The Glass
by
Robert Klassen
by Robert Klassen
Is the glass
half full or half empty? If the glass contains liberty and justice
for all, that’s a good question to answer. How are we to judge?
Whenever my
mind drifts over such questions, I find myself considering two preliminaries.
Is it important? Does it matter? For example, if the time of day
is the question, it’s not important to me and it no longer matters;
ten years ago it was the opposite. If the spot price of gold is
the question, it is important to me, but it doesn’t matter because
I’m not in any hurry to buy or sell. The fullness of that glass
is important to me as a measure of human progress, and it matters
because my future actions depend on my answer. As Spencer
MacCallum recently wrote, "[I]t is productive to assume
that human society … is a work in progress and that we will outgrow/are
outgrowing the conflicted behavior of politics." I agree, and
I want to know where we stand.
In order to
judge, I have two empirical resources available, past and present
events, and a hypothetical extrapolation that awaits testing. I
am unable to view present events without trying to correlate them
with past events. I’ll try to review a few. We have a political
executive who promotes lying, cheating, stealing, torture, and murder.
I fail to see any substantial difference between this one and all
of those who preceded him, although this one is more obvious. We
have a secretive elite that manipulates the political process for
its own purposes, which as always means trying to enslave the masses
to enrich the elite. The state is bankrupt, as usual. So far we
could still be living in 1790; today’s political system differs
only in size, not in
substance.
Our political
founders did not see the Industrial Revolution coming, but the political
faith absorbed it with aplomb: We don’t know what it is, but we
can rule it. And so they did and do, but before they got a vice
grip on discovery and innovation, the eruption of innovation between
the era of Lincoln and Wilson changed the everyday life and expectations
of mankind to this day.
Just as the
private and independent achievement of the Wright Brothers at Kitty
Hawk in 1903 eluded the genius assembled in DC, so did the achievements
of a few unknowns decades later (Jobs, Wozniak, Wayne, Gates, Allen,
Ballmer, Berners-Lee). Suddenly the personal computer appeared,
but what good was it? It’s nothing, said the elite, said congress,
said bureaucrats, it’s nothing, and the state ignored it. (Thank
goodness.)
Monolithic
assumptions have been fractured by the personal computer connected
to the Internet, so today we have multiple remnants competing for
attention. There is the political remnant, roughly 20% to 30% of
the population who still care to engage in voting, a percentage
remarkably similar to the number of public employees. There is a
military remnant who still cares to engage in military coercion.
There is a remnant who still wants to punish or reform human nature.
And who could leave out the elite? Here is a tiny remnant who would
like to rule the whole of mankind.
To be generous,
let’s say that half of the population has an ax to grind in one
leftover niche or another. But what are the other half thinking?
Now that people can be arrested, prosecuted, and convicted of thinking
something, not doing anything, at least half of our population is
at some risk for saying what they think, but will they shut up?
No.
Mankind
has barely come to terms with the unexpected Industrial Revolution,
and now it has a formerly unthinkable reality to cope with: every
person’s opinion and judgment plastered all over our planet. This
never happened or could have happened before.
The
state and the elite would very much like to stop this infernal proliferation
of information, and they are buying every means they can to do it,
yet I seem to hear laughter echoing from somewhere and I suspect
this is one cat they can’t put back in the bag. A few high-tech
traitors to mankind can be bought, no question, but can they be
paid enough to betray their own interests?
So
where do we stand? What about the glass? I think our glass is half
full, and I think that by drips and drops it’s getting fuller. Given
the chance, people cooperate spontaneously to get what they want,
as commerce has demonstrated forever; today people discuss ideas
and issues across political boundaries without intermediaries or
censors as never before. Predation by the state is obvious, and
belittles it. Stealing "elections" is also plain, and
discredits the process. DC’s old imperial intentions are laid bare.
Who believes a word these crooks say? Their glass is empty.
I have but
one hypothetical issue: Who will sell me coercion insurance? When
I have a positive answer to that, my glass will be full.
June
29, 2006
Robert
Klassen [send him mail]
retired from a forty-year career in critical-care respiratory therapy.
He is the author of five books, including Atlantis:
A Novel about Economic Government,
and Economic
Government, which describe a solution
to the problem of political government. Here's
his web site.
Copyright
© 2006 Robert Klassen
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