If We Quit Voting
by
Frank Chodorov
This essay
originally appeared in July 1945 in a monthly newsletter Chodorov
established called analysis. It later appeared as a chapter in his
book Out
of Step: The Autobiography of an Individualist (1962).
New York in
midsummer is measurably more miserable than any other place in this
world and should be comparable to the world for which all
planners are headed. Why New Yorkers, otherwise sane, should choose
to parboil their innards in a political campaign during this time
of the year is a question that comes under the head of man's inscrutable
propensity for self-punishment. And if a fellow elects to let the
whole thing pass him by, some socially conscious energumen is bound
to sweat him with a lecture on civic duty, like the citizeness who
came at me.
For 25 years
my dereliction has been known to my friends, and more than one has
undertaken to set me straight; out of these arguments came a solid
defense for my nonvoting position, so that the lady in question
was well parried with practiced retorts. I pointed out, with many
instances, that though we have had candidates and platforms and
parties and campaigns in abundance, we have had an equivalent plenitude
of poverty and crime and war. The regularity with which the perennial
promise of "good times" wound up in depression suggested
the incompetence of politics in economic affairs. Maybe the good
society we have been voting for lay some other way; why not try
another fork in the road, the one pointing to individual self-improvement,
particularly in acquiring a knowledge of economics? And so on.
There was one
question put to me by my charming annoyer that I deftly sidestepped,
for the day was sultry and the answer called for some mental effort.
The question: "What would happen if we quit voting?"
If you are
curious about the result of noneating you come upon the question
of why we eat. So, the query put to me by the lady brings up the
reason for voting. The theory of government by elected representatives
is that these fellows are hired by the voting citizenry to take
care of all matters relating to their common interests. However,
it is different from ordinary employment in that the representative
is not under specific orders, but is given blanket authority to
do what he believes desirable for the public welfare in any and
all circumstances, subject to constitutional limitations. In all
matters relating to public affairs the will of the individual is
transferred to the elected agent, whose responsibility is commensurate
with the power thus invested in him.
It is this
transference of power from voter to elected agents that is the crux
of republicanism. The transference is well-nigh absolute. Even the
constitutional limitations are not so in fact, since they can be
circumvented by legal devices in the hands of the agents. Except
for the tenuous process of impeachment, the mandate is irrevocable.
For the abuse or misuse of the mandate the only recourse left to
the principals, the people, is to oust the agents at the next election.
But when we oust the rascals, do we not, as a matter of course,
invite a new crowd? It all adds up to the fact that by voting them
out of power, the people put the running of their community life
into the hands of a separate group, upon whose wisdom and integrity
the fate of the community rests.
All this would
change if we quit voting. Such abstinence would be tantamount to
this notice to politicians: since we as individuals have decided
to look after our affairs, your services are no longer needed. Having
assumed social power we must, as individuals, assume social responsibility
provided, of course, the politicians accept their discharge.
The job of running the community would fall on each and all of us.
We might hire an expert to tell us about the most improved firefighting
apparatus, or a manager to look after cleaning the streets, or an
engineer to build us a bridge; but the final decision, particularly
in the matter of raising funds to defray costs, would rest with
the townhall meeting. The hired specialists would have no authority
other than that necessary for the performance of their contractual
duties; coercive power, which is the essence of political authority,
would be exercised, if necessary, only by the committee of the whole.
There is some
warrant for the belief that a better social order would ensue when
the individual is responsible for it and, therefore, responsive
to its needs. He no longer has the law or the lawmakers to cover
his sins of omission; need of the neighbors' good opinion will be
sufficient compulsion for jury duty and no loopholes in a draft
law, no recourse to "political pull" will be possible
when danger to his community calls him to arms. In his private affairs,
the now-sovereign individual will have to meet the dictum of the
marketplace: produce or you do not eat; no law will help you. In
his public behavior he must be decent or suffer the sentence of
social ostracism, with no recourse to legal exoneration. From a
law-abiding citizen he will be transmuted into a self-respecting
man.
Would chaos
result? No, there would be order, without law to disturb it.
But, let us
define chaos. Is it not disharmony resulting from social friction?
When we trace social friction to its source do we not find that
it seminates in a feeling of unwarranted hurt, or injustice? Then
chaos is a social condition in which injustice obtains. Now, when
one man may take, by law, what another man has put his labor into,
we have injustice of the keenest kind, for the denial of a man's
right to possess and enjoy what he produces is akin to a denial
of life. Yet the power to confiscate property is the first business
of politics. We see how this is so in the matter of taxation; but
greater by far is the amount of property confiscated by monopolies,
all of which are founded in law.
While this
economic basis of injustice has been lost in our adjustment to it,
the resulting friction is quite evident. Most of us are poor in
spite of our constant effort and known ability to produce an abundance;
the incongruity is aggravated by a feeling of hopelessness. But
the keenest hurt arises from the thought that the wealth we see
about us is somehow ours by right of labor, but is not ours by right
of law. Resentment, intensified by bewilderment, stirs up a reckless
urge to do something about it. We demand justice; we have friction.
We have strikes and crimes and bankruptcy and mental unbalances.
And we cheat our neighbors, and each seeks for himself a legal privilege
to live by another's labor. And we have war. Is this a condition
of harmony or of chaos?
In the frontier
days of our country there was little law, but much order, for the
affairs of the community were in the hands of the citizenry. Although
fiction may give an opposite impression, it is a fact that there
was less per capita crime to take care of then than there is now
when law pervades every turn and minute of our lives. What gave
the West its wild and woolly reputation was the glamorous drama
of intense community life. Everybody was keenly interested in the
hanging of a cattle rustler; it was not done in the calculated quiet
of a prison, with the dispatch of a mechanical system. The railriding
of a violator of townhall dicta had to be the business of the town
prosecutor, who was everybody.
Though the
citizen's private musket was seldom used for the protection of life
and property, its presence promised swift and positive justice,
from which no legal chicanery offered escape, and its loud report
announced the dignity of decency. Every crime was committed against
the public, not the law, and therefore the public made an ado about
it. Mistakes were made, to be sure, for human judgment is ever fallible;
but, until the politician came, there was no deliberate malfeasance
or misfeasance; until laws came, there were no violations, and the
code of human decency made for order.
So, if we should
quit voting for parties and candidates, we would individually reassume
responsibility for our acts and, therefore, responsibility for the
common good. There would be no way of dodging the verdict of the
marketplace; we would take back only in proportion to our contribution.
Any attempt to profit at the expense of a neighbor or the community
would be quickly spotted and as quickly squelched, for everybody
would recognize a threat to himself in the slightest indulgence
of injustice. Since nobody would have the power to enforce monopoly
conditions, none would obtain. Order would be maintained by the
rules of existence, the natural laws of economics.
That is, if
the politicians would permit themselves to be thus ousted from their
positions of power and privilege.
I doubt it.
Remember that
the proposal to quit voting is basically revolutionary; it amounts
to a shifting of power from one group to another, which is the essence
of revolution. As soon as the nonvoting movement got up steam, the
politicians would most assuredly start a counterrevolution. Measures
to enforce voting would be instituted; fines would be imposed for
violations, and prison sentences would be meted out to repeaters.
It is a necessity
for political power, no matter how gained, to have the moral support
of public approval, and suffrage is the most efficient scheme for
registering it; notice how Hitler, Mussolini, and Stalin insisted
on having ballots cast. In any republican government, even ours,
only a fraction of the populace votes for the successful candidate,
but that fraction is quantitatively impressive; it is this appearance
of overwhelming sanction that supports him in the exercise of political
power. Without it he would be lost.
Propaganda,
too, would bombard this passive resistance to statism; not only
that put out by the politicians of all parties the coalition
would be as complete as it would be spontaneous but also
the more effective kind emanating from seemingly disinterested sources.
All the monopolists, all the coupon-clipping foundations, all the
tax-exempt eleemosynary institutions in short, all the "respectables"
would join in a howling defense of the status quo.
We would be
told most emphatically that unless we keep on voting away our power
to responsible persons, it would be grabbed by irresponsible ones;
tyranny would result.
That is probably
true, seeing how since the beginning of time men have sought to
acquire property without laboring
for it.
The answer
lies, as it always has, in the judicious use of private artillery.
On this point a story, apocryphal no doubt, is worth telling. When
Napoleon's conquerors were considering what to do with him, a buck-skinned
American allowed that a fellow of such parts might be handy in this
new country and ought to be invited to come over. As for the possibility
of a Napoleonic regime being started in America, the recent revolutionist
dismissed it with the remark that the musket with which he shot
rabbits could also kill tyrants. There is no substitute for human
dignity.
But the argument
is rather specious in the light of the fact that every election
is a seizure of power. The balloting system has been defined as
a battle between opposing forces, each armed with proposals for
the public good, for a grant of power to put these proposals into
practice. As far as it goes, this definition is correct; but when
the successful contestant acquires the grant of power toward what
end does he use it not theoretically but practically? Does
he not, with an eye to the next campaign, and with the citizens'
money, go in for purchasing support from pressure groups? Whether
it is by catering to a monopoly interest whose campaign contribution
is necessary to his purpose, or to a privilege-seeking labor group,
or to a hungry army of unemployed or of veterans, the over-the-barrel
method of seizing and maintaining political power is standard practice.
This is not,
however, an indictment of our election system. It is rather a description
of our adjustment to conquest. Going back to beginnings although
the process is still in vogue, as in Manchuria, or more recently
in the Baltic states when a band of freebooters developed
an appetite for other people's property they went after it with
vim and vigor. Repeated visitations of this nature left the victims
breathless, if not lifeless, and propertyless to boot. So, as men
do when they have no other choice, they made a compromise. They
hired one gang of thieves to protect them from other gangs, and
in time the price paid for such protection came to be known as taxation.
The tax gatherers settled down in the conquered communities, possibly
to make collections certain and regular, and as the years rolled
on a blend of cultures and of bloods made of the two classes one
nation. But the system of taxation remained after it had lost its
original significance; lawyers and professors of economics, by deft
circumlocution, turned tribute into "fiscal policy" and
clothed it with social good.
Nevertheless,
the social effect of the system was to keep the citizenry divided
into two economic groups: payers and receivers. Those who lived
without producing became traditionalized as "servants of the
people," and thus gained ideological support. They further
entrenched themselves by acquiring sub-tax-collecting allies; that
is, some of their group became landowners, whose collection of rent
rested on the law-enforcement powers of the ruling clique, and others
were granted subsidies, tariffs, franchises, patent rights, monopoly
privileges of one sort or another. This division of spoils between
those who wield power and those whose privileges depend on it is
succinctly described in the expression, "the state within the
state."
Thus, when
we trace our political system to its origin, we come to conquest.
Tradition, law, and custom have obscured its true nature, but no
metamorphosis has taken place; its claws and fangs are still sharp,
its appetite as voracious as ever. In the light of history it is
not a figure of speech to define politics as the art of seizing
power; and its present purpose, as of old, is economic.
There is no
doubt that men of high purpose will always give of their talents
for the common welfare, with no thought of recompense other than
the goodwill of the community. But so long as our taxation system
remains, so long as the political means for acquiring economic goods
is available, just so long will the spirit of conquest assert itself;
for men always seek to satisfy their desires with the least effort.
It is interesting to speculate on the kind of campaigns and the
type of candidates we would have if taxation were abolished and
if, also, the power to dispense privilege vanished. Who would run
for office if there were "nothing in it"?
Why should
a self-respecting citizen endorse an institution grounded in thievery?
For that is what one does when one votes. If it be argued that we
must let bygones be bygones, see what we can do toward cleaning
up the institution so that it can be used for the maintenance of
an orderly existence, the answer is that it cannot be done; we have
been voting for one "good government" after another, and
what have we got? Perhaps the silliest argument, and yet the one
invariably advanced when this succession of failures is pointed
out, is that "we must choose the lesser of two evils."
Under what compulsion are we to make such a choice? Why not pass
up both of them?
To effectuate
the suggested revolution all that is necessary is to stay away from
the polls. Unlike other revolutions, it calls for no organization,
no violence, no war fund, no leader to sell it out. In the quiet
of his conscience each citizen pledges himself, to himself, not
to give moral support to an unmoral institution, and on election
day he remains at home. That's all. I started my revolution 25 years
ago and the country is none the worse for it.
Reprinted
from Mises.org.
Frank
Chodorov (18871966), one of the great libertarians of the
Old Right, was the founder of the Intercollegiate Society of Individualists
and author of such books as The
Income Tax: Root of All Evil. Here he is on "Taxation
Is Robbery." And here
is Rothbard's obituary of Chodorov.

The
Best of Frank Chodorov
|