Egalitarianism
as a Revolt Against Nature
by Andy Duncan
The
Cobden Centre
Recently
by Andy Duncan: Jesús
Huerta de Soto: Socialism, Economic Calculation and Entrepreneurship
The remarkable
thing about being an aspiring Rothbardian, is that no matter how
much Rothbard you read, the next virgin Rothbard book up on your
reading list is always a superb surprise.
The twists
and the turns on the route are remarkable; though they are almost
always consistently within the same Rothbardian memory palace and
universe of thought.
As a searcher
for truth in a world of lying politicians, bureaucrats, and technocrats,
many of us at first pursue an initial tentative pathway through
the Dead Marshes of state propaganda, state education, and other
self-justifying political lies, via the guiding ministrations of
Hazlitt, Rand, Heinlein, Hayek, and Mises. Eventually, however,
the inevitable high pass of Rothbard is reached; it can no longer
be put off, or deviated from, despite what the Cato Institute says.
But what to read first when faced by that mountainous bibliography?
The Bow-Tied and Bespectacled One looks down upon you from
heaven and sniggers. Be my guest, he says. Pick
one, while I eat a ham sandwich with Michaelangelo.
Obviously,
if youve read Human
Action, you have to go to its sequel, Man,
Economy, and State. Though that seems a dauntingly mighty
effort, particularly when the book arrives on the delivery truck,
usually man-handled to your door by at least two burly delivery
van drivers, who puff and pant their way up your drive, with their
insignia cards being sucked into the gravitational mass of this
immense Magnum Opus.
(Thank goodness
for iBooks and digital delivery.)
And so the
quest to ultimate Rothbardian status begins in earnest. Next up
is For
a New Liberty, alongside The
Ethics of Liberty, which form a delightful complementary
pair, all washed down with Power
and Market.
At this point
the aspiring Austrian may be temporarily satiated, and thus turn
elsewhere for a little variety. Hoppe springs to mind, of course,
and then Mises is revisited, particularly Socialism,
Liberalism,
Bureaucracy,
Omnipotent
Government, and The
Anti-Capitalistic Mentality, this final one being a delightfully
light snapshot of our modern socialistic world, in which music industry
stars can go on MTV and speak such inane unchallenged drivel as,
I hate capitalism, but I love spending money.
Despite the
remarkable freshness of Mises, you soon hunger for more of the Masters
Apprentice, Rothbard.
So, now its
the magnificent and monumental Conceived
in Liberty, where you have to unlearn and revise much that
you had formerly taken for granted in British and American history,
seen through the hugely-detailed chromatic prism of individual motivation
and perseverance in the face of enormous historical odds, which
after 4,000 years finally created a society which threw off the
Old Order of pharaohs, kings, warriors, and priests, much
to the benefit of Europe, which had to adapt quickly to avoid losing
all of its tax-paying population to the wonderful liberty of the
New World.
(Oh what a
shame it has proved that the Jeffersonian dream of America has become
the Hamiltonian nightmare of the United States. For more on that,
you need DiLorenzo
and Woods, but I digress.)
Many who have
followed this familiar literary trail from the elegant Manhattan
apartment of Mises down to the more urbane Amsterdam Avenue home
of Rothbard, past all the gilded creatures of that locale, will
know that the next port of call has to be the most distilled Rothbard
book of all.
This is the
simply incredible Austrian
Perspective on the History of Economic Thought, in which
much becomes clear that was once hidden, buried, written out of
thought, or gleefully atomised in the memory hole by ruling bandit
gangs writ large and their priestly hordes of intellectual bodyguards
who support these bandits and their parasitic Old Order predations
upon the rest of us, in return for a dishonourable pew at the trough.
Have we therefore
finished our quest?
Oh, theres
a long way to go yet, my friend. Perhaps we need a temporary diversion
first however, through Hoppes mind-bending Democracy
the God That Failed, his indispensable A
Theory of Capitalism and Socialism, followed swiftly by
the double-bagger of The
Economics and Ethics of Private Property and The
Myth of National Defense.
Perhaps after
this colourful detour were ready for some more Rothbard? But
where to go next? You may think youre hardcore by now, but
youve only scratched the first outer layer of that vast tottering
pyramid of Rothbardian books, articles, videos, and speeches, which
astonishingly sprang from the resolute and presumably much-battered
typewriter of just one single man.
Mises.org
spoil us for choice, of course, with their innumerable windows through
to the soul and collected wisdom of Rothbard, with most of his books
freely available to download, and every audio tape and video tape
that can be harvested from a chaotic world up there on YouTube
and discussed in depth at Mises University.
One feels like
Neo in that final lamentable Matrix
movie, where our martial arts hero is faced with a billion Agent
Smiths; which one do you attack first?
Fortunately,
to shorten your quest, I now know the next one you should read;
Egalitarianism
As a Revolt Against Nature. It was a long time in the finding,
but I finally got there.
Where to begin?
As Man, Economy, and State is to Human Action, so
you might say that Egalitarianism As a Revolt Against Nature
is to The Anti-Capitalistic Mentality, though much expanded
when compared in size to that tiny work of Mises, with perhaps a
little soupçon of Hayeks Fatal Conceit thrown
in for taste.
Although the
History of Economic Thought is still hard to beat, and perhaps
remains the pinnacle of Rothbard at his finest, I think Egalitarianism
has to be right up there challenging for that coveted top spot.
This collection
of essays opens in predictable enough fashion:
For
well over a century, the Left has generally been conceded to have
morality, justice, and idealism on its side; the Conservative
opposition to the Left has largely been confined to the impracticality
of its ideals. A common view, for example, is that socialism is
splendid in theory, but that it cannot work
in practical life.
Pure music
to your eyes, of course, as an aspiring Rothbardian. But later in
the next chapter, after the usual glorious bubbling stream of sparkling
Rothbard, theres this:
Or
rather, to be more precise, there were from the beginning two
different strands within socialism: one was the right-wing, authoritarian
strand, from Saint-Simon down, which glorified statism, hierarchy,
and collectivism and which was thus a projection of conservatism
trying to accept and dominate the new industrial civilization.
The other was the left-wing, relatively libertarian strand, exemplified
in their different ways by Marx and Bakunin, revolutionary and
far more interested in achieving the libertarian goals of liberalism
and socialism; but especially the smashing of the state apparatus
to achieve the withering away of the State and the
end of the exploitation of man by man.
The relatively
libertarian strand? Of Karl Marx?!?
Crazy.
Well, thats
what the Cato Institute would say too, perhaps, but if you persevere
it works. It fits. Like a pearly piece of grit in an oyster shell.
And these pearls
just keep being strewn throughout the book, explaining how socialism
was the wrong answer to the right question of challenging the Old
Order, and how this wrong answer has metastasised into the horrific
creatures of IMF austerity and world global government that we see
gathering around us today, as vampire squid elites keep foisting
their socialist paper fiat nonsense upon us, to try to drag us back
a few thousand years to some kind of horrific murderous New World
Order (read, Old Order) and a borderless global Romanesque Empire.
Soon we will
all realise that one of the important sub-definitions of money,
perhaps the most important one of all, is that money should be a
store of value, and that therefore printed-from-the-Brow-of-Zeus
socialised currencies are simply not money, but are
more akin to Soviet ration tickets. When that shoe eventually drops,
the Old Order may try one last throw of the dice with their IMF
SDR gambit or their usual joker card, a global world war.
However, these
efforts will also fail, claims Rothbard.
The revolutions
of the last few hundred years, particularly the Industrial Revolution,
have made the world too complex for the Old Order to rule over in
the manner to which it aspires. Yes, it can rule agrarian non-industrialised
societies, as it did with the Inca Empire, the Roman Empire, and
the Athenian-dominated Delian League though youll notice
that none of these once-mighty edifices lasted however the
worlds population will no longer stand for such serfdom and
penury, even if it currently tolerates a pelf-extraction rate of
forty or fifty percent. The ratchet of liberty has clicked, and
theres no turning back the mass-industrial technological clock,
says Rothbard.
Even if we
claim to be socialists, and allow the state to continually extract
a pelf protection tax rate from us of forty percent,
or more, we will only tolerate a society in which we can have our
iPhones, iPads, and MacBooks, along with foreign travel, exotic
food, windsurfing opportunities, the potential of an exciting career,
and most of all some fun in our lives, rather than the endless unendurable
austerity, tedium, and deference, of terminal servitude to a ruling
criminal oligopoly and its supportive caste of privileged bureaucratic
and priestly technocratic tax eaters.
All of what
we want as modern people can only be delivered via complex industrial
society, tied together with trillions of streams of disparate information
held within the minds of billions of individuals. Complex industrial
society, and these myriad communication pathways, can only be achieved
through freedom and the final elimination of the Old Order, a fate
which Rothbard brands as inevitable, in a seemingly deliberate and
playful historicist swipe at Marx, the libertarian.
Witness the
Soviet Union. The socialists made the terrible still-unacknowledged
mistake of using Old Order methods to generate paradoxical freedom
from the despised Old Order societal structure; for instance, by
replacing the hated Okhrana secret police of the Tsar with the hated
NKVD secret police of Stalin.
The worlds
socialists were still shocked, nevertheless, when the Berlin Wall
came down, despite their ideological brethren having inflicted this
mass-murdering criminal regime upon the people of Russia and other
countries, with one Soviet agent, Vasili Blokhin, being personally
responsible, one bullet at a time, for the murder of of 7,000 Poles
in one protracted session, and perhaps tens of thousands of other
innocent victims over his career, all of them shot by Blokhin in
the back of the neck, for which Stalin awarded this Soviet hero
both the Order of the Badge of Honor and the Order of
the Red Banner.
At last, despite
a cover-up which had lasted many decades, aided and abetted by western
governments, the socialist system was eventually seen by one and
all to have failed, thus forcing many western socialists into the
green socialist movement to escape from having to defend the busted
flush of the laughable economic merits of red socialism, which found
it impossible to even marry a right shoe together with a left shoe,
without first threatening to kill someone.
And lets
not mention the laces. Those were last seen on a train to Murmansk,
along with all of those one-ton nails and giant cubes of window
glass.
What was best,
however, was that this monstrous grey socialist dead-hand construct
had been overthrown by ordinary people, as Rothbard had predicted
it would be, in a relatively bloodless collapse.
This hated
political construct had previously sent tens of millions of these
ordinary people to die in its mindless socialist Gulag, a number
far outweighing the murderous national socialist, Adolf Hitler.
And yet still we see inane music industry stars wearing T-shirts
branded with scarlet hammers, stars, and sickles.
The only thing
the Soviet Union was perhaps good at was killing ordinary people,
exporting Kalashnikovs, and producing vodka; such glory for socialism
and the socialists.
However, look
at Russia now, even under the former KGB general, Putin? Look what
a little freedom did. For example, who would have believed 40 years
ago that Max Keiser would now be broadcasting hard money truths
from Moscow, while the Chairman of the Federal Reserve would be
broadcasting soft money lies from Washington? Or that Russia may
itself be contemplating a hard gold rouble, of which we hear constant
unsubstantiated whispers, while the west descends into a sea of
political paper currency?
Perhaps if
Daniel Craig remakes Goldfinger
as James Bond, the pivotal scene with Oddjob will be set in the
Russian State Depository for Precious Metals and Gems rather
than Fort Knox, to complete the monetary inversion, with
perhaps a return for Xenia Onatopp instead of Pussy Galore?
And look what
a little freedom did for China, which may itself
be contemplating a gold or silver yuan, almost in a pastiche of
Henry Hazlitts novel, Time
Will Run Back, a book almost quite literally ahead of its
time.
This unwinding
of socialism will continue, says Rothbard, until it truly does wither
away, to fulfil the misguided dream of Bakunin and Marx.
Naturally enough,
Rothbard predicted communisms fall, in 1974, in the pages
of his startling collection of energetic essays, barely contained
within Egalitarianism:
For
only liberty, only a free market, can organize and maintain an
industrial system, and the more that population expands and explodes,
the more necessary is the unfettered working of such an industrial
economy. Laissez-faire and the free market become more and more
evidently necessary as an industrial system develops; radical
deviations cause breakdowns and economic crises. This crisis of
statism becomes particularly dramatic and acute in a fully socialist
society; and hence the inevitable breakdown of statism has first
become strikingly apparent in the countries of the socialist (that
is, communist) camp. For socialism confronts its inner contradiction
most starkly. Desperately, it tries to fulfill its proclaimed
goals of industrial growth, higher standards of living for the
masses, and eventual withering away of the State and is increasingly
unable to do so with its collectivist means. Hence the inevitable
breakdown of socialism.
Overall, it
is Rothbards unquenchable optimism which marks him out. Although
as pessimistic as the best of us, in the short-run, when discussing
Boobus Americanus or Boobus Anglicus, he is absolutely
certain of the long-run outcome of our global societal fate, and
that is a future of honest money, peace, freedom, prosperity, and
the death of the Old Order, much though the tax-eating beneficiaries
of that Old Order will kick and scream at the rest of us, on their
way down and out, before we make them earn a living rather than
continuously feasting upon the rest of us.
In the end,
the productive will slough off the unproductive, and the Old Order
will die, says Rothbard.
And so it goes
on, with essay after glorious essay exploring all forms of egalitarianism
and smashing them all with typical twinkling Rothbardian glee.
It is a rip-roaring
masterpiece of a book, and one Im sure Mises himself would
have loved.
For all aspiring
Rothbardians, it is also an essential weapon in your intellectual
armoury and it will be a boost to your morale if youre struggling
to maintain a grip on your sanity in this currently insane world
of hilarious Keynesian nincompoops.
Download it
right
now.
Reprinted
with permission from The Cobden
Centre.
May
14, 2011
Andy
Duncan [send him
mail] works as an independent educational and professional practice
consultant within the quantitative finance industry.
Copyright
© 2011 The Cobden Centre
|