The
United Front Against Liberty
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Defenders
of liberty are prone to despair, perhaps always, and certainly since
the end of the 18th century, when the hopes of the last
Enlightenment generation were dashed as the French Revolution descended
into tyranny and war, and the American Revolution was betrayed by
a centralizing coup against the Articles of Confederation. Then,
as now, the evidence that our side was losing the battle seemed
overwhelming. Old-style liberalism lost defenders, not because the
idea of a free society was false, but because the cause seemed hopeless.
So
it is in our time, when wars and party politics are forever on attack
against the individual and the common good (there is nothing incompatible
about the two). The mistake is to believe that somehow our efforts
are in vain, that liberty stands no chance in the battle of ideas,
that the situation would not be even worse without our efforts.
This is precisely what the enemies of liberty seek, so libertarians
must be the last to grant them satisfaction. Adhere to principle,
even if only to bug those who hate you for your principles!
Nonetheless,
a crisis on the current scale always reduces our ranks. Because
of this thinning, in every generation the idea of liberty must be
reasserted by those with the vision to see through the fog, and
rediscovered by the young and courageous. "Most men are accessible
to new ideas only in their youth," wrote Mises. "With
the progress of age the ability to welcome them diminishes."
This is why we put so much of our efforts into education. Only victory
in the battle of ideas will secure a future of freedom.
Just
as the prevalence of murder and theft is not a reason to abandon
the fifth and seventh commandments, so the constant tendency of
the State to grow provides no reason to jettison the libertarian
ideal. After a murder, we don’t say: that’s it, making the case
against murder is hopeless! No, we see the violation of the moral
rule as evidence for the need to constantly reassert the right to
life. So it is with liberty: without the State, there would be no
need to constantly push for the right to freedom.
But
discouragement is not the only reason people abandon the cause of
freedom. Often, people just get tired of being attacked for holding
the very unpopular view that liberty offers a better way. The criticisms
can be brutal, but they are no different in character from what
they have always been. The fundamental tactic is to question our
motives, and to disparage our cause as only another special interest.
By exposing the supposed malice behind the motive, they believe
they have made their case.
This
year alone, the Mises Institute has been accused of being on the
wrong side of many political fashions. It has been charged with
standing up for price gougers and profiteers; promoting the interests
of large corporations and monopolists; currying favor with the Chinese,
the Iraqis, and the Taliban; providing an intellectual cover for
racists and "neo-Confederates"; working as a shill for
Wall Street; justifying moral deviancy; favoring pollution; signing
up with the Christian Right; having our heads in the clouds; putting
our heads in the sand; and of being in the pay of big banks and
multinationals, among a thousand other claims.
LewRockwell.com
has been similarly charged with every manner of treachery. I have
received many ominous emails, some even threatening death. Every
angry correspondent seems to believe that he has discovered my special
interest, which includes all the above plus a few more, like being
in the pay of drug merchants, stumping for Ultramontanists, and
"providing cover for the Jews."
I’ve
left out many accusations because they become tedious after a while.
The accusations have about as much substance as those of the 1930s
Marxists, who believed that winning arguments was all about exposing
your opponents as apologists for capital. It is a dishonest tactic
that stems from a sincere belief that nobody could possibly be involved
in political commentary without a secret desire to reward some group
at the expense of everyone else. Exposing this interest, the Marxists
believed, is identical to undermining the credibility of the argument.
But
liberty is not the demand of a special interest. It is a plea for
the good of the entire society. This makes it unique in politics.
Think of the debate over the stimulus package. One side wanted special
breaks to help the capital sector, combined with subsidies for the
same. The other side wanted special breaks for the working class,
combined with subsidies for the poor. These two sides, the only ones
involved in the debate, fought it out for months before reaching
an impasse.
This
shouldn’t surprise us. Mises wrote in 1927 that the origin of all
modern political parties and ideologies represents a reaction to
the claim of old liberalism, that no group should be allotted a
privileged legal status. The ideologies then were socialism and
fascism, and each rejected the liberal idea. Today, the options
are more insidiously respectable–left- and right-social democracy–but
no less incompatible with the old liberal ideal.
The
true friends of freedom, the ones who believe it in as a matter
of hard-core principle, are always few. We have been reminded of
this in recent days. The much-vaunted civil libertarians of the
left can be counted on to defend the rights of every anti-bourgeois
segment of society, except when that segment crosses the State to
which the left owes its primary loyalty. Thus did these civil libertarians
recently see the light on the need to censor and spy on anything
the State deems politically deviant. So too with the political right,
which sponsors and promotes treatises on the need for traditionally
morality, isn’t at all troubled when the State murders thousands
of innocents in the course of a war.
Through
it all, the libertarian theme has been the same: liberty for everyone,
State privileges for no one. This is a message that no faction within
the apparatus of the ruling class wants to hear. No matter how divided
the factions are among themselves, they form a united front against
the libertarian idea, which is the one thing they find most intolerable.
This is why criticisms against us seem to have more sticking power:
all members of the ruling class, and their intellectuals and wannabes,
are pleased to see any rhetorical weapon used against us.
There
are two reasons for this: intellectual and political. Intellectually,
our contemporaries cannot conceive of a movement that seeks not
the triumph of a special interest, but only the common good. They
simply cannot believe that anyone would be involved in intellectual
affairs who doesn’t have some axe to grind. Idealism, they think,
belongs in monasteries, not public affairs. The second reason, discussed
often in the work of Murray Rothbard, is political: the triumph
of liberty against power would undermine their own special interest,
so they fight this prospect with everything they have.
In
times of crisis, in particular, we are reminded of just how unified
the ruling class is, and how it is willing to put aside internal
bickering for the sake of preserving power and its ability to shuffle
wealth around. This is why, for example, after September 11, the
ruling class was so united in its call for war: nothing solidifies
power against liberty like a war, and the State never misses a chance
to use events to confer moral legitimacy on what it would like to
do anyway. There were many horrible aspects to September 11, but
that it seemed to provide a rationale for the dramatic expansion
of the State, for its killing and looting, is the one least questioned.
To
sign up with the party of liberty is to take a principled step.
It means rejecting the dominant strain of politics of our time.
What is that strain? That the State ought to be used to promote
the agenda of some special interest, whether it be those who benefit
from welfare, regulation, inflation, war, or the consolidation of
the police State generally.
The
party of liberty rejects all of this, not because we have a special
interest but because we stick by the most unpopular claim of all:
that society ought to be organized so that it benefits everyone
in the long run. There is only one system that does so, and that
is the natural order of liberty. That’s why we believe in it, and
why we will neither give up the ideal, nor yield the slightest in
the face of attacks.
December
28, 2001
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send
him mail], is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, and editor of LewRockwell.com.
Copyright
© 2001 LewRockwell.com
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