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Trading
Victims, Increasing State Power
by
Roderick T. Long
by Roderick T. Long
DIGG
THIS
By most reports,
Israeli bombings of Lebanon are strengthening Hezbollah’s support
among Lebanese civilians, while Hezbollah bombings of Israel are
strengthening the Israeli government’s support among Israeli civilians.
So here we
have (what are by libertarian standards) two criminal gangs, both
blasting away at innocent civilians, and the result is to increase
these gangs’ popularity among the civilians being victimised! A
very successful outcome for both sides.
The trick,
of course, is that each gang is blasting away at civilians in the
other gang’s territory. If each gang were to attack its own civilians
directly, those civilians would quickly turn against the gangs in
their midst. But since in fact each side’s continuation of bombings
is what allows the other side to excuse, and get away with, its
bombings, the situation isn’t really all that different; each side
is causing its own civilians to be bombed. It’s just that by following
the stratagem of attacking each other’s civilians, the two gangs
manage to avoid (and indeed promote the exact opposite of) the loss
of domestic power that would follow if they were to bring about
the same results more directly. Think of it as the geopolitical
version of Strangers on a Train.
No, I’m not
suggesting that Hezbollah and the Israeli government are in cahoots.
They don’t need to be. This is how the logic of statism works, this
is how its incentives play out, regardless of what its agents specifically
intend. The externalisation of costs is what states do best. (True,
Hezbollah isn’t a state, but it aspires to be one, and its actions
are played out within a framework sustained by statism.)
What would
happen if the civilian populations of Israel and Lebanon were to
come to see this conflict, not as Israel versus Hezbollah, or even
Israeli-government-plus-Israeli-civilians versus Hezbollah-plus-Lebanese-civilians,
but rather as Israeli-government-plus-Hezbollah versus ordinary-people-living-on-the-eastern-Mediterranean?
Both Hezbollah and the Israeli government would quickly lose their
popular support, and their ability to wage war against each other
would go with it.
But by encouraging
the identification of civilians with the states that rule them,
statism makes it harder for civilians to find their way to such
a perspective. (Of course racism and religious intolerance are part
of the story too – yet another way in which such cultural values
help to prop up the state apparatus.) As long as the people of the
eastern Mediterranean continue to view this conflict through statist
spectacles, Hezbollah and/or the Israeli government will continue
to be the victors, while the civilian populace in both Israel and
Lebanon will remain the vanquished and victimised.
August
10, 2006
Roderick
T. Long [send him mail]
is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Auburn
University; Editor of the Journal
of Libertarian Studies; President of the Molinari
Institute; Senior Scholar of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute; and author of Reason
and Value: Aristotle versus Rand. He received his Ph.D. from
Cornell in 1992, and maintains the website Praxeology.net,
as well as the web journal Austro-Athenian
Empire.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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