Morpheus Proposal PoLL 2

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The Morpheus Proposal

by Jim Davidson

Papers of the Libertarian Left, #2


Papers of the Libertarian Left is a series of writings by members of the Alliance (ALL). The Alliance of
the Libertarian Left is a multi-tendency coalition of mutualists, agorists, voluntaryists, geolibertarians,
left-Rothbardians, green libertarians, dialectical anarchists, radical minarchists, and others on the
libertarian left, united by an opposition to statism and militarism, to cultural intolerance (including
sexism, racism, and homophobia), and to the prevailing corporatist capitalism falsely called a free
market; as well as by an emphasis on education, direct action, and building alternative institutions,
rather than on electoral politics, as our chief strategy for achieving liberation. More information is
available at http://www.all-left.net.

http://PapersOfTheLibertarianLeft.wordpress.com
The Morpheus Proposal
by Jim Davidson
When we first meet her, the character Trinity is in a room numbered 303.
Throughout the film, "The Matrix"1 there is a delightful motif of numbers. A
little later, we meet the character "Neo" who, we are told is "the one."
Obviously, Neo is an anagram of "one." We meet him for the first time in his
room, 101.

Numbers play a key role in a society in which people are not merely cogs in
a wheel, but a "human resource" in the most barbaric sense of the term.
Certain key characters are identified with numbers, Trinity - three, Neo - one,
Cipher - zero.

"Let me give you a piece of advice: be honest. He knows more than you can
imagine," says Trinity at a critical juncture in the film. As with much of the
other advice throughout the film, this advice proves to be excellent. Trinity
gives Neo this advice as they stand together outside a door, behind which is the man Neo has come to
meet.

Neo enters the room. Standing against the windows opposite the door is a tall, bald, black man in a long
leather coat. After introducing himself as Morpheus, he says, "I imagine that right now you're feeling a
bit like Alice…tumbling down the rabbit hole? I can see it in your eyes. You have the look of a man
who accepts what he sees because he's expecting to wake up. Ironically, this is not far from the truth."

There is further irony in the fact that in Ovid's Metamorphoses, the character Morpheus was the deity
responsible for sleep, dreams, and the forms that dreamers see. The Morpheus of "The Matrix" is
responsible for helping dreamers wake up and see the forms of reality.

Morpheus continues, "Let me tell you why you're here. You're here because you know something. What
you know you can't explain. But you feel it. You've felt it your entire life. That there's something wrong
with the world. You don't know what it is, but it's there. Like a splinter in your mind, driving you mad.
It is this feeling that has brought you to me. Do you know what I'm talking about?"

With a voice full of uncertainty, Neo asks, "The Matrix?"

"Do you want to know what it is?" Morpheus inquires very deliberately.

At a nod from Neo, Morpheus continues, "The matrix is everywhere. It is all around us. Even now, in
this very room. You can see it when you look out your window or when you turn on your television.
1 "The Matrix" is a film starring Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne, Carrie-Anne Moss, Hugo Weaving and Joe
Pantoliano, written and directed by Andy Wachowski and Larry Wachowski, executive producers Barrie Osborne,
Andrew Mason, Andy Wachowski, Larry Wachowski, Erwin Stoff, and Bruce Berman. It is a Silver Pictures production
produced by Joel Silver and presented by Warner Brothers in association with Village Roadshow Pictures - Groucho II
Film Partnership. More information on The Matrix film trilogy can be found at http://www.whatisthematrix.com/ The
soundtrack album features songs by Ramstein, Rage Against the Machine, Deftones, Prodigy, Rob Zombie, and Marilyn
Manson. The program content, artwork, and photography is copyright © 1999 Warner Brothers. The use of quotes from
the film dialog in this essay is fair use for the purpose of film review and film analysis.
You can feel it when you go to work, when you go to church, when you pay your taxes. It is the world
that has been pulled over your eyes to blind you from the truth."

"What truth?" asks Neo.

"That you are a slave, Neo. Like everyone else you were born into bondage, born into a prison that you
cannot smell or taste or touch. A prison for your mind.

"Unfortunately, no one can be told what the Matrix is. You have to see it for yourself.

"This is your last chance. After this, there is no turning back.

"You take the blue pill. The story ends. You wake up in your bed and believe…whatever you want to
believe.

"You take the red pill. You stay in Wonderland and I show you how deep the rabbit hole goes.

"Remember. All I'm offering is the truth. Nothing more."

As everyone who has seen the film "The Matrix" quoted above recalls, Neo chooses the red pill. "The
Matrix" is available for viewing on VHS or DVD. You should buy this film, you should watch it, and
you should understand it.

The sequels are considerably different, dwelling not at all on philosophy or background, and instead
presenting intense action sequences. The sequels are extremely satisfying as action and special effects
tours des forces, but do leave some issues unresolved. To understand the background and world in
which these films take place, you should buy "The Animatrix," on DVD, which includes a series of
animated short stories explaining not only what came before the first film, but also what comes
between "The Matrix" and its sequel "The Matrix Reloaded." We found the ending of "Matrix
Revolutions" in the theater a bit disappointing, but after reviewing it on DVD, much that was
unresolved seems more clear.

The matrix of the film may be thought of as a metaphor for another system, a system which is also
designed for control. It is designed for the benefit of those who operate the system, and it endeavors to
hide the truth that all of its subjects are slaves.

When I refer to this metaphor, I do not mean that the film was made as allegory
nor in some way to be limited to a certain interpretation nor for the characters in
the film to tell a parable. Rather, I refer to what JRR Tolkien called
"applicability" in his Foreword to The Fellowship of the Ring:

"I cordially dislike allegory in all its manifestations, and always have done so
since I grew old and wary enough to detect its presence. I much prefer history,
true or feigned, with its varied applicability to the thought and experience of
readers. I think that many confuse 'applicability' with allegory; but the one
resides in the freedom of the reader, and the other in the purposed domination of the author."
To understand this metaphor, we should examine a bit more of the dialog from the film. Reading this
dialog is no substitute for watching the film, and you should certainly go to great lengths to rent or buy
and watch this film. It is possibly the most interesting film of the last fifty years. It stands up to other
excellent films such as "Casablanca," "Grosse Pointe Blank," and the "Star Wars" serial as commentary
on the nature of political society.

What Is the Matrix?


"You wanted to know what the matrix is, Neo?

"You've been living in a dream world, Neo. This is the world as it exists today. Welcome to the desert
of the real.

"Throughout human history, we have been dependent on machines to survive. Fate, it seems, is not
without a sense of irony.

"The human body generates more bio-electricity than a 120 volt battery and over 25,000 BTUs of body
heat. Combined with a form of fusion the machines had found all the energy they would ever need.

"There are fields, Neo, endless fields where human beings are no longer born. We are grown. For the
longest time, I wouldn't believe it. And then I saw the fields with my own eyes, watched them liquefy
the dead so they could be fed intravenously to the living. And standing there, facing the pure horrifying
precision, I came to realize the obviousness of the truth.

"What is the Matrix?

"Control.

"The Matrix is a computer-generated dream world built to keep us under control in order to change a
human being into this. {Holds up battery}

"As long as the Matrix exists the human race will never be free."

The above quote comes from the Warner Home Video DVD, "The Matrix" by the Wachowski Brothers.
I've transcribed the actual lines as delivered by Laurence Fishburne, though the subtitles available on
the DVD are somewhat similar.

The average American makes $38,000 per year annual income. This figure is somewhat deceptive,
since it includes a large number of non-working persons, and fails to count the incomes of a wide array
of non-filing adults, children, and "illegal aliens" among others. Over the course of a forty to fifty year
career, the average American will make over $1.5 million in income. The government will obtain up to
38% of the income, and various other governmental systems will take a further 12% of income. Plus,
the funds the individual spends on rent, food, transportation, and other incidentals will be taxed as
income of others.

In other words, the system has found all the money it would ever need. Better still, the currency used in
all these exchanges will very likely not be free market money. Instead, it will in most instances prove to
be Federal Reserve Notes. This fiat money is allegedly legal tender, though there are no penalties for
refusing it. Redeemable for nothing, the Federal Reserve Note is a promise to pay - but only in further
Federal Reserve Notes. The banks which issue these notes are not a part of the Federal government, are
not constitutionally authorized entities, and they benefit from monetary inflation to a considerable
degree.

As Beardsley Ruml pointed out in the 1930s, with the ability to issue currency, the government has no
need to tax. It can print as much money as it would ever need. Therefore, in his view, the function of
taxes such as the income tax and the inheritance tax, is not to fund the government or provide for
constitutionally mandated functions. Instead, the function of these taxes, he wrote in his article for
Foreign Affairs magazine, is the redistribution of wealth. From whom? From those capable of
producing wealth.

To whom? To those unable or unwilling to produce wealth.

In other words, the tax system exists to plunder. It loots from the productive to provide salaries for
bureau-rats and payments to those unable or unwilling to work.

A similar scheme is the Social Security system. It loots from the productive to provide, not only for
those unable to work, but also for those who have "retired" without regard to whether they are poor.
The Social Security system has no "trust fund." Funds paid in currently are paid out immediately. There
is no investment of the funds. The entire system is a Ponzi scheme. As long as new investors are
compelled to pay into the system, and as long as more of them, or more productive ones, can be found,
the system can remain afloat. However, it is not moral.

The average person paying into the system as of 1998 when Forbes magazine did an analysis, makes
$35,000 per year. The average person receiving payments from the system makes $65,000 per year. At
that time, those receiving payments were estimated to get $70,000 or so more out of their Social
Security checks than they had ever paid in. However, those paying in were estimated to have as much
as a quarter million dollars less paid out "eventually" than they had paid in. Between the $250,000 in
lost payments and the $70,000 in excess receipts are one generation and $180,000 worth of bad
bureaucracy, per person.

Moreover, these optimistic figures are based on a scenario of continuing operations. Most Americans
under the age of 45 believe that they have a greater chance of being abducted by aliens than they do of
receiving a penny from Social Security. The system is bankrupt, it is unable to provide for the security
of those contributing to it, it provides payments to many who are wealthier than those being taxed, and
it is not ethical. It is theft, the same as all other taxes.

Do not be beguiled by the ideal of order. The average individual seeks useful order. He wants to be able
to conduct business with his neighbors and with complete strangers with a certain amount of
confidence. He prefers that the tall buildings in his neighborhood not be devastated by thugs who
hijack passenger jets. He prefers to stay far from wars so that his property is not looted or plundered.

In contrast to this useful order, this modicum of order, we have the surplus order imposed by the state.
The term "surplus order" appears in the book Powershift by Alvin and Heidi Toffler. It is an excellent
book which you should buy and read. Surplus order does not benefit the individual. It exists only for
the benefit of those who control the state. Surplus order consists of terrorizing all individuals
everywhere so they obey whatever dictates the rulers attempt to impose. It includes kicking in doors at
4 a.m., revoking passports, refusing travelers the opportunity to fly, tearing children away from their
screaming parents, and burning seven dozen Texans to death in their church, to name but a few of its
more dire consequences.

Free Your Mind


Morpheus continues, "You have to let it all go, Neo…fear…doubt and disbelief…. Free your mind!"

The advice is extremely good. You can do worse than follow this advice. Let go of fear, let go of doubt,
let go of disbelief. Don't be limited by what you've been told all your life about how the system is your
friend, how the government is necessary, how you are the beneficiary of its protection, its largesse, its
regulations. Understanding is the first step on the path to freedom. Free your mind and everything else
follows.

How? How can you free your mind from a lifetime of conditioning? By refusing to fear, refusing to be
beguiled, refusing to be taken in. Strip away the illusions and realize your own potential.

Lesson of the Other Potentials


"Do not try to bend the spoon," says the young boy. "That's impossible. Only try to realize the truth."

"What truth?" asks Neo.

"There is no spoon."

Doubtfully, Neo replies, "There is no spoon?" He can clearly see a spoon in his hand.

"Then you'll see that it is not the spoon that bends; it is only yourself."

Later in the film, Neo repeats the words "there is no spoon" while shooting at an elevator cable. He
obtains the results he desires.

I submit that there is no government. "The government" is an illusion, sometimes consensual. In fact,
there are only individuals. Individuals in "the government" get away with murder, theft, lies, deceit,
fraud, violence, viciousness, and betrayal. Were those individuals without governmental sanction, they
would be merely bullies, killers, and thieves. They would deserve no greater respect and no swifter
punishment. As "the government" however, they are understood to be immune from prosecution,
immune from lawsuits, immune from criticism. Even their own treason2 against the constitution is
considered acceptable, whereas it is considered treasonous to accuse them of treason.

About 155 years ago, Henry David Thoreau composed a speech called "On Civil Disobedience." In that
speech, which is available here: http://www.houstonspacesociety.org/civil.html he said that the
government had not done anything. It had not settled the West. It had not educated the people. It had
not opened new avenues of trade and commerce. All that had ever been done was done by individuals.

2 "Treason doth never prosper. What's the reason?


For if it prosper, none dare call it treason." - Sir John Harrington, 1561-1612
He pointed out that if trade and commerce were not made of a substance akin to India rubber, it would
not be able to bounce over all the obstacles constantly put in its path by government. Indeed, if
legislators, he said, were tried and punished for the results they produced, rather than understood for
their intentions, they would be equated with the miscreants who put obstructions on railroad tracks.

Moreover, the government was simply a tradition, passing itself down from generation to generation. It
was nothing more than tradition - the special treatment of those in the government nothing but a habit.
He also wrote, though I believe mistakenly, that the government could be bent to the will of one man,
and (correctly, in my view) was therefore of less consequence than one man.

However, if there is no government, then what is bent? Not the government, but the individual. If you
attempt to bend the government to your will, then you will find that it is you who bends.

In this particular fashion, I believe, all the efforts of Libertarian Party members, Republicans,
Democrats, and others are made pointless. You cannot reform the government. There is no government
for you to reform. You cannot make the government better. There is no government to improve. You
cannot make the government obey the constitution. There is no government to be made obedient.

Your efforts to bend the government only result in you being bent. You may believe that you can stick
to your guns, remain true to your principles, and bend the government. However, you will find that you
are bent in the process, whether corrupted or made weary and stooped over. If you remain, as some
noteworthy individuals such as Dr. Ron Paul, unbendable, you will still not find the government bent to
your will. Why not? Because there is no government.

Lesson of the Agent


"Do you hear that Mr. Anderson?" asks Agent Smith. "It is the sound of inevitability. It is the sound of
your death."

The sound folio is of a screeching subway train. Why is a train so interesting as the metaphor for
inevitability? Those of you readers who have ever been arrested may know why. It is often used by the
agents of government or "law enforcement" to intimidate suspects, perpetrators, witnesses, and others.

The government agent would say that there is a train coming. You can either get on it, or get run over
by it. The train is too powerful to stop. You can't stop it. So, are you going to get on it? This type of
false reasoning is used to coerce plea bargains, guilty pleas, false testimony, and a host of other ills.
Don't be taken in.

In his confrontation with Agent Smith, Neo proves the train is not the sound of his death. His death
comes, but is hardly inevitable. Miraculously, Neo recovers from death with the metaphorical love of a
good woman. He recovers from death because that isn't real, either.

Centuries ago, Ben Franklin wrote that three things are inevitable: the weather, death, and taxes. I
disagree on all three counts. I'm for weather control, life extension, and free markets.

Another Lesson about Agents


Earlier in the film, we are introduced to a crowd of people walking down the street. Morpheus and Neo
seem to be wading through them, against the stream as it were. They are ordinary people from every
walk of life -- teachers, lawyers, tradesmen. Most of them have become so inured to the system they
are not ready to be unplugged, says Morpheus.

A beautiful woman in a red dress walks by, distracting Neo. Morpheus asks if Neo is still listening, or
looking at the woman in the red dress. Neo, flustered, turns toward Morpheus who tells him to look
again.

Suddenly, behind Neo, there is an Agent holding a gun at him. Morpheus has the simulation frozen.

He points out that anyone still hard-wired into the system is a potential enemy. Anyone in that
condition can be turned into an Agent at a moment's notice.

Indeed, subsequently, while Neo is fleeing from Agent Smith and others, he races down a hallway.
Then he bursts into an apartment where we see two old ladies. As he rushes to the back door, we see
one old lady on the sofa, another in the kitchen chopping vegetables. As he reaches the back door,
THUNK! A knife is embedded into the door jam. He turns back and sees the second old lady has
become an Agent in just the split second since we first saw her. He continues to flee.

By analogy, this ability of Agents to corrupt any individual who is "still hardwired into the system" is
much like the ability of government agents to corrupt individuals who are still trying to obey the
government. If you are filing taxes, you are certainly making errors. Obedience to the law is no excuse,
for the laws are so convoluted, so byzantine, so hard to follow that you must inevitably break many of
them, even in the process of scrupulously obeying others.

In her novel Atlas Shrugged author Ayn Rand has a character point out that the purpose of these laws is
not to keep the people honest and law-abiding, but to make them all guilty. Guilty of something. By
attempting to obey the law, by filing taxes and participating in the process, by leaving your children in
public school or your family at a known address, you leave yourself vulnerable to coercion and control.
Many individuals have been turned into informants on the strength of the threats to their way of life,
their families, or their health. If you are dependent upon the good will of agents of government for your
survival or your lifestyle, you may become very disappointed when you learn that those agents have no
good will. Indeed, they are not agents of the properly constituted government, which is nowhere to be
found.

Don't rely upon the good will of others, wrote Robert Heinlein. After all, some men don't have a good
side. If, instead, you find a way to engage their self interest, you are much better off.

The Neo Proposal


"I know you're out there," says Neo. "I can feel you now. I know that you're afraid. You're afraid of us.

"You're afraid of change."

I think these statements are very well delivered. The script writers were brilliant in coming up with
much of this dialog. The system is afraid of change. The system is terrified right now of the Internet.
The ability to bypass the mainstream media and get information without their approval or knowledge is
frightening to those who believe in a hydraulic empire of information.
George Carlin points out that we call the mainstream a stream because it is far too shallow to be a river.

Neo continues, "I don't know the future. I didn't come here to tell you how this is going to end. I came
here to tell you how it's going to begin. I'm going to hang up this phone and then I'm going to show
these people what you don't want them to see. I'm going to show them a world without you. A world
without rules and controls, without borders or boundaries. A world where anything is possible."

Indeed, that is the opportunity before us. We have the opportunity to break free from the matrix of
control, from the system. We have the opportunity to live in a world without government, without
rulers. We have the opportunity to have no borders, no boundaries, no rule except self-rule, no control
except self-control, where anything is possible. Which world would you rather have?

Many years ago, I wrote a couplet as part of the Anthem of the Ama-Gi.
"I don't believe in predestined fate
The future is what we choose to create."

It isn't up to me to create the future for you. Nor is it up to me to free your mind. "I can only show you
the door, you are the one who has to walk through it," says Morpheus.

I cannot free you. You must free yourself.

Once you've asked yourself which world you'd rather have, and once you've taken time to watch this
film "The Matrix" I urge you to buy "The Matrix Reloaded" which proves to be as excellent a film as
the first, though of a slightly different genre. Not only is "The Matrix" a trilogy, but also the
Wachowski Brothers have come up with a video game "Enter the Matrix" and a set of animated short
films "The Animatrix" which provide additional exposition and information. Moreover, the third film
leaves enough unresolved themes and ideas to make more films conceivable. After all, "the one" has
already been reborn in the matrix six times, so he may come again.
Jim Davidson is a sovereign individual, entrepreneur, and author. He is currently involved in several
development stage companies and two operating companies. In addition to The Indomitus Report, Jim
is writing a book on new countries and another on privacy.

As a sovereign individual, Jim knows that it is resolution and determination which separate sovereign
from servant. In the words of Étienne de la Boétie, "Resolve to serve no more, and you are at once
freed. I do not ask that you place hands upon the tyrant to topple him over, 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 into pieces."
As an entrepreneur, Jim has been involved in dozens of start-up ventures in industries ranging from
banking, aerospace, real estate, software, and e-commerce to space travel, data havens, and longevity
research. He has worked in companies founded by others and in companies of his own creation.
Entrepreneurs know that many companies end in failure. It is the fear of failure which prevents a great
many people from ever being entrepreneurs or sovereign.
As an author, Jim has written essays, articles, poetry, fiction, and is developing a book on the new
country trend. Words about him have appeared in Time magazine, The New York Times, The Wall Street
Journal, and other major publications. Words by him have appeared in The Libertarian Enterprise,
Final Frontier magazine, Space News, The Houston Post, The Houston Chronicle, and other
publications. An earlier book, The Atlantis Papers was published in 1994 and is available from After
Dark Publications.
copy and distribute

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