By Their Fruits You Shall Know Them
by
Paul Hein
by Paul Hein
DIGG THIS
For those of
us who question the necessity, or desirability, of government, the
incessant media blather about the November election is depressing.
How can the people who listen raptly to this campaign news possibly
take it seriously? In the lifetime of anyone alive today, has any
election made a significant difference? If the President were to
take his oath of office seriously, would it matter who he was? Or,
if, as is the case, he ignores his oath of office, does it make
any difference who he is? In my long lifetime I have seen American
government grow increasingly totalitarian, regardless of election
results. Whether the elected are liberal, conservative, Democrats
or Republicans, the trend is increasingly leftward.
The idea of
government is so ingrained that most people have simply never given
a fleeting thought to the possibility of life without it. Like disease,
it’s been around forever. In school we might have learned something
of ancient Greece or Roman history, but what we learned was not
the life of a typical Greek or Roman, but the activities of Greek
and Roman governments, and their battles for control. In short,
the study of ancient – and not so ancient – civilizations is the
study of war, without which history books would be little more than
pamphlets.
Let’s look
at government as we might look at any other enormous corporation,
without any preconceived notions as to its necessity, if any. If
Corporation X, for example, consistently produced products of high
price and low quality, would its continued existence be regarded
as inevitable? Wouldn’t the arguments by the shareholders, executives,
and workers, for its continuation, be recognized as without merit,
and self-serving?
What are the
products of government? Considering the all-intrusive nature of
the institution, they are legion, but let’s consider just a couple,
which will include a number of lesser ones.
The first,
as we’ve alluded to above, is war. Wars are waged by governments.
Individuals do not decide to take up arms and march on their neighbors;
they do so because their rulers convince them that it’s the thing
to do, or, in many cases, because they are forced to do so – again
by government. And the consequences?
Information
easily obtained via the Internet, with impressive statistical support,
indicates that in World War I, there were about fifteen million
deaths. Of those, eight and a half million were soldiers, the rest
civilians. The Russian Civil War of 1917 took about nine million
lives. World War II saw something new: more civilian than military
deaths. Of the fifty million casualties in that conflict, about
thirty million were civilians. There were many other wars, of course.
I’m just hitting the high points, or perhaps it should be low points,
and only for the twentieth century.
But governments
kill in other ways than war. Stalin, for example, with purges and
engineered famines, killed about twenty million individuals. But
when we say "Stalin," we really mean the Russian government.
In China, Mao executed between forty-nine, and seventy-eight million,
depending on whose figures you believe. Again, when you say "Mao"
killed them, you mean the Chinese government.
Hitler (Germany)
killed about twelve million, and Tojo (Japan) accounted for another
five million murders. Pol Pot (Cambodia) accounted for over one
and a half million, with Kim Il Sung (North Korea), and Menghistu
(Ethiopia) matching that number. Enver (Turkey) and Gowon (Biafra)
are, each, responsible for about a million civilian deaths.
Of course,
we’ve not even considered the millions destroyed, either as soldiers
or civilians, in Korea, Viet Nam, Afghanistan, or Iraq. How many
millions must be counted before the point is made: governments are
lethal!
Can it be argued
that these deaths were, in some way, necessary if tyrants were to
be deposed, or human rights restored, or justice done? I’m sure
it could be argued, but proof would be hard to produce. Events of
history lack a "control series." We don’t know how life
would have proceeded if, for instance, the U.S. had not entered
WWI, or started bombing Iraq. The millions who are dead as a result
of those actions, however, would very likely say, were they able,
that they’d prefer to be alive, even if it meant living under Saddam,
than dead under the chaos that followed him.
I read somewhere
that Germans polled after the runaway inflation of 1923 said that
the collapse of the monetary system caused greater suffering than
the preceding World War. The German experience was not unique. Most
developed countries, including America, have, at one time or another,
experienced disastrous inflation. Is this just some economic fluke,
the result of consumer ignorance, or greed, or corporate misadventure?
Hardly. Inflation is a product of government, bringing it great
benefits, at great cost to the general public. Not as spectacular
as war, it is, nevertheless, catastrophic on a greater scale, since
no one can escape the baleful effects of an increasingly worthless
currency.
Could any organization
not protected by government create money from nothing and loan it
at interest? From the very instant such a system is inaugurated,
the society afflicted with it finds itself trying to pay its debts
by more borrowing. We see the results all around us.
When my father
died in 1988, I discovered a life insurance policy that he had purchased
as a young man. It paid a death benefit of 5,000. When Dad bought
that policy, 5,000 could have purchased a modest home. Dad paid
for it with dollars of silver or gold; what his heirs finally received
was literally no thing: paper "bills" that were not payable
in anything, and wouldn’t buy a garage, much less a house.
Charles Ponzi
spent fourteen years in jail for doing what Social Security has
been doing for over seventy years. It was obviously an unsound,
fraudulent, scheme that Ponzi devised, but it’s baseball and apple
pie when Uncle Sam does it. The victims are cheated just as thoroughly,
but with one difference: Ponzi’s victims entered his scheme willingly,
if ignorantly, whereas the victims of the Social Security scheme
are strongly pressured into "joining." Which scheme is
the more dishonest?
War, or economic
injustice. Take your pick. They are two principal and, I would say,
inevitable, consequences of government.
What an evil
and idiotic organization we have chosen to cherish and maintain!
August
18, 2008
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is author of All
Work & No Pay, which is out of print, but may occasionally
be obtained on eBay.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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