|
Patriot
Games
The
most encouraging trend of our time is the widespread loss of faith
in government. No longer do people look to the government as the
great problem solver, economic planner, social unifier, or cultural
czar. The government is more likely to be seen for what it is, a
haven for grafters, liars, and would-be tyrants. Americans, like
the Russians, no longer believe anything until it is officially
denied.
It's
an encouraging trend because it foretells the restoration of liberty
in economic relations, political and social self-determination,
and in the autonomy of communities, families, and individuals. There
are many barriers to these goals, but the largest is the overwhelming
power of the central state, the foremost evil of our time. Its remaining
power rests on its perceived authority, which, once stripped away,
collapses leaving only the unimposed order of market relations and
voluntary associations.
The
turning point, of course, was the end of the Cold War and the return
to normalcy some seven years ago. Ever since, the governing elites
and their intellectual apologists have been searching for some grand
national project to revive the spirit of collectivism from days
gone by. Back then, hardly anyone questioned the need for the Leviathan
state or the moral necessity of absolute obedience to the federal
government.
To
bring back the old days, there were massacres in Panama and Iraq.
Then there were the "humanitarian" police actions in Somalia, Haiti,
and Bosnia. But public enthusiasm waned quickly, and these international
schemes began to backfire by increasing opposition to government
and all its works. The state has tried other diversionary tactics
including the drug war, the everlasting war on poverty, the terrorist
threat, the "crisis" of unaffordable health care, and a proposed
manned mission to Mars.
Nothing
works. There are no domestic or foreign crises left to grab our
attention away from demanding what we should always demand, which
is the ability to live normal lives unencumbered by the central
state. "It's hard when you're not threatened by a foreign enemy,"
President Clinton pouted after his State of the Union this year,
"to whip people up to a fever pitch of common, intense, sustained,
disciplined endeavor."
Precisely,
and may it always be so. Clinton's attempt to make education a national
issue fell flat because most people have an instinctive sense that
education is and should be addressed at the local level. When we
think about the federal government, its talent at managing the education
of the young is not the first thing that comes to mind.
Government
always takes advantage of the citizens' sense of loyalty. It wants
us to put the nation-state first, second, and third, so that our
families and communities, our liberty and our property, are of minor
importance. This is why Jefferson said the proper attitude toward
government is not confidence and trust but eternal suspicion. If
that was true of the constitutional government of his time, how
much more is it true of a Leviathan state with a proven record of
running scams, destroying wealth, telling lies, and needlessly harassing
its citizens?
Not
everyone is thrilled at these positive trends. Some people are panicked,
especially the bureaucrats and politicians who have lost their exalted
status in public life. Mario Cuomo says it all signals the loss
of collective responsibility. "There's no hero, no heroine, no great
cause, no soaring ideology," he says. We "need something to hold
onto. Something deeper, stronger, grander" that can make us "better
than we are."
What
is that something? The heroic central state, of course. To Cuomo,
"better" means subordinating the individual to the collective. He
openly longs for a socialist leader he's available, of course
to define and dominate our collective consciousness.
Intellectuals
and journalists also want to return to the good old days of statism.
They prefer times of national crisis, when people are willing to
give up their liberty for the sake of common goals, like getting
through a depression or beating some foreign foe.
"Communitarians"
like Cuomo would have us believe that unless the tax state unites
us in a common endeavor, nothing else will. For people like Amati
Etzioni, the Golden Rule means give unto the state as the state
prods others to give unto you.
Even
more curious is the growth of national socialist ideology on the
right, particularly in the pages of the Weekly Standard.
David Brooks, a former writer for the Wall Street Journal,
glories in the days when Americans trusted their government and
never questioned its need for vast and increasing amounts of revenue.
He proposes to bring those times back, not by giving anyone a good
reason to love the government, but by embarking on another grandiose
national program, which he equates with "greatness."
The
Panama Canal was "greatness." The Library of Congress building was
"greatness." Trust-busting is "greatness." Global supremacy is "greatness."
Wilson's Fourteen Points, the New Deal, Kennedy's New Frontier
"these were efforts to aim high, to accomplish some grand national
endeavor." How can these boondoggles be described in this way? Because
"American purpose can find its voice only in Washington."
But
this voice has grown hoarse or silent, and Brooks thinks this means
"we don't have a clear sense of what America is for, what we, as
a nation, should achieve with all our wealth." he is not speaking
of what individuals should achieve, but what the government should
achieve with our money. And, oddly, he doesn't even come up with
a suggestion for what our new national project should be.
In
fact, "it almost doesn't matter what great task government sets
for itself," so long as it's done with "energy and effectiveness."
For those who think that the government ought to defend the borders
and otherwise leave everyone alone, Brooks offers this corrective:
"the first task of government is to convey a spirit of confidence
and vigor that can then spill across the life of a nation. Stagnant
government drains national morale."
His
sentiments are nothing new. They are summed up by the Nazi slogan,
Gemeinnutz geht vor Eigennutz, which means communal welfare
precedes individual welfare. This has been and is the first principle
of national socialism. As the party newspaper put it in 1936, "there
exists no law which binds the State. The State can do what it regards
as necessary, because it has authority."
As
an ideology, national socialism exalts the Great Leader as the embodiment
of the national will, and insists that citizens be loyal to the
nation-state and the regime above all else. It insists on a planned
economy, where the priorities of the regime supercede those of private
entrepreneurs. It glorifies the people working for the military
sector or the civil service for answering a higher calling than
"petty" business or professional life.
National
socialism is protectionist and expansionist at the same time. Its
trade policy tries to bar imports, but insists every other nation
buy its products as a test of loyalty. Foreign regimes that don't
go along are denounced as enemies, and public hysteria is whipped
up against them. National socialism has an ambitious foreign policy
that attempts to gain control of whole regions in order to expand
its global market share, and it praises global organizations dominated
only by its own regime. Its chauvinism is worn on its national sleeve.
National
socialism is different from international socialism in that the
state prefers property control to nationalization. And it attaches
sacramental significance not to class (as with Marxism) but to nationality
(which in the U.S. means no more than paying into, or living off
of, the welfare state).
In
another distinguishing mark, its leaders deny the reality of economic
law. That allos them to deny there is any downside to statism. They
won't admit that government programs cost money, which means taxes,
which means coercing people to forfeit earnings they would otherwise
use to provide for their families. What the state can't get in taxes,
it assumes in debt, which is followed by inflation that loots savings
that could otherwise be invested to make people better off.
National
socialism and aggression go together. Brooks, for example, praises
war as a heroic enterprise, but never mentions how it results in
the deaths of young people for the sake of the state and its connected
interest groups. Who can doubt that oil barons were ultimately behind
the U.S. intervention in the Gulf War? Is such a war worth the life
of a young man who joined out of a desire to defend our own borders?
That war had as its lasting effects the permanent stationing of
troops in that region and the introduction of mysterious new diseases
to the American continent, not to mention the deliberate killing
by starvation and disease of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians.
National
socialism also means a national police force, snipers shooting and
burning political dissenters, and phony evidence presented at state
trials. It means spying on people's bank accounts, tapping their
phones, reading their mail, grabbing their land, and stealing their
children. It means a military and national security state unaccountable
to the civilian population, a welfare state that grows without limit,
a regulatory state that drives small business underground, and a
tax system that causes whole sectors to stagnate.
It
means that the central state is enlisted, in thousands of ways big
and small, in a war against the citizenry. This was well describe
in Gunter Reimann's 1939 work The Vampire Economy, a compelling
account of the plight of German businessmen under the Nazis. John
T. Flynn, in As
We Go Marching, told similar stories of business life under
the New Deal. Making the link between varieties of socialism were
Ludwig von Mises (
Omnipotent
Government in 1944) and F.A.
Hayek (The
Road to Serfdom in 1945).
Business
faces even more crushing burdens today, but people have gotten used
to them. Thirty years ago, who would have imagined that two incomes
would be necessary to support a middle-class existence for a family,
and that economic conditions would force parents to turn over their
children to strangers to raise? It's been so long since we've experienced
free enterprise, we've forgotten what it's like to live in true
prosperity and security.
Brooks
longs for national socialism, knowing full well that it is precisely
the system of government we have now. What is missing, in his mind,
is the public spirit essential to making it thrive, the civil religion
of statism. This is what the federal government started with Lincoln,
and has tried to foster from McKinley to Clinton.
As
Mises says, "the worship of the state is the worship of force."
This is why Brooks's article is not only wrong, but also evil. What
he celebrates as "greatness" is actually the greatest enemy civilization
has ever encountered, the unencumbered rule of the political and
bureaucratic class.
But
in his apparently triumphalist article, Brooks is whistling past
the D.C. graveyard. National socialism is no longer an option. It's
been tried, and it's failed. The locus of national life has at least
shifted outside the beltway. Few care anymore what Washington has
to say, and fewer still believe it when they hear it.
Even
more importantly, the fear that once restrained fundamental criticism
of the government is largely gone. And this fact, more than any
other, is what is driving the power elite out of their living minds.
Their authority is now radically in question. Let the media and
the political class decry this as cynicism, or even hate. People
who can look beyond this bloody century of statism, and imagine
the truly great ideal of liberty, rejoice at the meltdown of the
national socialist state.
|