“The Tree of Liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants,” said Thomas Jefferson. Erne Lewis does a terrific job of adapting this theme to 21st-century America in his new novel, An Act of Self-Defense.
Like Atlas Shrugged, his story is set in an immediate future where the economy is collapsing, and more so than in Atlas, personal freedoms are vanishing. Unemployment is at 20 percent and all communications are recorded and tracked by the NSA. RFID badges are worn by all federal employees and will soon be required for all citizens. A small group of patriots takes matters into their own hands, and the action is fast and furious.
Lewis draws the correct battle lines of our time: not left versus right but libertarian versus fascist. The f-word correctly describes anyone on the left or right who would use government power to suppress personal or economic freedom while leaving nominal ownership in private hands. The novel’s villains are of both stripes, some of them decent people who entered politics with good intentions but became corrupted. That leaves libertarians as the only consistent defenders of what Ludwig von Mises called the “Free and Prosperous Commonwealth” founded on the rule of law, particularly respect for property rights.
I had to wonder, when reading his portrayals of atrocities committed by government agents: How much of this is fiction? Can they do such things? Are they close? Have they already? The Patriot Act is law, so the atrocities seem disturbingly plausible. Continue reading