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The Individualist in Wartime
by
Daniel McCarthy
The anti-statist,
whether he calls himself libertarian, conservative, individualist,
or something else, is facing a dilemma right now. He’s under pressure
to pick a side in the run-up to war with Iraq, and the choice
isn’t pretty.
To one side
of him are anti-war Communists and near-Communists. Across from
them are respectable-looking militarists. Normally a sane man
who values peace and prosperity would not want anything to do
with either camp. But there’s something about being caught between
the two that makes him feel compelled to choose a side, when the
only side he ought to choose is that of his own conscience.
Consider
the two factions vying for the anti-statist’s allegiance, starting
with the pro-war group. Its members may look normal enough but
their arguments, such as they are, make no sense. No good case
has been made for invading Iraq. In rare moments of candor, even
the war’s supporters admit
that it isn’t necessary. Saddam Hussein may well be violating
UN Security Council resolutions and developing whatever he can
in the way of "weapons of mass destruction," but that
doesn’t mean he poses a threat to the United States, let alone
an imminent threat. Saddam Hussein is not suicidal, he is not
about to launch a pre-emptive WMD attack against the United States.
Nor does he, a secular dictator with Christians serving high in
his regime, have good reason to trust al Qaeda with WMDs. No credible
evidence has linked Saddam Hussein to al Qaeda, and none has come
to light to suggest he plans to attack the US. The planned invasion
of Iraq is not a defensive war, it’s aggression. It should be
clear why any decent person should oppose it.
Iraq, however,
is very far away from where most of us live and work. Not so the
anti-war protesters, at least if you live in a major city. The
evils of the attack against Iraq are not immediately before our
eyes, but those of the anti-war protests are. And what are those
evils? A local example may serve to illustrate. The main library
of my university, Washington University in St. Louis, is undergoing
renovation. A wooden wall has been erected around the building’s
perimeter to keep students from wandering onto the construction
site. The university administration has made the wall available
to students and student groups who would like to paint it as a
form of publicity. Anti-war groups have taken advantage of the
opportunity. Here are four of the slogans they’ve put up:
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"Do
we use cellphones, or do cellphones use us?"
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"Cigarettes
are for Capitalistas."
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"America
is Nazi Babylon."
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Not all anti-war
activists, even on the Far Left, are as stupid or downright evil
as these graffiti suggest. But quite a few are. Neocons at National
Review Online and, interestingly, a couple of writers at The
Nation, have been hammering away for months now on the point
that many of the anti-war protests have been organized and led
by unreconstructed Communists, and that among their rank-and-file
are legions of Mumiacs and anti-globalization types. There is
enough truth to the exaggerated charges of the anti-antiwar press
to do the movement real damage. Sane people, even those with solid
anti-war principles, do not want to associate with Communists
and loons. What’s worse, I know of one person, a thoroughgoing
libertarian and devout Christian, who has been so repulsed by
what he’s seen of the anti-war movement that he’s now having second
thoughts about his own opposition to the war. I suspect my friend
is not alone. And he’s an extreme case, someone who is a self-identified
libertarian. Less ideologically committed people – that’s most
of middle America – are bound to be even more turned off. It would
be easy to criticize my friend for wavering and going on a basically
emotional reaction against the anti-war movement, but most people
do let their emotions color their reason. Even libertarians cannot
always avoid it.
My friend’s
problem, and the problem of those like him, is that he finds it
hard to be anti-war without being part of the anti-war movement.
Since he cannot accept the latter, he moves away from the former.
He thinks he only has two choices: to oppose the war alongside
the Far Left, or to oppose the Far Left alongside the war’s supporters.
This perception on his part is reinforced by rhetoric from both
factions, each of which makes claims to the effect that "those
who are not with us are against us" or "those who do
nothing [i.e., don’t join the protests] are as guilty as those
who take part in the invasion." Such declarations are intended
in part to polarize, to force the individual to choose between
the two extremes – misleading extremes, in this case. They are
also intended to associate belief with action. If you’re not protesting,
you must not be anti-war; or conversely, if you’re not supporting
US aggression against a sovereign nation, you must not be against
terrorism.
The unstated
assumption behind such arguments is the collectivist doctrine
that everybody has to pick a team, or indeed that everybody already
belongs to a team by default. To stake out an independent position,
this doctrine holds, is both untenable and immoral. It’s untenable
because the individual, acting alone, cannot possibly be effective.
And it’s immoral because the man who believes in something owes
it to his cause to be effective. It follows, then, that if he
holds any principles at all, he must work with a movement. To
go it alone is a waste, and to do it out of principle is "ideological
preening." It’s sheer vanity.
This fundamentally
collectivist idea, implicitly promoted by the Far Left, the center-Left
and so-called conservatives alike, has become part of the background
against which Americans (and others) today make decisions. One
might say that it has seeped into the "collective subconscious,"
although I think I would prefer to say that it has seeped into
subconscious of many an otherwise sane person. It’s an idea that
has to be examined and rejected. No earthly movement has a God-given
right to anyone’s loyalty. For a man to be morally obligated to
one, he has to have given his allegiance freely.
In concrete
terms, that means one should not feel implicated in the idiocies
and villainies of the anti-war movement simply because one is
anti-war. You’re not a
draftee in Ramsey Clark’s army just because you’re not with
Bush, and by the same token repudiating Ramsey Clark doesn’t have
to mean accepting the attack on Iraq. The individual’s only obligation
here is to his own conscience. That doesn’t necessarily make things
easy: there’s still the question of what the civilized man can
do about the war. It may be that the best thing for him
to do is nothing at all; simply minding his own business and refraining
from supporting the war. Or it may be that the best thing he can
do, according to the dictates of his reason and his conscience,
is to join the anti-war protests. But that’s for him to decide;
nobody else can tell anyone how best to use his time and talent,
and certainly nobody else has any moral claim upon either. To
say otherwise is to undercut the entire point of anti-statism.
It would be a bitter irony indeed for someone who’s against the
war because he’s against collectivism to become a collectivist
in order to oppose the war. One does not become a collectivist
merely by associating with them – collectivism is not like fleas
– one becomes a collectivist by adopting collectivist doctrine.
And that, unfortunately, is what otherwise sensible people are
doing when they feel compelled to make a choice between absurdities,
when all along they ought to follow their own principles.
March
5, 2003
Daniel
McCarthy [send him
mail] is a graduate student in classics at Washington University
in St. Louis.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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McCarthy Archives
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