Death
by Government: The Missing Chapter
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
DIGG THIS
Over the past
decade a number of researchers have attempted to document the extent
to which various governments during the twentieth century committed
acts of mass murder against their own citizens. The millions
of deaths catalogued by such researchers as R.J. Rummel, author
of Power
Kills and Death
by Government, and by the authors of The
Black Book of Communism, are not deaths caused by foreign
armies, but by all those unfortunate souls’ own governments.
The reason
for all the killing, whether it is called genocide or "democide,"
to use Rummel’s term, was to eliminate all opposition to the ruling
regime and its ideology. In Russia, the kulaks "who resisted
collectivization [of land] were shot, and the others deported,"
according to The Black Book of Communism (p. 9).
When the rural population of the Ukraine resisted, Stalin created
a famine that killed 6 million in a few months. "Virtually
identical crimes" were committed "by the regimes of Mao
Zedong, Kim Il Sung, and Pol Pot," according to The Black
Book (p. 10).
In Power
Kills, R. J. Rummel writes that "democidal" regimes
tend to become even more vicious toward their own people when their
political power "is conjoined with an absolutist ideology"
(p. 93). And, "when the rulers of such regimes find for whatever
reason that the continued existence of a social group is incompatible
with their beliefs or goals, totalitarian power enables them to
destroy that group" (p. 93). "War or rebellion" have
often provided "an excuse and cover for a regime to eliminate
those social groups it finds objectionable."
Armed with
this understanding, the authors of The Black Book present
the following statistics regarding how various communist governments
killed their own citizens by the millions (p. 4):
- U.S.S.R.:
20 million deaths
- China: 65
million deaths
- Vietnam:
1 million deaths
- North Korea:
2 million deaths
- Cambodia:
2 million deaths
- Eastern
Europe: 1 million deaths
- Latin America:
150,000 deaths
- Africa:
1.7 million deaths
- Afghanistan:
1.5 million deaths
Rummel has
studied more than just the former communist regimes, and includes
Nazi Germany’s 21 million civilian murders, among others.
After familiarizing
myself with this stomach-turning literature (you cannot really understand
the essence of socialism without it), it struck me that there is
a glaring omission. According to this scholarship, "democide"
occurs because of a desire on the part of a ruling regime to eliminate
its opposition; to eliminate all challenges to its "absolutist
ideology"; to exterminate a social group whose very existence
is incompatible with the regime's goals or ideology; and often occurs
disguised by a war or a rebellion that provides a convenient excuse.
The glaring
omission is the 300,000 Americans who were killed by the Lincoln
regime from 18611865. According to some conservative estimates,
some 50,000 Southern civilians were also killed. The southern secessionists
certainly were a significant opposition to the ruling regime; they
absolutely denied the validity of the regime’s absolutist ideology
– nationalism and a "mystical" union (as Lincoln called
it) that must be held together at all cost; they were certainly
dissenting to the Lincoln regime’s goals and its nationalistic ideology;
and Lincoln did refer to the original, peaceful acts of secession
as a "rebellion." Indeed, the "official" U.S.
government title for the War to Prevent Southern Independence is
"The War of the Rebellion."
More than
half of the 300,000 or so southerners (one out of four adult men)
who died, perished from disease. Nevertheless, it was the war, which
forced those men to live in conditions where they would be subjected
to being exposed to epidemics, that was the root cause of their
death.
On the
day he was inaugurated Lincoln pledged his everlasting support for
a constitutional amendment that had just passed the House and Senate
(the "Corwin Amendment") that would have prohibited the
federal government from ever interfering with Southern slavery.
It was his "mystic" union that he launched an invasion
of the southern states over, eventually killing hundreds of thousands
of fellow citizens. And Lincoln always considered southerners to
be fellow citizens in light of the fact that he never conceded that
secession was legal. The southern states never really left the union,
in Lincoln’s opinion; therefore, he admittedly waged the bloodiest
war in history up to that point against his own people.
Some 300,000
southern men were killed by the Lincoln regime at a time when the
population of the entire country was about 30 million, one-tenth
of what it is today. Standardizing for today’s population, the equivalent
number would be 3 million. If this number were included in the above
table, it would make the Republican Party regime of the 1860s appear
to be even worse democidal murderers than the twentieth-century
communist regimes of Pol Pot’s Cambodia, the Vietnamese communists,
North Korea, and the communist dictators in all of Eastern Europe
during the Cold War.
Confronting
this ugly reality also calls into question the basis of all of R.J.
Rummel’s work in this area, which is his claim that democracies
do not tend to wage war on each other. The War to Prevent Southern
Independence is a major contradiction of this claim, and it is simply
brushed aside by Rummel.
Rummel
is not the first to make this claim, however. World War I was supposed
to be "the war to end all wars" by dethroning the European
monarchs and replacing them with democracies. It didn’t work out
quite that way.
Ludwig
von Mises offered a more realistic interpretation of the causes
of "total war" (including the mass slaughter of civilian
dissenters) in the chapter of his magnum opus, Human
Action, entitled "The Economics of War." "[T]otal
war is an offshoot of aggressive nationalism," he wrote (p.
819, Scholars Edition). "While laissez faire eliminates the
causes of international conflict, government interference with business
and socialism create conflicts for which no peaceful solution can
be found."
It was
the Republican Party of the 1860s whose party platform was dominated
by mercantilistic interventionism, complete with high protectionist
tariffs, a politicized banking system, corporate welfare, and much
more. The phrase "New Deal" was first used to describe
the blizzard of domestic policy interventionism that was ushered
in by the Lincoln regime.
The
South was so much in favor of free trade, by contrast, that protectionist
tariffs were outlawed altogether in the Confederate Constitution.
And the majority of the political opposition to politicized banks
and corporate welfare had come from the south for some seventy years
as of 1861.
Southerners
opposed the aggressive nationalism of the Republican Party regime
(not of all northerners), and by seceding, adopting free trade,
and no longer paying federal taxes (mostly the tariff) they threatened
a very quick destruction of that regime. For that they had to be
invaded, killed by the hundreds of thousands, conquered, occupied,
and re-educated over and over again.
November
22, 2006
Thomas
J. DiLorenzo [send him mail]
professor of economics at Loyola College in Maryland and the
author of The
Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an
Unnecessary War,
(Three Rivers Press/Random House). His
latest book is Lincoln
Unmasked: What You’re Not Supposed To Know about Dishonest Abe
(Crown Forum/Random House).
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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