Citizenship and Courage

The world is better for young men like Kyle Rittenhouse defending their communities. 

By 

In recent weeks, a series of high-profile criminal cases stemming from private citizens acting to protect their communities have been in the spotlight. A young Kyle Rittenhouse worked with other volunteers to protect Kenosha, Wisconsin from violent Antifa and BLM rioters. He ended up being attacked and defended himself from a violent mob, killing two and wounding one in the process.

In Georgia, a father and son, frustrated by a series of thefts, tried to stop a suspected burglar, Ahmaud Arbery. Arbery ended up charging them and reached for the son’s gun, only to be shot dead in the melee.

One man’s courage is another man’s rash vigilantism. Critics say Rittenhouse and the McMichaels were stupid and full of bloodlust for getting involved, and should have left these matters to the professionals. This cautionary message is widespread and does not come exclusively from the Left.

The Managerial Regime Citizen

Professional civil service and bureaucratic systems are the foundations of the managerial state. This system justifies itself because of the perceived benefits of specialization, professionalization of government tasks, and jealous guarding of bureaucratic turf, similar to private-sector unions.

The extensive state bureaucracy encourages a different relationship between the state and its citizens. Under this system, citizens are more like consumers or spectators, whose electoral control consists of symbolic “no confidence” votes at most. Criticism, initiative, and input into matters of government are usually looked at skeptically, as evidenced by the recent deployment of the FBI against parents who dared to speak out against critical race theory. As Terry McCauliffe infamously summed up the matter, “I don’t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.”

Without getting into a pedantic discussion of democracy and republics, it is fair to say that the United States evolved quickly into a democratic republic. The republican part consisted not merely in the existence of a constitution and the conduct of elections, but also from citizen participation in various government functions, whether it was in the jury system, the militia, the posse comitatus, or acting as part-time, citizen-legislators.

Alexis de Tocqueville observed that the great genius of Americans came from the people’s capacity for organization and problem solving without the need for official intervention, in contrast to continental Europe. “In the United States, as soon as several inhabitants have taken an opinion or an idea they wish to promote in society, they seek each other out and unite together once they have made contact. From that moment, they are no longer isolated but have become a power seen from afar whose activities serve as an example and whose words are heeded.”

Republican Virtues

To flourish, a republican system needs more than voting, but also patriotism, public-spiritedness, and courage. Mere self-interest would never counsel one to resist threats while serving on a jury, or rush to the barricades to protect against an invading threat, or inconvenience oneself to help the victim of a crime. Rather, it is always individually rational (but collectively disastrous) to fob off one’s duties to others and hang back.

The latter way of thinking is familiar to me from the years I spent in New York and Chicago. Both are large, anonymous, urban centers with a great deal of diversity. Both have large police departments and elaborate city services. But the dark side of these cities resides in the cynical and widespread desire “not to get involved.” From the Kitty Genovese murder to the modern-day “no snitching” culture, a culture hostile to the concept of civic duty has led to a coarsening of life, the explosion of crime, the growth of government, and the destruction of community.

This is not surprising. Many of the people in both cities are not recognizably American in any meaningful sense. From whence would they acquire habits in decline among Americans themselves? As the country has become more urbanized (a century-long process) and has deliberately favored immigration from illiberal parts of the world (a 50-year process), it has become less respectful of republican virtues and less capable of self-government.

Prosecutions of those few who do take initiative—Rittenhouse, George Zimmerman, or Bernie Goetz—reinforces the supine and servile mentality that serves only to increase the relative power of the managerial class as distinguished from ordinary citizens.

A lot can be said about Kyle Rittenhouse and the other men who went out to the streets of Kenosha last summer. Perhaps these self-defense volunteers were reckless, dangerous, foolhardy, and naïve. But even if the volunteers were all those things, they were also noble, brave, and pro-social. Kyle Rittenhouse worked as a lifeguard. He spent the earlier part of the day cleaning up graffiti. In the several interviews of him, he appears unbearably earnest and innocent. 

Even in his use of force, he only shot the few people directly attacking him. He did not panic, and he declined to impose rough justice on the mob. He even tried to turn himself into the police, who incompetently sped past him.

If he was young and inexperienced, so are a great many young men. Indeed, physical courage is something of a young man’s game. But one cannot also label the army veterans and local business owners as immature when they decided to take action because the state had abandoned them and their community. They were doing something brave, and they were doing something that an incompetent and indifferent managerial system made necessary.

An Ethic of Self-Preservation Will Not Preserve Civilization

Whether from the Right or the Left, the constant mantras of caution eventually cede all power and initiative to a hostile state. It is an ethic of weakness and humiliation, the opposite of the Spirit of 1776. At every possible opportunity for courageous civic engagement—a letter to the editor, appearing at a protest, making a donation, or simply refusing to utter lies—there is always a choice to be made between cautious cowardice and civic-minded courage. The recent explosion of “cancel culture” has only thrived, in part, because of the neutered agreeableness and abject fear that has become the national norm.

Year after year, teachers, military officers, managers, cops, lawyers, social workers, and everyone embedded in the system console themselves that they’ll do the right thing someday when they have the power to do it—someday when they’re in charge or at least more influential. But after decades of shrugging compliance, one’s beliefs tend to conform more to one’s actions as a matter of psychological self-preservation.

The notion of conforming one’s actions to one’s beliefs—and, indeed, even the category of personal beliefs—becomes unfamiliar. Even mild criticism feels dangerous, radical, and unseemly. In spite of the self-consolation stories people tell to themselves, few people find greater moral courage on the eve of receiving a pension than they do as a young person, full of idealism and energy.

To be clear, even in courage, one should be prudent and strategic. But civilization and self-government cannot survive solely by rational self-calculation. Purely self-interested rationality always says it’s good for someone to do something, but not you. As we used to learn as kids, if everyone behaved that way, nothing would get done.

Someone has to stand up and do something, and when that someone appears, we should be forgiving and even admiring of his courage in a world where so few people stick their necks out. The world is better for young men like Kyle Rittenhouse defending their communities.

Christopher Roach is an adjunct fellow of the Center for American Greatness and an attorney in private practice based in Florida. He is a double graduate of the University of Chicago and has previously been published by The Federalist, Takimag, Chronicles, the Washington Legal Foundation, the Marine Corps Gazette, and the Orlando Sentinel. The views presented are solely his own.

November 10, 2021 | 2 Comments »

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  1. This is absurd. Only in our modern state of insanity would this outrage be tolerated. Will they be cancelling dancing and celebrating religious holidays next? There was nothing wrong with Emerald’s assertions which described her belief that these pharma giants are purposefully using code words in products to mock us as they take over the world. These are her beliefs. If anyone finds them ungrounded or inaccurate, they should simply stop reading Emerald’s substack. Yet, there is no reason for her to have been silenced by the govt sanctioned censors nor by her employer. Nothing she stated was harmful or dangerous in her own personal blog. Also, as politically unacceptable as her comments were to the Trusted News Initiative and their govt associated allies, she was not wrong, at least about luciferase being listed on the moderna website as she described…yes I did check it out, but I have a personal interest in Luciferase, and neither my interest or the name of this enzyme are related to a religious context.

    I researched luciferase when I was in college. It was not actual lab research, but rather a deep dive into the compound itself to discuss before the entire Chemistry dept and I had to write a lengthy summary of my findings as well. I had to choose a compound to investigate and I had an interest in possibly pursuing chemical/medical research if I did not make the cut in my pursuits in medicine. Earlier in my college career I had briefly looked into the why and how the firefly was able to achieve its luminescent ability. In my cursory look into what was known on it, I found that It is used in all manner of research and bio assays as an indicator. So, when I was required to choose a compound to give a 30-45-min review on a chosen drug or compound, I chose luciferase, as it might prove useful if my Plan B was ever needed. I really went deep into the history on the compound, its properties, uses and future development prospects. This was many many years ago, and quite an interesting future lay on the horizon regarding luciferase’s many expanding uses. Still, I never would have believed it would become as topical as it has. I went into medicine, never enacting Plan B, and hadn’t thought of this compound in nearly 30yrs… til last year.

    For what it’s worth, the name luciferase has no religious connection. Lucifer means light and -ase is added to any enzyme to indicate it is an enzyme(eg, lipase is an enzyme that breaks down lipids, ie fats). The luciferase enzyme cleaves off part of a protein called luciferin, following which light is emitted but virtually no heat. There are many types of both luciferins/luciferases, and it was discovered over a hundred years ago. It is a fascinating compound that is found in various forms in different fish and insects and animals that have an innate ability to emit light. It was also employed in a test reflecting the use of lipid-nanoparticles in 2020, that actually was used supplement research on the Spike protein mRNA vaccine that was never conducted. Life has its little ironies.

  2. From Daily Beast, via Yahoo.com. This is how courageous people are treated in contemporary America. Free speech!!??!!

    Newsmax Star Returns to Twitter—and Is Permanently Banned Hours Later for Vax Insanity
    Tue, November 9, 2021, 11:25 PM
    Newsmax
    Newsmax
    Newsmax White House correspondent Emerald Robinson has been permanently suspended from Twitter for repeatedly violating the social platform’s rules against spreading COVID-19 misinformation, according to a spokesman for the tech giant.

    Twitter initially gave Robinson, who has relentlessly pushed anti-vaccine falsehoods for more than a year, a temporary time-out last week after she posted an insanely absurd claim that the COVID-19 vaccines contained a glowing tracking device that was linked to the devil.

    “Dear Christians: the vaccines contain a bioluminescent marker called LUCIFERASE so that you can be tracked,” Robinson declared last Monday. “Read the last book of the New Testament to see how this ends.”

    While some vaccine research has used the enzyme luciferase, which has bioluminescent features, it is not an ingredient in any of the coronavirus vaccines currently on the market. Furthermore, luciferase does not have any satanic associations despite deriving its name from the Latin word lucifer, which means light-bearing.

    Besides receiving the reprimand from Twitter at the time, Robinson was also benched by Newsmax over her blatantly false claims about the vaccines. Prior to taking Robinson off the air pending a review of her anti-vax social-media posts, Newsmax also publicly rebuked its controversial star.

    “Newsmax strongly believes and has reported that the Covid 19 vaccines are safe and effective. We do not believe the vaccines contain any toxic materials or tracking markers, and such false claims have never been reported on Newsmax,” the network said in a statement. “The many medical experts appearing on Newsmax have supported the use of the vaccine.”

    After serving her week-long Twitter lockout, the conservative firebrand returned to the social media site with a fury on Tuesday morning. Proclaiming that she was back on Twitter “at least”—seemingly throwing shade at Newsmax for sidelining her—Robinson then promoted her account on Substack, a subscription newsletter service.

    “Join me at Substack today before I’m banned again,” she wrote, sharing a link to a post in which she doubled down on her disproven claims about luciferase and vaccines.

    Robinson would continue to implore her followers to join her Substack page, which included a new post on Tuesday that again suggested the vaccines were linked to Satan.

    “One more thing: the new COVID-19 antibody test is called SATiN and it uses Luciferase. No, I’m not kidding,” she wrote. “It’s not an accident that they’ve given this name to this test. It’s a warning.”

    Eventually, Twitter decided to shut her account down for good.

    A Twitter spokesperson told The Daily Beast that Robinson’s Twitter account, which had nearly 450,000 followers, “was permanently suspended for repeated violations of our COVID-19 misinformation policy.”

    Robinson’s future with Newsmax, meanwhile, remains up in the air. Following publication, a network spokesperson told the Daily Beast that the far-right reporter “remains off-air as Newsmax reviews matters relating to her posts made outside of the channel on her own social media,” adding that the network has “not determined when she will return to the air.”

    Read more at The Daily Beast.

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