Nothing
Outside the State
by
Robert Higgs
by Robert Higgs
Recently by Robert Higgs: No
Recovery Until America Invests Again
A popular slogan
of the Italian Fascists under Mussolini was, Tutto nello Stato,
niente al di fuori dello Stato, nulla contro lo Stato (everything
for the state, nothing outside the state, nothing against the state).
I recall this expression frequently as I observe the states
far-reaching penetration of my own society.
What of any
consequence remains beyond the states reach in the United
States today? Not wages, working conditions, or labor-management
relations; not health care; not money, banking, or financial services;
not personal privacy; not transportation or communication; not education
or scientific research; not farming or food supply; not nutrition
or food quality; not marriage or divorce; not child care; not provision
for retirement; not recreation; not insurance of any kind; not smoking
or drinking; not gambling; not political campaign funding or publicity;
not real estate development, house construction, or housing finance;
not international travel, trade, or finance; not a thousand other
areas and aspects of social life.
One might affirm
that the state still keeps its hands off religion, but it actually
does not. It certifies certain religious organizations as legitimate
and condemns others, as many young men discovered to their sorrow
when they attempted to claim the status of conscientious objector
during the Vietnam War. It assigns members of certain religions,
but not members of others, as chaplains in its armed services.
Besides, isnt
statism itself a religion for most Americans? Do they not honor
the state above all else, above even the commandments of a conventional
religion they may embrace? If their religion tells them thou
shalt not murder, but the state orders them to murder, then
they murder. If the state tells them to rob, to destroy property,
and to imprison innocent people, then, notwithstanding any religious
strictures, they rob, destroy property, and imprison innocent people,
as millions of victims of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and millions
of victims of the so-called Drug War in this country will attest.
Moreover, in every form of adversity, Americans look to the state
for their personal salvation, just as before the twentieth century
their ancestors looked to Divine Providence.
When the state
produces unworkable or unsatisfactory conditions in any area of
life, and therefore elicits complaints and protests, as it has for
example in every area related to health care, it responds to these
complaints and protests by making reforms that heap
new laws, regulations, and government bureaus atop the existing
mountain of counterproductive interventions. Thus, each new reform
makes the government more monstrous and destructive than it was
before. Citizen, be careful what you wish for; the government just
might give it to you good and hard.
The areas of
life that remain outside the governments participation, taxation,
subsidization, regulation, surveillance, and other intrusion or
control have become so few and so trivial that they scarcely merit
mention. We verge ever closer upon the condition in which everything
that is not prohibited is required. Yet, the average American will
declare loudly that he is a free man and that his country is the
freest in the world. Thus, in a country where more and more is for
the state, where virtually nothing is outside the State, and where,
aside from pointless complaints, nothing against the State is permitted,
Americans have become ideal fascist citizens. Like the average German
during the years that Hitler ruled Germany, most Americans today,
inhabiting one of the most pervasively controlled countries in the
history of the world, think they are free.
Reprinted
from History News Network.
March
19, 2010
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.
Copyright
© 2010 History News Network
The
Best of Robert Higgs
|