A Terminal State
by
Stefan Molyneux
by Stefan Molyneux
It is the worst
day of your young life. Your doctor has just told you that you have
terminal cancer. You have a few months to live, maybe six. Your
skin crawls, your mouth is bone-dry. Lists of everything you have
to do scroll by endlessly in your mind’s eye… Finances, my job,
my will, a long line of goodbyes…
"My God,"
you stammer, trying to swallow. "Are you sure? Can I get a
second opinion?"
"Of course,"
nods your doctor sympathetically, gesturing at the brown folder
on his desk. "The tests are pretty conclusive, but… Take them
across the hall, there’s an oncologist over there. Have a chat with
him, see what he thinks."
You walk out
of the office, almost feeling as if you’re floating. Miraculously,
you get an immediate appointment with the new doctor. You sit down,
and before you can open your mouth, he says: "What are you
doing here? You look as healthy as a horse!"
"Well
I was sent over here by my doctor. He says I’m sick, really sick…"
Yeah, verily, unto the grave¸ you think involuntarily.
"What
nonsense!" cries the doctor heartily, snapping his fingers.
"Nothing wrong with you at all!"
"But…"
Wordlessly, you hand your file over. The doctor glances at it.
"Well
sure, there are some problems, naturally. That’s to be expected.
But you’re sound. Fundamentally sound!" He jabs his finger
onto his desk for emphasis.
"But it’s
spread to my…"
"Yes,
yes," he says impatiently, glancing at your file from the corner
of his eye. "I can see that there are some problems. But you’re
going to live to be 90!"
"How?"
The doctor
pauses very briefly, then waves his hand dismissively. "Oh,
you’ll pull through. Something will come up…"
Against hope,
you ask: "Do you know of a cure?"
The doctor
cocks his head and narrows his eyes, obviously confused. "A
cure?" he asks slowly. "For what?"
Question:
What is your opinion of this oncologist? Would you put your treatment
in his hands? Or would you think he was an incompetent lunatic –
or worse – and back out of his office slowly?
With all due
respect, this is how many anarchists feel when dealing with statists.
You see, the
state might look healthy, but there’s this little matter
of the national debt. It’s not just a US phenomenon, but let’s look
at it from an American perspective.
We’ve all heard
the scare statistics. $8 trillion dollars of debt. $110,000
per US household.
$47 trillion
dollars in unfunded liabilities… And picture all the people who
are never going to help pay that debt – stay-at-home parents, students,
retirees, criminals, soldiers, public employees, mimes and countless
others who live hand-to-mouth.
Fiscally, the
state is completely terminal. There is no way in God’s green acre
that the national debt is ever going to be paid off – we’re going
in completely the wrong direction for that! And all debts
that escalate end up in bankruptcy.
So when a statist
says to me that we need the government, or the government
should do ‘X’ or ‘Y’, it could be arguable I guess, but it seems
rather… irrelevant. It’s like getting a call from a man who’s jumped
naked out of plane telling you he needs a parachute. Sure
you do. But you haven’t got one, and it’s far too late to reverse
that now, isn’t it?
The facts are
clear, the math is clear, the lack of political will is clear, the
self-interest of our rulers is clear – the government is dead. Dead,
dead, dead. Sure, it might look OK from the outside, but it’s already
starting to smell.
So when people
tell me they want a small government, I just ask them: OK, what
programs will you cut to pay off the national debt?
The interest
on the national debt alone is over $380 billion a year. Can we cut
every single dollar from public education? That’s about $60 billion
– barely makes a dent in the interest payments. What else?
Defense? Over $400 billion – OK, now we’re getting somewhere, but
we’re still not dealing with the principal…
You can go
on and on – and, as the statist whittles down the functions of government
in order to pay off the national debt, you know what happens?
You start
to get a society that looks pretty anarchistic!
One of two
things can occur. Either the statist won’t support spending
cuts, in which case he’s just like the second doctor in the earlier
analogy, blindly declaring the health of something that is dying.
Or, he does find the money to pay off the national debt –
in which case he not only ends up about 3 microns away from anarchism,
but he also implicitly admits that the state has been ripping
people off horrendously for the past hundred years or so!
If the government
can effectively function with, say, 5% of its current budget, then
it has stolen trillions upon trillions of dollars from the past
few generations. And the state cannot survive on, say, 50% of its
current budget, because that won’t be enough to pay off the debt.
So the state
is either unnecessary, or a vile thief. Or both.
In every medical
drama known to mankind, some Type-A surgeon always ends up trying
to resuscitate a patient who has clearly shuffled off to join the
choir invisible. Some gentle and rational soul always has to touch
his shoulder and say: "He’s dead, Jim. He’s dead…" Someone
else calls out the time of death.
As
anarchists, this is our role. You can argue as frantically as you
like about the role of the state, but we will continue to patiently
put our hands on your shoulder and say: "Let it go. Stop electrocuting
a corpse. Come with us, so we can choose the dance songs for the
funeral, and work together to create what comes next."
June
24, 2006
Stefan
Molyneux [send him mail]
has been an actor, comedian, gold-panner, graduate student, and
software entrepreneur. His first novel, Revolutions
was published in 2004, and he maintains a
blog. Listen to his podcast, which you can get by clicking here
or, you like iTunes better, you can click here.
For more on DROs, please see
my archives. He is host of Freedomain
Radio.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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