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Liberty
v. Utopia
by
James Ostrowski
by James Ostrowski
Recently
by James Ostrowski: Remarks
to the WNY Tea Party on July 4th
Note:
this is the introduction to Political
Class Dismissed, now back in print on Amazon.
These
essays apply libertarian ideas to current political problems. The
first section deals with politics in Buffalo and New York State,
and, by implication, the Northeast "Rust Belt." The second
section concerns domestic policy issues of national concern. Foreign
policy comes next, with a heavy emphasis on recent events such as
the war in Iraq. Following that come several essays about well-known
public figures, past and present. Finally, there are two essays
that provide a fair summary of my views: one about libertarianism’s
polar opposite, communism; the last about the relevance of libertarian
views in a post-9/11 world.
Libertarianism
holds that the only legitimate function of government is to protect
the individual’s rights to life, liberty, and property. These are
negative rights. Our rights are respected if others leave
us alone, that is, do nothing to us. They are not positive
rights. We can’t use government to force others to give us things
we want without violating their own right to be left alone.
I
did not invent libertarianism or any of its major elements. I merely
apply its insights to understand and explain how politics and politicians
have worsened our world and our lives. Libertarianism is a simple
philosophy often accused of being simplistic. It is not. It does
not deny the complexities and difficulties of life. It does not
purport to solve all problems through political means, or even anti-political
means. It is not utopian, though it is commonly thought to
be so. Libertarianism is simultaneously accused of being utopian
and not being utopian enough. We are thought by some to be callous
towards the multifarious problems that can plague free people. Both
criticisms cannot be true. Actually, neither is true.
The
charge of utopianism is easier to refute. Libertarians do not say,
and have never said, that all of life’s problems will be solved
if society operates on libertarian principles. Human nature and
the human condition being what they are, there will still be crime
and conflict and the occasional war. Given the finitude of existence
and the gap between dreams and reality, there will always be tragedy,
frustration, loneliness and violence in human affairs. Libertarianism
offers no solution to these problems. It is not a religion or personal
philosophy.
The
notion that libertarianism is utopian is itself explainable by reference
to the limitations of human nature. Calling it utopian is a lazy
way for people to dismiss an alternative view they cannot refute
in any other way. Laziness is a feature of human nature that libertarians
do not purport to solve. People also resist libertarianism for many
other reasons arising out of human nature such as fear of change,
ego investment in long-held, if flawed, ideas, and fear of losing
politically-derived power, prestige and wealth if radical political
change occurs. Again, these are natural human tendencies flowing
out of human nature that libertarians cannot change. Unlike many
other political philosophies, libertarians take human beings as
they are and require no changes in them to make their vision workable.
Ironically,
it is the various philosophies ranged against libertarianism that
are guilty of the fallacy of utopianism to varying degrees. The
utopian fallacy is committed when a political ideal is posited which
cannot, in the nature of things, be achieved. Such schemes ignore
the basic unalterable facts of human nature and the human condition.
They contain internal contradictions, and, since contradictions
cannot exist outside the mind, such schemes, in their intended form,
cannot exist. It is not that people are not good enough for these
utopian schemes to work; rather, these utopian schemes are not good
enough for them to work with real people.
For
example, communism was utopian, among other reasons, because it
abolished private property in capital goods. As Ludwig von Mises
demonstrated, without a market in capital goods there will be no
market prices for such goods. Without prices, we cannot know whether
we are taking lesser-valued goods and converting them into more
highly-valued goods (i.e., producing wealth), or taking more highly
valued goods and turning them into less highly-valued goods (i.e.,
destroying wealth).
One
of the underlying premises of utopianism is that there is a political
solution for every human problem. This is why utopians insist that
libertarians detail how they will solve every conceivable social
problem. On the contrary, not only is there not a political
solution for most human problems, there is not an earthly
solution of any kind for many human problems. Similarly, it is typical
for utopians to require a complete blueprint for the future, "the
five-year plan," which provides for all contingencies. The
politicians who could not assure us that on September 11th America
would not suffer a devastating attack, insist that libertarians
set forth every tiny detail of how a libertarian society would work.
This
is utopian folly. All that can be done, and that needs to be done,
is to set forth the essential logic of the system, and to show that
all competing political schemes have failed. Libertarianism will
work, or not work, according to the nature and character of the
people in a given society. Should we continue to operate under a
system that has failed – and whose failure was inevitable given
its internal contradictions – and never for all time find out if
there is a workable alterative? Is it possible there will be problems
under a regime of libertarianism? Yes, and what else is new? The
relevant question is: will the problems be worse than the problems
of Big Government? It is difficult to see how they could be.
The
statist system itself is based on utopian thinking. We are told
that a strong central government is necessary because, human nature
being what it is, the public needs to be protected from evil miscreants.
We are then asked to assume these same miscreants will not do everything
they can to gain control of the state apparatus. This is contrary
to all theory and experience and is thus utopian. Logic tells us
that evil people will gravitate to positions of state power so they
can lie, cheat, steal, and murder with the impunity granted by their
legal monopoly. See, "Why the Worst Get on Top," F.A. Hayek, The
Road to Serfdom. Experience tells us that liars, cheats, thieves,
and murderers such as Hitler, Stalin, Nixon, and Clinton have in
fact gravitated to politics to fulfill their foul agendas.
Statists
assure us that irresponsible people will act responsibly. That is,
state officials, who are given power over us, and who
therefore are not responsible to us, will act responsibly.
All logic and experience tell us this is false, and thus utopian.
Statists tell us that no one should be the judge of his own cause
because injustice would result, but that the state may be the judge
of its own cause because its judges will ensure that justice
is done. We know, however, that systems which contain internal contradictions
cannot exist and are thus utopian in nature.
It
is not libertarianism but Big Government that is utopian. In order
for Big Government to work, we must assume that the people who staff
it are better than those they govern. We must assume they are angels,
to paraphrase the mixed-up James Madison: "If men were angels,
no government would be necessary." Not only is this false,
but the opposite is true: the people who staff the state are, on
average, worse than those they govern! What kinds of people spend
their whole lives plotting to get power over others? We may
say, in reply to Madison, "If the government was staffed by
angels, it might work."
On
the other extreme, libertarianism is attacked for not being utopian
enough. That is, libertarians, in their truncated view of what political
action can accomplish, leave a whole host of problems unsolved and
unresolved. That’s true. Libertarians can solve only those problems
created by the mistaken use of positive state action to solve human
problems. The state cannot solve problems in this sense; it can
only exacerbate them. Let us not, however, underestimate the enormity
of the problems governments cause and that libertarianism can therefore
solve. The 20th Century was a laboratory for the study of the problems
states cause or worsen: war, mass murder, genocide, racism, systematic
starvation, poverty, terrorism, economic stagnation, and cultural
decline.
In
addition to offering a plausible solution for these mega-problems,
libertarianism presents a framework for how people can solve their
own micro-problems through the free market and voluntary
private institutions and organizations. Our opponents are not satisfied
with this state of affairs; they have a love affair with the state
and complain that without a large state, many problems will not
be solved. They thereby commit the fallacy of utopianism. There
is no way to simultaneously solve all human problems and it is folly
to try. Various forms of statism, from liberalism to fascism
to communism, have also failed to solve all human problems, to say
the least. So the utopian attack on libertarianism is a spectacular
failure, as is the attempt to label libertarianism itself a utopian
fallacy.
Libertarianism
is very simple and commonsensical – everyone owns himself and any
property acquired by honest work or voluntary trade – but reaching
this simple conclusion is very complicated. You first have to unravel
2500 years worth of philosophical, political, economic, and historical
fallacies and propaganda. Most libertarian writing, including these
essays, involves not an exposition of the positive doctrine of libertarianism
– I just did that in one sentence – but rather a dissection of the
numerous and proliferating justifications for some form of Big Government
statism. When all the other political ideologies, factions, classes,
and parties have been revealed under our withering analysis to be
the frauds, shams, scams, daydreams and nightmares that they are,
one is left with the thought: old John Locke was right after all:
"every Man has a Property in his own Person;
this nobody has any right to but himself."
October
28, 2009
James
Ostrowski is an attorney in Buffalo, New York and author of Political
Class Dismissed: Essays Against Politics,
Including "What’s Wrong With Buffalo." See his
website.
Copyright
© 2009 James Ostrowski
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