Nozick
and Rothbard at the WTC
by
Burton S. Blumert
I
only met Robert Nozick on one occasion, and learning of his death
today brought a kaleidoscope of images surrounding that encounter.
Here’s
how I remember it, but please don’t jump all over me if some of
the dates and details are skewed.
I
think it was 1981: the Center for Libertarian Studies was going
through a difficult time.
For
the first five years of its existence, CLS received funds from a
major conservative foundation, but an antiwar essay by Murray Rothbard
bothered them, and they unceremoniously cut us off. (Rothbard, like
Mises, was uncompromising, intractable, they fumed.)
The
Center, free from their clutches, found itself poor, proud, and
independent a condition maintained through the years.
At
about the same time, CLS was having bad luck with its Executive
Directors. One was lost in a tragic suicide, and his successor the
CLS board would sadly learn was a partially recovered member of
Gambler’s Anonymous.
Some
months later, Richard let’s call him disappeared,
and two fellows with hand-painted ties, representing a garbage disposal
company from New Jersey, came to CLS’s offices looking for him.
(Today, they could audition for "The Sopranos.")
In
spite of the fancy address on Park Avenue South in Manhattan, the
CLS offices were appropriately grungy. The two "collectors"
were disappointed to see the impoverished setting. They realized
they weren’t collecting any unpaid gambling debts in this dump and
after looking around a bit, they gave CLS a $5 contribution. (It’s
all true except the donation.)
Bear
with me. I haven’t forgotten Robert Nozick.
Old
Racing Forms and torn up pari-mutuel tickets were not Mr. Gambler’s
Anonymous’ only legacy. He had decided that the Center For Libertarian
Studies would honor the 100th anniversary of the birth
of Ludwig von Mises with a bash at the ritzy "Windows on the
World" atop the World Trade Center. Yes, Richard’s event would
not soon be forgotten and could bankrupt CLS .
The
CLS board was horrified. I was the brand new member of that august
body, a lone businessman amongst a bevy of academics. Only friend
Lew Rockwell, on the brink of launching the Mises Institute, was
there to help derail Richard’s grandiose plans.
I
soon learned that the contracts with Windows on the World had already
been signed. The Center was guaranteeing 250 guests and a sumptuous
menu. When I noted that the Baked Alaska dessert alone was priced
at $12.50, I feared we were doomed.
But
Richard’s sin cut far deeper. It was well known in libertarian circles
that Murray Rothbard had overcome a list of phobias. It took a great
deal of effort, but poor Murray could now deal with airplanes, tunnels,
and bridges, but, one fear remained he was not about to enter an
elevator in a skyscraper; a moving, sealed coffin that propelled
a body over 100 stories in a few seconds.
Given
the recent horrid event on 9/11 at that very site, Murray’s "phobia"
now seems quite understandable.
How
in heaven’s name could the Center for Libertarian Studies schedule
a celebration like the 100th anniversary of the birth
of Ludwig von Mises knowing full well that Murray Rothbard would
never show up?
I
tried everything to break the contract with Windows on the World
and cancel the event but it was too late. Richard had locked us
in with substantial deposits we could not recover. CLS was committed
to the dinner on the 108th floor, and Murray Rothbard.
wasn’t going to be there.
And
finally to Robert Nozick. Nozick was our first libertarian "pop-star."
His award-winning book, Anarchy,
State and Utopia, published in 1974, brought semi-radical
libertarian concepts to the Establishment.
Many
of us felt Nozick’s book drew heavily upon Murray Rothbard’s work
without sufficient credit indeed, that the whole work was
intended as a limited-governnment response to Murray’s anarcho-capitalism
though Nozick did grudgingly recognize Murray in the book’s
"Acknowledgements."
In
balance, the success of the book was a breakthrough for the movement.
Nozick was movie-star handsome and eloquent and you guessed
it Mr. Gamblers Anonymous had contracted with Nozick to be
the main speaker at the Mises dinner.
The
elaborately engraved invitations went out and Nozick proved to be
a powerful draw. The dinner was over-subscribed and although the
mercy of time has obliterated the memory of Nozick’s exact fee,
there is no question
that he filled the room
As
the night of the dinner drew closer we became more worried about
Murray. We begged, we implored, we threatened. We even considered
taking the entire day to walk him up the 100-plus floors.
Not
a chance. He wasn’t getting near those elevators.
Dear
Joey Rothbard, Murray’s lifelong companion, finally asked that we
stop badgering him and that we leave the matter in her hands.
At
the elegant reception prior to the banquet tuxedoed waiters splashed
French champagne into everybody’s glass. Any wasted drops that might
have spilled to the carpet set off the cash register in my head.
The
guests milled about on the 108th floor in the clouds
looking down on New York’s old skyscrapers, the Empire State and
the Chrysler Building.
But
our joy was tempered. There was no Murray.
Suddenly
all eyes turned to the giant elevator doors as they rolled open.
There was JoAnn Rothbard with her trophy, poor Murray. He was ghastly
white. The applause started slowly and mounted to cheers as most
in the room realized what Murray had overcome to make that ascent.
JoAnn
led him to the lectern and the room grew silent. Murray leaned over,
grasped the microphone, and said: "I bring you greetings from
Planet Earth."
Robert
Nozick’s entrance was almost as dramatic. Not copying Murray’s rumpled
appearance, Nozick wore a fashionable turtleneck under his jacket.
His hair was perfectly coiffed and a fashion critic might report
that he was exquisitely casual. Only a Harvard philosopher could
bring it off.
Not
only was he thin and tall and god-like, he was articulate and born
to dazzle women. It was as if they were melting at his feet. Women
were lining up to present him with their hotel room keys.
But
most of the men in the room would have most likely murdered him.
The
rest of the evening remains blurry. The program was well received,
and as the blood began to course again through Rothbard’s veins,
his speech turned out to be the hit of the evening.
Nozick
did not disappoint, but there was a surprise yet to come.
The
near-bankrupt CLS had provided a limo for super-star Nozick, and
pre-paid his hotel accommodations for one night. But he never used
our reservation, and I soon learned why.
Weeks
later I received a bill in the mail. It was for an expensive suite
for an entire weekend at the fanciest East Side hotel.
Murray
once said he never met a billionaire he liked. I never met a Harvard
philosopher super-star that I understood. N.B.:
We devoted much of the first issue of the Journal
of Libertarian Studies to his book
January
26, 2002
Burt
Blumert [send him mail]
is publisher of LewRockwell.com
and president of the Center
for Libertarian Studies.
Copyright
© 2002 LewRockwell.com
Burton
S. Blumert Archives
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