The State Is a Predator
by
David Gordon
by David Gordon
DIGG THIS
The
Rise and Fall of Society.
By
Frank Chodorov. New York: Devin-Adair, 1959. Xxiv + 168 pgs. Available
from the Ludwig von Mises Institute, Student Series, and online.
Frank Chodorov’s
work comes with a high recommendation. Murray Rothbard considered
Chodorov a thinker of exceptional merit and credited him as a key
influence in his own embrace of full libertarianism. He said: "I
[Rothbard] will never forget the profound thrill – a thrill of intellectual
liberation – that ran through me when I first encountered the name
of Frank Chodorov…. As a young graduate student in economics, I
had always believed in the free market, and had become increasingly
libertarian over the years, but this sentiment was as nothing to
the headline that burst forth in the title of a pamphlet that I
chanced upon in the university bookstore: Taxation
Is Robbery by Frank Chodorov. There it was; simple perhaps,
yet how many of us, let alone how many professors of the economics
of taxation, had ever given utterance to this shattering and demolishing
truth? Frank was always like that." ("Frank
Chodorov, R.I.P.," Left and Right, Volume 3, Number
1, Winter 1967.)
Readers of
The Rise and Fall of Society will have little difficulty
in grasping the reasons for Rothbard’s esteem. The book is a penetrating
analysis of the structure of world history. Chodorov uses a basic
principle of economics to provide what a philosopher of a very different
stripe, John Macmurray, called "the clue to history."
In order to
survive, human beings must labor, but labor is onerous: to the extent
that we can do so, we prefer to avoid labor. Chodorov of course
recognizes that some people engage in activities that they enjoy
for their own sake, but this is not the usual case. "In the
sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread." (Genesis 3:19)
Mises recognized the same principle, calling it the "disutility
of labor."
How can people
get what they want, given their unwillingness to labor? Chodorov
once more calls attention to the obvious. People find it much easier
to achieve their desires by exchanges with others than by a futile
effort to produce everything they want by themselves. In this fact
Chodorov finds the glue that holds society together. It is not necessary
to postulate a social instinct to explain why society exists. The
principle that we wish to attain our desires with the least effort
possible suffices.
The advantages
of trade have achieved nearly universal recognition. Chodorov, citing
the German sociologist Franz Oppenheimer, notes that "in ancient
times, on days designated as holy, the market place and its approaches
were held inviolable even by professional robbers; in fact, stepping
out of character, these robbers acted as policemen for the trade
routes, seeing that merchants and caravans were not molested. Why?
Because they had accumulated a superfluity of loot of one kind,
more than they could consume, and the easiest way of transmuting
it into other satisfactions was through trade." (Rise and
Fall, p.49.)
With remarkable
insight, Chodorov refutes in advance a now popular attack on the
free market. Some economists, in particular Robert H. Frank and
Sir Richard Layard, claim that contemporary capitalism, with its
stress on ever greater consumption, does not make people "really"
happy. People quickly adjust to whatever new level of consumption
they attain, and growth in productivity leads to no permanent gain
in happiness. Chodorov makes a penetrating observation that casts
doubt on this whole line of analysis. If people wish to satisfy
their wants with the least labor possible, will they not find gratifying
the knowledge that a rise in production has enabled them to achieve
more goods in fewer hours? "The value the individual puts on
himself is measured in terms of the labor he must put out to satisfy
his desires. His ego expands or contracts in proportion to the labor
cost of his living.... That being so, an economy so managed as to
provide a general abundance, an economy of plenty, must improve
the self-esteem or morale of those who enjoy it, while an economy
of scarcity has the opposite effect." (pp.2728) Happiness
and the free market have more to do with each other than our sophisticated
skeptics imagine.
Because it
is the institutional setting in which people engage in trade, society
is thus essential for human welfare; but here we must avoid a fatal
mistake. Construed in Chodorov’s fashion, society consists solely
of individuals who engage in exchanges to their common benefit.
It is not an independent entity, with a will and purpose of its
own. Chodorov phrases this fact in a picturesque way: "society
are people."
Once stated,
Chodorov’s point appears obvious. How can anyone seriously deny
it, affirming by contrast a group mind with thoughts and intentions
of its own? However apparent the mistake, promulgating it has been
in certain persons’ interests; and the myth of society as a thing
apart has persisted. People, it is alleged, must sacrifice themselves
for the good of society.
But who determines
this good? If, in fact, there is no group mind, then it is particular
persons who allege to others that they must do as "society" dictates.
These people follow Chodorov's principle of least effort. They too
wish to attain their desires with as little effort as possible,
but they do so in a way that, unlike peaceful trade, is harmful.
Rather than engage in mutually beneficial exchange, these predators
endeavor to get others to give them something for nothing. And behind
their mystification of "society" lies brute force.
The myth of
a society that exists apart from the individuals who compose it
is an ideological tool of the State, which Chodorov, like his mentor
and friend Albert Jay Nock, viewed as an instrument of predation.
Society does not need the State. Quite the contrary, the State is
parasitic on social cooperation. Predators seize the chance to grab
for themselves what others have peacefully produced. At first, predatory
raids are sporadic; but intelligent predators soon realize that
they can entrench their theft on a permanent basis and the State
is born.
Chodorov appeals
to the Bible to illustrate his thesis. The Israelites after the
Exodus from Egypt had no king; they relied on judges and prophets
to settle disputes and guide them but had no settled coercive institution
that stood over them. "The significant feature of the rule
of the Judges is that it lacked the power of coercion." (p.90).
The people later asked for a king, so they could be like other nations.
In response, the prophet Samuel clearly indicated that he thought
their request foolish, though he eventually granted it.
Chodorov finds
another illustration of his view of the State in the Bible. If the
State is organized predation, taxes are its essential activity.
"But, as to taxation, we learn nothing until we come to 2 Chronicles
(Chapter 10), which deals with the installation of his [Solomon’s]
son Rehoboam. There it is told that ‘all Israel’ pleaded with him
thus: ‘Thy father made our yoke grievous’… The designation of taxation
as a yoke is a nice piece of biblical directness. A yoke is worn
by an ox, a beast of burden, which is by nature incapable of claiming
a property right in the product of its labors." (pp.96–98)
Taxation is
far from the only evil that the predatory State imposes on its victims.
War is among the most frequent activities of the State. If the State
exists for predation, will it not be natural for it to extend its
dominion in order to increase what it can extract? Other States
will of course not readily surrender their favored position and
armed conflict almost always ensues.
During a war,
the demands of the State on its citizens grow beyond what is customary
in peacetime. Taxes rise, as civilians are exhorted to sacrifice
everything to preserve the State; and civil liberties usually are
suspended for the duration of the war. Chodorov, here anticipating
the classic analysis of Robert Higgs in his Crisis
and Leviathan, points out that when a war ends, freedom
is almost never restored to its pre-war level. The power of the
State continually tends to grow.
To Chodorov’s
argument, the conventional wisdom will respond with an objection.
Is Chodorov right that the State is exclusively predatory? Does
not any large society need a system of laws that defines people’s
rights and duties and, further, an agency to enforce these laws
and judge disputes about them? Our author acknowledges this; but
he terms the agency that enforces laws government rather than the
State. Here he makes much more than a semantic distinction. His
point is that the members of society can handle the necessary functions
of administration informally, without a permanent, independent,
and oppressive institution, the State.
It is easy
to make this distinction, but can it be sustained in practice? Will
not governmental arrangements, however informal, tend inevitably
to grow into an oppressive State? People who specialize in the functions
of government will quickly come to acquire an interest in maintaining
and enhancing their own power.
Chodorov, no
easy optimist, does not deny this trend, but he ventures to hope
that an alert and informed citizenry can successfully combat it.
To do so, the principal tool of the State, taxation, must be drastically
curtailed. Chodorov suggests that taxes should never be granted
permanently but rather be levied on a case-by-case basis as the
members of society, not the government, determine. And of course
an income tax is out altogether. (Another of Chodorov’s books was
The
Income Tax; Root of All Evil. This book, by the way, was
one of the first libertarian works that I read.) Further, the government
must be small and decentralized; this will make it easier for people
to prevent it from overstepping its limits. Chodorov’s foremost
disciple, Murray Rothbard, at one point deepened his mentor’s analysis.
Why need there be taxation at all? Competing protection agencies
can raise the money to operate through the sale of their services,
just like any other business.
Chodorov
refused to exempt democracies from his indictment. To the contrary,
the claim that the State represents the will of the people is an
ideological instrument to enhance the State’s power, not to limit
it. Those enamored of power falsely argue that since they are instruments
of the people, there is no need to restrict them with constitutional
restraints. Whatever they may allege, they are in fact seekers of
power for themselves. Chodorov here once again displays his ability
to anticipate future scholarship. He offers a "public choice"
account of democracy that anticipates the main conclusions of the
Virginia School. "A more impelling reason for the attenuation
of social power is the splintering of its homogeneity as population
grows; group interests replace the common interest and the politician
finds himself under a variety of pressures…. Group pressures, rather
than social sanctions, chart his course, and his problem is the
selection of allies…. His release from the social sanctions of the
small community make of him an entrepreneur in power." (pp.138–39)
Chodorov’s
brilliant assessment of the State is a vital contribution both to
historical understanding and to the defense of liberty.
Copyright ©
2007 LewRockwell.com
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