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Slouching
Towards Statism
Which
is a greater cause of cultural and moral decline: the private sector
or the government? Asked another way, which is doing more to promote
a return to civilized social norms: the market or the central state?
The answer highlights a dividing line between left ad right.
Robert
Bork's book Slouching
Towards Gomorrah provokes this query. He chronicles a dizzy
array of depressing cultural data that even left-liberals can't
ignore. His thesis is that civilization is slipping through our
fingers, and he's probably right. However, his suggestions for change
require new forms of government intervention, a grave error that
dooms his analysis.
Bork
has confused the cause with the cure. It's government policy, not
the private sector, that has caused social collapse by politicizing
culture in the first place. Whether it's fostering welfarism, backing
ugly art and music, punishing society's natural elites with income
and inheritance taxes, or shortening time horizons through persistent
inflation, the government has debased tastes, subsidized moral squalor,
and dumbed down social norms.
Before
we put government in charge of cultural uplift, consider that prototype
of government social and cultural hegemony: the military base. Once
seen as model communities of discipline and moral high standards,
bases have recently been rocked by revelations of widespread sexual
impropriety. This hardly surprises anyone who's spent time in our
around the military.
Young
people are put in distant places where they face no supervision
from family or an organic community. They have little work to do
and an abundance of discretionary income. Their housing, food, medical
care, and clothing are provided at no charge by the government.
Nobody need plan, for example, to come up with next month's rent.
The
grayness and regimentation of the military base masks a deep debasement.
Illegal drug use is rampant, on and off the base, and has long involved
more than half of the enlisted men (recent declines in reported
drug use measure only a rise in dishonesty). Alcoholism is more
than double civilian levels. Tattooing is normal, gambling is rampant,
and in its discount stores, the U.S. military is the biggest purveyor
of pornography in the world.
Go
to any military base in the country and look at the kinds of outlying
enterprises taxpayers unwittingly support. Once-nice communities
have been turned into magnets for nude dancing, prostitution, and
every manner of sexual profiteering.
Look
at Georgia's Fort Benning. Apart from the military, the area is
populated by traditional people with traditional morals. Yet along
the main drag you pass dozens of brightly lit sex parlors, an alarming
sight in the Deep South. The military here is a cultural cancer
that lives off the taxpayer. It's no surprise that the military
is riddled with sexual abuse: in their off-hours, these guys are
feeding our tax dollars to naked performers. It reflects the absence
of chivalry inherent in all government operations.
Other
businesses popular around military bases are pawn shops and the
sort of car dealers that cater to people who don't pay their debts.
That reflects another dirty secret of the military: live-for-the-moment
attitudes and bad credit are typical, as in any welfare culture.
Relieved
of the burdens of making themselves productive, exercising economic
choices, or managing finances, the troops in these bases tend to
collapse into a state-of-nature barbarism, despite the best efforts
of the officer corps.
Conservatives
like Bork, who complain about the culture, should take notice of
this, but as avid supporters of the warfare state, they carefully
avert their eyes.
Now
consider the other side of the question: can the private sector
rescue us from a Borkian fate? Left-liberals like to cite Disney
to show that free enterprise is also a social menace. They say Disney
preys on kids' voracious material appetites, wrecks and trivializes
classic literature, and erects enormous monuments to the indulgence
of pleasure.
There's
no need to defend Disney's more recent animated movies (let alone
those released under subsidiary labels). For example, the pagan
environmentalism and anti-European propaganda of Pocahontas
is unbearable for anyone who knows economics or history. Nobody
claimed the private sector produces only what is beautiful and true.
However
tacky some of Disney's products are, remember this: the company
has no power of its own. It only profits when it succeeds in persuading
the buying public to purchase its products. The tastes of the consuming
public are the driving force behind every product the company produces,
and not the reverse. If people decided not to buy, Disney's market
power would instantly collapse.
Moreover,
the real triumph of Disney had nothing to do with its movies. This
corporation, founded by a hard-core believer in free markets, and
a cultural reactionary to boot, has demonstrated new frontiers of
private-property creativity. It has erected entire communities of
perfect order and freedom organized on the principles of free enterprise.
Disney
World is 45 square miles, an area the size of San Francisco. The
rides are the least interesting part. Disney World contains upwards
of 300 retail stores, plus nature preserves, streams and lakes,
nature trails, recreation areas, yacht clubs, resorts, beach clubs,
golf courses, office space, and campsites. There are 12,000 rooms
available for rent, and total employment is 35,000, most of them
young people who behave themselves because they have to.
Infrastructure
like roads and bridges are entirely private, as are police services,
fire protection, sewage, and trash disposal. Despite having no taxes
or mandates, and being entirely free from outside zoning, this massive
park is arguably the best "governed" place on earth. There is no
crime, no vandalism, and no sexual profiteering. There are no gangs,
no slums, no homeless bums, no panhandlers, and no loiterers. Because
it is private, every inch is cared for.
If
you're looking to restore the old days of charming architecture
and safe, clean streets, look to the Disney created town of Celebration,
Florida. Again, it is entirely private. Ten minutes south of the
Magic Kingdom, it is a bustling place that will soon be home to
20,000 people. New houses are grabbed up instantly, as are spots
in the new private school. There's no cultural rot here. How interesting
that it's become the target of left-wing attacks for "artificiality."
The
economics literature is always fretting about "public goods" that
markets supposedly can't produce, including police protection and
infrastructure. Nonsense, said Disney, and proceeded to demonstrate
how orderly a micro-society can be when there's no government to
push property owners around.
Indeed,
Disney World points the way towards solving most of our social and
cultural troubles: put more property in private hands. It has even
shown us how the immigration problem can be handled. Disney World
attracts 30 million visitors per year without disruption.
As
economist Fred Foldvary points out, Disney shows that the less government
intervenes, the more private enterprise can satisfy human wants;
supposed "public goods" are no exception.
The
stark contrast between the ordered liberty of Disney World and the
deep corruption of the military base is no accident. These two communities
demonstrate, in contrasting microcosms, the difference between the
market's means of social organization and the government's.
Yet
micro-secessionism isn't the only way the market overcomes cultural
disintegration. Wal-Mart is hated by the left, but it too has become
a source of cultural uplift. As the nation's largest distributor
of compact discs, it supervises everything that appears on its shelves.
Producers must take out degrading lyrics, electronically mask dirty
words, and supply clean cover art. This approach is not for everyone.
But Wal-Mart saw a market niche and filled it. Only capitalism allows
that.
Our
society may be slouching towards Gomorrah, but government is the
least likely institution to revers the trend. The free market not
only gives us prosperity, it can also make us better people by requiring
and rewarding old-fashioned virtues like thrift, prudence, courage,
and stewardship. Government, which has made us so much poorer by
its invasions of private property, has also wrecked culture.
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