Partisan
Politics A Fool’s Game for the Masses
by
Robert Higgs
by Robert Higgs
Recently by Robert Higgs: New
Deal Orgy No Model For Current Binge
Because I despise
politics in general, and the two major parties in this country in
particular, I go through life constantly bemused by all the weight
that people put on partisan political loyalties and on adherence
to the normative demarcations the parties promote. Henry Adams observed
that politics, as a practice, whatever its professions, has
always been the systematic organization of hatreds. This marshalling
of hatreds is not the whole of politics, to be sure, but it is an
essential element. Thus, Democrats encourage people to hate big
corporations, and Republicans encourage people to hate welfare recipients.
Of course,
its all a fraud, designed to distract people from the overriding
reality of political life, which is that the state and its principal
supporters are constantly screwing the rest of us, regardless of
which party happens to control the presidency and the Congress.
Amid all the partisan sound and fury, hardly anybody notices that
political reality boils down to two parties: (1) those
who, in one way or another, use state power to bully and live at
the expense of others; and (2) those unfortunate others.
Even when politics
seems to involve life-and-death issues, the partisan divisions often
only obscure the overriding political realities. So, Democrats say
that anti-abortion Republicans, who claim to have such tremendous
concern for saving the lives of the unborn, have no interest whatever
in saving the lives of those already born, such as the poor
children living in the ghetto. And Republicans say that Democrats,
who claim to have such tremendous concern for the poor, systematically
contribute to the perpetuation of poverty by the countless
taxes and regulations they load onto business owners who would otherwise
be in better position to hire and train the poor and thereby to
hasten their escape from poverty.
If the unborn
children happen to be living in the wombs of women on whom U.S.
bombs and rockets rain down in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan,
however, all Republican concerns for the unborn evaporate completely,
as do the Democrats concerns for the poor children living
in the selfsame bombarded villages. Both parties positions
would seem to rest on very flexible and selective morality, if indeed
either party may be said to have any moral basis at all, notwithstanding
their chronic public displays of moral wailing and gnashing
of teeth.
Read
the rest of the article
October
14, 2009
Robert
Higgs [send him mail] is
senior fellow in political economy at the Independent
Institute and editor of The
Independent Review. He
is also a columnist for LewRockwell.com. His
most recent book is Neither
Liberty Nor Safety: Fear, Ideology, and the Growth of Government.
He is also the author of Depression,
War, and Cold War: Studies in Political Economy, Resurgence
of the Warfare State: The Crisis Since 9/11 and Against
Leviathan: Government Power and a Free Society.
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© 2009 Investor's Business
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