Natural Order, State, and Looting
by
Hans-Hermann Hoppe
The
experience of "regime change" in Iraq raises fundamental questions
about political economy and philosophy. For example, the looting
and vandalizing occurring after the military defeat of the Saddam
Hussein government in Baghdad has
been cited as proof of the necessity of a state, a living refutation
of the idea that a natural order of private property can produce
orderliness within the framework of liberty.
This
is far from the truth.
Notwithstanding
considerable talk to the contrary, the natural relationship among
people is one of peaceful cooperation, based on the recognition
of the higher physical productivity of the division of labor. This
is not to say that there will be no crime and aggression.
Mankind being what it is, murderers, robbers, thieves, thugs, and
con artists will always exist.
However,
their anti-social behavior is typically suppressed by means of armed
self-defense and mutual assistance and insurance arrangements. In
most cases, conflicts are settled peacefully through arbitration
and by judges endowed with natural, voluntarily acknowledged authority
(typically members of the "nobility" or social elite). Men have
thus cooperated for thousands of years without the help of a State
(as defined below). Even today, in every small village the workings
of a natural order are still discernable.
What
requires explanation is not the phenomenon of cooperation but that
of a State. A State is defined as a territorial monopolist
of ultimate decision making in the event of conflict (including
conflicts involving itself); and implied in this power to exclude
all others from acting as ultimate judge is its second defining
element: the State's power to tax, i.e., to determine unilaterally
the price that those seeking justice must pay for its services.
Based
on this definition of a State, it is easy to understand why a desire
to found a State or to come into control of an existing one might
exist: He who is a monopolist of final arbitration within a given
territory can make laws in his own favor. Moreover, he who
can legislate can also tax and thus enrich himself at the
expense of others. Surely this is an enviable position.
More
difficult to understand is how anyone can get away with founding
a State. Why would others put up with such an extraordinary institution?
It is here that the phenomenon of "looting" enters the picture.
A
natural order is characterized by peaceful cooperation. Hence, to
make a State appear necessary, any would-be State must first destroy
the natural order and create a Hobbesian "anarchy" characterized
by looting and vandalizing. Typically, this is accomplished by some
members of the social elite inciting the propertyless masses (the
tenants) to riot against the propertied class (their landlords).
In the ensuing chaos, the would-be State then comes to the rescue
of the landlords by offering to halt the tenant-rebellion and restore
peace in return for recognition of its monopoly status as ultimate
judge.
Once
the would-be State has thus been transformed into a State, the latter
will suppress further looting, if only to have more property left
for itself to loot. However, the State has no interest in being
"too" successful in suppressing private crime, for it provides a
constant reminder of the alleged need for a State. Indeed, to loot
its own subjects more successfully, the State will attempt to disarm
its citizenry, rendering it more vulnerable to private criminal
attack.
Let
us turn to the events in Baghdad. States are inherently aggressive.
This holds for the U.S. government as well as that of Iraq. If one
can externalize the costs of one's aggression onto others in the
form of taxes imposed on one's citizenry, one will be more aggressive
than if one had to pay the full cost of aggression personally. Moreover
and seemingly paradoxically, "liberal" States, which tax and regulate
their subjects comparatively less (such as the U.S.), tend to be
more aggressive in their foreign policy than "nonliberal" States
(such as Iraq).
The
reason for this is simple. Victory or defeat in interstate war depends
on numerous factors, but what is ultimately decisive is the relative
amount of economic resources at a government's disposal. In taxing
and regulating, governments do not contribute to the creation of
economic wealth. Instead, they draw parasitically on existing wealth.
However,
governments can influence the amount of existing wealth negatively.
Other things being equal, the lower the tax and regulation burden
imposed by government on its domestic economy, the larger its population
tends to grow (due to internal reasons as well as immigration factors)
and the larger will be the amount of domestically produced wealth
on which it can draw in its conflicts with other States. That is,
States which tax and regulate comparatively little tend to defeat
and expand their territorial control at the expense of nonliberal
States. Indeed, it was the U.S. government which aggressed against
Iraq, and not the Iraqi government against the U.S.
Predictably,
the aggressor State, the U.S., has been successful in invading and
occupying Iraq. Once Baghdad was conquered by U.S. troops, the Saddam
Hussein government effectively ceased to exist, and a new, U.S.
government was established in Iraq. Instead of Saddam Hussein, it
was now the U.S. military that acted as ultimate judge in Iraq.
No
people can be ruled for long at the point of a gun, however. In
order to endure, the new U.S. government must gain legitimacy within
the Iraqi public. Yet contrary to U.S. government propaganda, the
invasion and occupation of Iraq has been no act of liberation. If
A frees B, who is held hostage by C, this is an act of liberation.
It
is not an act of liberation, however, if A frees B from the
hands of C in order to take B hostage himself. It is not
an act of liberation if A frees B from the hands of C by killing
D. Nor is it an act of liberation if A forcibly takes D's money
to free B from C.
Accordingly,
unlike genuine liberation, which is greeted by the liberated with
unanimous assent, the U.S. occupation has been met with much less
than universal enthusiasm by the "liberated" Iraqis. Even many of
Saddam Hussein's opponents, who gladly saw him overthrown, still
consider the U.S. an uninvited invader.
Confronted
thus with a legitimacy-deficit, what better way to demonstrate the
"necessity" of a continued U.S. presence than by the old and tried
method of first creating chaos? The U.S. occupiers incite the Baghdad
masses to loot first (seemingly justified) only "government property,"
but then also private property. Moreover, in shooting indiscriminately
at any armed Iraqi, and then confiscating privately held weapons,
the U.S. troops prohibit any effective self-defense on the part
of the looters' Iraqi victims (and hence prevent the re-emergence
of a natural order). In the ensuing Hobbesian anarchy, Baghdad's
propertied class comes out and begs its occupiers for protection.
In
conclusion, rather than cause and reason for the State,
Hobbesian anarchy as seen in Baghdad is result and consequence
of State-making and -overtaking, otherwise known as "regime change."
Hans-Hermann
Hoppe [send him mail],
whom Lew Rockwell calls "an international treasure," is senior fellow
at the Ludwig von Mises Institute, professor of economics at the
University of Nevada, Las
Vegas, and editor of The
Journal of Libertarian Studies.
Democracy:
The God That Failed
is his eighth book. Visit his website.
Copyright
© 2003 by LewRockwell.com
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Hoppe Archives
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