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May
a Libertarian Take Money From the Government?
by
Walter Block
Recently
by Walter Block: The
Battle of Wisconsin
Prof. Block,
First of all,
I want to say what a huge fan and follower of your work I am. Of
all the contributors to LRC and the LVM Institute I look forward
to your articles the most and Defending
the Undefendable is a truly entertaining and insightful
work.
I have a question
that I hope you might find the time to answer. Next fall, I will
be starting an Assistant Professor appointment at the University
of A in the Department of B. I understand that while possibly less-than-ideal,
the anarcho-libertarian academic can justify employment at a State
university because academia is a profession that has been monopolized
by the state and therefore we make do given our circumstances, much
like when we use government roads. As Murray Rothbard said, it's
not necessary for us to become martyrs. My question, as a young
faculty member on a tenure track at a research university, what
is the anarcho-libertarian position on state research grants? Obviously,
we cannot lobby the state to increase funding for these, but since
they exist anyway, may we pursue them and still remain consistent
libertarians? (I am assuming that any technology developed would
not be directly used to perpetrate aggression, but for basic science
and technologies that could lead to higher production, safety, better
standards of living for all.) My plan is to pursue every opportunity
possible to work with private industry, and ideally not take a penny
from the State, but this may not be a successful strategy.
I would very
much like to hear your opinion on this issue and I thank you in
advance for any time you may give to respond.
Regards,
Professor C
Dear Professor
C:
Thanks for
allowing me to address you (anonymously, for obvious reasons) in
this public setting. I wanted to do so, instead of replying to you
alone, since I get many, many letters from people on this very question,
or closely related issues. And, for every letter of this sort I
get, there are probably dozens of others who either do not take
jobs they would relish, or do so, and feel guilty about this since
they think they are violating libertarian principles. This letter,
then, although addressed to you, applies to all these others as
well. Hopefully, at least some of them will find solace from what
I am about to say.
1. It is only
a libertarian, and a thoughtful one at that, such as you are, who
would ever think to ask a question like this. This issue would never
in a million years arise on the left, or even the right. They both
believe in statism. In contrast, we libertarians support the non-aggression
principle (NAP) and thus are quite properly leery of having anything
to do with the government (the prime violator of the NAP), and,
certainly, to take money from the state is to be involved with it.
So, this question in and of itself is a great credit to you.
2. This question
most often is articulated by academics such as you. They, we, are
brighter than many, and, as libertarians we do not want to contradict
our principles. (In contrast, the leftie egalitarians are happy
hypocrites; they preach equality, and yet run around with two eyes,
when they could have donated one of them to a blind person; and
so are the chicken-hawk generals on the right, who would like the
U.S. to invade every country on the planet, and, maybe, some
on Mars, too, and yet do not volunteer for the military.) In a sense
libertarianism is simple: just keep your mitts to yourself, don’t
steal, rape, murder, etc. But, being true to the NAP is difficult
when the state has its tentacles in virtually every aspect of life.
The state violates rights with a vengeance, and it is difficult
to lead a normal life without being ensnared in its web.
3. My take
on this is that it is a positive virtue to relieve the government
of its ill-gotten gains. Suppose Z steals an apple from Y and then
X comes along and takes this fruit away from Z. Did X do anything
wrong? Did he act incompatibly with the NAP? Is X no longer a libertarian?
Of course not. Very much to the contrary, X did something entirely
compatible with our philosophy. Certainly, all libertarian theories
of private property rights, of punishment, would agree that of all
people in the world, Z is the absolutely least deserving
of this foodstuff. Now, it might be nice, it might be virtuous,
for X to return the apple to Y. Indeed, this was precisely the relationship
between Ragnar Danneskjold (X) and Hank Reardon (Y) in Ayn Rand’s
magnificent and monumental novel, Atlas
Shrugged. The government (Z) stole from Reardon (and of
course others) and Ragnar was just returning these stolen goods
to Hank, the victim. But, Ragnar’s behavior constituted a double
or two-stage act. First, he grabbed gold from the government; then,
and only then, did he return it to Hank. But, if a double act is
to be licit, then each and every part of it must be, too. Two wrongs
cannot make a right, and neither can one right and one wrong. So,
I deduce, it was entirely proper for Danneskjold to relieve the
evil government depicted in Atlas of its stolen property,
even if he did not give a penny of it to Reardon. Taking money from
a thief is an unadulterated good deed. Returning it to victims is
virtuous, too, but it is supererogatory: it is not needed to convert
the first part of this double-stage act into righteousness; the
first part is good in and of itself!
4. If you take
statist money, and I, personally, have, more on this see below,
suppose someone else asks you for it, on the ground that the government
stole his money, and you should return to him what you took from
them. Well, first off, you wouldn’t owe him all of it; you could
keep a sizeable portion of it as a salvage payment (the private
law of the sea judges in medieval times commonly awarded the rescuer
of a boat at sea one third of the value of the vessel). As for the
rest of it, the person requesting money from you must come with
clean hands himself. He cannot be anything but a libertarian; if
he is not, he is a supporter of this theft in the first place. He
is thus in cahoots with this criminal gang. And, if he is a libertarian,
he will fully realize that you are the first homesteader of this
wealth, and thus its proper owner. If he wants some, too, as is
his right, he should go to the same place as you did, and seize
it from the same bad guys.
5. I have in
my time been "guilty" of accepting subsidies from the
state. I shop for food in supermarkets, and eat even more of it
in restaurants. I therefore indirectly avail myself of agricultural
subsidies (I full well realize that farm goods would be cheaper
in the fully free society, but, still, given our lack of economic
freedom, there may well be a subsidy in it for me from dining.)
I have U.S. fiat fractional reserve bank currency in my wallet and
use it too, even though as a libertarian I favor free market (e.g.,
gold or silver) money. I use streets, sidewalks, roads and highways,
brought to me courtesy of our least favorite institution. I went
to public schools as a student, and taught at a few of them as a
faculty member. I had a New York State Regents’ Scholarship, and
I’m not giving back a penny of it to the government. I use public
libraries, art galleries and museums, shamelessly. I avail myself
of the services of statist parks: Central Park in New York City,
Stanley Park in Vancouver, Canada, and Audubon Park when in New
Orleans, and others besides. And when I do so, I give off with a
little smirk of satisfaction for a job well done. I have written
about these transgressions of mine and other aspects of this challenge
here,
here,
here,
here,
here, here,
here, here,
here,
here,
here,
here,
here,
here,
here,
here
and here.
Please, as the Jewish Mother of the libertarian movement, I absolve
all you kinder regarding the guilt you may have accepting these
and other such subsidies. Go out there, and proudly get everything
you can from the government. Hold your head high; you are doing
a mitzvah!
6. Which organizations
may properly accept government subsidies? May the typical private
university do so? My answer is no: while there may be a few free
enterprise professors on staff, typically in the economics department,
virtually all of the rest are hand in glove with the state, supporting
its depredations. For example, it is very rare indeed that there
will be even one freedom oriented professor in American higher education
in departments such as sociology, anthropology, philosophy, law,
political science, history, religion, literature, to say nothing
of multicultural departments as feminist, black and queer studies.
In my experience, the majority of the faculty even at business colleges
are critics of the free enterprise system, not supporters.
7. Now, at
long last, let me reply to the specific points you make. I don’t
think that the "anarcho-libertarian academic can justify employment
at a State university because academia is a profession that has
been monopolized by the state." First of all, the government
has not fully monopolized education. There are, after all, numerous
fully private institutions of learning. Even on the college level,
there is Grove City College and Hillsdale. There are many, many
ostensibly private universities that are only partially subsidized
by government. The government, moreover, has not fully monopolized
information flows: there are many alternatives to its Post Office.
Yet, it is entirely justified for libertarians to avail themselves
of snail mail. You are quite right: Murray Rothbard truly said that
it's not necessary for us to become martyrs. Libertarianism does
not at all require any such thing.
I have no objection,
at all, to your plan of pursuing "every opportunity possible
to work with private industry." But, realize that if you do,
you will not be awarded any libertarian brownie points at all for
helping to relieve the government of its plunder. Please understand
me: I certainly don’t oppose private industry (under present institutional
arrangements, there’s very little of that out there, except for
a few mom and pop operations). It should not at all be an "ideal
… not take a penny from the State," at least not for the libertarian.
No, no, no, a thousand times no, it is a virtue to take money
away from this illicit organization, and way more than a penny too.
8. But wait!
If you cooperate with the government in this manner, can you not
be properly accused of "aiding and abetting" an evil institution?
Well, yes, sort of. If you take money from the state, you are indeed
giving it your imprimatur, or "sanction" as the Randians would say.
And, indeed, you are helping the government in the ex ante sense,
in that both parties always and ever, and necessarily so, benefit
from any voluntary exchange, and, here, you are both agreeing: you
to accept the funds, they to give them to you.
However, you
are not promoting statism any more by taking their money than by
carrying around their cash, patronizing their libraries or streets,
etc. And, too, while you are of course benefitting them in the ex
ante sense, you are certainly not doing so in the ex post sense.
That is, they are giving you the money in the hope that by doing
so, they can better promote statism than by the use of it in any
other way. But you, by your actual actions, will not be doing any
such thing. Now, I am not at all knowledgeable about your own specialty,
B. So, I cannot say how this will play out in your field. So, let
me talk about my own. I have previously taught economics at several
public colleges and universities. What the powers that be would
have liked me to teach was moderate neoclassicism; the doctrine
of market failure, according to which while free enterprise does
indeed function well under the conditions of perfect competition,
in the real world these conditions are often not met, and thus there
is an important role for the government to engage in anti-trust,
welfare policies, to enact pro-union legislation, tariff barriers,
etc. As you can imagine, while I did indeed acquaint my students
with these claims (not to have done so would have left them helpless,
and would have been to cheat them), I have also pointed out serious,
nay, fatal, flaws in this analytic framework. So, when the libertarian
Nuremberg trials begin for me, and I shall indeed be in the
dock for consorting with the enemy in this manner, I fully expect
that I will be exonerated, and fully so. But what about the Marxist,
socialist, mixed economy or interventionist professor? Will he also
be found innocent by the libertarian jury? Not at all. In contrast
to me, he really did "aid and abet" the evil state, by
promoting its doctrines, inculcating them among the youth.
What of your
field, B? Let us posit that it is impossible for you to promote
liberty in it. If you do your job (if not, you’ll quickly be fired
so your question is all but moot) you cannot promote liberty, since
your calling is too orthogonal to freedom for that purpose. Here’s
a suggestion for you. If you still feel guilty about becoming enmeshed
in statist finance (which feelings I strongly urge you to squelch),
and have no way to promote liberty (as I do in economics), then
how about the following. Take a hefty part of your salary (net not
gross), say 5% or even 10%, and donate it to an organization that
promotes freedom in a spectacular manner. Hint, hint: I can think
of no better group than the Mises Institute, and/or, at least in
the short term, a contribution to Ron Paul.
9. To conclude.
Enough of pure theory. Let us now get down to practical reality.
It is entirely legal under the present laws of the land for you
to apply for, and receive, wealth from the government of the sort
you describe, so all of this talk of "theft" is beside
the point from the pragmatic perspective. I urge you to apply for
all of the grants you possibly can. Murray Rothbard said that a
man’s contribution to society is proportional to the profits he
earns. I say in similar vein, other things equal, the more money
you take from the coffers of the state the better libertarian you
are.
March
11, 2011
Dr.
Block [send him mail] is a
professor of economics at Loyola University New Orleans, and a senior
fellow of the Ludwig von Mises Institute. He is the author of Defending
the Undefendable and Labor
Economics From A Free Market Perspective. His latest book
is The
Privatization of Roads and Highways.
Copyright
© 2011 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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