Doing Your Own Thing
by Ben O'Neill
Recently
by Ben O'Neill: Happy
Mother Earth Day, Citizen!
The idea of
a society where people are free to "do their own thing"
is an appealing one. It is implicit in the slogan "live and
let live," which has been adopted by many libertarian groups,
and it is also an idea that was central to the Marxist idea of liberation
from the alienation of labor under capitalism (which is merely a
natural result of the division of labor).[1]
This fuzzy
notion, roughly understood, has been a central pillar of many opposing
ideological visions of society for many centuries, and has often
received explicit recognition, in some form, in political ideologies
appearing since the advent of classical liberalism. Various competing
political ideologies have crafted their advocacy in terms of their
desire to see people being able to live as they please, even when
they have had radically different notions of what this would entail.
But in considering
this freedom to do one's own thing, we must consider exactly what
we are to be free from. Are we to be free from coercion by
others from violent interference with our bodies and our
property? Are we to be free from being physically restrained or
molested when we try to "do our own thing"? Or are we
to be free from the adverse consequences of our actions? Even from
adverse judgments by others?
This is an
important question, because these things are ultimately incompatible.
If a person is to be free from the adverse judgments of others,
then this means that each of those others must be forced to think
and act against their own conscience they must be forced
to refrain from holding or expressing views that would upset those
who are merely "doing their own thing." But what if those
others desire to follow their conscience what if that is
their "doing their own thing"? Similarly, if a person
is to be free from the adverse consequences of their own actions,
then this means that others must be forced to shield them from these
consequences they must be forced to contribute their resources
and services to those who are "doing their own thing."
But what if those others desire to keep their own property and use
it for themselves and their loved ones what if that is them
"doing their own thing"? Who's "own thing" is
to prevail?
For the advocates
of redistributive policies and antidiscrimination policies the answer
is clear: the freedom to "do your own thing" entitles
a person to the resources to support them, and immunity from criticism
for their chosen lifestyle it is just their own thing after
all! This is precisely the vision of the modern moral-relativist
welfare state. This is what the advocates of redistributive and
antidiscrimination policies have in mind when they hide behind this
innocuous phrase. How dare you refuse to contribute your earnings
to others who are just trying to do their own thing? How dare you
deign to criticize the actions of other people, or discriminate
against them don't you realize that they are just doing their
own thing?
In this corrupted
sense, the notion of a society where people are free to "do
their own thing" becomes a cruel joke, a nightmare tyranny
in which this peaceful slogan belies a rigorous system of coercion
and control. In such a society, people are not free to do their
own thing at all. Not if "their own thing" happens to
consist of thinking and telling the truth about the people and institutions
around them, objectively assessing and judging the ideas and actions
of others, and trying to live their own lives free from egalitarian
molestation. In such a society, people are free to do their own
thing only to the extent that they avoid objective reasoning and
kowtow to the tenets of moral relativism, adopting the mushy "nonjudgmental"
thinking.
In a truly
free society, people would be free, not from adverse judgments by
others or from the consequences of their own actions, but from the
initiation of force by others.[2]
They would be free to use their own property as they see fit, so
long as their actions do not violate the rights of others. In such
a society, people would be free to engage in all manner of alternative
lifestyles from heavy drug use to polygamy, nudism, or communitarian
living but they would not be allowed to force others to contribute
to their chosen lifestyle or shield them from the consequences of
their actions. They would not be allowed to forcibly restrain others
from criticizing their ideas, peacefully condemning their actions,
or discriminating against them. And in return, they could
not be forced to contribute to their own detractors, to fund their
own suppression or demonization, or deal with those who dislike
them. They would, in short, be free to do "their own thing"
and bear the consequences themselves.
This line of
thought has sometimes been expressed by making a distinction between
so-called negative and positive liberty. The former is the liberty
afforded by freedom from violence by others, while the latter is
the liberty afforded by the possession of resources, and assistance
of others. The view that the freedom to "do your own thing"
entails the right to be insulated from adverse consequences by the
efforts of others or be immune to adverse judgment by others is
an expression of the idea that negative liberty should be sacrificed
to positive liberty which means that freedom from violence
should be sacrificed to the desire for freedom from reality.[3]
Not all attempts
to suppress liberty are done with a view to assisting people to
do their own thing. Prohibition is often adopted precisely with
a view to preventing certain lifestyles that are regarded as being
destructive. After all, this notion of allowing others to "do
their own thing" grates against the sensibilities of people
who look to the government as a means of promoting virtue and warding
off vice. Some are inclined to look at people who act irresponsibly
and believe that it is the role of the government to coercively
remold them into good citizens to do this precisely by forcibly
preventing them from doing their own thing. But these very people
engage in the most despicable vice of all when they augment their
disapproval of others' (nonviolent) actions with campaigns of coercion
against them. In the words of John
Galt,
Whatever
may be open to disagreement, there is one act of evil that may
not, the act that no man may commit against others and no man
may sanction or forgive. So long as men desire to live together,
no man may initiate do you hear me? no man may start
the use of physical force against others.[4]
In fact, the
most conducive atmosphere for cultivating moral virtue is a society
where people are free to make their own choices and then bear the
natural consequences of their own actions. This allows for proper
adaptation to reality, and the inculcation of good character. Prohibition
and forced subsidization of lifestyle choices are the two flush
buttons on the toilet of social decline both of these wipe
out civilized society by preventing the natural process of our life
choices from running their proper course. At half-flush we prohibit
a voluntary action that we believe to be destructive, with the result
that we prevent it from being tested against reality. At full flush
we subsidize others so that they may continue to act destructively
and shift the consequences onto others. Both of these approaches
retard the development of good habits and character and both are
inimical to a virtuous society.
People who
want to have the freedom to "do their own thing" should
not tolerate legal prohibitions on their chosen lifestyles (so long
as these lifestyles do not involve violence against others). But
they must also bear in mind that true freedom includes the freedom
of others to refuse to deal with them, to make adverse judgments
of their actions or ideas, to discriminate against them, and even
to dislike or despise them. Unless and until this kind of
freedom is widely accepted, no one will genuinely be free to do
his own thing.
Notes
[1]
Marx was particularly concerned that wage labor alienates the worker,
insofar as it separates him from the product of his labor (i.e.,
the worker is not the one who uses or consumes the product). He
regarded private ownership of the means of production as being incompatible
with the ability of workers to do meaningful work. (For discussion
of Marx's theory of alienation, see e.g., A.W. Gouldner, The
Two Marxisms, Oxford University Press: New York (1980),
pp. 177198). Though this is a more specific idea than we are
talking about here, it is certainly in the spirit of the rather
vague sentiment that people should be free to do their own thing.
[2]
Specifically, people in a free society would interact through voluntary
exchange and would obey the non-aggression principle (see Rothbard,
M.N. (2002) The
Ethics of Liberty. New York University Press: New York,
pp. 35-62.)
[3]
This conflict was highlighted by the economist Frédéric
Bastiat, most notably in his correspondence with the French writer
and politician Alphonse de Lamartine, where he asserted that Lamartine's
desire to impose "fraternity" by force of law would destroy
genuine liberty (see C.F. Bastiat, The
Bastiat Collection (Volume 1), Ludwig von Mises Institute:
Auburn (2007), p. 62).
[4]
Ayn Rand, For
the New Intellectual, Signet: New York (1992), p. 133.
Reprinted
from Mises.org.
January
19, 2012
Ben
O'Neill [send him mail]
is a lecturer in statistics at the University of New South Wales
(ADFA) in Canberra, Australia. He has formerly practiced as a lawyer
and as a political adviser in Canberra. He is a Templeton Fellow
at the Independent Institute, where he won first prize in the 2009
Sir John Templeton Fellowship essay contest. Send him mail. See
his article
archives at Mises.org.
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