It is eve of Independence Day for the United States of America. The USA sets aside the 4th of July as a national holiday to celebrate its freedom from colonial rule and autocracy of Britain
Hundreds of years later, we,
rightfully, decry a loss of freedom or privacy as a new eavesdropping, surveillance
or electronic tracking technique is revealed that collects information about us
as we innocently shop, drive, walk, watch TV, surf the web, talk on the phone
or sit in our homes. Or when someone
tries to take away our guns.
Then the debate begins anew on
what freedom is and what it takes to be free.
If these debates didn’t rise from the life, hearts, actions and spirit
of humankind to be daily earned and refreshed, it would die and be replaced.
But does anyone ask, “What is
freedom for?” Sometimes that question
crosses my mind when I’m curled up on the sofa watching whatever crime series
or sporting event happens to be on television.
The thought should come to all
our minds when ANY authority which directs, restricts or restrains conduct of human
relations inhibits someone/something akin to a “universal principle” (read
natural law or moral code if you wish) through coercion or more overt forces
like oppression or control. Overt force is
the easier one to detect.
One cannot identify what freedom
is for without not knowing what it truly is.
How does one choose a path without knowing what the options are? Obviously, freedom means different things to
everyone.
There are many legal and personal
definitions of freedom. That’s part of
what makes it “universal.” One can imagine
a code with different goals, but it remains that this life is the only one
anyone has. Applying collective judgments and
benchmarks makes a “principle.”
To paraphrase a Pope John Paul II comment, “Freedom is not doing what we like, but in having the right to
do what we ought.” A trite, answer,
then, to “What is freedom for?” might be, “To set our own daily schedule, i.e.,
to read, go, say, think, do, or believe—with some terms and conditions.”
It is such an important concept
to debate and fight over because without it we could not do the above
things. Freedom is passionately fought
for to preserve or win endless choice for ourselves.
But the real value of freedom
depends on what you do with it provided that mere self-indulgence is not guiding
our lives.
This is the paradox: Freedom changes
from being for the pursuit of individual happiness. Freedom becomes being for serving one another because
it leads to enhanced expressions of creativity and original thought, increased
productivity and an overall high quality of life. This definition of what freedom is for is seldom
addressed in our debates or wars, hence lost.
No comments:
Post a Comment