“A less publicized case of arrogant disregard for people occurred in Carmel Valley, California, during the 2008 fires. Ivan Eberle, a well-known wildlife photographer, was commended for heroism in saving the Monterey Institute for Research Astronomy observation station on Chews Ridge from a raging wild fire. A few days after the fire, he was visited by six Monterey County Sheriffs and charged with the crimes of battering a firefighter and interfering with a firefighting crew in the line of duty.
Calling the charges “ironic” and “truly bizarre,” Eberle said he felt that his “constitutional rights were violated to an egregious degree.” To him, the charges filed by the fire department were in retaliation for his public criticism, as he had spread the word that the firefighters refused to help him save the observatory, which is also his home. To Eberle, the firefighters were acting with “willful negligence or dereliction of duty.”
Eberle believes the bogus charges stem from his quick actions to save the observatory. When a large tongue of flames raced toward propane tanks next to a grove of pines, he unrolled a fire hose from the facility’s hydrant and bumped into a sleep-deprived firefighter. Although the observatory is the only structure on Chews Ridge, Eberle single-handedly saved it. Nobody from the fire department would help. Similar to the theme of Fahrenheit 451, the firefighters seemed to have forgotten their primary purpose.
So how could such arrogant misconduct occur? Some have pointed to the consolidation of local volunteer fire departments with more formal, government-operated ones. Years earlier in 2001, the Valley Volunteers Inc. in Carmel Valley Village merged with a government fire department in the Mid-Valley area. The merger quickly turned sour. In 2004, the volunteer fire department circulated a petition for “detachment,” arguing that their privately raised million-dollar fund had been squandered and that the two groups had different philosophies on how to operate a fire department. Although explicitly told that a detachment could easily be arranged if either side found the merger unsatisfactory, the LAFCO government agency in charge of such disputes refused to allow the separation. Many of the citizen firefighter quit the department, saying that they were being “treated as subordinates” by the new consolidated fire department.
The most dangerous threat from Vichy liberals is that they do not trust ordinary people to do the right thing. Instead, government control and bureaucracy are substituted to run society. Politics and officiality overshadow anything that citizens attempt to do, preventing society from self-organizing into a system to which people are willing to dedicate valuable time and money. Unfortunately, as consolidation grows, so does an attitude that only government can solve problems, leaving the citizenry defenseless and dependant. Obviously, government has gotten too big for it britches, and its arrogance is showing through….”
“The Arrogant Self-righteousness of Vichy Liberals,”
L.K. Samuels, Libertarian Perspectives, Dec. 28, 2008
This reminds me of seat-belt laws. And FDA laws. And euthanasia and suicide laws. Etc. We should add a “Right to (potentially) hurt oneself” into the constitution — which /should/ have been implied by “the right to life”, but clearly isn’t obvious enough.
(Though that would probably conflict a little with our cloudy “right to health care”.)