Imperialism:
Enemy of Freedom
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
This talk
was delivered on October 28, 2006, at the Mises Institute’s supporters’
summit.
The US Population
just passed an important demographic marker this year: it finally
reached 300 million. The reactions to the news were predictable.
Many on the left celebrated the growing diversity of the population,
while many on the right came to the defense of rising population
for fear that the news would be spun in favor of social policies
with which they disagree.
Environmentalists
like Vicky Markham of the Center for Environment and Population
regretted that all these people are wreaking havoc on the environment.
If by "wreaking havoc" she means transforming it to the good of
the human population, this is a point that might be made about Adam
and Eve.
But there were
two considerations that were not addressed, and they are the most
fundamental ones. First, what kind of economy is necessary to support
this level of population? After all, whether a rising population
is good or bad depends on the capacity of the economic structures
to support the people's well-being. Second, why should it be necessary
that all these people should have to live under the same central
government?
Let us address
the first question. A population of 300 million is about 5 percent
of the world's population today but it was the whole of the world's
population 1,000 years ago. The dramatic emergence of complex capital
structures in the late Middle Ages and the Industrial Revolution
led to the most explosively large increases in human well-being
ever recorded. No pharaoh or Caesar lived as well as the poor live
today in the United States. The vital statistics tell a similar
story, as each generation since the development of complex capital
structures has lived better than the previous one. The free market
is the most pro-life policy there is.
If we could
somehow transport the whole population of today back to a millennium
ago, with the level of technology and capital present at the time,
what would be the results? Nothing short of mass starvation. While
it is true that people are a resource, even the ultimate resource,
people still must be fed, clothed, and housed. This would not be
possible with the present level of population with the existing
state of economic development 1,000 years ago.
There are many
people today who long for a system of economics that prevailed in
the Middle Ages. On the left, we have the neo-Rousseauians who imagine
that modern technology has a hopelessly corrupting effect, while
many on the right dream of a guild-dominated system of small craftsmen
and home-based production. But these fantasies are not only unworkable;
in reality, they are nothing short of lethal. Most of the world's
population would die immediately if such a system were imposed.
There is only
one system that can support a national and world population on this
scale, and it is not socialism, primitivism, or any other than capitalism.
Moreover, no form of government can create wealth. So we need not
credit the Constitution except to the extent that it has justified
the curbing of government's reach. Nor can we credit any political
leader. So let's not hear about the glories of our great presidents.
It is capitalism alone that has supported this level of population
growth and keeps it contributing to the common good. And by naming
capitalism as the benefactor of mankind, I also intend to include
the many millions of entrepreneurs, workers, savers, and investors
who push forward economic growth.
Now, someone
might quickly respond that the welfare state does its share of the
work, but keep in mind that the welfare state produces nothing.
Redistribution of wealth does not create wealth. It only shuffles
it around from its most economically suitable uses toward purposes
that serve the needs of the political class. If any property is
forcibly made to serve anything other than its first most suitable
purpose, its value is reduced. When it is channeled into purposes
that serve the interest of the state, it is done at the cost of
freedom as well.
And yet in
all the discussion of this landmark of population, I didn't hear
a word about the critical question of how it is that all these people
can be supported. Indeed, the very source of wealth in society gets
hardly any press at all. People act as if the given level of prosperity
is like good weather; it just appears and disappears in a manner
that is largely beyond human control.
This is precisely
what good economic education seeks to correct. It must draw attention
to both the question and the answer. This is what good economists
have done since the 14th century. And then as now, the
press that capitalism does get is usually of a negative nature.
We hear about businessmen going to jail, about food manufacturers
trying to poison our kids, about fraudulent and unlicensed professionals,
about rapacity and greed. Partly because of this propaganda, capitalism
today is hamstrung, taxed, regulated, regimented, distorted and
twisted in a hundred million ways. And yet it remains the one and
only source of wealth that serves to feed, clothe, and house the
growing multitudes of the American population.
A hundred years
ago, when the US population passed the 100 million mark, there was
much talk about many subjects concerning the growth, but one subject
was not raised, and this is the very subject that dominated the
headlines this year: the environment. There seems to be some kind
of consensus, one that is not open to dispute, that a growing population
is a disaster for the environment.
Now, when speaking
of this question of the environment, it is good to clarify our terms.
If by the environment we mean, for example, clean air, I can promise
you that there is no surer way to clean the air than air conditioning.
And this is distinctly a product of the human population. The same
can be said of water: a rising population engaged in the capitalist
project of bottling water to sell is the great path to clean water.
Nature left
to its own devices is cruel and dirty. But many people don't see
it this way. For them, the best environment is the one that is utterly
uninhabited. This dream provides a strangely perverse justification
for socialist policies, the end result of which is finally poverty
and death. The New Scientist, for example, has published
an article oddly titled "Imagine
earth without humans."
"Humans are
undoubtedly the most dominant species the Earth has ever known,"
the article begins. "In just a few thousand years we have swallowed
up more than a third of the planet's land for our cities, farmland
and pastures. By some estimates, we now commandeer 40 per cent of
all its productivity. And we're leaving quite a mess behind: ploughed-up
prairies, razed forests, drained aquifers, nuclear waste, chemical
pollution, invasive species, mass extinctions and now the looming
specter of climate change. If they could, the other species we share
Earth with would surely vote us off the planet."
"Now just suppose
they got their wish," the article continues. "Imagine that all the
people on Earth all 6.5 billion of us and counting could be
spirited away tomorrow, transported to a re-education camp in a
far-off galaxy. … Left once more to its own devices, Nature would
begin to reclaim the planet, as fields and pastures reverted to
prairies and forest, the air and water cleansed themselves of pollutants,
and roads and cities crumbled back to dust."
Of course no
article that seems to long for the end of humanity would be complete
without a quotation from an expert scientist. So here it is: "The
sad truth is, once the humans get out of the picture, the outlook
starts to get a lot better," says John Orrock, a conservation biologist
at the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis in
Santa Barbara, California.
We can gather
from this statement that there is at least one form of extinction
that some environmentalists would not entirely regret. The irony
is that the policies of the environmentalists have moved far beyond
the early conservation movement that saw merit in the wonders of
the Grand Canyon and California Redwoods. It has become an all-encompassing
political ideology that argues against the well-being of people
and on behalf of anything non-human. In its reductio ad absurdum,
it aspires to the extinction of the human race, and, in its politics,
it works to kill off the source of prosperity, and therefore works
toward extinction in bits and pieces.
The truth is
that this country has entirely too much unused nature, as is obvious
when you take a coast-to-coast flight in the United States. From
a bird's-eye view, this country is hardly overcrowded, a fact which
is also underscored in detailed maps. Indeed, most of the landmass
of the United States is empty. Our population density is far lower
than the rest of the world, especially that of Asia, Latin America,
and Europe.
And yet you can't make that kind of statement in American politics
and expect any kind of assent. Yet the issue of immigration has
become a hotbed. People are increasingly angry about all that they
associate with immigration.
But a consideration
that sheds light on the issue is that all the problems we associate
with immigration stem not from the presence of people but from the
institutional arrangements in which people interact. Immigration
of some types forces on the domestic population new requirements
for public infrastructure. Schools must be built and funded, and
new public-sector employees hired. The demands on the public purse
grow.
New immigrants
can receive public assistance. They coalesce based on language and
ethnicity and gain control of local governments, through which they
then coerce others. They have national voting interests, and their
votes are up for grabs by parties representing special interests,
which means both parties.
Whereas people
will suffer through incredible abuses when imposed by people who
share their nationality, they will not tolerate the same from those
whom they regard as alien.
The result is social and political upheaval. And what is the source?
Not capitalism. Not immigration as such. Rather the core problem
is the state, which enables some people to rob others on their own
behalf. All other concerns are a distraction from the key issue.
The best immigration reform is one that would provide neither impediments
toward work for anyone or subsidies of any sort.
Eliminating
the subsidies alone would also help alleviate the resentment that
comes with immigration. It would also stop the subsidies that cause
people to immigrate for the wrong reasons. In any case, it is pointless
and dangerous to pursue the method of using government power to
round up illegals and throw them out a power that is used to the
detriment of commercial freedom when the law still encourages demographic
upheaval through subsidies and special rights.
And let us
recall that the federal government has no real incentive to stabilize
and control immigration in any sense that would be beneficial to
American citizens. Whatever the government does, it ends up conspiring
against private property owners. In areas of Arizona where private
lands bumped up to the border, for example, the government actually
restricts the ability of landowners to control trespassing.
Let us ask a fundamental question: can there be such a thing as
overpopulation? The left seems to say that population growth is
always a problem. The right seems to believe that there can be no
such thing as overpopulation. The libertarian-Austrian view is a
third position entirely. It argues that every population is optimal
provided it reflects the free choice of individuals within a society
in which production and exchange the means of support for all people are
also permitted to reflect the choices of people. A capitalistic
society leaves the issue of population to the people.
Under socialism,
says Mises, there can be no toleration towards a laissez-faire population
policy. Indeed, writes Mises, "Without coercive regulation of the
growth of population, a socialist community is inconceivable. A
socialist community must be in a position to prevent the size of
the population from mounting above or falling below certain definite
limits. It must attempt to maintain the population always at that
optimal number which allows the maximum production per head....
it is certain that even if a socialist community may bring 'free
love,' it can in no way bring free birth."
Population only becomes a problem when government enters the picture.
Here is where we need to address the second question with which
I began. Why should these 300 million people be forced to live under
the same central government? The independent Greek cities, out of
which came Western civilization, had populations of 15,000 or so,
smaller than Auburn, Alabama, today.
If we followed
the Greek model, we would not have one central government but fully
20,000 small communities, each with political autonomy. They would
compete for citizens and capital. Those that taxed and regulated
their citizens and their property would lose, and those who let
people alone would gain. They would be economically unviable on
their own, and so they would be driven to permit free trade, not
only between the cities but also with the rest of the world.
This would
not lead to isolationism but rather the very opposite: a heightened
economic and cultural internationalism, even as the structures of
government would be close at home and easier to control. And as
the politically independent Greeks were still all Greeks, we would
still be all Americans. But the forces of competition would work
to improve the governments under which we live and bring them in
line with the old liberal ideal.
If raising
the idea of breaking the US into 20,000 autonomous entities sounds
completely crazy to you, I look at it this way. If the New Scientist
can talk about how healthy the world would be if six billion people
were zapped away by aliens, I can talk about the far more realistic
and responsible vision of turning fifty United States into 20,000
free and disunited cities.
Moreover, we
should reflect on the reality that self-governing communities were
precisely the experience of Colonial America. The colonies traded
with each other and with the rest of the world. Citizens moved to
locations based on the relative liberality of laws. Our colonial
ancestors were widely read. They learned from the experience of
Rome that republican government can only coexist with liberty when
both the territory and the population size are small. Otherwise,
they degenerate into despotic and unworkable schemes for central
planning.
The knowledge
of this reality is what led to the revolt against their masters
overseas. School kids are taught that the basis of the American
Revolution was the desire of the colonies not to be ruled by a King.
But this is a superficial view. It is also misleading to say that
the colonists were driven to revolution by taxes or trade monopolies.
These were both symptoms of a larger reality that had begun to dawn
on them, namely that they were capable of self-government and that
therefore the empire was imposing a wholly unnecessary despotism
on them. They didn't need to be ruled by some far-flung government
on the other side of the world. They could rule themselves, and
they had every right to assert that truth, which is what they did
in the Declaration of Independence.
The revolutionary
generation spoke of the high debts of the British government, of
its patronage and corruption, of the cruelty of its colonial administrators,
of its arrogance and pride, of its departure from its historic principles
of liberty and all of these were seen as the inevitable consequence
of empire, which is nothing more than the attempt to rule too many
people over too large a territory under rules and laws that favor
interest groups in league with the imperial state.
The colonists
spoke aggressively about liberating the colonies from the grip of
the British Empire. They spoke of how a revolution against the empire
would ultimately prove to be beneficial to Britain itself, because
it would help to return it to its first principles. They spoke of
how the world would rejoice to see the British Empire humiliated
in defeat.
Mercy Otis
Warren writes in her history of the revolution that the Americans
felt a sense of solidarity with many nations around the world who
had been cruelly treated by the British empire. Their identity began
to be shaped around themselves as resistors to empire, and it even
affected historiography at the time, as every group that had ever
longed to throw off the yoke of Britain came to have new luster
in their eyes.
Had the taxes
and depredations occurred domestically, the level of tolerance would
have been much higher, as is always the case. The decisive force
in the Revolution was that despotism was being imposed at so remote
a distance by a government that knew nothing and understood nothing
about the distinctive American cultural and political identity that
had been shaped over the previous 100 years and more.
It was this
that gave rise to such rhetoric as found in the sermon of Pastor
Jonathan Mayhew in 1750: "For a nation thus abused to arise unanimously,
and to resist their prince, even to the dethroning him, is not criminal;
but a reasonable way of vindicating their liberties and just rights;
it is making use of the means, and the only means, which God has
put into their power, for mutual and self-defense. And it would
be highly criminal in them, not to make use of this means."
It was the
successful overthrowing of an empire that inspired the first code
of government after the Revolution: the Articles of Confederation.
The United States was to be an assembly of republics. We must understand
that the word republic in those days was synonymous with small.
The territory would be small. Monarchies could be larger, but even
they had to divide as their populations grew. This view toward the
size of republics was due to the influence of Montesquieu, who argued
the point in great detail. In his view, large republics were necessarily
corrupt and contained the seeds of their own destruction.
Montesquieu
was the favorite thinker of the intellectuals and activists who
opposed the creation of the US Constitution on precisely the grounds
that such a big state would constitute an empire.
Robert Yates,
writing under the name Brutus, said against the Constitution: "History
furnishes no example of a free republic, anything like the extent
of the United States. The Grecian republics were of small extent;
so also was that of the Romans. Both of these, it is true, in process
of time, extended their conquests over large territories of country;
and the consequence was, that their governments were changed from
free to the most tyrannical that ever existed in the world."
Patrick Henry,
as usual, was more eloquent than anyone: "If we admit this consolidated
government, it will be because we like a great, splendid one. Some
way or other we must be a great and mighty empire; we must have
an army, and a navy, and a number of things. When the American spirit
was in its youth, the language of America was different: liberty,
sir, was then the primary object. … But now, sir, the American spirit,
assisted by the ropes and chains of consolidation, is about to convert
this country into a powerful and mighty empire. If you make the
citizens of this country agree to become the subjects of one great
consolidated empire of America, your government will not have sufficient
energy to keep them together. Such a government is incompatible
with the genius of republicanism. There will be no checks, no real
balances, in this government."
So powerful
was this argument that Alexander Hamilton was forced to reply in
the Federalist Papers: "the opponents of the plan proposed have,
with great assiduity, cited and circulated the observations of Montesquieu
on the necessity of a contracted territory for a republican government.
… When Montesquieu recommends a small extent for republics, the
standards he had in view were of dimensions far short of the limits
of almost every one of these States. Neither Virginia, Massachusetts,
Pennsylvania, New York, North Carolina, nor Georgia can by any means
be compared with the models from which he reasoned and to which
the terms of his description apply."
Do you see
the sleight of hand here? He is citing the case of the states as
not being empires. But what was at issue was not the states they
were already sovereign but the creation of the national government.
That was what the antifederalists feared. The federalists (who were
of course misnamed) promised that the states would retain political
autonomy, but that begged the question of why there was a need for
a federal government at all.
All such questions
must be considered in context. Might Hamilton have reversed his
judgment had he lived to see the federal government trample on the
legal rights of the states, or seen the states expand from 13 to
50, or seen the empire spread from the Northeast all the way to
Hawaii and Alaska? Might he have eaten his words if he could have
seen the dreadful results of the attempt of the US empire to even
impose its rule in a long series of wars? It is difficult to say,
but this much we do know: the antifederalists were precisely right
that the creation of the new federal government would create too
many temptations to empire.
I'm particularly
intrigued by Patrick Henry's comments. He says that a free people
do not speak of imperial greatness but of liberty itself. They do
not seek to be feared by the world but appreciated, admired, and
emulated. In the same spirit, a free people do not rule by tanks
and guns and bombers; they win converts to their cause through peaceful
cooperation and good example to the world.
This is the
ideal of Patrick Henry. He fought to immunize the American people
against the great error that has bamboozled the producers from the
ancient world to our own time: the myth that imperial greatness
can be achieved without the expense of freedom. All nations that
aspire to imperial greatness lose their liberty and learn, but always
at a date too late.
In the early
part of the 20th century, following World War I, Europe
faced a similar crossroad. Would it choose the path of liberty or
would it attempt to shore up the old imperial states that existed
in the 19th century? A new democratic age had dawned,
and monarchies had been overthrown. Mises was the new Montesquieu,
warning against large states and urging radical devolution of government
as the only path to peace and prosperity.
The book in
question is called Nation, State, and Economy. It was Mises's
first book on politics. His explicit purpose was to map out a plan
for Europe to avoid future war. To Mises, that meant turning the
nationalist impulse toward a productive use in the creation of much
smaller states, and avoiding the error of empire.
He wrote that
the princely states strive for expansion of territory and for unlimited
increases in the number of subjects, with which the prince can expect
higher tax revenues. The state believes that its survival depends
on its size. The more mighty and expansive, the more it assures
its preservation and prosperity.
But classical
liberalism introduced a revolutionary idea into history. It saw
that prosperity depends not on the size of the state but on its
economic structure. In fact, an expansive state requires high taxes
and inflation and these institutions actually work against prosperity.
Moreover, it saw that small states are actually more stable and
long-lasting because they avoid the expense of war and refrain from
cultivating enemies that seek their destruction. Their governments
are more likely to remain small and limited.
The old liberal
position, then, turned ancient wisdom on its head. It is not through
empire that a nation (which is different from a state) achieves
prosperity and longevity, but through free markets, free trade,
small and localized forms of government, and an international policy
of peace. This was the only way forward for Europe, if another war
were to be prevented.
There is another
point: small government resolves the civil strife that comes when
too many people within a diverse population live under a unitary
state. The struggle to gain power and impose one group's will on
another will always be present. But devolved government keeps people
out of each other's hair, and allows all people to interact by means
of human choice rather than force. If we understand this point,
we can begin to make sense not only of America's immigration problems
but also why the war in Iraq has so far proven such an abysmal failure.
"Liberalism
knows no conquests," Mises wrote, "no annexations…. It forces no
one against his will into the structure of the state. Whoever wants
to emigrate is not held back. When a part of the people of the state
wants to drop out of the union, liberalism does not hinder it from
doing so. Colonies that want to become independent need only do
so. The nation as an organic entity can be neither increased nor
reduced by changes in states…."
Mises was very
shrewd in turning the idea of democracy, which was then heralded
by all as the great leap forward out of monarchical states, toward
a literal rendering of the idea. To Mises, democracy meant that
people consent to a government of their choosing. If people want
to leave that government and form a new one, they are following
the democratic impulse. Such is usually the case in territories.
To prevent people from leaving would be to assert the rights of
empire over democracy. "Democracy," he wrote "is self-determination,
self-government, self-rule."
The connection
with his advocacy of free markets is clear. Just as in political
life, people must always consent to the way in which they are ruled,
in economics, people should not be ruled without their consent in
their exchanges, business enterprises, or choices of any kind. So
long as people are not forced against their will in economics or
politics, they are free, and it is this free condition that leads
to peace and prosperity. So Mises's idea of democracy had nothing
to do with democracy today, in which an unwilling majority is ruled
by special interest groups under ever-increasing power relations.
While we might
not agree with Mises in believing that democracy could work so long
as government is in charge we can commend his attempt to reconcile
the idea of law with freedom. This ideal depended heavily on governmental
structures that are close to the people and can be influenced by
them.
There can be
no compromise between the liberal idea and the imperial idea, and
no special considerations justify replacing the former with the
latter. "The idea of liberalism starts with the freedom of the individual,"
he wrote. "It rejects all rule of some persons over others; it knows
no master peoples and no subject peoples, just as within the nation
itself it distinguishes between no masters and no serfs. For fully
developed imperialism, the individual no longer has value. He is
valuable to it only as a member of the whole, as a soldier of an
army."
Imperialism,
wrote Mises, "strives for the numerical greatness of the nation.
To make conquests and hold them, one must have the upper hand militarily,
and military importance always depends on the number of combatants
at one's disposal. Attaining and maintaining a large population
thus becomes a special goal of policy…. The imperialist wants a
state as large as possible; he does not care whether that corresponds
to the desire of the peoples."
In contrast,
Mises favored a globalism in economic relations and a localism in
political relations. To achieve these required an ideological change
that set aside grudges in favor of a future of liberal individualism.
Such was the
Misesian vision in 1919.
It was not
to come to pass. World War I had ended with many resentments stewing
and the old longing for empire had not entirely gone away. Germany
in particular was ripe for bamboozlement by a leader who could tap
into the resentment concerning lost territories. The leader would
convince the people that the urge for justice can only be satisfied
by re-creating an empire, and only the strongest possible leader
could manage to accomplish this against all odds.
Mises wrote
with an impassioned desire to stop the course of events. "It would
be the most terrible misfortune for Germany and for all humanity
if the idea of revenge should dominate the German policy of the
future," he wrote. "To become free of the fetters that have been
forced upon German development by the peace of Versailles, to free
our fellow nationals from servitude and need, that alone should
be the goal of the new German policy. To retaliate for wrong suffered,
to take revenge and to punish, does satisfy lower instincts, but
in politics the avenger harms himself no less than the enemy. What
would he gain from quenching his thirst for revenge at the cost
of his own welfare?"
There is only
one problem with the Misesian analysis. While it is true that the
people of a nation do not and cannot gain anything from a policy
of revenge, government leaders do gain what they always and everywhere
seek above all else: power and money. It then becomes the task of
the leaders to convince the mass of people that everyone benefits
when the leaders benefit.
In short, the
people must be bamboozled into accepting some ideological rationale
for government to expand and become an imperial power that rules
as much as possible. And what kinds of rationales are there available?
Almost any idea alive in the culture is open to being co-opted.
If people are
religious, the rulers can claim that empire is necessary for religious
reasons. If they have a fear of some ghastly ideology like fascism
or communism, the leaders can say that they are staving off such
systems. If they believe that their economic well-being is being
threatened from abroad, an economic nationalism can be advanced.
There are many other available rationales.
In the interwar
period, for example, race theory became very popular among the educated
elite of all Western nations, and this theory was often linked with
a socialist plan for using eugenic policies to bring about some
purported ideal. Nazism did not invent all this; it only used what
was alive in the culture as a way of justifying its power. These
ideas were no less popular in Britain and the United States.
Americans have
a deep-rooted attachment to the ideal of liberty, which is a glorious
thing. But it is also why American leaders have always justified
foreign wars in the name of liberating the oppressed people of the
world. The mistake is thinking that freedom can be achieved by means
of force. The Cold War originated with the idea that the US should
do whatever was necessary to roll back the very Soviet client states
that the US worked to establish at the end of World War II. Then
the US pursued a series of wars in far-flung places that cost lives
and liberty and did nothing to stop the spread of communism.
Murray Rothbard
saw what was happening in the late 1940s, and emerged as the last-surviving
member of the Old Right that united love of free markets with an
anti-imperial foreign policy. This eventually became known as libertarianism,
which, in its best form, is as much as opposed to imperial warmongering
as anyone on the left. His strength as a writer and commentator
on public affairs was that he saw through the official lies of the
state, particularly in wartime.
The more implausible
the imperial war, the more a variety of rationales becomes necessary.
Iraq has been justified on grounds of security, safety, religion,
vengeance, and economics, each rationale carefully tailored to appeal
to a certain demographic group. All that is necessary is that the
state convinces a slight majority, however temporarily.
Hardly a day
goes by when I don't receive emails from advocates of war explaining
why the wars of the Bush administration are actually wonderful and
just and great for us. They all have a different tenor. Some are
about security. Some emphasize the need to overthrow foreign dictators.
Some are religious in nature and express great fear about the old
religion of Islam, with which the West has had peaceful and productive
relations provided we have not been working to overthrow their governments
and invade their lands.
But a theme
that emerges from all these emails is the one that we need to be
most on guard against: raw enthusiasm for the state as the appointed
representative of American interests. In fact, I would say that
this attitude is un-American in the most profound sense.
What must a
person forget in order to believe in the unity of interest between
US foreign policy and the American people? They must forget that
the US was born in revolt against not only the British Empire but
also the very idea of empire itself. They must forget that the only
way the US Constitution was adopted was the promise that it would
not act imperialistically at home or abroad. They must forget the
warnings of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and many other
leaders of the 18th and 19th centuries. They
must forget about the history of failure of our own imperial wars
in the 20th century, in which guerilla armies have consistently
beat back our regular troops.
Every American
is right to be mighty angry at the Bush administration. Bush originally
campaigned against the big government of Clinton and called for
humility in foreign policy. And what did the Republicans do with
their political capital? They squandered every last bit of it on
an imperial adventure. In so doing, they further discredited other
causes with which the Republicans are linked in the public mind,
including the cause of free markets. War is all they have to show
for themselves, and it’s a disgrace.
And at this
late stage in the Iraq conflict, the Bush-run state is asking us
to forget even how the Iraq war began. Recall that the idea was
to bomb Baghdad, create shock and awe, decapitate the head of state,
and then watch as the rest of the country celebrated their liberation
from Saddam. Today, Iraq is a country in ruins. Death and violence
are everywhere. The reconstruction is going nowhere. Almost 10%
of the population has fled. The only immigrants coming in are those
swearing to kill.
And yet I read
the headline of the New York Times, which quotes what is
passed on as some sort of revelation from the military commanders
in Iraq. They have decided that the future of Iraq depends heavily
on taking Baghdad, cleaning out its rebels and dissidents, and enforcing
this through massive violence.
Folks, this
is how this war began. And it how this war is ending.
But let me
say something in defense of the US military commanders in Iraq who
concocted this latest scheme. There is something intuitively plausible
and honest about the statement that if a government can't control
its own capital, it cannot control the rest of the country.
In fact, I
propose that the same approach be used domestically. Before the
federal government makes any more attempts to bring their proposed
utopia to the rest of the country, let them eliminate poverty, crime,
gang war, hate, despair, abuse, corruption, and injustice in Washington,
D.C. Once that city is cleared of all such vice, we can talk about
moving on to other parts of the country.
I think we
can safely predict a quagmire.
The US has
no business attempting to run a government in Iraq, halfway across
the world. A policy maker who claims to be surprised by the resistance
is feigning ignorance of the heritage of the US. We are all rebels
in our hearts. Anyone who longs for freedom must be.
The same can
be said of the entire United States. It is an utterly unviable project
to attempt to rule 300 million people under a single central government.
The experience of all of mankind teaches us that. For that reason
a consistent anti-imperialist stance today must not only oppose
the US war in Iraq and its attempts to manage governments anywhere
in the world, but also favor a complete rollback of the US empire
at home on grounds that it is contrary to liberty and contrary to
our heritage.
And if we understand
something about economics, we must also see that a consistent stance
against imperialism must also favor a completely free market, not
only within the territory of the state but also with the entire
world. A people who live in small independent cities can be the
most prosperous in history provided they keep the markets free of
any impediments, maintain a sound currency, and not interfere with
the right of free association.
The old liberal
vision is as valid today as it was before 1776, before 1787, and
in 1919. There is a unity in the idea of a free economy at home
and abroad, and a reduced and devolved form of government. We must
reclaim that spirit that Patrick Henry said was alive in America's
youth.
Why is it then
that the Mises Institute is nearly alone in championing such a policy?
After all, it is part of the conventional apparatus of received
opinion in this country that people who love free enterprise also
love war, while those who love peace are also friendly to socialism
and people-impoverishing ideologies like environmentalism. Why is
it that the Mises Institute position on this is so rare?
Well, we can
observe that this position was rare in Mises's day too. When Rothbard
took up the cause after World War II, he was nearly alone. And today
we stand out among institutions for upholding this ideal. And yes,
this opinion is still rare. But it need not stay that way. The cause
of anti-imperialism and freedom triumphed in 1776 and it can triumph
again, provided we have the courage to continue to speak the truth.
Never has the
work of the Mises Institute been more essential. This country and
this world need a voice that addresses the questions that others
not only fail to answer, but also fail to ask. The cause of liberty
itself needs the Mises Institute. It needs all our student programs
to thrive. It needs our publishing to be even more aggressive and
prolific. It needs our web presence to be ever more spectacular.
Academia
is in desperate need of thinkers who understand what liberty means.
The human population needs liberty in order to continue to grow
in numbers and well-being, and liberty needs champions to make it
so. This is what is needed for social peace and economic prosperity.
And
above all, the Mises Institute needs you, your fighting spirit that
inspires our work, and the confidence you give us to forge ahead
and say what few others are willing to say. Thank you for all you
have done to give voice to the wisdom of the ages, and for enabling
us to point to a future in which the idea of liberty rises above
all the ideologies that seek to kill the human spirit.
October
30, 2006
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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