Near 500 Years later, La Boétie still fuels revolt

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"Resolve to serve no more, and you are at once freed."

With those words, and a brief, brilliant legal career, Étienne de la Boétie set the stage for centuries of resistance to tyranny. That resistance played out just down the street in Nashua, New Hampshire, even as freedom lovers were announcing an award for the long-dead "freedom philosopher."

"I do not ask that you place hands upon the tyrant to topple him over," he wrote, "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."

These legendary phrases have repeatedly reached out from the 16th century and inspired revolts of nearly every kind. Today, they inspired another milestone for the French writer.

"The Politics of Obedience is certainly worthy of the honor it receives," says Jeremy Furbish of FreedomBookClub.com

Furbish, or more accurately the folks who use his website, just awarded La Boétie's classic "Book of the Year" for 2009. The prize goes to books which rank the highest on surveys conducted throughout the year at FreedomBookClub.com.

As talk show host Gardner Goldsmith announced this award at the New Hampshire Liberty Forum...he reminded his audience that two of their number were missing, having just been arrested a few miles away. They were protesting the seizure of a pot smoker, using La Boétie's formula of peaceful non-cooperation. Both were released that night.

"The Politics of Obedience: the Discourse of Voluntary Servitude," was written while La Boétie was a law student at the University of Orleans. It was a free-thinking hot spot of its time. His teacher was branded a heretic and died at the stake during a Huguenot rebellion in 1559.

"The Politics of Obedience, in its very timelessness, made the work ever available to be applied," continues Furbish. La Boétie was heavily influential in the Huguenot uprisings in later 16th century
France and the enlightenment of the 18th and 19th centuries. Furbish believes he had a profound impact on Gandhi as well.

Other books vanquished but honored in this contest:

Fela: The Life and Times of an African Musical Icon, by Michael E. Veal
What Has Government Done to Our Money, and the Case for a 100 Percent Gold Dollar, by Murray N. Rothbard
I Must Speak Out: The Best of the Voluntaryist, by Carl Watner
The Market for Liberty, by Linda and Morris Tannehill
Live Free of Die: Essays on Liberty by New Hampshire Libertarians by Gardner Goldsmith and Paul Goldsmith
Alongside Night, by J. Neil Schulman
Against Intellectual Monopoly, by David K. Levine and Michele Boldrin
Drop Dead Gorgeous, by Wayne Simmons
Songs of Freedom: Tales from the Revolution, by Darryl W. Perry, Jim
Davidson, Tom Woods, Voltairine de Cleyre (and more)
End the Fed, by Ron Paul
Our Enemy, The State, by Albert Jay Nock

Ultimately La Boétie's , seemingly ancient efforts outshone all these prodigies in the contest. He was a mighty butterfly, whose wing-flapping half-a-millennium in the past...continues to trigger hurricanes of noncooperation.

For more information:
http://FreedomBookClub.com

Diggable at:
http://digg.com/political_opinion/Near_500_Years_later_La_Bo...

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thanks for the kind words

thanks for the kind words guys

The Revolution is Now Televised
http://RidleyReport.com

There is a video version of

There is a video version of this story up now featuring a guest appearance by Rothbard himself!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uPWS1pcUyY

The Revolution is Now Televised
http://RidleyReport.com

RidleyReport you

do such great videos thanks, for all your hard work and efforts. We are watching, listening and learning in Peace & Liberty.

Prepare & Share the Message of Freedom through Positive-Peaceful-Activism.

Thank you for posting this

it is very interesting and seems helpful for positive activism.

Prepare & Share the Message of Freedom through Positive-Peaceful-Activism.

The Market for Liberty, by Linda and Morris Tannehill

This one caught my eye. Around the world, freedom is popular. Any government of the future, will be the most successful government of the future, a government that truly attracts citizens seeking liberty
. . . liberty will prove to be more efficient in this networked, high touch, high tech world.
And better for human kind and all living things and creatures.
A country of respect, pride and humility is quality and effecient.

At a Sept. 19,1966, press conference in New York City, Dr. Timothy Leary famously commanded everyone on the planet to "Turn on, tune in and drop out."

And never forget, “Humans, despite our artistic pretensions, our sophistication and many accomplishments, owe the fact of our existence to a six-inch layer of topsoil and the fact that it rains.”