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Dr. David Yeagley Interviews Ilana Mercer
Dr. David Yeagley is a Comanche Indian from Oklahoma,
educated at Oberlin, Yale, Emory, Hartt, and the University of Arizona.
(He was a special student at Harvard in 1982). He has invited several
nationally known conservative and independent writers to offer their
perspective on American Indians. The following interview with
Free-Market News Network and WorldNetDaily columnist Ilana Mercer is
the first
in the planned series. (The next was with
Ann Coulter, followed by Peter Brimelow's "English
Assessment,"
Michael Barone, and
Cyrus Nowrasteh) Dr. Yeagley thinks the American Indian is
conservative by nature, and should assume a leading role in “love of
country” and patriotism, a cause to which he is devoted. Yeagley is the
only conservative American Indian in national media. He is president of
the
Bad Eagle Foundation, named after his great, great grandfather.
Ilana Mercer’s work has appeared in the Journal of Social,
Political and Economic Studies, Free Life: a Journal of Classical
Liberal and Libertarian Thought, FrontPageMagazine, The
American Spectator, The New Individualist, The Colorado Gazette,
The Orange County Register, The American Conservative,
Insight On the News, Ideas on Liberty, The Financial Post,
The Globe and Mail, The Ottawa Citizen, The Calgary Herald,
London’s Jewish Chronicle, and others. She is the author of
Broad Sides: One Woman’s Clash With a Corrupt Culture, and the
proprietor of
www.ilanamercer.com.
David Yeagley: What is your response to the idea of an American Indian being an
American patriot? Is it impossibly contradictory? Is it disingenuous?
Ilana Mercer: Patriotism in my view is a very modest thing. I feel
patriotism when I encounter many people in my immediate community, or
among my readers. The arborist who came to trim my trees the other day
told me he was not a Republican or a Democrat. He said he hated the war
in Iraq and loved his guns as well as keeping what he earned.
This independence of mind is quintessentially American. I feel patriotic
when I encounter such an American. Ditto the gentleman who installed my
alarm recently. He too expressed his disdain for politics, and moved on
to discuss his gun collection. The sight of the Jeffersonian arborist
swinging heroically at the top of my giant cedars, giving them a trim,
and the cowboy-clad alarm installer makes me patriotic. People like
yourself, Dr. Yeagley, make me patriotic. There are quite a few
Americans such as these around. Not enough, but enough to make me want
to fight the good fight for them.
I’ve lived in Israel, South-Africa, Canada, and even Europe for a short
while, yet I’ve never felt patriotism in any of those countries.
Granted, nowhere else have I felt as desperate about the dismal state of
political discourse as I do in America. But that’s because I care about
America.
So what is patriotism? Here’s what it’s not: It’s not an allegiance to
the government of the day, or to its invariably wicked, un-American
policies. It’s an affinity for your community; it’s an understanding of
the great principles upon which this country was founded—which have been
excised by successive governments, Republican and Democratic alike. And
it’s a commitment to restoring the republic of private-property rights,
individual freedoms, and radical decentralization.
So, can American Indians be patriotic? You bet they can.
David Yeagley: What is your opinion about Indian reservations? Most
reservations were won by blood. Indians are proud of this. Indians were
the first foreign nations the United States ever made treaties
with. Having said that, how do you see their function in America? Are
they 'nations within a nation,' to create an unwanted balkanization, or
are they immutable historical tokens, to the honor of both Americans and
Indians?
Ilana Mercer: I’m not well-schooled in the intricacies of the reservation
system. It appears to have mired Indians in entitlement and welfare with
all the attendant social ills; has failed to palliate past injustices,
and commits new wrongs by instituting policies of wealth distribution.
When you say “function,” however, I’m not sure what you mean.
Individuals and their social organizations needn’t have a “function” for
the “community.” But they ought not to live off or commit crimes against
the individual members of that community. If people wish to band
together because they share a history, a culture, or an ideology, let
them be free to so do, as long as they don’t aggress against others or
demand that their forms of coexistence be funded.
As in your first question, my answer here flows from certain first
principle. Live as you like, so long as you don’t aggress against me or
force me to fund your living arrangements.
The Kibbutzim in Israel instantiate the principles of voluntary
socialism. As such, they are perfectly legitimate living arrangements.
Problems arise invariably because of government policies. Government,
exceeding its mandate—in violation of the positive and natural law,
usually—decides to grant special privileges to these voting blocks.
That’s when the moral legitimacy of Indian reservations—and
Kibbutzim—becomes questionable.
As for the Indian’s place in America—he is an organic part of America
and its history. This history should be studied using traditional
historical method, now just about extinct in the academe. Instead,
American history and the fate of the Indian have become part of the
country’s cultural studies departments—Ethnic, Women, Lesbian, Gay,
Bisexual, and Transgender Studies. The humanities and comparative
literature departments are another enclave where truth is secondary or
often suppressed in favor manufacturing dogmas about victims and
oppressors.
Injustices have abounded against Indians. But we want to study facts, not
political dogma. Just human beings, Indians included, ought to abhor how
government has gleefully codified the discourse of the “excluded” and
the “oppressed” into law, giving blacks, women, Indians, and gays (the
list is still under construction) the power to displace and destroy
unprotected species (white men, for instance).
David Yeagley: How do you regard race in general? Is it something to be honored
and preserved, or something to 'overcome,' in the Communist (Leftist)
sense of erasing all boundaries and borders of all kinds, psychological,
physical, genetic, etc.?
Ilana Mercer: The attitude to race is shaped by two forces, one entirely
legitimate, so long as it involves no coercion; the other
illegitimate—at least in this matter. The first refers to the
individual’s choice as to with whom he associates. By the second I mean
the law. It compels individuals, often against their will and judgment,
into associations dictated and enforced by civil rights laws.
Back to your question, now that I’ve clarified who the collective “we”
is. Should we honor a race? I don’t know about you, but I can
only honor or dishonor individuals, based on their actions. Conversely,
individualists, libertarians in particular, often make the mistake of
thinking that broad statements about aggregate group characteristics are
collectivist, ergo 1) forbidden, and 2) erroneous. This is a confusion.
Generalizations, provided they are substantiated by hard evidence, not
hunches, are not incorrect. Science relies on the ability to generalize
to the larger population observations drawn from a representative
sample. People make prudent decision in their daily lives based on
probabilities and generalities.
Whatever your theory about difference in the propensity for crime among
racial groups, for example, the fact is that, while blacks make up only
12 percent of the American population, they make up over 64 percent of
all violent arrests. Have you taken that fact into account in
determining where you set up house? I suspect you have. That one chooses
not to live in a particular crime-ridden area in no way implies that one
views all individual residents there as criminals, only that one
has made a prudent decision, based on statistically significant data, as
to where one will invest scarce and precious resources, to
wit, one’s life and property.
Race is intricately and ineluctably tied to freedom because we live
under a state which circumscribes liberty by enforcing codes of hiring,
firing, renting, and money lending, among others. In a truly free
society, the kind we once enjoyed, one honors the right of the
individual to associate and disassociate, invest and disinvest, speak
and misspeak at will.
Race has become important because we labor under nominal property
ownership, and are subject to what is flippantly called political
correctness, but is in fact codified and legalized theft and coercion.
David Yeagley: What do you think of Indian casinos, and specifically of the idea
of land-to-trust, where a tribe buys up land (often of its
choice--unconnected to historical ownership) to build more casinos?
Ilana Mercer: I’ll make the same suggestion to patriotic American Indians
that I made to the “First Nations” of Canada, when they were on the
brink of separating from that country (Canada, to its credit, is
infinitely more tolerant toward secessionist movements than the highly
centralized American state): Make banking your new economy. Turn your
territories, and their privileged independent legal status, into tax
havens for the besieged American taxpayer.
For Americans to regain individual sovereignty, the Federal Frankenstein
must be forced into retreat (it spends approximately 48 percent of GDP).
So long as it can confiscate wealth at will, it’ll continue to grow. The
Constitution has not managed to limit the growth of the federal
behemoth, because the political cast simply ignores it. By setting up
tax havens in their jurisdictions, countervailing to the state, Indians
will be facilitating a peaceful, property-based secessionist movement.
If my memory serves me, the Kahnawake Mohawks in Quebec had begun to
investigate how far they could push the envelope of self-government.
Like Barbados, the Channel Islands or Switzerland, this brilliant band
had been looking to turn its territory into an offshore tax haven,
complete with bank, securities exchange, a separate regulatory
authority, secretive accounts and low taxes. When it got a whiff of
this, the Canadian Federal government became apoplectic, as would our
feds. It’s one thing to expand the definition of aboriginal rights;
quite another to have to deal with the reality of autonomous chieftains
intent on exercising self-determination.
Tell the Indians of America they’d be the quintessential patriots
if they followed my advice on this.
David Yeagley: What is your basic concept of a nation? Certainly, America is the
exception to many historical precedents. But, if America is a nation,
where do Indian nations 'fit in,' and how? An Indian nation, such as the
Comanche, or the Apache, or the Sioux, have their own language, their
own religion, their own culture, and their own general geographic
locales. Are they therefore nations?
Ilana Mercer: We libertarians are often guilty of simplistic and vulgar
individualism, in the words of Murray Rothbard. This includes an
inability to distinguish the nation from the state. The former
encompasses “the land, the culture, the terrain, the people”; the latter
“the coercive apparatus of bureaucrats and politicians.” That the Indian
is part of America’s land, culture, and terrain is indisputable. Ergo,
he is a part of the American nation.
Being a social being by nature, man belongs to a variety of social
systems. Could contradictions arise between the various systems with
which individuals affiliate? Indeed there could, but there needn’t be.
Do Indians believe that their way is the only way and that
non-Indians should be subdued or killed? Do they believe in holy war
to achieve those ends? Are the values articulated in the Bill of Rights
at odds with their Indian values? If not, then their expression of
nationhood, or self-determination, needn’t conflict with other social
system around them.
David Yeagley: How do you view the idea of Indian mascots for sports teams, or
Indian names for states, roads, buildings, companies, creeks, rivers,
counties, etc? Does America want to expunge all things Indian? A visual
genocide, if you will? What do you think is really behind this trend to
remove Indian images from the country?
Ilana Mercer: The little I’ve heard is that “The Radical American Indian
Movement” and the liberal PC brigade have complained that words like
“Squaw” are pejoratives, disparaging of Indians. I’m all for leaving
Indian names where these are the original names. In South-Africa, for
instance, when the African National Congress pleased the world by
unseating the minority government (and ultimately bringing about the
rapid ruin of that country), the powers-that-be decided to erase Boer
and British history, and Africanize places the former made great.
Transvaal is now “Gauteng,” whatever that means (I suspect it’s code for
murder capital of the world). We don’t want to entertain such folly.
Places named by the colonists should not be changed to reflect PC dogmas
and sentiments.
©2006 By Ilana Mercer
Free-Market News Network
(& at
BadEagle.com)
September 15
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