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Last Sunday, 60 Minutes featured tyrannical German prosecutors boasting about persecuting private citizens who made comments that officialdom disapproved. Three prosecutors explained how the government was entitled to launch pre-dawn raids and lock up individuals who criticized politicians, complained about immigrant crime waves, or otherwise crossed the latest revised boundary lines of acceptable thoughts.
In a craven slant that would have cheered any mid-twentieth century European dictator, 60 Minutes glorified the crackdown: "Germany is trying to bring some civility to the world wide web by policing it in a way most Americans could never imagine in an effort to protect discourse." Nothing "protects discourse" like a jackboot kick aside the head of someone who insulted a German politician on Facebook, right? Mocking German leaders is punished like heresy was punished 500 years ago—though no one has been publicly torched yet.
Do the priggish German prosecutors realize that they are the latest incarnation of nineteenth-century German philosopher G. W. F. Hegel? Hegel declared: "Men are as foolish as to forget, in their enthusiasm for liberty of conscience and political freedom, the truth which lies in power." Hegel bluntly equated government and truth: "For Truth is the Unity of the universal and subjective Will; and the Universal is to be found in the State, in its laws, its universal and rational arrangements." Hegel probably did more to propel modern totalitarianism than perhaps any other philosopher.