“Poor, wretched, and stupid peoples, nations determined on your own
misfortune and blind to your own good! You let yourselves be deprived
before your own eyes of the best part of your revenues; your fields
are plundered, your homes robbed, your family heirlooms taken away.
You live in such a way that you cannot claim a single thing as your
own; and it would seem that you consider yourselves lucky to be
loaned your property, your families, and your very lives.
All this
havoc, this misfortune, this ruin, descends upon you not from alien
foes, but from the one enemy whom you yourselves render as powerful
as he is, for whom you go bravely to war, for whose greatness you do
not refuse to offer your own bodies unto death. He who thus domineers
over you has only two eyes, only two hands, only one body, no more
than is possessed by the least man among the infinite numbers
dwelling in your cities; he has indeed nothing more than the power
that you confer upon him to destroy you. Where has he acquired enough
eyes to spy upon you, if you do not provide them yourselves? How can
he have so many arms to beat you with, if he does not borrow them
from you? The feet that trample down your cities, where does he get
them if they are not your own? How does he have any power over you
except through you? How would he dare assail you if he had no
cooperation from you? What could he do to you if you yourselves did
not connive with the thief who plunders you, if you were not
accomplices of the murderer who kills you, if you were not traitors
to yourselves?
You sow your crops in order that he may ravage them,
you install and furnish your homes to give him goods to pillage; you
rear your daughters that he may gratify his lust; you bring up your
children in order that he may confer upon them the greatest privilege
he knows — to be led into his battles, to be delivered to butchery,
to be made the servants of his greed and the instruments of his
vengeance; you yield your bodies unto hard labor in order that he may
indulge in his delights and wallow in his filthy pleasures; you
weaken yourselves in order to make him the stronger and the mightier
to hold you in check.
From all these indignities, such as the very
beasts of the field would not endure, you can deliver yourselves if
you try, not by taking action, but merely by willing to be free.
Resolve to serve no more, and you are at once freed. I do not ask
that you place hands upon the tyrant to topple him over, but simply
that you support him no longer; then you will behold him, like a
great Colossus whose pedestal has been pulled away, fall of his own
weight and break in pieces.” – Étienne de la Boétie, Discours
de la servitude volontaire (The Politics of Obedience)
Everything in life, right up to and including slavery... is a choice.
ReplyDeleteGlen, the quote is brilliant. It brings the phrase "useful idiots" to a whole new level.
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