Warmongering 'Libertarians'
by
Charles Curley
A
number of writers for LewRockwell.com are surprised at the phenomenon
of warmongering "libertarians." They shouldn't be. The phenomenon
was predictable as long ago as early 1999.
The
first thing to do when you are taken aback by some new development
is to check your fundamental principles. The first question, then,
is, what is a libertarian? The Libertarian Party requires its members
to sign a pledge, which states, "I hereby certify that I do not
believe in or advocate the initiation of force to achieve social
or political goals." This pledge is one statement of the non-aggression
principle. It is this principle which is the lodestone, the pole
star, by which libertarian ethics, morality and policy all steer.
If libertarianism had any commandments at all, it would have one:
Thou shalt not commit aggression.
We
may answer the question, what is a libertarian, with science fiction
writer and long time libertarian L.
Neil Smith, "A libertarian is a person who believes that no
one has the right, under any circumstances, to initiate force against
another human being, or to advocate or delegate its initiation.
Those who act consistently with this principle are libertarians,
whether they realize it or not. Those who fail to act consistently
with it are not libertarians, regardless of what they may claim."
Notice
that last "...regardless of what they may claim." If it doesn't
walk like a duck, it doesn't matter if it quacks like a duck.
Implicit
here is that one adopts a policy based on its ethical consistency
with the non-aggression principle. The true libertarian does not
support, say, Austrian economics because free markets are more efficient
than central control (although they are) or because they result
in more consumer goods than central control (although they do),
but because Austrian economics results in less aggression against
people than does central control.
Libertarianism
is a moral principle. It is not a grab bag of policies adjustable
to the popular fads of the moment.
I
am going to assume, dear reader, that you understand that warmongering
egregiously conflicts with this principle. If you don't understand
why this is so, the remedy is beyond the scope of this essay, but
a good dictionary and a first grade reading primer would be a start.
In ten or twenty years study, the errant reader, having built up
an epistemological foundation, may proceed to the works of Frank
Chodorov, Murray Rothbard, Albert Jay Nock, H. L. Mencken, and others.
Thus
the phrase "warmongering libertarian" is an oxymoron, a contradiction
in terms, like "Justice Department" and "honest politician". This
explains my use of quotes above. Warmongering "libertarians" are
not libertarians, pure and simple. They are LINOs, Libertarians
In Name Only. They are velociraptors in sheep's clothing.
But
why should one not be surprised at this phenomenon, and why was
it predictable three years ago?
In
1998, Liberty Magazine,
a publication best known for contemplating its objective navel and
articles like "The Use of Aristotelian Metaphysics in Frank O'Connor's
Laundry Lists," surveyed its readers on questions relating to libertarianism
and the libertarian movement. The survey followed a 1988 survey,
giving a baseline for changing libertarian views. In February 1999,
the
results were published.
In
general, the results in 1998 were more statist than 1988. Key to
this essay is the results for the following question:
| No
person has the right to initiate physical force against another
human being. |
|
1988
|
1998
|
|
90%
agree
|
50%
agree
|
Unfortunately,
there is no question along the lines, Do you consider yourself a
libertarian? Had all of the respondents answered that question consistently
with the one above, one would expect to see that 50% or fewer of
the respondents did so. But the surveyors themselves found nothing
amiss here. The remarks in the article announcing the results indicate
surprise that some (any?) of the respondents are not atheists, that
more of them are minarchists, that "fewer than half agreed ... that
foreign policy ought to be strictly isolationist." But they found
the results quoted above to be unremarkable.
It
is difficult to conclude that half the readers of Liberty Magazine
1998 are liberals, conservatives or otherwise not libertarians.
At the time of the survey Liberty Magazine specialized in
the minutia of the Cult of Ayn Rand, other gossip mongering, and
obscure questions like how many dollar signs can dance on the head
of a pin, i.e. a randroid tabloid. Why a libertarian would pay money
to receive a monthly dose of such occulta year in and year out is
beyond me, never mind why anyone else would.
Furthermore,
there is no way to tell if the readership of Liberty Magazine
reflects the libertarian movement at large. It certainly does not
reflect me. If the emergence of the warmongering "libertarian" is
a surprise to the writers at LewRockwell.com, then Liberty Magazine
probably does not reflect them either.
None
the less, the results of the question above are disconcerting. Some
"libertarians", possibly half of them, do not hold with the non-aggression
principle. And if not that, what do they hold with? Whatever it
is, it is not libertarianism.
And
furthermore that number appears to be growing. There have been a
number of efforts to remove the requirement of the pledge from Libertarian
Party membership. Even in the solidly paleolibertarian state
party of Wyoming, the question has come up, although it was
roundly defeated. Elsewhere, LP candidates like Murray Sabrin have
implicitly rejected the non-aggression principle by calling for
accepting government campaign funds, AKA "welfare for politicians".
Let
this stand as a warning to real libertarians everywhere. Remember
that within the last century the word "liberal" meant someone who
stood for free markets, free trade (meaning free trade, not international
bureaucratically managed trade) and a republican form of government.
Ludwig von Mises used the term in that sense to describe himself.
Since then the statists have co-opted the term to the point that
it stands for none of those things, and is a term of derision in
the real world.
Will
the word "libertarian" suffer the same fate? It seems to be headed
that way.
April
20, 2002
Charles
Curley
[send him mail] deals
with penguins, jackalopes and camarasaurus in his daily life.
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© 2002 LewRockwell.com
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