End
of the Nation-State
by
Doug Casey
Recently
by Doug Casey:
Notes From the Front Line on International Travel
There have
been a fair number of references to the subject of "phyles"
in this publication. But it occurs to me that I've never discussed
the topic myself in any detail. Especially how phyles are likely
to replace the nation-state, one of mankind's worst inventions.
Now might be
a good time to discuss the subject. We'll have an almost unremitting
stream of bad news, on multiple fronts, for years to come. So it
might be good to keep a hopeful prospect in mind although
I hate to use the word "hope," as much as it's been degraded
by OBAMA! and the kleptocrats, incompetents, and sociopaths that
surround him.
Let's start
by looking at where we've been. I trust you'll excuse my skating
over all of human political history in a few paragraphs, but my
object is to provide a framework for where we're going, rather than
an anthropological monograph.
Mankind has,
so far, gone through three main stages of political organization
since Day One, say 200,000 years ago, when anatomically modern men
started appearing. We can call them Tribes, Kingdoms, and Nation-States.
Karl Marx had
a lot of things wrong, especially his moral philosophy. But one
of the acute observations he made was that the means of production
are perhaps the most important determinant of how a society is structured.
Based on that, so far in history, only two really important things
have happened: the Agricultural Revolution and the Industrial Revolution.
Everything else is just a footnote.
Let's see how
these things relate.
The Agricultural
Revolution and the End of Tribes
In prehistoric
times, the largest political/economic group was the tribe. In that
man is a social creature, it was natural enough to be loyal to the
tribe. It made sense. Almost everyone in the tribe was genetically
related, and the group was essential for mutual survival in the
wilderness. That made them the totality of people that counted in
a person's life except for "others" from alien
tribes, who were in competition for scarce resources and might want
to kill you for good measure.
Tribes tend
to be natural meritocracies, with the smartest and the strongest
assuming leadership. But they're also natural democracies, small
enough that everyone can have a say on important issues. Tribes
are small enough that everybody knows everyone else, and knows what
their weak and strong points are. Everyone falls into a niche of
marginal advantage, doing what they do best, simply because that's
necessary to survive. Bad actors are ostracized or fail to wake
up, in a pool of their own blood, some morning. Tribes are socially
constraining but, considering the many faults of human nature, a
natural and useful form of organization in a society with primitive
technology.
As people built
their pool of capital and technology over many generations, however,
populations grew. At the end of the last Ice Age, around 12,000
years ago, all over the world, there was a population explosion.
People started living in towns and relying on agriculture as opposed
to hunting and gathering. Large groups of people living together
formed hierarchies, with a king of some description on top of the
heap.
Those who adapted
to the new agricultural technology and the new political structure
accumulated the excess resources necessary for waging extended warfare
against tribes still living at a subsistence level. The more evolved
societies had the numbers and the weapons to completely triumph
over the laggards. If you wanted to stay tribal, you'd better live
in the middle of nowhere, someplace devoid of the resources others
might want. Otherwise it was a sure thing that a nearby kingdom
would enslave you and steal your property.
The Industrial
Revolution and the End of Kingdoms
From around
12,000 B.C. to roughly the mid-1600s, the world's cultures were
organized under strong men, ranging from petty lords to kings, pharaohs,
or emperors.
It's odd, to
me at least, how much the human animal seems to like the idea of
monarchy. It's mythologized, especially in a medieval context, as
a system with noble kings, fair princesses, and brave knights riding
out of castles on a hill to right injustices. As my friend Rick
Maybury likes to point out, quite accurately, the reality differs
quite a bit from the myth. The king is rarely more than a successful
thug, a Tony Soprano at best, or perhaps a little Stalin. The princess
was an unbathed hag in a chastity belt, the knight a hired killer,
and the shining castle on the hill the headquarters of a concentration
camp, with plenty of dungeons for the politically incorrect.
With kingdoms,
loyalties weren't so much to the "country" a nebulous
and arbitrary concept but to the ruler. You were the
subject of a king, first and foremost. Your linguistic, ethnic,
religious, and other affiliations were secondary. It's strange how,
when people think of the kingdom period of history, they think only
in terms of what the ruling classes did and had. Even though, if
you were born then, the chances were 98% you'd be a simple peasant
who owned nothing, knew nothing beyond what his betters told him,
and sent most of his surplus production to his rulers. But, again,
the gradual accumulation of capital and knowledge made the next
step possible: the Industrial Revolution.
The Industrial
Revolution and the End of the Nation-State
As the means
of production changed, with the substitution of machines for muscle,
the amount of wealth took a huge leap forward. The average man still
might not have had much, but the possibility to do something other
than beat the earth with a stick for his whole life opened up, largely
as a result of the Renaissance.
Then the game
changed totally with the American and French Revolutions. People
no longer felt they were owned by some ruler; instead they now gave
their loyalty to a new institution, the nation-state. Some innate
atavism, probably dating back to before humans branched from the
chimpanzees about 3 million years ago, seems to dictate the Naked
Ape to give his loyalty to something bigger than himself. Which
has delivered us to today's prevailing norm, the nation-state, a
group of people who tend to share language, religion, and ethnicity.
The idea of the nation-state is especially effective when it's organized
as a "democracy," where the average person is given the
illusion he has some measure of control over where the leviathan
is headed.
On the plus
side, by the end of the 18th century, the Industrial Revolution
had provided the common man with the personal freedom, as well as
the capital and technology, to improve things at a rapidly accelerating
pace.
What caused
the sea change?
I'll speculate
it was largely due to an intellectual factor, the invention of the
printing press; and a physical factor, the widespread use of gunpowder.
The printing press destroyed the monopoly the elites had on knowledge;
the average man could now see that they were no smarter or "better"
than he was. If he was going to fight them (conflict is, after all,
what politics is all about), it didn't have to be just because he
was told to, but because he was motivated by an idea. And now, with
gunpowder, he was on an equal footing with the ruler's knights and
professional soldiers.
Right now I
believe we're at the cusp of another change, at least as important
as the ones that took place around 12,000 years ago and several
hundred years ago. Even though things are starting to look truly
grim for the individual, with collapsing economic structures and
increasingly virulent governments, I suspect help is on the way
from historical evolution. Just as the agricultural revolution put
an end to tribalism and the industrial revolution killed the kingdom,
I think we're heading for another multipronged revolution that's
going to make the nation-state an anachronism. It won't happen next
month, or next year. But I'll bet the pattern will start becoming
clear within the lifetime of many now reading this.
What pattern
am I talking about? Once again, a reference to the evil (I hate
to use that word too, in that it's been so corrupted by Bush and
religionists) genius Karl Marx, with his concept of the "withering
away of the State." By the end of this century, I suspect the
U.S. and most other nation-states will have, for all practical purposes,
ceased to exist.
The Problem
with the State and Your Nation-State
Of course,
while I suspect that many of you are sympathetic to that sentiment,
you also think the concept is too far out, and that I'm guilty of
wishful thinking. People believe the state is necessary and
generally good. They never even question whether the institution
is permanent.
My view is
that the institution of the state itself is a bad thing. It's not
a question of getting the right people into the government; the
institution itself is hopelessly flawed and necessarily corrupts
the people that compose it, as well as the people it rules. This
statement invariably shocks people, who believe that government
is both a necessary and permanent part of the cosmic firmament.
The problem
is that government is based on coercion, and it is, at a minimum,
suboptimal to base a social structure on institutionalized coercion.
I'm not going to go into the details here; I've covered this ground
from a number of directions in previous editions of this letter,
as well as in Crisis
Investing (Chap.16), Strategic Investing (Chap. 32), and,
most particularly Crisis Investing for the Rest of the '90s
(Chap. 34). Again, let me urge you to read the Tannehills' superb
The
Market for Liberty, which is available
for download free here.
One of the
huge changes brought by the printing press and advanced exponentially
by the Internet is that people are able to readily pursue different
interests and points of view. As a result, they have less and less
in common: living within the same political borders is no longer
enough to make them countrymen. That's a big change from pre-agricultural
times when members of the same tribe had quite a bit almost
everything in common. But this has been increasingly diluted
in the times of the kingdom and the nation-state. If you're honest,
you may find you have very little in common with most of your countrymen
besides superficialities and trivialities.
Ponder that
point for a minute. What do you have in common with your fellow
countrymen? A mode of living, (perhaps) a common language, possibly
some shared experiences and myths, and a common ruler. But very
little of any real meaning or importance. To start with, they're
more likely to be an active danger to you than the citizens of a
presumed "enemy" country, say, like Iran. If you earn
a good living, certainly if you own a business and have assets,
your fellow Americans are the ones who actually present the clear
and present danger. The average American (about 50% of them now)
pays no income tax. Even if he's not actually a direct or indirect
employee of the government, he's a net recipient of its largesse,
which is to say your wealth, through Social Security and other welfare
programs.
Over the years,
I've found I have much more in common with people of my own social
or economic station or occupation in France, Argentina, or Hong
Kong, than with an American union worker in Detroit or a resident
of the LA barrios. I suspect many of you would agree with that observation.
What's actually important in relationships is shared values, principles,
interests, and philosophy. Geographical proximity, and a common
nationality, is meaningless no more than an accident of birth.
I have much more loyalty to a friend in the Congo although
we're different colors, have different cultures, different native
languages, and different life experiences than I do to the
Americans who live down the highway in the trailer park. I see the
world the same way my Congolese friend does; he's an asset to my
life. I'm necessarily at odds with many of "my fellow Americans";
they're an active and growing liability.
Some might
read this and find a disturbing lack of loyalty to the state. It
sounds seditious. Professional jingoists like Rush Limbaugh, Sean
Hannity, Bill O'Reilly, or almost anyone around the Washington Beltway
go white with rage when they hear talk like this. My kind-of friend
Ann Coulter sent me a copy of her last book, endorsed with the words
"Stop promoting treason." (I sent her back an email: "Well,
maybe Obama will make us cellmates in a few years.") But the
fact is that loyalty to a state, just because you happen to have
been born in its bailiwick, is simply stupid.
As
far as I can tell, there are only two federal crimes specified in
the U.S. Constitution: counterfeiting and treason. That's a far
cry from today's world, where almost every real and imagined crime
has been federalized, underscoring that the whole document is a
meaningless dead letter, little more than a historical artifact.
Even so, that also confirms that the Constitution was quite imperfect,
even in its original form. Counterfeiting is simple fraud. Why should
it be singled out especially as a crime? (Okay, that opens up a
whole new can of worms
but not one I'll go into here.) Treason
is usually defined as an attempt to overthrow a government or withdraw
loyalty from a sovereign. A rather odd proviso to have when the
framers of the Constitution had done just that only a few years
before, one would think.
The way I see
it, Thomas Paine had it right when he said: "My country is
wherever liberty lives."
But where does
liberty live today? Actually, it no longer has a home. It's become
a true refugee since America, which was an excellent idea that grew
roots in a country of that name, degenerated into the United States.
Which is just another unfortunate nation-state. And it's on the
slippery slope.
June
4, 2012
Doug
Casey (send him mail)
is
a best-selling author and chairman of Casey
Research, LLC., publishers of Casey’s
International Speculator.
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© 2009 Casey
and Associates
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