TGIF:
Is Edward Snowden a Lawbreaker?
by Sheldon Richman June 28, 2013
Most people believe that Edward Snowden, who has confirmed that the U.S. government spies on us, broke the law. Even many of his defenders concede this.
While in one sense the statement “Snowden broke the law” may be trivially true, in another, deeper sense it is untrue. He may have violated the terms of legislation passed by Congress and signed by a president (criminal intent would have to be proved), but a venerable line of thought says legislation is not the same thing as law. (F.A. Hayek drew the distinction, obviously, in Law, Legislation, and Liberty, volume 1: “Unlike law itself, which has never been ‘invented’ in the same sense, the invention of legislation came relatively late in the history of mankind.”) Legislation may reflect the law, but it may also contradict it. In this line of thought, which dates back to antiquity, “law” refers to natural law. Any legislative product that conflicts with the natural law, so this philosophical tradition holds, is no law at all.
Auburn University philosopher Roderick Long points out that the principle lex injusta non est lex -- an unjust law is not a law --
- was once, and indeed for over two millennia, the dominant position in
western philosophy of law.… This doctrine was upheld by Socrates, Plato,
and Xenophon, by the Stoics and by Cicero, by Augustine and Aquinas, and
by Blackstone as well. The traditional idea was that law must be
distinguished from mere force by its authority, and that nothing unjust
could have genuine authority. [“Inside and Outside Spooner’s
Jurisprudence”; link will download an unpublished paper in Word
format.]
In 1882 Spooner defined natural law as “the science of justice” discoverable by reason:
- the science of all human rights; of all a man’s rights of person and
property; of all his rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness.
- It is the science which alone can tell any man what he can, and cannot, do; what he can, and cannot, have; what he can, and cannot, say, without infringing the rights of any other person.
- It is the science of peace; and the only science of peace; since it is the science which alone can tell us on what conditions mankind can live in peace, or ought to live in peace, with each other.
- It is the science which alone can tell any man what he can, and cannot, do; what he can, and cannot, have; what he can, and cannot, say, without infringing the rights of any other person.
- Let me then remind you that justice is an immutable, natural
principle; and not anything that can be made, unmade, or altered by any
human power.
- It is also a subject of science, and is to be learned, like mathematics, or any other science. It does not derive its authority from the commands, will, pleasure, or discretion of any possible combination of men, whether calling themselves a government, or by any other name.
- It is also, at all times, and in all places, the supreme law. And being everywhere and always the supreme law, it is necessarily everywhere and always the only law.
- It is also a subject of science, and is to be learned, like mathematics, or any other science. It does not derive its authority from the commands, will, pleasure, or discretion of any possible combination of men, whether calling themselves a government, or by any other name.
- Lawmakers, as they call themselves, can add nothing to it, nor take
anything from it. Therefore all their laws, as they call them, that is,
all the laws of their own making, have no color of authority or
obligation. It is a falsehood to call them laws; for there is nothing in
them that either creates men’s duties or rights, or enlightens them as to
their duties or rights. There is consequently nothing binding or
obligatory about them. And nobody is bound to take the least notice of
them, unless it be to trample them under foot, as usurpations.
And if perchance Congress should pass a law that coincides with the natural law?
- If they command men to do justice, they add nothing to men’s
obligation to do it, or to any man’s right to enforce it. They are
therefore mere idle wind, such as would be commands to consider the day
as day, and the night as night.
- If they command or license any man to do injustice, they are criminal
on their face. If they command any man to do anything which justice does
not require him to do, they are simple, naked usurpations and tyrannies.
If they forbid any man to do anything, which justice could permit him to
do, they are criminal invasions of his natural and rightful liberty. In
whatever light, therefore, they are viewed, they are utterly destitute of
everything like authority or obligation. They are all necessarily either
the impudent, fraudulent, and criminal usurpations of tyrants, robbers,
and murderers, or the senseless work of ignorant or thoughtless men, who
do not know, or certainly do not realize, what they are doing.…
- It is intrinsically just as false, absurd, ludicrous, and ridiculous to say that lawmakers, so-called, can invent and make any laws, of their own, authoritatively fixing, or declaring, the rights of individuals, or that shall be in any manner authoritative or obligatory upon individuals, or that individuals may rightfully be compelled to obey, as it would be to say that they can invent and make such mathematics, chemistry, physiology, or other sciences, as they see fit, and rightfully compel individuals to conform all their actions to them, instead of conforming them to the mathematics, chemistry, physiology, or other sciences of nature.
- It is intrinsically just as false, absurd, ludicrous, and ridiculous to say that lawmakers, so-called, can invent and make any laws, of their own, authoritatively fixing, or declaring, the rights of individuals, or that shall be in any manner authoritative or obligatory upon individuals, or that individuals may rightfully be compelled to obey, as it would be to say that they can invent and make such mathematics, chemistry, physiology, or other sciences, as they see fit, and rightfully compel individuals to conform all their actions to them, instead of conforming them to the mathematics, chemistry, physiology, or other sciences of nature.
Snowden should be left free, and those responsible for the spy programs should face justice.
http://fff.org/explore-freedom/article/tgif-is-edward-snowden-a-lawbreaker/ --
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