War
and the Common Good
by
Anthony Gregory
by Anthony Gregory
DIGG THIS
This
talk was delivered at the Future
of Freedom Foundation’s conference on "Restoring
the Republic: Foreign Policy and Civil Liberties," on
June 7, 2008, in Reston, Virginia.
We are used
to hearing discussion of political issues boiled down to a conflict
between the individual and the greater good. Nearly anyones
pet project for government can be sold as a way to promote the common,
or general interest a mission so compelling that the interests
of mere individuals must be sacrificed.
Before relating
this to war, it is important to consider what it means to take the
individuals side on such questions. It is not to be atomistic,
to believe humans do not need to cooperate with one another and
form groups, social organizations and institutions of law. Far from
it. Those who favor individual rights simply believe that out of
a respect for the dignity and rights of the individual come community,
business, society, religious groups and all the other crucial organizations
of social life. We thrive on social cooperation and indeed individualists
are its great defenders. We see compulsion against the individual
as a great threat to civil society. We believe that when coercion
replaces voluntarism, the very basis of civilization is in jeopardy.
Thus do we favor the market and community and family it is
only that we see these groups as being at their best when they respect
the dignity of the individual. While we understand that, in terms
of human progress, the group is indeed, in a sense, more than the
sum of the parts, losing sight of the freedom of each individual
involved undermines the strength and humanity of such groups. We
see no conflict between individual rights and the common good; rather
they are inextricably intertwined.
Furthermore,
we argue that private, individual selfishness, whether benign or
destructive, can never be abolished by the public sector. The state
only elevates flawed, selfish human beings to a position of unchecked,
lawless authority over others.
And indeed,
the focus on individual dignity and rights has been a focus of our
culture, of America, of the West, going back many centuries. It
pervades our relatively liberal culture and is seen on both the
right and left. Prolifers focus on the dignity of the individual
life of the unborn. Prochoicers stress the importance of the personal
right to choose of the individual woman. Whether the issue is guns,
drugs, taxes, or the freedom to worship, most Americans are somewhat
receptive idea that the individual is the premier unit in society,
on whose freedom rests the greater good of society as a whole.
At the same
time, the conservatives who defend individual freedom as it concerns
economics attack the left for being carried away with the personal
liberty of individuals in the social context. They see calls for
social tolerance as always an excuse for selfish, libertine behavior.
Leftists respond that conservatives are shilling for greedy and
rich CEOs, who care more about their own pocketbooks than the good
of humanity. It is not so much that either group is devoid of an
individualistic impulse; they only apply the principle that the
individual good leads to the social good in different contexts,
and inconsistently.
But there exists
a strong streak throughout our society of believing in individual
rights. There exists a resistance to the extreme forms of coerced
collectivism that have plagued totalitarian nations, and much the
rest of the world. And while much of the last century was a story
of violently competing forms of collectivism, there is certainly
a form of civil individualism that has survived, even improved in
ways, and to this we owe the blessings of our civilization.
As it concerns
the issues of empire, of national defense, of the military state,
however, there appears to be a double standard. Those who most loudly
condemn collectivism as it relates to domestic policy are often
among the loudest in support of war collectivism. Consider many
of the outspoken followers of Ayn Rand. Rand did some crucial work
in battling the modernist, collectivist zeitgeist of her time. She
was certainly no blind follower of the idea that the greater good
trumps the rights of the individual. And yet she was not immune
to a severe blind spot as it regarded war. In her famous novella
Anthem, the first-person protagonist, living in a collectivist
dystopia, comes upon an ethical and philosophical epiphany when
he discovers the word, "I." He and his society had been conditioned
to only use the word "we" – by discovering the word "I," he discovered
the idea of the individual. This is a powerful book in imparting
the lesson that the very conception of individual rights is itself
largely a cultural phenomenon.
And yet, how
did Rand discuss matters on questions of foreign policy? Often in
terms of we. Even when she criticized the Vietnam war,
it was mainly from a vantage point of lamenting the fact that we
must sacrifice our treasure and blood to liberate and socially reform
them them, who were not deserving
of our individualist culture. At her worst, she said that the oil
under Arab land was properly ours and that they
had stolen it.
Many of her
followers have taken this much further. They saw 9/11 as an attack
of them against us. And so we
must retaliate not just against the individual attackers,
many of whom, incidentally, died in the suicide mission. No, we
must remake the whole Middle East in our image. Americans
become indistinguishable from one another and from their government.
So do Arabs and Muslims. The act of living in an oppressive nation
alone means you have to sacrifice you rights to the great crusade
for democracy. And total democracy, which many individualists have
taken up as a sort of end in itself, is, in reality, of course not
the same as ethical individualism.
Belligerent
nationalism has for centuries been a particularly odious and destructive
form of collectivism. It ranks up there with communism in its capacity
to create human misery by dispensing with the lives of mere individuals.
In fact, even communism benefited greatly from nationalist impulses
throughout the world. And surely, not only the egoistical individualists
like Rands worst followers are currently enthralled by it.
Much of the conservative movement, and certainly the Republican
establishment, have signed on to the imperialist cause, willing
to throw the individual under the collectivist warfare state bus.
Much of the Christian Right has forgotten about the central tenets
of their faith concerning the dignity of the individual; for them,
the American nation state is what most deserves defending. The left,
too, when it talks about the war often sees it not in terms of individual
rights so much as in terms of national priorities, a tragedy for
the country, underfinanced collectivist projects at home and disrespect
for the American nation-state from the international community.
They sometimes attack the idea that corporate fat cats profit off
the war more than the war itself.
But what is
lost in the fog of war is the dignity and freedom of the individual,
something of such importance that, as the conservatives understood
it when we were talking about communism, its absence means the breakdown
and collapse of civilization, of the common good, of the well-being
of society at large. Let us look at what the empire means for the
individual, for only then can we even grasp what it means for the
greater good.
Lets
start with the beleaguered taxpayer. The empire and war on terror
are costing each American taxpayer thousands of dollars a year.
Before going further, we must reflect on just this cost. To varying
degrees, classical liberals, libertarians and conservatives have
long stood up for the rights of the individual not to be taxed for
governmental social services. By what right can a bureaucrat seize
someones hard-earned income, even for a good cause? This is
crucial, because even if liberating foreigners is a good cause that
can be done by the government, so would be the feeding of foreigners,
or the feeding and housing of the domestic poor. But the free marketers
have for years shown that, in practice, an agency that confiscates
wealth with the threat of imprisonment cannot properly be termed
an agency of compassion. In practice, because of its institutional
nature, the welfare state does not succeed in eliminating poverty.
And yet how can an agency that takes wealth from people who earn
it, and threatens them with time in a cage if they resist, be any
more an agency for liberation, for rights protection, than it is
for compassion? It would seem that the same practical and ethical
arguments against seizing a mans income for welfare would
apply to warfare as well.
Some libertarians
will defend warfare state taxation. Ayn Rand certainly did. But
let us remember that the American Revolutionaries who seceded from
the British were not rebelling against Social Security taxes, or
taxes that went to the welfare state. They were protesting relatively
low taxes to fund empire, some of which was being sold as being
in their best interest.
Of course,
much of the taxation is indirect. It comes in the form of credit
expansion, inflation and thus a weakened dollar, leading to higher
prices. The corporate state is empowered, the little guys
priorities are pushed to the side. This process, incidentally, also
leads to malinvestment and the business cycle, which are horrific
for the economy and the greater good.
The beleaguered
taxpayer is forgotten in the midst of war. For some reason it is
considered trivial to mention this. It is wrong to focus on what
a taxpayer would have chosen to spend his money on if it werent
taken away, even as the left dreams about what the government could
have spent it on if not on war.
Consider what
the taxpayer could have done with that money if it were not taken
at all. He could help secure his retirement, send his kids to a
better school, spend more time with the family, start or strengthen
a business, give to charity, or do a hundred things that bolster
civil society and the productive economy, rather than feed the military-industrial
complex and finance mass killing abroad. If it were really in his
interest to finance national defense, he would do so freely on his
own. When the choice is stripped from him, we should not be surprised
that the loot lines the pockets of corporate interests and fails
to bring about international peace.
The warfare
state is, on net, a huge drain on the economy. It has not made us
richer. We live in a comparatively rich nation because of the relatively
free market, to which the warfare state is always and everywhere
a premier threat. Indeed, the Progressive Era, New Deal and Great
Society never did nearly the violence to the free market, ushering
in central planning, than the great wars in American history. The
New Deal itself was simply a domestic version of Wilsons World
War I economic policies, with many of the same institutions resurrected
under different names and many of the same personalities, as Robert
Higgs has shown.
The loss in
hard-earned wealth is only the beginning. The warfare-security state
endangers individual liberty like no other threat. It destroys the
privacy of the individual. It supplants the free economy with central
planning. Sometimes it brings on rationing and a fullblown command
economy. Dissent is no longer a protected right. The freedom of
an individual to travel, to speak his mind, to work and live in
private liberty is thrown aside completely in the march of war.
Those accused
of threatening the security of the collective have virtually no
rights at all. He can be detained indefinitely in a dungeon on the
outskirts of the empire. He can be cruelly interrogated. His guilt
is presumed.
Habeas corpus
emerged in medieval England, largely as a tool of some courts to
assert jurisdiction over others. The individualist principle that
one could not be detained without cause, and that all imprisoned
subjects had at a minimum access to a judge was born in the midst
of competing and overlapping jurisdictional conflicts. Eventually,
the writ of habeas corpus which originated in the Kings
own royal courts were turned against the King himself. The
American revolutionaries demanded it as a constitutional safeguard,
at which point it took on a modern, individualist character. After
hundreds of years of struggle, a crucial mechanism for protecting
the individual against unjust imprisonment was claimed.
And this is
vital in every way. Committing a crime against the state, or society,
or an individual has been taken to be very serious. But what about
the crime of the state in detaining an innocent person? Think of
what it would be like to be detained indefinitely, knowing youre
innocent. This was the case for many in Guantanamo, many of whom
have finally been freed. I cant imagine it. But as true individualists,
we must respect the dignity of every peaceful person held inside
a cage. To paraphrase Augustine, a greater good that rests upon
unjust imprisonment is no greater good at all.
This principle
has been turned back on its head. Once again, habeas corpus is the
executives prerogative. Alberto Gonzales claimed there was
no right to it in the Constitution. People have been rounded up,
detained, shipped around the globe, shoved in torture cells in Guantanamo
and elsewhere all in the name of collective security, in
the name of the greater good. Many detainees have been tortured.
The idea in vogue is that sometimes you have to completely strip
an individual of his humanity in order to save humanity. This is
the path toward barbarism and savagery. It is the road to the same
mentality that allowed the Stalinists and Nazis to have their way.
But this compromise
of individual rights has yielded no successes for the nation as
whole. It has only eroded our cultures commitment to the rights
of the individual. It has led to the demonization of the other
the other who lives outside our collective. It also helped
bring about the fantastically disastrous Iraq war, as some of the
key pre-war intelligence if we are to call it that
came out of torture. If you forget about the individual dignity,
the intrinsic humanity of the prisoner you have before you, you
have already failed to see the forest, and the trees, and they will
all burn down in the heat of war collectivism.
The very idea
of weighing individual liberty against national security is an egregious
collectivist notion we must reject. There is no national security,
no collective worth preserving, where we are not safe against unjust
detention and oppression by the state.
As bad as all
this is, the worst attacks on the individual come with war itself.
Nation-building, occupying foreign countries to instill American
values and institutions all this is utopian central planning
on the scale of the 20th-century socialists and modernists. And
the conservatives, of course, have near infinite faith in it. But
a new modern man cannot be created through command and control at
home. A whole nation cannot be built abroad with curfews, bombs
and razor wire.
Bombing has
got to be among the most barbaric practices in modern life. This
is war, we are told. And so people must die. Individuals do
not count, they are only aggregates, only numbers, and the Pentagon
doesnt even care about the statistical side of the equation.
Lost completely is any sense that these are human beings being destroyed.
When a bomb
hits a neighborhood, civilians are killed. This happened even when
the domestic police in Philadelphia bombed an apartment complex
back in 1985, and we can go on and on about how militarism has displaced
any sense of individualism in domestic policing. But in foreign
affairs, mass killing is a matter of policy.
In the 20th
century, the century of gulags, concentration camps, mass conscription
and centrally planned workers paradises, America emerged as the
most bomb-happy regime in world history. While, at least intellectually,
the crimes of fascism and communism have imparted some lessons,
there is no comparable understanding of the significance of 20th-century
strategic bombing. In Japan, 60 cities were destroyed. In Germany,
the number was more than 100. In the Korean war, Truman pinpointed
civilian dams and devastated the country with thousands of tons
of ordnance and millions of gallons of napalm. In Vietnam, between
one and three million individuals were killed by US bombing campaigns.
Thats about as many people as Pol Pot killed in Cambodia.
For much of the postWorld War II 20th century, the US built
up its nuclear weapons cache, the mere existence of which should
dispel any myths that ours is a government overly concerned with
the rights of the individual.
These were
individuals who were slaughtered by a program of systematic civilian-killing.
They had families, and lives, and passions. They had their favorite
music, they had their faith, they had their dreams and futures.
They, just like the victims of Communism and fascism, were victims
of mechanized, modernist mass murder. I do think one day people
will look back at the 20th century as, in part, the era when the
US government murdered millions of people from the air.
In todays
world, there is less support for strategic bombing as a matter of
policy. There were barbaric calls after 9/11 for nuking the Middle
East. Conservatives did say that the way to save face in Iraq was
to pull out, but not before killing many thousands with a nuclear
blast in the Sunni triangle. This murderous policy prescription
must be seen in the full moral light in deserves, or else we will
not evolve much as a species.
But there has
been some change. I dont think Americans would be too happy
if Bush nuked Iraq or Iran like Truman did Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
This is all to the good.
However, the
underlying premise that killing innocents abroad is acceptable has
persisted. The trade sanctions against Iraq claimed the lives of
hundreds of thousands of children. In our society, killing one child
is seen as an unforgiveable act. A child is the most precious thing
in this world. And of course women and men have the right not to
be killed, too. But the 1990s sanctions are seen as, at most, a
sort of error in policy planning. They didnt work, we sometimes
hear. Unfortunately, they worked all too well at the only murderous
purpose they could possibly serve in the real world. They worked
in killing hundreds of thousands of innocent children, each one
as precious as an American child.
Shock and Awe
made me sick to my stomach. Baghdad was a city with a culture, with
civil life, with some degree of liberalism even. Of course, most
important, there were human beings there. The best thing Michael
Moore has ever done was to show footage of Baghdad before and after
bombing. Right-wingers hated this scene, because it forced Americans
to confront the faces of some of the people their political leaders
killed. Its ironic that these same conservatives stress all
the supposed good things happening in Iraq that the media wont
cover, while they seem completely unwilling to discuss the many
good things happening in Iraq before Shock and Awe. Many of those
good things happened to people who are not alive today.
And while Shock
and Awe was in some ways a more precision bombing than Dresden,
it was still mass murder. It was still totally immoral in every
respect. Had Saddam had weapons of mass destruction, had he even
been best friends with Osama, had he been involved in 9/11 it would
still not excuse the dispensing of the individual lives of men,
women and children none of them in any way the enemy
who just happened to live in Saddams neighborhood.
If bombing
a neighborhood in retaliation could be excused, so too can terrorism
in countless forms. The terrorism of September 11, insofar as it
was a response to US aggression in the Middle East and, as
we know, there was plenty of it for decades would be considered
legitimate by the logic of the defenders of bombings. Surely, Iraq
has been more a victim of the US than vice versa does this
mean Iraqis are allowed to do to American civilians what the US
did in Afghanistan and Iraq? Of course not. American individuals
had a right not to be murdered on 9/11, despite the evils of their
government. This principle must be universal. Dropping bombs in
a way that predictably leads to innocent deaths is nothing short
of deliberate homicide, no matter what your home address.
This brings
me to a particularly ghastly collectivist concept, the idea of collateral
damage. The idea is that the innocent people killed in a bombing
are not the target, and so the bombing can be an act of self-defense.
But this principle surely does not hold in civil life. If a neighbor
of yours has trespassed on your property, even caused violence against
you and your family, you have no right to kill his kids, no right
to attack his neighbor, no right to lift a finger against anyone
but the aggressor. The right to self-defense is fundamental, but
is grounded in property rights. Practicing it, just like practicing
any other right, does not absolve you in your violations of the
rights of third parties. Being threatened does not give you a blank
check on other peoples life and liberty. Collateral
damage is simply a euphemism for mass murder.
There are some
theorists who posit that it is sometimes acceptable to kill the
innocent in bombings because of the so-called human shield analogy.
If an aggressor is about to kill you, and he has taken a hostage,
and the only way to shoot him first is to kill the hostage, do you
not have a right to do it? The warmongers say without the right
to inflict collateral damage, we would be overtaken by an enemy
with tanks covered with babies.
Now, this is
quite an irony. Our individual ethic against killing civilians is
unrealistic, they say, because in the real world you are always
confronted with a human shield, or a ticking time bomb, or an invading
army with babies strapped to their tanks. Of course, the real world
is nothing like that. And surely invaders and aggressors will still
hesitate to embrace such a strategy regardless of our lifeboat ethics,
because they know people, when pressed, will even violate their
principles to save their lives.
In principle,
I believe the human shield retains the right not to be shot. But
even if not, this question is divorced from reality. They try to
personalize the question of bombing civilians by bringing it down
to the individual level. But we are not talking about the odd incident
when an individual is confronted with a choice between violating
his principles or death. Many of us might cave to survive. We might
lie, steal, even kill, if forced into the lawless environment of
a Hobbesian world. And, generally speaking, people are more forgiving,
even of those who trespass against them, when there are very extreme
circumstances.
The human shield
analogy is really a way to obscure the real issue. We are not talking
about an individual fighting back for dear life, and accidentally
or incidentally killing an innocent person. We are talking about
the warfare state, about aggressive invasions, about airmen far
above cities and dropping flaming death upon little babies, not
out of immediate self-defense in any sense at all. The attempt to
apply emergency individual ethics to the military, a socialist institution,
should raise flags for the true individualist. For the individual
is accountable to his victims and their heirs, as well as to public
opinion. The state, by definition, is not. It is above the law.
It is its own judge so long as it garners public legitimacy and
blind loyalty. Insofar as it is successful at this, the state is
a lawless machine. If an individual violates someones property
rights in an emergency, there is some recourse, some real chance
for making amends and getting forgiveness. The warfare state is
a totally different animal.
And, in practical
terms, if we want to avoid these Hobbesian cruelties of the battlefield,
we should stay the hell out of war.
Sometimes even
opponents of war forget about the methodological individualist analysis.
In a sense, the true individualist is also the most empathetic to
the individual soldier. Yes, he is morally responsible for all of
his actions, and yet he too has an individual human dignity that
must not be forgotten. Even in a terrible war, some soldiers do
defensible, even heroic things. They serve as medics. They defend
individual rights in isolated instances. And many of them dont
even want to be there, but they are being forced to finish their
term of service. The warfare state is, by the way, the one enterprise
where the rights of the individual worker are completely thrown
aside. He has no right to quit. We have indentured servitude in
the military. The philosophy of individual, inalienable rights is
the only one that truly stands up for the soldier who, in good conscience,
wants to walk away from the horrors in which he finds himself. And
so, if we respect the individual soldier, we should champion his
right to quit his job.
The individualist
ethic has been twisted to defend the warfare state and modern American
imperialism. It is, however, to be delivered through collectivist
means. This is the giveaway. This is how we know its a bankrupt
argument. Liberating individuals cannot be justly done at the expense
of violating the rights of others.
For a while,
individualism helped to curb the empire. A desire not to be taxed
for the benefit of foreigners constrained the warfare state.
Conservatives
and objectivists, among others, were well versed in the America
First argument against global intervention.
But with 9/11
we saw the limits of this ethic. Individualists felt threatened
and became collectivists at once. They ironically saw the American
state as the collective most protective of individualism, and so
favored an expansion of that collectivism to protect themselves.
But a purely
egoistical ethic, much like a nationalist orientation in non-intervention,
is perhaps not enough. We need to move beyond it to respect individuals
abroad. The individual slaughtered in Iraq is no less an individual,
no less entitled to his rights, than an individual in America taxed
or regulated out of business, or thrown in jail for consuming illegal
drugs. The sacrifice of foreign lives to an American imperial agenda,
along with the sacrifice of American lives, freedoms and wealth,
is a practice and program wholly at odds with the natural law ethic
of individual liberty and dignity on which Western Civilization,
and indeed all of human society, so precariously rests.
Thus do I urge
us to take all the arguments we would make against communism, fascism
and domestic coercive collectivism in all its forms, and apply them
with equal vigor and moral courage to the issues of war and peace.
It is true that we do, indeed, believe in a greater good, in public
vibrancy, in civil society and in community. We are not individualists
at the expense of society, but indeed see a good society itself
as a function of respecting the individuals who compose it. Our
arguments on economics demonstrate we are not blind to the social
good that emanates from our individualist ethic. Without some sense
of goodness for the individual, in fact, it is hard even to determine
what a good society is. And this ethic, if it is being trampled
anywhere, it is in the realm of foreign policy and the warfare state.
Communism failed
because it broke too many eggs and never made an omelette. The workers
paradise constituted the total destruction of the worker as individual,
the total negation of his dignity, the total trashing of his individual
rights. Thus did the whole plan fail, and thank goodness.
We are seeing
a similar crumbling of American society, a degeneration of civil
life and cultural mores, a lowering of moral standards. We are seeing
decay and cultural corruption, and while I never badmouth the market,
there is a sense in which materialism has threatened to overtake
cultural reflection. The greatest traditions in law and individualism
itself are under attack.
We are seeing
our economy stagnate and our personal freedoms lost day by day.
The partisans of empire are struggling to keep alive global American
hegemony, but they are on the losing side of history.
But we do want
things to go as painlessly and peacefully as possible. We do not
want Americans to have to suffer a shock or global markets to be
tossed into disarray.
I believe the
key is to reclaim, refine and always strengthen our understanding
of what it is that has led to the success story of Western civilization,
the Industrial Revolution and the American experience: It is respect
for the dignity and humanity and rights of each individual. Insofar
as this country has wavered, it has been disastrous and oppressive.
Insofar as it championed these principles, humanity, culture and
all we take for granted have flourished.
The warfare
state is the greatest of all threats to the individual in our time.
It is a threat materially, philosophically, spiritually, culturally
and intellectually. It displaces all the voluntary, civil associations
we champion the family, community, church and honest business.
It is the total negation of the dignity of the individual, the rights
of all men and women to live their lives in liberty. It is a mixture
of cold, anti-libertarian modernism and barbarism, the worst remnants
of the Middle Ages combined with a new callousness and technocratic
fervor. It is the most persistent form of American collectivism.
It is an unparalleled threat to world peace. It is the greatest
enemy of humanity and individual liberty in our midst.
One day the
modern warfare state will be looked upon the way we look upon the
failed socialist experiments of a past time, the way we look upon
chattel slavery, the way we look upon the gravest and most universally
reviled episodes of the individual being dispensed with to make
way for the march of collectivism and institutional inertia.
The first step
is similar to the step Ayn Rand described in Anthem, although I
dont think she applied it consistently. It is to understand
that the individual is the principal component of human society,
and that all individuals, wherever they live, have by their nature
certain rights that no government is permitted to violate. It is
to realize that dispensing with this principle is to dispense with
our chance at having a greater good whatsoever. It is to understand
that with war come bombings, standing armies, conscription, surveillance,
inflation, censorship and taxation any of which is an affront
to the dignity of the individual.
It is to understand
that the warfare state, like totalitarianism, is incompatible with
the individualist ethic on which society depends. Such an understanding
helped prevent communism from taking root in this nation, sparing
Americans the suffering so many others endured to learn the lessons
of fullblown economic central planning. The American empire cannot
last forever in its current state. But only by championing the rights
of the individual and opposing the warfare state out of principle
can we hope to see the empire crumble with as little pain as possible
for those caught underneath. Only by embracing the principle of
individualism the principle that truly guards the common
good and is the most damning of all indictments of the militaristic
warfare state can we hope to see the empire die and never
return.
June
17, 2008
Anthony
Gregory [send him mail]
is a writer and musician who lives in Berkeley, California. He is
a research analyst at the Independent
Institute. See
his webpage for more
articles and personal information.
Copyright
© 2008 Future of Freedom Foundation
Anthony
Gregory Archives
|