Neither King Nor Mob
INTRODUCTION
Neither King Nor Mob
I first encountered American politics as an argument, not a spectacle.
At fifteen, I read The Federalist Papers and the Anti-Federalist responses. I didn’t know then that I was being inducted into the oldest debate in the republic: whether liberty dies from chaos or from control. Hamilton feared disorder. Brutus feared tyranny. Both feared human nature. Both were right.
What struck me even then was not how different they were, but how similar. Each side believed the other would destroy the nation. Each side spoke in moral urgency. Each side thought compromise was dangerous. Two hundred and fifty years later, we use better microphones, but we say the same things.
My parents were Democrats who became Reagan voters after Jimmy Carter. My mother listened to Rush Limbaugh in the kitchen. I later became a libertarian, joined the Free State Project, and eventually drifted into what I now call the “leave me alone” branch of political thought. I voted for Republicans, Libertarians, and once, reluctantly, for Donald Trump—whom I disliked even as I marked the ballot.
That list of votes is not a contradiction. It is a record of a citizen trying to preserve a principle while the language of politics kept changing around him.
This book is not an argument for a party. It is an argument for a way of thinking that once defined American political life and now seems almost extinct: the belief that law should be neutral, power should be limited, speech should be free, and citizens should be treated as adults rather than moral projects.
The Permanent Emergency
Every generation believes it is living through the most dangerous moment in history. This is not arrogance; it is biology. Fear sharpens memory. Crisis simplifies stories. When politics becomes a permanent emergency, nuance becomes treason and doubt becomes cowardice.
Today, we are told that everything is existential: elections, words, borders, opinions, even jokes. The left warns of fascism. The right warns of invasion. Both claim moral necessity. Both demand loyalty. Both insist that the rules must bend for the sake of survival.
This is not new. Abraham Lincoln suspended habeas corpus. Woodrow Wilson jailed dissenters. Franklin Roosevelt interned citizens. George W. Bush built a surveillance state. Barack Obama expanded it. Donald Trump personalized power. Joe Biden moralized bureaucracy.
Different faces. Same logic: the crisis justifies the exception.
The founders anticipated this. James Madison warned that faction would be the greatest threat to liberty—not foreign enemies, but domestic certainty. A faction, he wrote, is any group “united and actuated by some common impulse of passion…adverse to the rights of other citizens.”
In other words, when politics becomes about moral identity instead of shared rules, liberty becomes collateral damage.
Immigration as a Moral Battlefield
Few issues reveal this transformation more clearly than immigration.
Once, it was a policy debate: how many, how fast, under what rules. Now it is a moral theater. One side speaks only of compassion. The other speaks only of threat. The human being disappears into the symbol.
In this new language, even legal categories become taboo. The phrase “criminal alien” is treated as a slur rather than a legal description. Enforcement becomes cruelty. Mercy becomes lawlessness. Every position is interpreted as hatred or betrayal.
Yet some of the most uncomfortable voices in this debate come not from native-born Americans, but from Black immigrants who followed the rules, waited years, and sacrificed to enter legally. They do not oppose immigration. They oppose erasing the meaning of legality. They ask a simple question: What was the point of doing it right?
That question cannot be answered with slogans. It requires a political philosophy capable of holding two truths at once: human dignity and rule of law. We once had such a language. We lost it.
Outrage as Industry
Modern politics does not merely exploit fear. It depends on it.
Rush Limbaugh pioneered the monetization of outrage. Cable news refined it. Social media perfected it. Algorithms learned that anger travels farther than reason and loyalty lasts longer than curiosity. Today, political conflict is not a failure of the system; it is the system.
Both parties need enemies. Both need emergencies. Both need moral absolutes. A calm citizen is a bad customer.
This is why moderation feels invisible. The middle has no merchandise. There is no market for “I’m uncertain.” There is no applause for “both sides might be wrong.” Tribalism pays better than thinking.
What emerges is a politics that looks religious: saints and sinners, heresy and orthodoxy, excommunication and conversion narratives. We no longer argue to persuade. We argue to signal belonging.
The Orphaned Philosophy
Classical liberalism—once the dominant American instinct—has become politically homeless.
It believed:
The law should be impersonal.
Power should be restrained.
Speech should be free.
Citizens should be responsible.
The state should be limited.
Differences should be tolerated.
This philosophy is now attacked from both directions. The right distrusts liberty when it threatens order. The left distrusts liberty when it threatens justice. Both distrust neutrality. Both believe power must be wielded for moral ends.
The “leave me alone” citizen is therefore suspect to all tribes. He is accused of indifference when he is actually defending boundaries: between state and citizen, between law and emotion, between disagreement and evil.
How to Stay Sane Without a Tribe
This book is not a manifesto. It is a diagnosis and a survival guide.
It explores:
Why “leave me alone” keeps resurfacing in history.
How immigration became a moral war instead of a policy question.
Why outrage now fuels both parties.
How a citizen can remain humane, rational, and free in a culture that rewards hysteria.
It does not pretend neutrality is easy. It is not. Independence is lonely. Skepticism is tiring. But it is the only posture that preserves both liberty and decency.
To reject the mob is not to reject morality. It is to insist that morality must be lived by individuals, not enforced by crusades.
Neither King Nor Mob
The American experiment was never about perfection. It was about restraint: restraining rulers, restraining majorities, restraining certainty itself.
We are now tempted by two ancient solutions:
The strongman who promises order.
The crowd who promises righteousness.
Both destroy liberty in different ways.
This book argues for a third path: the old one. The path of law over passion, humility over certainty, and liberty over fear. Not because it is fashionable, but because it is necessary.
I do not trust mobs.
I do not trust kings.
I trust rules, neighbors, and the quiet dignity of being left alone.
That faith is not radical. It is American.
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