Books You Must Read
by
David Gordon
by David Gordon
This article
is based on a talk given at the Mises Circle in Costa Mesa, California,
on May 6, 2006.
America is
today embroiled in a futile, costly, and immoral war. Domestically,
deficit spending is out of control, and new disclosures about telephone
spying by the National Security Agency reveal yet another threat
to civil liberties. How did we get to where we are today? To answer
this question, six books are especially useful.
The
Bush administration’s disastrous policies show the dangers of centralized
power. As Tom Woods makes clear in The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American History, the struggle
for liberty since the inception of the Constitution has been an
effort to limit the federal government. Woods shows that the federal
government, far from being the protector of the rights of minorities,
has been the main obstacle on the path to liberty.
The supporters
of the Constitution were the centralizing party, as opposed to the
more farseeing Antifederalists, who warned of the dangers of the
new regime. Yet even the Constitution’s advocates sought to restrain
national authority.
In this connection,
Woods emphasizes the Tenth Amendment, which "guaranteed the
states’ rights to self-government. . . Since the states existed
prior to the federal government, they were the sources of whatever
power the federal government had."
But this did
not suffice to protect the people from an overly powerful central
government. Thomas Jefferson and his followers argued that the states
had the right to nullify laws they deemed unconstitutional. If a
state resisted in this way, the operation of the disputed law would
be suspended in that state, until a conference of the states could
resolve the dispute. This doctrine, embodied in the Virginia and
Kentucky Resolutions, was by no means confined to the South. Northern
state courts later nullified the fugitive slave laws.
The War Between
the States, sometimes called the Civil War, was not fought to end
slavery; Abraham Lincoln’s aim was to consolidate national power.
In the pursuit of this centralizing mission, the Northern armies
shocked contemporary European observers by their assaults on civilians.
The campaigns of Sherman and other Northern generals foreshadow
the horrors of twentieth-century global warfare.
Woods shows
how the policies of Woodrow Wilson and Franklin Roosevelt continued
and extended Lincoln’s drive for an all-powerful central government.
Of course a government of this kind could not tolerate the free
market; but during the New Deal period, many prominent intellectuals
thought that interference with the market had not gone far enough.
Some of the self-styled intellectual elite sympathized with the
"Soviet experiment." During the 1920s,famed progressive
educator John Dewey could hardly contain his enthusiasm for the
Soviets.
Tom
DiLorenzo’s outstanding How
Capitalism Saved America shows in detail the economic aspects
of the struggle between centralized power and liberty. Throughout
the course of American history since the Constitution was adopted,
political groups have sought to yoke the free market to a policy
of economic nationalism and governmentally directed growth. Alexander
Hamilton began a program, unfortunately highly influential, that
distorted the choices of the free market. He "favored the mercantilist
policies of protectionist tariffs, taxpayer subsidies for private
road-and canal-building corporations, and a government-run monetary
system that could finance such patronage."
Hamilton faced
vigorous opposition from Jefferson and his many followers, who recognized
the fallacies of Hamilton’s mercantilism. As DiLorenzo points out,
the Jeffersonians hammered home the connection between a strong
national government and mercantilism.
The Hamiltonians
and their successors wanted a governmentally guided economy: the
Jeffersonians did not. Who was right? The answer comes as no surprise.
The policy of internal improvements, promoted by Henry Clay and
other proponents of his American System, failed disastrously. By
contrast, the free market proved perfectly able to provide public
goods such as roads and canals.
The manifest
mistakes of the American System did not deter Clay’s main follower,
Abraham Lincoln, from vigorous promotion of high tariffs and even
more "improvements." DiLorenzo sees this as the key to
Lincoln’s career. Far from being a champion of human freedom, Lincoln
aimed to subordinate the states to his program of economic nationalism.
DiLorenzo shows that Lincoln’s election was the triumph of mercantilism
in America.
Unfortunately,
DiLorenzo argues, "the American economy has featured what might
be called creeping mercantilism ever since." Franklin Roosevelt
proved an able student of Lincoln and the Hamiltonians, and, in
his case, economic nationalism bore disturbingly close parallels
with fascism. DiLorenzo notes that Roosevelt’s National Industrial
Recovery Act "was essentially modeled after the Italian fascist
system."
DiLorenzo shows
that the defenders of mercantilism often resort to strange tactics.
In their efforts to promote statist monopoly control of the economy,
they act to cripple large companies that serve the consumers. He
maintains that many proponents of state regulation of alleged monopolies
realize full well that the businesses they wish to suppress satisfy
market demand better than any available alternative. He quotes,
e.g., from Learned Hand’s Alcoa decision. "Hand condemned
Alcoa for its ‘superior skill, foresight, and industry.’ This was
exclusionary, he said, for not all the companies in the industry
shared this skill, foresight, and industry."
Both
Woods and DiLorenzo emphasize that war has been a principal means
to enhance the power of the centralized state. This has been a dominant
theme in the work of the distinguished economic historian Robert
Higgs, and I’d like to recommend two of his books: Against
Leviathan: Government Power and a Free Society and Resurgence
of the Warfare State: The Crisis Since 9/11.
In Against
Leviathan, Higgs applies his most famous thesis, elaborated
in his great earlier book Crisis
and Leviathan. The state grows during wartime and other
"emergencies"; and when peace or normality returns, government
does not shrink to its former size. Business groups that might have
been expected to defend free enterprise in fact cooperate with the
government in order to advance their own interests. "Within
three decades, from the outbreak of World War I in Europe to the
end of World War II, the American people endured three great national
emergencies, during each of which the federal government imposed
unprecedented taxation and economic controls on the population.
. . Rather than resisting the government’s impositions or working
to overthrow them, they [business interests] looked for ways to
adapt to them, positioning themselves so that government policies
would provide a tax advantage, channel a subsidy their way, or hobble
their competitors."
But
doesn’t the Constitution protect us from an overly powerful state?
The problem, for Higgs, does not lie in the text of the Constitution.
Rather, during periods of crisis, the Supreme Court all too often
defers to the central government. Faced with an emergency, the Court
refuses to impose legal barriers that an inflamed public is likely
to condemn. Higgs places great emphasis on the Court’s upholding
the Adamson Act in 1917, under which the Wilson administration imposed
a labor settlement on interstate railroads. Nothing in the Constitution
allowed Wilson to do this, but the Court found a "reservoir
of reserved power" to justify Wilson’s invasion of the railroad
owners’ property rights.
Even worse,
the Court during World War I "readily affirmed the constitutionality
of sending men against their will to fight and die in a remote power
struggle." Once conscription was allowed, how could government
be restrained at all? Elsewhere Higgs has noted that this was precisely
the argument of Justice Holmes: If government may involuntarily
compel people to risk their lives, may it not restrict their liberties
in any lesser way it chooses, should an emergency in its judgment
demand this?
Unfortunately,
as Higgs makes clear in Resurgence of the Warfare State,
during the Iraq War the Bush Administration has continued to use
military emergency to increase the power of the government. The
ostensible reasons for the war cannot be taken seriously. Who can
really believe that Iraq, a nation long subjected to a devastating
blockade and bombing, posed a danger to America? In the months that
preceded the invasion, much was made of Saddam Hussein’s supposed
plans to obtain nuclear weapons. Of course, we now know that the
intelligence reports that alleged such plans were false. But even
if they had been true, an Iraq with nuclear arms was a minor matter.
Higgs thinks
that not only the Iraq war, but also the entire "war on terrorism"
is a made-up affair, designed to frighten the American public into
support for a foreign policy of militant aggression. He uses a simple
but telling argument to show that the campaign against terror is
bogus. If we really were in danger, isn’t the government doing far
too little to protect us? "If semi-organized gangs of suicidal
maniacs numbering in the thousands are out to kill us all, the government
ought not to be fiddling with kindergarten subsidies and the preservation
of the slightly spotted screech owl. It ought to get serious."
If American
foreign policy is so manifestly unreasonable, how can the elites
who control the government fail to see that it is? Higgs finds part
of the answer in a concept of C. Wright Mills’s. (By the way, Murray
Rothbard also thought highly of Mills’s work.) Mills maintained
that a self-styled elite thinks itself superior to the masses, in
that it is not deceived by idealistic rhetoric but can cope with
the hard realities of Machtpolitik. In fact, as Mills explained
in The
Causes of World War III, the elite is the
prisoner of its own narrow assumptions.
Mills called this inability to think beyond the ready resort to
force "crackpot realism."
But why have
such inept and dangerous policies been adopted? A good part of the
answer, Higgs argues, stems from the vast fortunes to be made in
the defense industry. The Cold War, he trenchantly remarks, is "too
good a deal to give up." Military spending remains at Cold
War levels, and the Pentagon still spends money for "the same
kind of forces and weapons that had been developed for confrontation
with the Red Army or a similar foe." We do not need these weapons
for defense but a "politically entrenched defense industry
makes sure that spending continues at a high level, and pork-dispensing
congressmen grease the wheels, buying a few votes in the process."
To return to
Higgs’s main theme, events since 9/11 have conformed to the pattern
of governmental assaults on liberty. Most notable in this connection
is the notorious Patriot Act, and Higgs is appropriately severe:
"Our rulers declare that by nothing more substantial than the
emperor’s say-so, any person may be held incommunicado, without
trial, and then punished, even put to death. Say good-bye to the
writ of habeas corpus, the very bedrock of limited government.
. . Do I [Higgs] fear that the USA PATRIOT Act will be abused? No.
I know that it has been already and will continue to be as elastic
language allows unscrupulous prosecutors to scratch a variety of
itches unrelated to terrorism."
In
Speaking
of Liberty, Lew Rockwell usefully complements Higgs’s analysis
of the dangers of war. He insightfully asks: how can one rationally
favor both the market and a bellicose foreign policy? "The
framers intended to keep the US out of foreign wars. They understood
that a government that goes abroad in search of monsters to destroy
will end up destroying its own people. The foreign policy apparatus
of today inflicts a horrible cost on the world. But the greatest
cost of all or at least the one that should matter to us the most is
the cost to the liberty that is our birthright."
But, one might
object, can’t a peace-loving nation sometimes be forced to fight?
After the attacks of September 11th, what choice did
the Bush Administration have but to strike back at those who attacked
us?
Rockwell rises
to the challenge: though the attacks on the World Trade Center were
a grievous wrong, the American response made matters much worse.
How did the overthrow of the backward Afghanistan regime, in no
way a threat to the United States, advance our safety? The perpetrators
of the September 11th attacks remain at large, and since
our triumph over the Taliban, we have proceeded to a much more costly
and futile war. "The right response to September 11 would have
been for government’s entire security apparatus to be dismantled,
and to allow the airlines and other firms to provide their own security.
But, of course, it had all the earmarks of a crisis, and history
shows that crises are great opportunities for the State."
Rockwell is
a careful student of Mises and Rothbard. Rothbard’s heroic struggle
against a militaristic foreign policy is well known, but Rockwell
notes that Mises also warned against the dangers of militarism.
In a characteristically incisive passage, Mises said: "Military
Socialism is the Socialism of a state in which all institutions
are designed for the prosecution of war. . . Standing preparedness
for war is impossible if aims other than war influence the lives
of individuals. . . The military state is a state of bandits."
Aren’t we getting uncomfortably close to this today?
Rockwell’s
powerful defense of the key tenets of Mises and Rothbard presents
us with a paradox. The Old Right vigorously opposed an interventionist
foreign policy. Why have contemporary American conservatives been
unable to mount an effective resistance to the neo-conservatives
who now dominate American foreign policy?
The problem,
as Rockwell sees it, is that conservatives downgraded the role of
reason, and this rendered ineffective their resistance to the State.
Rockwell cites in this connection the baleful influence of Russell
Kirk. "In the middle fifties, as a consequence of Kirk’s Conservative
Mind, the word ‘conservative’ came to describe anyone who
was a nonsocialist skeptic of federal policy. . . In Kirk’s hands,
conservatism became a posture, a demeanor, a mannerism. . . And
if there was a constant strain in Kirkian conservatism, it was opposition
to ideology, a word that Kirk demonized. This allowed him to accuse
Mises and Marx of the same supposed error. In fact, ideology means
nothing more than systematic social thought. Without systematic
thought, the intellectual shiftiness of statist impulse gets a free
ride."
In
The
Economics and Ethics of Private Property, Hans-Hermann Hoppe
launches a full-scale assault on the philosophical enemies of reason.
Hoppe is a philosophical rationalist, who "claims that man
is capable of recognizing ultimate foundations and principles of
knowledge." As such, he challenges the positivists, who confine
our knowledge to empirical matters of fact. They recognize so-called
analytic truths as well, but in their view these are mere tautologies
that cannot convey new knowledge about the world. They reject Mises’s
economics, since Mises claimed that, purely by a priori reasoning,
we could build up the entire structure of economic theory. On this
view, a rational ethics also exits the field: ethical judgments
are not true or false, but merely express approval or aversion for
types of conduct.
Hoppe maintains
that positivism refutes itself. "Regarding positivism’s supposedly
exhaustive classification of analytic, empirical, and emotive propositions,
one must ask: What, then, is the status of this very axiom?"
Hoppe has little difficulty in showing that, however the positivist
answers, we have no reason to accept the axiom. If, e.g., the positivist
claims to be defining meaning, he has doomed himself, since positivists
think that definitions are no more than arbitrary conventions. If
so, aren’t we free to reject the definition of meaning the positivist
offers?
Hoppe doesn’t
limit himself to refuting the positivists and other enemies of reason.
He thinks that the main principles of libertarianism can be established
through reason. If you deny that you own yourself, he claims, you
are guilty of a performative self-contradiction. Someone who says,
in English, "I have never uttered an English sentence"
has contradicted himself; he is doing what he says he has never
done. In like fashion, in order to say "I don’t own myself,"
I have to own myself. This fascinating argument has aroused a great
deal of discussion among libertarian philosophers, and anyone who
wants to grasp the foundations of a free society needs to come to
terms with it. Readers may find the book a little more difficult
than the other items on my list, but it is a rewarding work that
repays careful study. Hoppe writes with relentless force and clarity.
Those
who read all of these books will have an excellent understanding
of how America has reached its present crisis and what needs to
be done to return to the path of freedom. All of the authors would
agree with Mises: "Man has only one tool to fight error: reason."
Copyright ©
2006 Mises Institute
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