freedom

Under Lockdown, Australians Have Forgotten Where Freedom Comes From

31 August 2021

3.4 MINS

Freedom is precious. But under lockdown, too many Australians have forgotten the meaning of liberty; the real definition of freedom. In truth, freedom comes from God, not government.

In New South Wales, all eyes were on Premier Gladys Berejiklian last Thursday when she announced an easing of restrictions for Sydney residents who have been fully vaccinated, starting mid-September.

Many expressed dismay at how small the changes would be: they include the ability to gather in groups of up to five in one’s local LGA (local government area) or within 5 km of home; and in LGAs under stricter lockdown, an additional hour of recreation outside in addition to the existing one-hour limit.

We Have Forgotten the Definition of Freedom

Arguably, however, this is all displaced disappointment. What Australians should be reflecting on is just how comprehensively we have forgotten where freedom comes from.

In advance of Berejiklian’s announcement, Sky News teased that she would “give at least one freedom” to those fully vaccinated. It seems that few have stopped to ask if freedoms are, in fact, something that can be “given out” by those we have elected.

Thursday afternoon, Berejiklian herself tweeted, “you will have additional freedoms” in September if you come forward for vaccination. Since when is any freedom “additional”? Additional to what?

NSW Health echoed the same refrain on Twitter. People with two doses of the vaccine “will be allowed more freedoms” next month, they wrote.

Unquestioning, major media outlets borrowed the same language. “New freedoms granted”, announced the Sydney Morning Herald. Residents “given new freedoms”, reported Nine News Sydney.

The Original Meaning of Liberty

Ask almost any historian or political philosopher about the origins of liberty in the Western tradition, and they will tell you that freedom is not a thing to be withheld or dispensed by rulers. It is a sacred gift of nature and God, one which constitutional governments are bound to protect.

“Freedom is not a gift bestowed upon us by other men, but a right that belongs to us by the laws of God and nature,” wrote American Founding Father Benjamin Franklin. “The God who gave us life, gave us liberty at the same time; the hand of force may destroy, but cannot disjoin them,” mused Thomas Jefferson. “Liberty must at all hazards be supported. We have a right to it, derived from our Maker,” warned John Adams. This is the definition of liberty.

Not every founder of a Western liberal democracy believed in God, to be sure. But they invoked the language of God in recognition that human freedoms are a sacred, transcendent fact of the universe. They are an inseparable birthright of every human being.

America’s founders eventually put their heads together and, in 1776, crafted one of the most influential documents in history, the Declaration of Independence. “We hold these truths to be self-evident,” they wrote, “that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”

Recovering the Definition of Liberty as Lockdowns End

Is it pedantic to compare Gladys to the towering greats of the Western tradition? Perhaps. But language matters. Arguably, the language of freedom matters all the more after eighteen months of its interruption.

Australia does not have a Bill of Rights like the United States, but our Constitution does guarantee a range of freedoms, and others have been well established through case law since Federation. Moreover, Australia is a signatory to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights — the standard-bearer of human liberty recognised globally.

Among the multitude of the Declaration’s guarantees are “the right to freedom of movement and residence within the borders of each state” and “the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country” (Article 13); the right “to manifest [one’s] religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance (Article 18); and “the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association” (Article 20).

The suspension of these freedoms has been possible over the last 18 months only because of a national Biosecurity Emergency Declaration announced at the beginning of 2020 and various states of emergency and public health orders declared by Australia’s states and territories.

Night after night, Australians have become accustomed to listening to politicians and health bureaucrats offer the latest diktat on masks, gathering sizes, border closures and the rest. It hasn’t taken long for the average Australian to forget that in normal circumstances, any such laws would have to pass muster through two chambers of a parliament and be signed off by a governor.

Australians and the True Meaning of Freedom

In this precious window of time, as Australia regains its sense of normality and returns to regular constitutional governance, the language of freedom is of utmost importance. The future of our liberty depends on it — because if freedom doesn’t exist in the hearts of Australians, then it won’t long exist in our laws or practice either.

Premier Berejiklian is lifting restrictions for NSW residents. She is repealing mandates. She is even restoring freedom, perhaps.

But she is not granting freedom, giving it, allowing it, or adding to it. Such words don’t exist in the vocabulary of freedom. Because freedom has always been yours and mine, and it always will be — but only if we preserve it.

___

Originally published at MercatorNet.
Photo by Simon Maage on Unsplash.

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One Comment

  1. 3bdbf91dd593c2005f263fe434e1cf8e56bead1677dcad950a349d5bdf70ac8a?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Sylvia Huxham 1 September 2021 at 5:26 am - Reply

    Wow! You communicated the message of freedom so concisely and authoritatively Thanks Kurt ! Every generation -young and old –needs to embrace the principles here-and realign our thinking with The Truth.

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