Freedom and Security

January 16, 2012

We often hear people saying that we cannot have both freedom and security.  But I question this claim.

On this Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, after listening again to some of MLK’s speeches, I am struck by how often he talked about freedom.  And I cannot help but notice the contradiction of how the U.S. keeps going to war to “protect and defend our freedom,” and yet simultaneously curtails those freedoms in the name of security.  The latter is “justified” by claiming that we cannot have both freedom and security.

It seems to me that we can have both freedom and security, but we need something else as well for both of these to be possible at the same time:  we need true justice.

In a truly just world, people have the freedoms they need to live a meaningful and fulfilling life.  And a truly just world also ensures the most effective security:  the security that comes by virtue of everyone having the freedoms they need to live a meaningful and fulfilling life.  If you think about what threatens security, it is unhappy, struggling, desperate people.  In a truly just world, there are effective ways that unhappy people can get the help they need, and so desperation does not rise to the level that threatens security.  This is why freedom and security are both not only possible in truly just world, but are necessary consequences of justice.  We see that the shared root that brings them together is the very concept of justice itself.

Of course, working for true justice is hard, and may require those who are privileged to have to give up some of their privilege (which they tend to not want to do:  see my previous post).  It is much easier for those in power to use that power to claim that we cannot have both freedom and security.  Those in power can play on people’s fears, and use that fear then as an excuse to curtail the people’s freedom.  Conveniently enough, this strategy also has the side-effect of weakening the people, and strengthening the power of those in power.

Therefore, both by questioning the motives of those who make that claim, and by critically reflecting on the deeper meanings of the concepts of freedom, security, and justice, we find that the claim that we cannot have both freedom and security is very likely not true at all.  We can have both freedom and security if we create a truly just society.


Is It Really So Hard to Define Justice?

March 30, 2011

Whenever I raise the question “What is justice?” in philosophy or peace studies classes, my students groan and insist that “we could never agree upon a definition of justice!”  I push them to try anyway, and, before the class session is over, everyone is rather surprised to realize that that wasn’t really so hard after all.

Now that I’ve gotten over my own surprise about this (after several years of consistent results), I find myself asking new questions.  Why do people think it will be hard?  Or, maybe more interestingly, why are we taught to believe that it is impossible — why are we discouraged from even trying?  And, finally, if our struggles and conflicts are not grounded in disagreement over what true justice is, what are they all about, then?

I am coming to think that the answer to all of these questions is the same:  those who find themselves on the advantageous side of injustice tend to be highly reluctant to give up their privilege; plus, the privilege that they have gives them the power not to have to give it up very easily.  But because no one wants to believe that their privilege is supported by injustice, it is strongly tempting to deny that they really know what justice is and it is furthermore strongly tempting to discourage everyone else from clarifying its definition.

The real issue, then, is not that we don’t know what justice is.  The real issue is that those who benefit from injustice often become ambivalent about seeking true justice because of the advantages they will lose.

But, there is still hope.  Sometimes people who benefit from injustice are willing to use their advantages to try to bring about the restoration of true justice, even realizing that, if they succeed, their privileges and advantages will be lost.

Why are there such people?  What can bring people to a willingness to give up privilege and advantage?  It is usually two realizations.  The first is that they come to realize that they are not happy with privileges that come at the expense of the suffering of others.  And the second is that they realize that happiness can be found in a simpler and humbler life, because making the best of a humble life demands that you clarify what’s really important to you.  Once you strip away the excess and focus your life on what really matters, you feel a sense of unencumbered freedom that brings a clearer, steadier joy than the thrills and drama of an extravagant life.