For a New Liberty by Murray N. Rothbard part 1
For a New Liberty: page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19
3 The State
The State as Aggressor
THE CENTRAL THRUST of libertarian thought, then, is to oppose any and
all aggression against the property rights of individuals in their own persons and in the
material objects they have voluntarily acquired. While individual and gangs of criminals
are of course opposed, there is nothing unique here to the libertarian creed, since
almost all persons and schools of thought oppose the exercise of random violence against
persons and property.
There is, however, a difference of emphasis on the part of
libertarians even in this universally accepted area of defending people against crime. In
the libertarian society there would be no "district attorney" who prosecutes criminals in
the name of a nonexistent "society," even against the wishes of the victim of crime. The
victim would himself decide whether to press charges. Furthermore, as another side to the
same coin, in a libertarian world the victim would be able to press suit against a
wrongdoer without having to convince the same district attorney that he should proceed.
Moreover, in the system of criminal punishment in the libertarian world, the emphasis
would never be, as it is now, on "society's" jailing the criminal; the emphasis would
necessarily be on compelling the criminal to make restitution to the victim of his crime.
The present system, in which the victim is not recompensed but instead has to pay taxes
to support the incarceration of his own attacker?would be evident nonsense in a world
that focuses on the defense of property rights and therefore on the victim of crime.
Furthermore, while most libertarians are not pacifists, they would
not join the present system in interfering with people's right to be
pacifists. Thus, suppose that Jones, a pacifist, is aggressed against by Smith, a
criminal. If Jones, as the result of his beliefs, is against defending himself by the use
of violence and is therefore opposed to any prosecution of crime, then Jones will simply
fail to prosecute, and that will be the end of it. There will be no governmental
machinery that pursues and tries criminals even against the wishes of the victim.
But the critical difference between libertarians and other people is
not in the area of private crime; the critical difference is their view of the role of
the State?the government. For libertarians regard the State as the supreme, the eternal,
the best organized aggressor against the persons and property of the mass of the public.
All States everywhere, whether democratic, dictatorial, or monarchical, whether
red, white, blue, or brown,
The State! Always and ever the government and its rulers and
operators have been considered above the general moral law. The "Pentagon Papers"
are only one recent instance among innumerable instances in history of men, most of whom
are perfectly honorable in their private lives, who lie in their teeth before the public.
Why? For "reasons of State." Service to the State is supposed to excuse all actions that
would be considered immoral or criminal if committed by "private" citizens. The
distinctive feature of libertarians is that they coolly and uncompromisingly apply
the general moral law to people acting in their roles as members of the State apparatus.
Libertarians make no exceptions. For centuries, the State (or more strictly, individuals
acting in their roles as "members of the government") has cloaked its criminal activity
in high-sounding rhetoric. For centuries the State has committed mass murder and called
it "war"; then ennobled the mass slaughter that "war" involves. For centuries the State
has enslaved people into its armed battalions and called it "conscription" in the
"national service." For centuries the State has robbed people at bayonet point and called
it "taxation." In fact, if you wish to know how libertarians regard the State and any of
its acts, simply think of the State as a criminal band, and all of the libertarian
attitudes will logically fall into place.
Let us consider, for example, what it is that sharply distinguishes
government from all other organizations in society. Many political scientists and
sociologists have blurred this vital distinction, and refer to all organizations and
groups as hierarchical, structured, "governmental," etc. Left-wing anarchists, for
example, will oppose equally government and private organizations such as
corporations on the ground that each is equally "elitist" and "coercive." But the
"rightist" libertarian is not opposed to inequality, and his concept of "coercion"
applies only to the use of violence. The libertarian sees a crucial distinction between
government, whether central, state, or local, and all other institutions in society. Or
rather, two crucial distinctions. First, every other person or group receives its income
by voluntary payment: either by voluntary contribution or gift (such as the local
community chest or bridge club), or by voluntary purchase of its goods or
services on the market (i.e., grocery store owner, baseball player, steel manufacturer,
etc.). Only the government obtains its income by coercion and violence?i.e., by
the direct threat of confiscation or imprisonment if payment is not forthcoming.
This coerced levy is "taxation." A second distinction is that, apart from criminal
outlaws, only the government can use its funds to commit violence against its
own or any other subjects; only the government can prohibit pornography, compel a
religious observance, or put people in jail for selling goods at a higher price than the
government deems fit. Both distinctions, of course, can be summed up as: only
the government, in society, is empowered to aggress against the property rights of
its subjects, whether to extract revenue, to impose its moral code, or to kill those with
whom it disagrees. Furthermore, any and all governments, even the least despotic,
have always obtained the bulk of their income from the coercive taxing power. And
historically, by far the overwhelming portion of all enslavement and murder in the
history of the world have come from the hands of government. And since we have seen that
the central thrust of the libertarian is to oppose all aggression against the rights
of person and property, the libertarian necessarily opposes the institution of the State
as the inherent and overwhelmingly the most important enemy of those precious rights.
There is another reason why State aggression has been far more
important than private, a reason apart from the greater organization and
central mobilizing of resources that the rulers of the State can impose. The reason
is the absence of any check upon State depredation, a check that does exist when we have
to worry about muggers or the Mafia. To guard against private criminals we have been able
to turn to the State and its police; but who can guard us against the State itself? No
one. For another critical distinction of the State is that it compels the monopolization
of the service of protection; the State arrogates to itself a virtual monopoly of
violence and of ultimate decision-making in society. If we don't like the decisions of
the State courts, for example, there are no other agencies of protection to which we may
turn.
It is true that, in the United States, at least, we have a
constitution that imposes strict limits on some powers of government. But, as we have
discovered in the past century, no constitution can interpret or enforce itself; it must
be interpreted by men. And if the ultimate power to interpret a constitution is
given to the government's own Supreme Court, then the inevitable tendency is for the
Court to continue to place its imprimatur on ever-broader powers for its own government.
Furthermore, the highly touted "checks and balances" and "separation of powers"
in the American government are flimsy indeed, since in the final analysis all of these
divisions are part of the same government and are governed by the same set of rulers.
One of America's most brilliant political theorists, John C.
Calhoun, wrote prophetically of the inherent tendency of a State to break through the
limits of its written constitution:
A written constitution certainly has many and considerable
advantages, but it is a great mistake to suppose that the mere insertion of provisions to
restrict and limit the powers of the government, without investing those for whose
protection they are inserted with the means of enforcing their observance, will be
sufficient to prevent the major and dominant party from abusing its powers. Being the
party in possession of the government, they will . . . be in favor of the powers granted
by the constitution and opposed to the restrictions intended to limit them. As the major
and dominant parties, they will have no need of these restrictions for their
protection?.
The minor or weaker party on the contrary, would take the opposite
direction and regard them as essential to their protection against the dominant party?But
where there are no means by which they could compel the major party to observe the
restrictions, the only resort left them would be a strict construction of the
constitution?. To this the major party would oppose a liberal construction?one which
would give to the words of the grant the broadest meaning of which they were
susceptible. It would then be construction against construction?the one to contract and
the other to enlarge the powers of the government to the utmost. But of what possible
avail could the strict construction of the minor party be, against the liberal
interpretation of the major, when the one would have all the powers of the government to
carry its construction into effect and the other be deprived of all means of enforcing
its construction? In a contest so unequal, the result would not be doubtful. The party in
favor of the restrictions would be overpowered?. The end of the contest would be the
subversion of the constitution? the restrictions would ultimately be annulled and the
government be converted into one of unlimited powers.
Nor would the division of government into separate
and, as it regards each other, independent departments prevent this result . . . as each
and all the departments?and, of course, the entire government?would be under the
control of the numerical majority, it is too clear to require explanation that a
mere distribution of its powers among its agents or representatives could do little or
nothing to counteract its tendency to oppression and abuse of power.1
But why worry about the weakness of limits on governmental power?
Especially in a "democracy," in the phrase so often used by American liberals in their
heyday before the mid-1960s when doubts began to creep into the liberal utopia: "Are
we not the government?" In the phrase "we are the government," the useful
collective term "we" has enabled an ideological camouflage to be thrown over the naked
exploitative reality of political life. For if we truly are the
government, then anything a government does to an individual is not only just
and not tyrannical; it is also "voluntary" on the part of the individual concerned. If
the government has incurred a huge public debt which must be paid by taxing one group on
behalf of another, this reality of burden is conveniently obscured by blithely
saying that "we owe it to ourselves" (but who are the "we" and who the
"ourselves"?). If the government drafts a man, or even throws him into jail for dissident
opinions, then he is only "doing it to himself" and therefore nothing improper has
occurred. Under this reasoning, then, Jews murdered by the Nazi government were
not murdered; they must have "committed suicide," since they were the
government (which was democratically chosen), and therefore anything the government did
to them was only voluntary on their part. But there is no way out of such grotesqueries
for those supporters of government who see the State merely as a benevolent and voluntary
agent of the public.
And so we must conclude that "we" are not the government;
the government is not "us." The government does not in any accurate sense
"represent" the majority of the people, but even if it did, even if 90% of the people
decided to murder or enslave the, other 10%, this would still be murder and
slavery, and would not be voluntary suicide or enslavement on the part of the
oppressed minority. Crime is crime, aggression against rights is aggression, no
matter how many citizens agree to the oppression. There is nothing sacrosanct about the
majority; the lynch mob, too, is the majority in its own domain.
But while, as in the lynch mob, the majority can become actively
tyrannical and aggressive, the normal and continuing condition of the State is
oligarchic rule: rule by a coercive elite which has managed to gain control of
the State machinery. There are two basic reasons for this: one is the inequality and
division of labor inherent in the nature of man, which gives rise to an "Iron Law of
Oligarchy" in all of man's activities; and second is the parasitic nature of the State
enterprise itself.
We have said that the individualist is not an egalitarian. Part of
the reason for this is the individualist's insight into the vast diversity and
individuality within mankind, a diversity that has the chance to flower and expand as
civilization and living standards progress. Individuals differ in ability and in interest
both within and between occupations; and hence, in all occupations and walks of life,
whether it be steel production or the organization of a bridge club, leadership in
the activity will inevitably be assumed by a relative handful of the most able and
energetic, while the remaining majority will form themselves into rank-and-file
followers. This truth applies to all activities, whether they are beneficial or
malevolent (as in criminal organizations). Indeed, the discovery of the Iron Law
of Oligarchy was made by the Italian sociologist Robert Michels, who found that the
Social Democratic Party of Germany, despite its rhetorical commitment to
egalitarianism, was rigidly oligarchical and hierarchical in its actual functioning.
A second basic reason for the oligarchic rule of
the State is its parasitic nature?the fact that it lives coercively off the production of
the citizenry. To be successful to its practitioners, the fruits of parasitic
exploitation must be confined to a relative minority, otherwise a meaningless
plunder of all by all would result in no gains for anyone. Nowhere has the coercive and
parasitic nature of the State been more clearly limned than by the great late
nineteenth-century German sociologist, Franz Oppenheimer. Oppenheimer pointed out that
there are two and only two mutually exclusive means for man to obtain wealth. One, the
method of production and voluntary exchange, the method of the free market, Oppenheimer
termed the "economic means"; the other, the method of robbery by the use of violence, he
called the "political means." The political means is clearly parasitic, for it requires
previous production for the exploiters to confiscate, and it subtracts from instead
of adding to the total production in society. Oppenheimer then proceeded to define
the State as the "organization of the political means"?the systematization of the
predatory process over a given territorial area.2
In short, private crime is, at best, sporadic and
uncertain; the parasitism is ephemeral, and the coercive, parasitic lifeline can be
cut at any time by the resistance of the victims. The State provides a legal, orderly,
systematic channel for predation on the property of the producers; it makes certain,
secure, and relatively "peaceful" the lifeline of the parasitic caste in society. The
great libertarian writer Albert Jay Nock wrote vividly that "the State claims and
exercises the monopoly of crime?. It forbids private murder, but itself organizes murder
on a colossal scale. It punishes private theft, but itself lays unscrupulous hands
on anything it wants, whether the property of citizen or of alien."3
At first, of course, it is startling for someone to
consider taxation as robbery, and therefore government as a band of robbers. But anyone
who persists in thinking of taxation as in some sense a "voluntary" payment can see what
happens if he chooses not to pay. The great economist Joseph Schumpeter, himself by no
means a libertarian, wrote that "the state has been living on a revenue which was being
produced in the private sphere for private purposes and had to be deflected from these
purposes by political force. The theory which construes taxes on the analogy of club dues
or of the purchase of the services of, say, a doctor only proves how far removed this
part of the social sciences is from scientific habits of mind."4 The eminent Viennese "legal positivist" Hans Kelsen attempted, in
his treatise, The General Theory of Law and the State, to
establish a political theory and justification of the State, on a strictly "scientific"
and value-free basis. What happened is that early in the book, he came to the crucial
sticking-point, the pons asinorum of political philosophy:
What distinguishes the edicts of the State from the commands of a bandit
gang? Kelsen's answer was simply to say that the decrees of the State are "valid," and to
proceed happily from there, without bothering to define or explain this concept of
"validity." Indeed, it would be a useful exercise for nonlibertarians to ponder this
question: How can you define taxation in a way which makes it different
from robbery?
To the great nineteenth-century individualist anarchist?and
constitutional lawyer?Lysander Spooner, there was no problem in finding the answer.
Spooner's analysis of the State as robber group is perhaps the most devastating ever
written:
It is true that the theory of our Constitution is, that all
taxes are paid voluntarily; that our government is a mutual insurance company,
voluntarily entered into by the people with each other?
But this theory of our government is wholly different from the
practical fact. The fact is that the government, like a highwayman, say to a man: "Your
money, or your life." And many, if not most, taxes are paid under the compulsion of that
threat.
The government does not, indeed, waylay a man in a lonely place,
spring upon him from the roadside, and holding a pistol to his head, proceed to rifle his
pockets. But the robbery is none the less a robbery on that account; and it is far more
dastardly and shameful.
The highwayman takes solely upon himself the
responsibility, danger, and crime of his own act. He does not pretend that he has any
rightful claim to your money, or that he intends to use it for your own benefit. He does
not pretend to be anything but a robber. He has not acquired impudence enough to profess
to be merely a "protector," and that he takes men's money against their will, merely to
enable him to "protect" those infatuated travellers, who feel perfectly able to protect
themselves, or do not appreciate his peculiar system of protection. He is too sensible a
man to make such professions as these. Furthermore, having taken your money, he
leaves you, as you wish him to do. He does not persist in following you on the road,
against your will; assuming to be your rightful "sovereign," on account of the
"protection" he affords you. He does not keep "protecting" you, by commanding you to bow
down and serve him; by requiring you to do this, and forbidding you to do that; by
robbing you of more money as often as he finds it for his interest or pleasure to do so;
and by branding you as a rebel, a traitor, and an enemy to your country, and shooting you
down without mercy, if you dispute his authority, or resist his demands. He is too much
of a gentleman to be guilty of such impostures, and insults, and villainies as these. In
short, he does not, in addition to robbing you, attempt to make you either his dupe or
his slave.5
If the State is a group of plunderers, who then
constitutes the State? Clearly, the ruling elite consists at any time of (a) the
full-time apparatus?the kings, politicians, and bureaucrats who man and operate
the State; and (b) the groups who have maneuvered to gain privileges, subsidies, and
benefices from the State. The remainder of society constitutes the ruled. It was, again,
John C. Calhoun who saw with crystal clarity that, no matter how small the power of
government, no matter how low the tax burden or how equal its distribution, the very
nature of government creates two unequal and inherently conflicting classes in
society: those who, on net, pay the taxes (the "tax-payers"), and those
who, on net, live off taxes (the "tax-consumers"). Suppose that the
government imposes a low and seemingly equally distributed tax to pay for building a dam.
This very act takes money from most of the public to pay it out to net "tax-consumers":
the bureaucrats who run the operation, the contractors and workers who build the dam,
etc. And the greater the scope of government decision-making, the greater its fiscal
burdens, Calhoun went on, the greater the burden and the artificial inequality it imposes
between these two classes:
Few, comparatively, as they are, the agents and employees of the
government constitute that portion of the community who are the exclusive recipients of
the proceeds of the taxes. Whatever amount is taken from the community in the form of
taxes, if not lost, goes to them in the shape of expenditures or disbursements. The
two?disbursement and taxation?constitute the fiscal action of the government. They are
correlatives. What the one takes from the community under the name of taxes is
transferred to the portion of the community who are the recipients under that of
disbursements. But as the recipients constitute only a portion of the community, it
follows, taking the two parts of the fiscal process together, that its action must be
unequal between the payers of the taxes and the recipients of their proceeds. Nor can it
be otherwise; unless what is collected from each individual in the shape of taxes shall
be returned to him in that of disbursements, which would make the process nugatory and
absurd?.
The necessary result, then, of the unequal fiscal action of the
government is to divide the community into two great classes: one consisting of those
who, in reality, pay the taxes and, of course, bear exclusively the burden of supporting
the government; and the other, of those who are the recipients of their proceeds through
disbursements, and who are, in fact, supported by the government; or, in fewer words, to
divide it into tax-payers and tax-consumers.
But the effect of this is to place them in
antagonistic relations in reference to the fiscal action of the government?and the entire
course of policy therewith connected. For the greater the taxes and disbursements, the
greater the gain of the one and the loss of the other, and vice versa?. The effect, then,
of every increase is to enrich and strengthen the one, and impoverish and weaken the
other.6
If states have everywhere been run by an oligarchic group of
predators, how have they been able to maintain their rule over the mass of the
population? The answer, as the philosopher David Hume pointed out over two centuries ago,
is that in the long run every government, no matter how dictatorial, rests on
the support of the majority of its subjects. Now this does not of course render these
governments "voluntary," since the very existence of the tax and other coercive powers
shows how much compulsion the State must exercise. Nor does the majority support have to
be eager and enthusiastic approval; it could well be mere passive acquiescence and
resignation. The conjunction in the famous phrase "death and taxes" implies a
passive and resigned acceptance to the assumed inevitability of the State and its
taxation.
The tax-consumers, the groups that benefit from the
operations of the State, will of course be eager rather than passive followers of the
State mechanism. But these are only a minority. How is the compliance and acquiescence of
the mass of the population to be secured? Here we come to the central problem of
political philosophy?that branch of philosophy that deals with politics, the exercise of
regularized violence: the mystery of civil obedience. Why do people obey the edicts
and depredations of the ruling elite? Conservative writer James Burnham, who is the
reverse of libertarian, put the problem very clearly, admitting that there is no rational
justification for civil obedience: "Neither the source nor the justification of
government can be put in wholly rational terms? why should I accept the hereditary or
democratic or any other principle of legitimacy? Why should a principle justify the rule
of that man over me?" His own answer is hardly calculated to convince many others: "I
accept the principle, well? because I do, because that is the way it is and has
been."7 But suppose that one does
not accept the principle; what will the "way" be then? And why have the
bulk of subjects agreed to accept it?
The State and the Intellectuals
The answer is that, since the early origins of the State, its rulers
have always turned, as a necessary bolster to their rule, to an alliance with society's
class of intellectuals. The masses do not create their own abstract ideas, or indeed
think through these ideas independently; they follow passively the ideas adopted and
promulgated by the body of intellectuals, who become the effective "opinion
moulders" in society. And since it is precisely a moulding of opinion on behalf of the
rulers that the State almost desperately needs, this forms a firm basis for the age-old
alliance of the intellectuals and the ruling classes of the State. The alliance is based
on a quid pro quo: on the one hand, the intellectuals spread among the masses
the idea that the State and its rulers are wise, good, sometimes divine, and at the very
least inevitable and better than any conceivable alternatives. In return for this panoply
of ideology, the State incorporates the intellectuals as part of the ruling elite,
granting them power, status, prestige, and material security. Furthermore,
intellectuals are needed to staff the bureaucracy and to "plan" the economy and
society.
Before the modern era, particularly potent among the intellectual
handmaidens of the State was the priestly caste, cementing the powerful and terrible
alliance of warrior chief and medicine man, of Throne and Altar. The State "established"
the Church and conferred upon it power, prestige, and wealth extracted from its subjects.
In return, the Church anointed the State with divine sanction and inculcated this
sanction into the populace. In the modern era, when theocratic arguments have lost
much of their lustre among the public, the intellectuals have posed as the scientific
cadre of "experts" and have been busy informing the hapless public that political
affairs, foreign and domestic, are much too complex for the average person to bother his
head about. Only the State and its corps of intellectual experts, planners, scientists,
economists, and "national security managers" can possibly hope to deal with these
problems. The role of the masses, even in "democracies," is to ratify and assent to the
decisions of their knowledgeable rulers.
Historically, the union of Church and State, of
Throne and Altar, has been the most effective device for inducing obedience and support
among the subjects. Burnham attests to the power of myth and mystery in inducing support
when he writes that "In ancient times, before the illusions of science had corrupted
traditional wisdom, the founders of Cities were known to be gods or
demi-gods."8 To the established priest-craft, the
ruler was either anointed by God or, in the case of the absolute rule of many Oriental
despotisms, was even himself God; hence, any questioning or resistance to his rule would
be blasphemy.
Many and subtle are the ideological weapons the State and its
intellectuals have used over the centuries to induce their subjects to accept their
rule. One excellent weapon has been the power of tradition. The longer lasting
the rule of any given State, the more powerful this weapon; for then the X-Dynasty or the
Y-State has the seeming weight of centuries of tradition behind it. Worship of one's
ancestors then becomes a none-too-subtle means of cultivating worship of one's ancestral
rulers. The force of tradition is, of course, bolstered by ancient habit, which
confirms the subjects in the seeming propriety and legitimacy of the rule under which
they live. Thus, the political theorist Bertrand De Jouvenel has written:
The essential reason for obedience is that it has
become a habit of the species? Power is for us a fact of nature. From the earliest days
of recorded history it has always presided over human destinies? the authorities which
ruled? in former times did not disappear without bequeathing to their successors their
privilege nor without leaving in men's minds imprints which are cumulative in their
effect. The succession of governments which, in the course of centuries, rule the
same society may be looked on as one underlying government which takes on continuous
accretions.9
Another potent ideological force is for the State to deprecate the
individual and exalt either the past or the present collectivity of society. Any
isolated voice, any raiser of new doubts, can then be attacked as a profane violator of
the wisdom of his ancestors. Moreover, any new idea, much less any new critical
idea, must necessarily begin as a small minority opinion. Therefore, in order to
ward off any potentially dangerous idea from threatening majority acceptance of its
rule, the State will try to nip the new idea in the bud by ridiculing any view that sets
itself against mass opinion. The ways in which the State rulers in ancient Chinese
despotisms used religion as a method of binding the individual to the State-run society
were summarized by Norman Jacobs:
Chinese religion is a social religion, seeking to
solve the problems of social interests, not individual interests?. Religion is
essentially a force of impersonal social adjustment and control?rather than a medium
for the personal solutions of the individual?and social adjustment and control are
effected through education and reverence for superiors?. Reverence for superiors?
superior in age and hence in education and experience?is the ethical foundation of social
adjustment and control?. In China, the inter-relationship of political authority with
orthodox religion equated heterodoxy with political error. The orthodox religion was
particularly active in persecuting and destroying heterodox sects; in this it was
backed by the secular power.10
The general tendency of government to seek out and thwart any
heterodox views was outlined, in typically witty and delightful style, by the
libertarian writer H. L. Mencken:
All [that government] can see in an original idea
is potential change, and hence an invasion of its prerogatives. The most dangerous man,
to any government, is the man who is able to think things out for himself, without regard
to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion
that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane and intolerable, and so, if he is
romantic, he tries to change it. And even if he is not romantic personally he is very apt
to spread discontent among those who are.11
It is also particularly important for the State to make its rule
seem inevitable: even if its reign is disliked, as it often is, it will then be
met with the passive resignation expressed in the familiar coupling of "death and taxes."
One method is to bring to its side historical determinism: if X-State rules us, then this
has been inevitably decreed for us by the Inexorable Laws of History (or the Divine Will,
or the Absolute, or the Material Productive Forces), and nothing that any puny
individuals may do can change the inevitable. It is also important for the State to
inculcate in its subjects an aversion to any outcropping of what is now called "a
conspiracy theory of history." For a search for "conspiracies," as misguided as the
results often are, means a search for motives, and an attribution of individual
responsibility for the historical misdeeds of ruling elites. If, however, any tyranny or
venality or aggressive war imposed by the State was brought about not by
particular State rulers but by mysterious and arcane "social forces," or by the imperfect
state of the world?or if, in some way, everyone was guilty ("We are all
murderers," proclaims a common slogan), then there is no point in anyone's becoming
indignant or rising up against such misdeeds. Furthermore, a discrediting of "conspiracy
theories"?or indeed, of anything smacking of "economic determinism"?will make the
subjects more likely to believe the "general welfare" reasons that are invariably
put forth by the modern State for engaging in any aggressive actions.
The rule of the State is thus made to seem inevitable. Furthermore,
any alternative to the existing State is encased in an aura of fear. Neglecting its
own monopoly of theft and predation, the State raises the spectre among its subjects of
the chaos that would supposedly ensue if the State should disappear. The people on their
own, it is maintained, could not possibly supply their own protection against sporadic
criminals and marauders. Furthermore, each State has been particularly successful over
the centuries in instilling fear among its subjects of other State rulers. With
the land area of the globe now parcelled out among particular States, one of the basic
doctrines and tactics of the rulers of each State has been to identify itself
with the territory it governs. Since most men tend to love their homeland, the
identification of that land and its population with the State is a means of making
natural patriotism work to the State's advantage. If, then, "Ruritania" is attacked by
"Walldavia," the first task of the Ruritanian State and its intellectuals is to convince
the people of Ruritania that the attack is really upon them, and not simply upon
their ruling class. In this way, a war between rulers is converted into a war
between peoples, with each people rushing to the defense of their rulers in the
mistaken belief that the rulers are busily defending them. This device of
nationalism has been particularly successful in recent centuries; it was not very
long ago, at least in Western Europe, when the mass of subjects regarded wars as
irrelevant battles between various sets of nobles and their retinues.
Another tried and true method for bending subjects to one's will is
the infusion of guilt. Any increase in private well-being can be attacked as
"unconscionable greed," "materialism," or "excessive affluence"; and mutually beneficial
exchanges in the market can be denounced as "selfish." Somehow the conclusion always
drawn is that more resources should be expropriated from the private sector and siphoned
into the parasitic "public," or State, sector. Often the call upon the public to yield
more resources is couched in a stern call by the ruling elite for more "sacrifices" for
the national or the common weal. Somehow, however, while the public is supposed to
sacrifice and curtail its "materialistic greed," the sacrifices are always one way. The
State does not sacrifice; the State eagerly grabs more and more of the public's
material resources. Indeed, it is a useful rule of thumb: when your ruler calls aloud for
"sacrifices," look to your own life and pocketbook!
This sort of argumentation reflects a general double standard of
morality that is always applied to State rulers but not to anyone else. No one, for
example, is surprised or horrified to learn that businessmen are seeking higher profits.
No one is horrified if workers leave lower-paying for higher-paying jobs. All this is
considered proper and normal behavior. But if anyone should dare assert that politicians
and bureaucrats are motivated by the desire to maximize their incomes, the
hue and cry of "conspiracy theorist" or "economic determinist" spreads throughout the
land. The general opinion?carefully cultivated, of course, by the State itself?is that
men enter politics or government purely out of devoted concern for the common good and
the public weal. What gives the gentlemen of the State apparatus their superior moral
patina? Perhaps it is the dim and instinctive knowledge of the populace that the State
is engaged in systematic theft and predation, and they may feel that only a
dedication to altruism on the part of the State makes these actions tolerable. To
consider politicians and bureaucrats subject to the same monetary aims as everyone
else would strip the Robin Hood veil from State predation. For it would then be clear
that, in the Oppenheimer phrasing, ordinary citizens were pursuing the peaceful,
productive "economic means" to wealth, while the State apparatus was devoting itself to
the coercive and exploitative organized "political means." The emperor's clothes of
supposed altruistic concern for the common weal would then be stripped from him.
The intellectual arguments used by the State throughout history to
"engineer consent" by the public can be classified into two parts: (1) that rule by the
existing government is inevitable, absolutely necessary, and far better than the
indescribable evils that would ensue upon its downfall; and (2) that the State rulers are
especially great, wise, and altruistic men?far greater, wiser, and better than their
simple subjects. In former times, the latter argument took the form of rule by "divine
right' or by the "divine ruler" himself, or by an "aristocracy" of men. In modern times,
as we indicated earlier, this argument stresses not so much divine approval as rule by a
wise guild of "scientific experts" especially endowed in knowledge of statesmanship and
the arcane facts of the world. The increasing use of scientific jargon, especially in the
social sciences, has permitted intellectuals to weave apologia for State rule which rival
the ancient priestcraft in obscurantism. For example, a thief who presumed to justify his
theft by saying that he was really helping his victims by his spending, thus giving
retail trade a needed boost, would be hooted down without delay. But when this same
theory is clothed in Keynesian mathematical equations and impressive references to
the "multiplier effect," it carries far more conviction with a bamboozled public.
In recent years, we have seen the development in the United States
of a profession of "national security managers," of bureaucrats who never face electoral
procedures, but who continue, through administration after administration, secretly
using their supposed special expertise to plan wars, interventions, and military
adventures. Only their egregious blunders in the Vietnam war have called their
activities into any sort of public question; before that, they were able to ride high,
wide, and handsome over the public they saw mostly as cannon fodder for their own
purposes.
A public debate between "isolationist" Senator
Robert A. Taft and one of the leading national security intellectuals, McGeorge Bundy,
was instructive in demarking both the issues at stake and the attitude of the
intellectual ruling elite. Bundy attacked Taft in early 1951 for opening a public debate
on the waging of the Korean war. Bundy insisted that only the executive policy leaders
were equipped to manipulate diplomatic and military force in a lengthy decades-long
period of limited war against the communist nations. It was important, Bundy maintained,
that public opinion and public debate be excluded from promulgating any policy role in
this area. For, he warned, the public was unfortunately not committed to the rigid
national purposes discerned by the policy managers; it merely responded to the ad
hoc realities of given situations. Bundy also maintained that there should be no
recriminations or even examinations of the decisions of the policy managers, because it
was important that the public accept their decisions without question. Taft, in contrast,
denounced the secret decision-making by military advisers and specialists in the
executive branch, decisions effectively sealed off from public scrutiny. Furthermore, he
complained, "If anyone dared to suggest criticism or even a thorough debate, he was at
once branded as an isolationist and a saboteur of unity and the bipartisan foreign
policy."12
Similarly, at a time when President Eisenhower and
Secretary of State Dulles were privately contemplating going to war in Indochina, another
prominent national security manager, George F. Kennan, was advising the public that
"There are times when, having elected a government, we will be best advised to let it
govern and let it speak for us as it will in the councils of the nations."13
We see clearly why the State needs the intellectuals; but why do the
intellectuals need the State? Put simply, the intellectual's livelihood in the free
market is generally none too secure; for the intellectual, like everyone else on the
market, must depend on the values and choices of the masses of his fellow men, and it is
characteristic of these masses that they are generally uninterested in intellectual
concerns. The State, on the other hand, is willing to offer the intellectuals a warm,
secure, and permanent berth in its apparatus, a secure income, and the panoply of
prestige.
The eager alliance between the State and the
intellectuals was symbolized by the avid desire of the professors at the University
of Berlin, in the nineteenth century, to form themselves into what they themselves
proclaimed as the "intellectual bodyguard of the House of Hohenzollern." From a
superficially different ideological perspective, it can be seen in the revealingly
outraged reaction of the eminent Marxist scholar of ancient China, Joseph Needham, to
Karl Wittfogel's acidulous critique of ancient Chinese despotism. Wittfogel had shown the
importance for bolstering the system of the Confucian glorification of the
gentleman-scholar officials who manned the ruling bureaucracy of despotic China. Needham
charged indignantly that the "civilization which Professor Wittfogel is so bitterly
attacking was one which could make poets and scholars into officials."14 What matter the totalitarianism so long as the ruling class is
abundantly staffed by certified intellectuals!
The worshipful and fawning attitude of
intellectuals toward their rulers has been illustrated many times throughout history. A
contemporary American counterpart to the "intellectual bodyguard of the House of
Hohenzollern" is the attitude of so many liberal intellectuals toward the office and
person of the President. Thus, to political scientist Professor Richard Neustadt,
the President is the "sole crown-like symbol of the Union." And policy manager Townsend
Hoopes, in the winter of 1960, wrote that "under our system the people can look only to
the President to define the nature of our foreign policy problem and the national
programs and sacrifices required to meet it with effectiveness."15 After generations of such rhetoric, it is no wonder that Richard Nixon, on the eve
of his election as President, should thus describe his role:
"He [the President] must articulate the nation's
values, define its goals and marshall its will." Nixon's conception of his role is
hauntingly similar to Ernst Huber's articulation, in the Germany of the 1930s, of the
Constitutional Law of the Greater German Reich. Huber wrote that the head of
State "sets up the great ends which are to be attained and draws up the plans for the
utilization of all national powers in the achievement of the common goals? he gives the
national life its true purpose and value."16
The attitude and motivation of the contemporary national
security intellectual bodyguard of the State has been caustically described by
Marcus Raskin, who was a staff member of the National Security Council during the Kennedy
administration. Calling them "megadeath intellectuals," Raskin writes that:
?their most important function is to justify and
extend the existence of their employers?. In order to justify the continued large-scale
production of these [thermonuclear] bombs and missiles, military and industrial leaders
needed some kind of theory to rationalize their use?. This became
particularly urgent during the late 1950's, when economy-minded members of the
Eisenhower Administration began to wonder why so much money, thought, and resources
were being spent on weapons if their use could not be justified. And so began a series of
rationalizations by the "defense intellectuals" in and out of the universities?. Military
procurement will continue to flourish, and they will continue to demonstrate why it must.
In this respect they are no different from the great majority of modern specialists who
accept the assumptions of the organizations which employ them because of the rewards
in money and power and prestige. . . . They know enough not to question their
employers' right to exist.17
This is not to say that all intellectuals everywhere have been
"court intellectuals," servitors and junior partners of power. But this has been the
ruling condition in the history of civilizations?generally in the form of a
priestcraft?just as the ruling condition in those civilizations has been one or another
form of despotism. There have been glorious exceptions, however, particularly in the
history of Western civilization, where intellectuals have often been trenchant critics
and opponents of State power, and have used their intellectual gifts to fashion
theoretical systems which could be used in the struggle for liberation from that power.
But invariably, these intellectuals have only been able to arise as a significant force
when they have been able to operate from an independent power base?an independent
property base?separate from the apparatus of the State. For wherever the State controls
all property, wealth, and employment, everyone is economically dependent on it, and it
becomes difficult, if not impossible, for such independent criticism to arise. It has
been in the West, with its decentralized foci of power, its independent sources of
property and employment, and therefore of bases from which to criticize the State, where
a body of intellectual critics has been able to flourish. In the Middle Ages, the Roman
Catholic Church, which was at least separate if not independent from the State, and the
new free towns were able to serve as centers of intellectual and also of substantive
opposition. In later centuries, teachers, ministers, and pamphleteers in a relatively
free society were able to use their independence from the State to agitate for
further expansion of freedom. In contrast, one of the first libertarian philosophers,
Lao-tse, living in the midst of ancient Chinese despotism, saw no hope for achieving
liberty in that totalitarian society except by counseling quietism, to the point of the
individual's dropping out of social life altogether.
With decentralized power, with a Church separate
from the State, with flourishing towns and cities able to develop outside the feudal
power structure, and with freedom in society, the economy was able to develop in Western
Europe in a way that transcended all previous civilizations. Furthermore, the
Germanic?and particularly the Celtic?tribal structure which succeeded the disintegrating
Roman Empire had strong libertarian elements. Instead of a mighty State apparatus
exerting a monopoly of violence, disputes were solved by contending tribesmen consulting
the elders of the tribe on the nature and application of the tribe's customary and
common law. The "chief" was generally merely a war leader who was only called into his
warrior role whenever war with other tribes was under way. There was no permanent war or
military bureaucracy in the tribes. In Western Europe, as in many other
civilizations, the typical model of the origin of the State was not via a voluntary
"social contract" but by the conquest of one tribe by another. The original liberty of
the tribe or the peasantry thus falls victim to the conquerors. At first, the conquering
tribe killed and looted the victims and rode on. But at some time the conquerors
decided that it would be more profitable to settle down among the conquered peasantry and
rule and loot them on a permanent and systematic basis. The periodic tribute exacted from
the conquered subjects eventually came to be called "taxation." And, with equal
generality, the conquering chieftains parcelled out the land of the peasantry to the
various warlords, who were then able to settle down and collect feudal "rent" from the
peasantry. The peasants were often enslaved, or rather enserfed, to the land itself to
provide a continuing source of exploited labor for the feudal lords.18
We may note a few prominent instances of the birth of a modern State
through conquest. One was the military conquest of the Indian peasantry in Latin America
by the Spaniards. The conquering Spanish not only established a new State over the
Indians, but the land of the peasantry was parcelled out among the conquering warlords,
who were ever after to collect rent from the tillers of the land. Another instance was
the new political form imposed upon the Saxons of England after their conquest by the
Normans in 1066. The land of England was parcelled out among the Norman warrior
lords, who thereby formed a State and feudal-land apparatus of rule over the subject
population. For the libertarian, the most interesting and certainly the most poignant
example of the creation of a State through conquest was the destruction of the
libertarian society of ancient Ireland by England in the seventeenth century, a
conquest which established an imperial State and ejected numerous Irish from their
cherished land. The libertarian society of Ireland, which lasted for a thousand years?and
which will be described further below?was able to resist English conquest for
hundreds of years because of the absence of a State which could be conquered easily and
then used by the conquerors to rule over the native population.
But while throughout Western history, intellectuals have formulated
theories designed to check and limit State power, each State has been able to use its own
intellectuals to turn those ideas around into further legitimations of its own advance of
power. Thus, originally, in Western Europe the concept of the "divine right of kings" was
a doctrine promoted by the Church to limit State power. The idea was that
the king could not just impose his arbitrary will. His edicts were limited to
conforming with the divine law. As absolute monarchy advanced, however, the kings
were able to turn the concept around to the idea that God put his stamp of approval on
any of the king's actions; that he ruled by "divine right."
Similarly, the concept of parliamentary democracy began as a popular
check on the absolute rule of the monarch. The king was limited by the power of
parliament to grant him tax revenues. Gradually, however, as parliament displaced the
king as head of State, the parliament itself became the unchecked State sovereign. In the
early nineteenth century, English utilitarians, who advocated additional individual
liberty in the name of social utility and the general welfare, were to see these concepts
turned into sanctions for expanding the power of the State.
As De Jouvenel writes:
Many writers on theories of sovereignty have worked
out one or the other of these restrictive devices. But in the end every single such
theory has, sooner or later, lost its original purpose, and come to act merely as a
springboard to Power, by providing it with the powerful aid of an invisible sovereign
with whom it could in time successfully identify itself.19
Certainly, the most ambitious attempt in history to impose limits on
the State was the Bill of Rights and other restrictive parts of the United States
Constitution. Here, written limits on government became the fundamental law, to be
interpreted by a judiciary supposedly independent of the other branches of
government. All Americans are familiar with the process by which John C. Calhoun's
prophetic analysis has been vindicated; the State's own monopoly judiciary has inexorably
broadened the construction of State power over the last century and a half. But few have
been as keen as liberal Professor Charles Black? who hails the process?in seeing that the
State has been able to transform judicial review itself from a limiting device into a
powerful instrument for gaining legitimacy for its actions in the minds of the public. If
a judicial decree of "unconstitutional" is a mighty check on governmental power, so too a
verdict of "constitutional" is an equally mighty weapon for fostering public acceptance
of ever greater governmental power.
Professor Black begins his analysis by pointing out the crucial
necessity for "legitimacy" of any government in order to endure; that is, basic
majority acceptance of the government and its actions. Acceptance of legitimacy, however,
becomes a real problem in a country like the United States, where "substantive
limitations are built into the theory on which the government rests." What is needed,
adds Black, is a method by which the government can assure the public that its expanding
powers are indeed "constitutional." And this, he concludes, has been the major historic
function of judicial review. Let Black illustrate the problem:
The supreme risk [to the government] is that of disaffection and a
feeling of outrage widely disseminated throughout the population, and loss of moral
authority by the government as such, however long it may be propped up by force or
inertia or the lack of an appealing and immediately available alternative. Almost
everybody living under a government of limited powers, must sooner or later be subjected
to some governmental action which as a matter of private opinion he regards as outside
the power of government or positively forbidden to government. A man is drafted, though
he finds nothing in the Constitution about being drafted. . . . A farmer is told how much
wheat he can raise; he believes, and he discovers that some respectable lawyers believe
with him, that the government has no more right to tell him how much wheat he can grow
than it has to tell his daughter whom she can marry. A man goes to the federal
penitentiary for saying what he wants to, and he paces his cell reciting? "Congress shall
make no laws abridging the freedom of speech"? A businessman is told what he can
ask, and must ask, for buttermilk.
The danger is real enough that each of these people
(and who is not of their number?) will confront the concept of governmental limitation
with the reality (as he sees it) of the flagrant overstepping of actual limits, and draw
the obvious conclusion as to the status of his government with respect to
legitimacy.20
This danger is averted, Black adds, by the State's
propounding the doctrine that some one agency must have the ultimate decision on
constitutionality, and that this agency must be part of the federal government
itself. For while the seeming independence of the federal judiciary has played a vital
role in making its actions virtual Holy Writ for the bulk of the population, it is also
true that the judiciary is part and parcel of the government apparatus and is appointed
by the executive and legislative branches. Professor Black concedes that the government
has thereby set itself up as a judge in its own case, and has thus violated a basic
juridical principle for arriving at any kind of just decision. But Black is remarkably
lighthearted about this fundamental breach: "The final power of the State? must stop
where the law stops it. And who shall set the limit, and who shall enforce the stopping,
against the mightiest power? Why, the State itself, of course, through its judges and its
laws. Who controls the temperate? Who teaches the wise??"21 And so Black admits that when we have a State, we hand over all our weapons and
means of coercion to the State apparatus, we turn over all of our powers of ultimate
decision-making to this deified group, and then we must jolly well sit back
quietly and await the unending stream of justice that will pour forth from these
institutions?even though they are basically judging their own case. Black sees no
conceivable alternative to this coercive monopoly of judicial decisions enforced by the
State, but here is precisely where our new movement challenges this conventional
view and asserts that there is a viable alternative: libertarianism.
Seeing no such alternative, Professor Black falls
back on mysticism in his defense of the State, for in the final analysis he finds the
achievement of justice and legitimacy from the State's perpetual judging of its own
cause to be "something of a miracle." In this way, the liberal Black joins the
conservative Burnham in falling back on the miraculous and thereby admitting that there
is no satisfactory rational argument in support of the State.22
Applying his realistic view of the Supreme Court to the famous
conflict between the Court and the New Deal in the 1930s, Professor Black chides his
liberal colleagues for their shortsightedness in denouncing judicial obstructionism:
?the standard version of the story of the New Deal
and the Court, though accurate in its way, displaces the emphasis?. It concentrates on
the difficulties; it almost forgets how the whole thing turned out. The upshot of
the matter was (and this is what I like to emphasize) that after some twenty-four months
of balking? the Supreme Court, without a single change in the law of its composition, or,
indeed, in its actual manning, placed the affirmative stamp of legitimacy on the New
Deal, and on the whole new conception of government in America. [Italics
the author's.]23
In this way, the Supreme Court was able to put the quietus to the
large body of Americans who had strong constitutional objections to the expanded powers
of the New Deal:
Of course, not everyone was satisfied. The Bonnie
Prince Charlie of constitutionally commanded laissez-faire still stirs the hearts of
a few zealots in the Highlands of choleric unreality. But there is no longer any
significant or dangerous public doubt as to the constitutional power of Congress to deal
as it does with the national economy?. We had no means, other than the Supreme Court, for
imparting legitimacy to the New Deal.24
Thus, even in the United States, unique among governments in having
a constitution, parts of which at least were meant to impose strict and solemn limits
upon its actions, even here the Constitution has proved to be an instrument for ratifying
the expansion of State power rather than the opposite. As Calhoun saw, any written limits
that leave it to government to interpret its own powers are bound to be interpreted as
sanctions for expanding and not binding those powers. In a profound sense, the idea of
binding down power with the chains of a written constitution has proved to be a noble
experiment that failed. The idea of a strictly limited government has proved to be
utopian; some other, more radical means must be found to prevent the growth of the
aggressive State. The libertarian system would meet this problem by scrapping the
entire notion of creating a government?an institution with a coercive monopoly of
force over a given territory?and then hoping to find ways to keep that
government from expanding. The libertarian alternative is to abstain from such a
monopoly government to begin with.
We will explore the entire notion of a State-less society, a society
without formal government, in later chapters. But one instructive exercise is to try
to abandon the habitual ways of seeing things, and to consider the argument for the State
de novo. Let us try to transcend the fact that for as long as we can remember,
the State has monopolized police and judicial services in society. Suppose that we were
all starting completely from scratch, and that millions of us had been dropped down upon
the earth, fully grown and developed, from some other planet. Debate begins as to how
protection (police and judicial services) will be provided. Someone says: "Let's all give
all of our weapons to Joe Jones over there, and to his relatives. And let Jones and his
family decide all disputes among us. In that way, the Joneses will be able to protect all
of us from any aggression or fraud that anyone else may commit. With all the power and
all the ability to make ultimate decisions on disputes in the hands of Jones, we will all
be protected from one another. And then let us allow the Joneses to obtain their income
from this great service by using their weapons, and by exacting as much revenue by
coercion as they shall desire." Surely in that sort of situation, no one would treat this
proposal with anything but ridicule. For it would be starkly evident that there would be
no way, in that case, for any of us to protect ourselves from the aggressions, or the
depredations, of the Joneses themselves. No one would then have the total folly to
respond to that long-standing and most perceptive query: "Who shall guard the guardians?"
by answering with Professor Black's blithe: "Who controls the temperate?" It is only
because we have become accustomed over thousands of years to the existence of the State
that we now give precisely this kind of absurd answer to the problem of social protection
and defense.
And, of course, the State never really did begin with this sort of
"social contract." As Oppenheimer pointed out, the State generally began in violence
and conquest; even if at times internal processes gave rise to the State, it was
certainly never by general consensus or contract.
The libertarian creed can now be summed up as (1) the absolute right
of every man to the ownership of his own body; (2) the equally absolute right to own and
therefore to control the material resources he has found and transformed; and (3)
therefore, the absolute right to exchange or give away the ownership to such titles to
whoever is willing to exchange or receive them. As we have seen, each of these steps
involves property rights, but even if we call step (1) "personal" rights, we
shall see that problems about "personal liberty" inextricably involve the rights of
material property or free exchange. Or, briefly, the rights of personal liberty and
"freedom of enterprise" almost invariably intertwine and cannot really be separated.
We have seen that the exercise of personal "freedom of speech," for
example, almost invariably involves the exercise of "economic freedom"?i.e., freedom
to own and exchange material property. The holding of a meeting to exercise freedom
of speech involves the hiring of a hall, traveling to the hall over roads, and using some
form of transportation, etc. The closely related "freedom of the press" even more
evidently involves the cost of printing and of using a press, the sale of leaflets to
willing buyers?in short, all the ingredients of "economic freedom." Furthermore, our
example of "shouting 'fire' in a crowded theater" provides us with the clear
guideline for deciding whose rights must be defended in any given
situation?the guidelines being provided by our criterion: the rights of property.