The Quisling Effect

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RomanKnight

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Some food for thought

The Quisling Effect
Government is not the only destroyer of freedom

By Claire Wolfe

Miller Smithton* is a federally licensed firearms dealer. When he wanted to give his own son a hunting rifle for his birthday, he had to run a criminal background check on the young man. "I felt like a worm," Miller told me. "Like a traitor to my own values and my own family. But what else could I do?"

K.J. "Cage" Linton* is a 911 emergency dispatcher and a man concerned about the creeping loss of freedom and privacy in the world. If you call him because your father is having a heart attack or your daughter has broken her leg playing soccer, Cage will calmly ask for your full name, date of birth, and other information. (This is aside from what already appears on his computer screen from the E911 service.) You, in your urgency, give him the information. And this freedom-loving man, without informing you of a thing, enters you into a law-enforcement database. Cage works in a rural county, where he has routinely entered his own friends, neighbors, and family members into this database of crooks and creeps. He knows that all sorts of government employees have free access to the database and use it as a juicy source of both local gossip and leads for investigation. But he's got to stick you in it. It's his job.

Juan Fuentes was just a man minding his own business. On the morning of August 23, 2000 three neighbor children, Jessica, Anna, and Vanessa Carpenter, rushed up pounding his door. Anna was bleeding from dozens of puncture wounds. All three were desperate. A naked intruder had broken into their home and was at that moment savaging their little brother and sister with a pitchfork. The girls begged Fuentes to get his gun and save the little ones' lives. But Fuentes said no. It wasn't that he was afraid to confront the intruder; with his rifle he could easily have dropped a pitchfork wielder. No, it was the government he was more terrified of. They'll take my gun away if I do that, he told the desperate girls, whose brother and sister were dying horribly at that moment. To compound the horror, the girls' own father, John Carpenter, had locked away the family pistol in obedience to California's "child-safe" storage laws. All five Carpenter children knew how to shoot and how to handle guns safely, but because their father feared the law more than he feared an armed intruder, they couldn't save themselves or each other.

We've all heard about the frog in the kettle. Turn the heat up under him gradually enough and he'll sit there until he boils to death. It's become the most common metaphor to describe our gradual loss of freedom.

We never ask, "Who's turning up the heat under us froggies?" because the answer is so obvious. It's government, of course. And it is.

But there's something else that's causing the heat to rise and freedom to evaporate into air. It's going on in all three stories above and in daily life around us. Call it the Quisling Effect.

Most everybody knows what a quisling is: a turncoat, a Judas, a Benedict Arnold. Specifically, the American Heritage Dictionary defines it as "a traitor who serves as the puppet of the enemy occupying his or her country."

The word "quisling" has a naturally slimy sound. Even if you didn't know what it meant, you'd know it was something unsavory, undesirable, or at best, something weak. Not many people realize that (as with martinet, sandwich, and boycott), the word came to us from a man's name.

Vidkun Quisling was a twentieth-century Norwegian politician and head of Norway's home-grown form of Nazism, the Nasjonal Samling (National Unity) Party. He went so far as to urge Hitler to invade his country in hopes of becoming Norway's supreme leader. Hitler did. And Quisling did -- for exactly five days. The Nazis quickly placed him in a figurehead position while one of their own actually ran the country. Within months of the war's end, Quisling got his just desserts. He was executed by firing squad. And a new word entered the dictionary, not only in English, but in many other languages.

The identification of Quisling with dirty deeds is so strong that when I encountered an article that mentioned humanitarian acts Quisling had committed in the 1920s, it was as if I'd just read, "Ted Bundy heroically feeds the poor in Calcutta," or "Jeffrey Dahmer rescues kitten from burning building."

But maybe Bundy did send a few bucks to Mother Teresa. And Dahmer, by many accounts, wasn't entirely a horrible guy, aside from that inconvenient penchant for murdering and eating his lovers. And yes, before he entered the dictionary so odiously, Quisling was actually a respected man.

Even the blackest of us is not all black. And it doesn't take a long look into our own hearts to admit that the whitest of us look more like the pile of laundry that was washed 10 times in Brand X than the pile that was laundered with the good stuff in the old commercial.

In each of the three incidents that open this article, people made pragmatic decisions that went against their own better principles. They did so for all the ordinary, perfectly excusable daily reasons -- because they feared to break the law, because it was their job, because they didn't want to make waves, because it was a compromise that got them through the day. When their actions were done only to obey a law, they could, with justification, claim the government "made" them do it.

Except in a rare tragic case like the deaths of the Carpenter children, the negative consequences are miniscule and life goes on.

But it isn't only "the government" that is causing freedom to boil away around us. Though major and minor manifestations of The Quisling Effect, we sell out our own freedom and the freedom of our children, our neighbors, and our friends. Gradually. Oh, so gradually. But sell it we do. We are participants, willing or otherwise, in our own destruction.

Businesses -- those proud products of our allegedly free market -- also sell out freedom. And they are bigger culprits than we. Sometimes they do it because corporations, by their very structure and nature, have a lot in common with the state. As one friend of mine always put it, "Every corporation wants to be a government when it grows up." Businesses often help condition us to daily regimentation, to trading our privacy for perks, and to going along to get along. That, I suppose, is an unavoidable, unintended (?) consequence of the post-Industrial revolution.

But businesses increasingly manifest The Quisling Effect for the very same reasons we private people do: to avoid making waves, to be allowed to do business as usual under the eye of an ever-stronger state, or to appease the real or imagined demands of the "authorities." (In the latter case, it might be more apt to apply a different WWII analogy, and accuse them of The Chamberlain Effect; but that's another story.)

How typical is this? Your ISP meekly enables all e-mail and Web activity to be easily monitored by the FBI, not because the law says they must, but because the FBI unilaterally decrees that they should. Online commerce companies, led by the 800-pound mine canary eBay, announce that they will turn over any customer record to any law enforcement agent, without asking for a subpoena, search warrant, or even an explanation of probable cause. Saks department store sends a notice to charge account customers, saying it will no longer accept more than $350 in cash payments. Even though that amount is far, far below the federal government's own "suspicious" cash reporting limits, Saks is scared, Saks has decided to be overly cautious. Saks' lawyers have no doubt advised the company to prepare for a future in which even $400 is a sign that a loyal Saks customer is a terrorist or drug dealer.

Banks demand detailed information about you and the origins of your deposits. Following 9-11, one supermarket chain, in a "patriotic" gesture, even turned over its entire database of customer purchasing records to the federal government for "anti-terrorism" records. (And yes, the type of food you buy and how you buy it really is part of the government's profiling of your terrorist potential.)

In some cases, the thousands of companies who do such things really are bowing to the law (even when the law isn't constitutional). But in most cases, they're merely complying with fishy agency interpretations of regulations or cravenly, pathetically trying to look compliant and cooperative in general so that they themselves won't become targets of the FBI, IRS, or Department of Homeland Security.

It must have been a lot like this in Stalinist Russia. But nevertheless, in each case, these businesses are following their own momentary self interest -- just as we are when we run a background check or enter a caller's name in a database. In relationships with "security scared" businesses, your legal rights, or for that matter their own long-term self interest (assuming freedom is in the long-term interest of every private enterprise), are easy casualties.

Saks doesn't care about your freedom. Nor should it have to, in the best of all worlds. Its main concern is with its own survival, as it should be. In a free market, its survival would depend largely on how well it served customers. In this world, survival depends more and more on how well a company kowtows to regulators or law enforcers. And like virtually all corporations (and most individuals), Saks' little hive-mind will simply adapt to present conditions in whatever way it thinks will best ensure its own survival.

(The very concept that the federal government has a right to order private businesses to do anything is another matter. But we've long ago accepted that state of affairs as normal, however abnormal and unfree it really is.)

If this is the way institutions behave, then we can't expect much better from individuals who, no matter how much they love freedom and still want a nice, uncomplicated daily life. In fact, Miller Smithton, my gun-dealer friend, pointed out that there's even a corollary to The Quisling Effect in which we not only make conscious decisions that trade away freedom, but we begin adopting the psychology of the unfree in our daily lives.

For instance, Smithson told me he finds himself sneaking his perfectly legal machine guns from his house to his car and back so that his yuppie neighbors won't see him. He's not doing anything wrong, owning and using these machine guns. Nor is he hiding the guns because he's afraid his neighbors are going to steal such valuable stuff. He just doesn't want to cope with the almost-inevitable suspicion -- complete with reports to the ATF -- that being seen with absolutely legal weapons might bring down on him.

So, he submits. Not only in his rational choices, but in his attitudes and way of life.

Go back for a moment to the definition of a quisling: "a traitor who serves as the puppet of the enemy occupying his or her country."

If you believe that the behemoth now squatting on the banks of the Potomac is constitutional or in some other fashion legitimate, then the definition of quisling doesn't apply to anyone who bows to that government's will -- even when, by bowing or "complying," we diminish our own and our children's freedom. By those terms, the loss of freedom itself is "legitimate," and heaven help us all.

But if you believe that the ever-consuming, ever-growing creature now spreading itself across the land is, rather, an alien living off the traditions of freedom as it destroys its own host, if you believe that the security state, the surveillance state, and the control state are truly occupying forces that don't belong in this land and aren't good for it, for you, for your progeny, or for the future ... then clearly all who cooperate with it manifest The Quisling Effect. Some of us bear a large responsibility for selling our own freedom. Some a lot less. But hardly anybody walks among us who isn't responsible in some way for cooperating with the freedom-consuming occupier.

Unfortunately, there's no solution -- for the moment, at least. There is no incentive for your banker or your ISP to stand up and say, "Hey, wait a minute, this is wrong and we're going to fight it." And for both businesses and individuals, there is almost no motivation, beyond sheer stubbornness and increasingly archaic principles, to do anything else but comply.

If froggie is getting hotter in the pot, government is ultimately at fault. If froggie stays in the pot instead of jumping out, froggie is also responsible. But with millions of quisling froggies out there helping turn the heat up and up and up ... where, really, is the most sincerely freedom loving froggie to go, even if he decides to take the giant leap? Straight from the boiling pot into a world of hot-hot burners.
 
‘All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing’

I don't know who said it, but they were right.
 
Thinking about this creeps me out and makes me want to bag it all and move to Montana or Idaho -- not to get away from some race of people but to get away from too much government. I wish this was more accessable to the mainstream public. But then, we don't want to be challenged by having to think. Just let us watch American Idol or Wife Swap or some other crap.

As I've said before, the perceived value of freedom is currently at an all time low. Most are not willing to pay any price for it.
 
You're right, 2nd Amendment. My remark could be interpreted as patriotic chest thumping. And we can't have any of that. :eek: :eek: :p
 
You know full well that the article at the head of this thread is not of the type the "harmful rhetoric" discussion was all about. This article is thoughtful and well-reasoned, not a bunch of cheap epithets, centered on bravado.

There is a distinction. Too bad you can't find it. Quoting Burke isn't what it was about either.
 
Now you watch that harmful rhetoric there.

You're right, 2nd Amendment. My remark could be interpreted as patriotic chest thumping. And we can't have any of that.

I know this is off topic a little here, but since these refer back to the other thread :rolleyes: ....

I don't think this is the type of rhetoric that most of us thought was harmful. The type of rhetoric that we, or atleast I, consider harmful is the "grab ye'r rifles, feed the hogs, pop the blue helmets" etc etc. And I mainly consider that harmfull in a public forum.

I.G.B.
 
There is a distinction. Too bad you can't find it. Quoting Burke isn't what it was about either.
Au contraire. That's exactly what it's about. Apathy and a lack of individual principles. That's exactly how Hitler was able to exterminate 10-12 million 'undesirables'.
 
RileyMc,

With all due respect...

It's not that we are doing nothing, it's not that we are apathetic, it's not that we lack individual principles.

It's that we are not ready to abandon the other means of fulfilling our goals, and we are not ready to call for an open war. It's also that we understand that this is a open forum where anybody can view it, and encouraging a violent revolution (which is the rhetoric that was talked about in the other thread) **at this point in time** is counterproductive to our goals.

Right now we should be working together, bringing more people into our camps, and encouraging them to work through the legal system by writing letters to newspapers, magazines, Congress Critters and preaching it to their close friends and associates.

We should be celebrating our recent victories, the '94 AWB is gone, more states are allowing concealed carry, and more people are buying guns. We are turning the tide.

If we fail at this, at encouraging the trend that we have been enjoying this very short time, then we will be forced to go the alternate route, and most of us don't want that to happen.

I.G.B.
 
Well first off I was simply razzing Riley, nothing more, so get yer panties out of a bunch folks.

Second, nobody has EVER advocated abandoning other means of turning the tide. I think that is a point that has been missed in all this recent rucus. A belief or acknowledgment that the time may have come, or has come, to consider other options as well does not mean "Get yer gun 'n start a war!", nor run and hide and give up. It's simply a belief that things are worse than many people admit or see and they need to be considering less than pleasant possibilities.
 
That's a very well written article.

K.J. "Cage" Linton* is a 911 emergency dispatcher and a man concerned about the creeping loss of freedom and privacy in the world. If you call him because your father is having a heart attack or your daughter has broken her leg playing soccer, Cage will calmly ask for your full name, date of birth, and other information. (This is aside from what already appears on his computer screen from the E911 service.) You, in your urgency, give him the information. And this freedom-loving man, without informing you of a thing, enters you into a law-enforcement database. Cage works in a rural county, where he has routinely entered his own friends, neighbors, and family members into this database of crooks and creeps. He knows that all sorts of government employees have free access to the database and use it as a juicy source of both local gossip and leads for investigation. But he's got to stick you in it. It's his job.

Would 911 deny you assistance if you refused to divluge any such information? Also I find it hard to believe that neighbor would refuse to help those kids out of fear for losing his gun. What kind of person thinks like that? I guess I'm not totally surprised reading what some people think here.
 
By all means continue petition and persuasion, but know that without the implied threat of consequences, .gov will not abandon its course. Now those consequences do not have to be violent; simple removal of the offenders from office by way of the ballot box will suffice. Unfortunately, incumbents have so perverted the representative electoral process as to make that unlikely. I mean, we gunowners can't even agree on a candidate to replace the incumbent strongly anti-gunrights offenders. (Libertarians, are you listening?).

I suppose your tolerance for the erosion of liberty depends on whether or not you think we still enjoy representation. I, for one, think that time has passed.
 
2nd Amendment,

I think we can all admit that times are tough right now, and bound to get worse. There is a saying I remember reading "we are at the uncomfortable stage, it's too late to vote them out, to early to start shooting them." I think it goes something like that.

Riley,

I agree that the threat has to be there. I am just cautious about bringing out that stick too often and before the time comes. If the threat is issued to often and too early we run the risk of not only being guilty of crying wolf but of encouraging the .gov to continue infringing if we don't back up the threats.

Once again, this is all with full respect to both of you.

I.G.B.
 
I find it hard to believe that neighbor would refuse to help those kids out of fear for losing his gun. What kind of person thinks like that?

I suspect he more likely feared a murder charge and a long stay in prison.

~G. Fink
 
The problem with the "implied threat of force" is that without mass public support, the threat of force means very little. Unless something catastrophic happens to our rights all at once, most people (read: ignorant) would simply think that the media was right about all the crazy "gun nuts" that tried to rise up against the govt. As long as the .gov keeps usurping our rights a little at a time, we WILL cook to death in the pot because there will always be that little bit of hope that maybe, just maybe, things will get better.

Even if things do get entirely out of hand, what can we do about it? There won't be any fairy tale ending like in Unintended Consequences because the .gov will never admit that it was wrong...when was the last time it did that? Hmm, prohibition is the only time I can think of off the top of my head. Isolated pockets of resistence do little good and are easily silenced. Now, if everyone in favor of doing things legally were ALSO primed and ready to bring about change through force of arms if necessary, it would be different. But as I said before, the majority will always hold out hope....
 
Quote:
I find it hard to believe that neighbor would refuse to help those kids out of fear for losing his gun. What kind of person thinks like that?


I suspect he more likely feared a murder charge and a long stay in prison.

~G. Fink

I agree. Not withstanding that he would be saving a couple of kids, the state of KA will come down harder on him then they would on the guy with the pitchfork.

Just like they would with the father if he left a loaded gun where his 14 y/o daughter could have got a hold of it.

-Bill
 
Liquid is right.

Unfortunatly the threat of force is only effective if it is plausible. Right now it isn't.

Look at us, we are a community of just over 16,000 members. And there are probably only 500 or less that actively participate in the legal and political threads. Probably less honestly.

And here we are, unable, in multiple threads, to even come to a consensus as to whether we should be discussing the possiblity of using that force or not. Not whether we should be considering the **use** of force, but just the public discussion of that possible use of force.

Can you imagine us actually being able to organize a large effort to physically fight a corrupt government?

I.G.B.
 
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