Two
Threats to Liberty
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
This talk
was delivered on June 1, 2007, at the Future
of Freedom Foundation’s Conference on "Restoring
the Republic: Foreign Affairs and Civil Liberties."
There are two
clear and present dangers to liberty in America. One is known as
the left, and the other is known as the right. They are dangerous
because they seek to use government to mold society into a form
they seek, rather than the form that liberty achieves if society
is left on its own.
I'm going to
assume that the left and the right come to their views sincerely,
that their passion for using government is driven by some fear that
the absence of government would yield catastrophe. So the burden
of my talk today will be to identify and explain the common thread
that connects the worldview of the left and the right, and suggest
that they are both wrong about the capacity of society, whether
it is defined locally or internationally, to manage itself.
Let us begin
with the question: why should we have confidence in the notion that
society can develop on its own, that it contains within itself the
capacity for self-management? Another way to ask the question: why
do the advocates of leviathan believe that the members of society
are incapable of achieving cooperative engagement in the absence
of the state?
The discovery
of this capacity for cooperation was the great intellectual contribution
of the classical liberal school that gave rise to the American Revolution.
It grew out of a belief that whatever imperfections social self-organization
had, there was nothing that centralized government could do to improve
it. They took the daring step of tossing off the rule of the state
in favor of complete self-government. They didn't fear chaos. They
looked forward to liberty.
This event
was the product of the liberal idea, as held by most all sectors
of society. Liberalism did not seek utopia. It sought liberty under
the conviction that society had a built-in mechanism that permitted
individual members to achieve a harmony of interests. They believed
it to be true because they lived it. The belief in this harmony
of interests was the great passion of the old liberal intellectuals,
of which Thomas Jefferson was a leading exponent.
After the revolution,
when government began to regroup and reconsolidate, the liberal
idea began to gain detractors. John Adams, whom Jefferson beat in
the great presidential election of 1800, never stopped resenting
Jefferson's suspicions toward power and opposition to practically
everything the federal government wanted to do. It was Jefferson's
conviction that liberty yielded social cooperation; it was Adams's
view that liberty could only be established and sustained through
government authority. These two opposing views persist to this day.
Adams went
so far as to level a familiar accusation against Jefferson's faith
in pure liberty. Adams wrote him in 1813: "You never felt the terrorism
of Shays' Rebellion in Massachusetts,…. You certainly never felt
the terrorism excited by Genet in 1793, when ten thousand people
in the streets of Philadelphia, day by day, threatened to drag Washington
out of his house and effect a revolution in the government…. I have
no doubt you were fast asleep in philosophical tranquility when…Market
Street was as full of men as could stand by one another, and even
before my door when some of my domestics, in frenzy, determined
to sacrifice their lives in my defence…. What think you of terrorism,
Mr. Jefferson?"
So we can see,
then, how Shays' Rebellion served the government in the same way
that 9-11 does now: it is held up as an example of the kind of terror
that will befall us if we refuse to give government the power and
money necessary to make the world peaceful and wonderful. What Adams
conveniently overlooked is that the rebellion of which he spoke
was actually sparked by taxation and government-backed credit expansion.
There would have been no need for a revolt had government not created
the conditions that led to it.
And so it is
with 9-11. It was government that created the motives that led the
hijackers to give up their lives, and it was government that had
so regulated airline security that passengers and crew were defenseless
in the face of criminals with box cutters. The right response would
have been to roll back the conditions that created the motives for
9-11, and to unleash the power of private enterprise to prevent
such attacks in the future. Instead, the impulse of the state as
backed by uninformed public ideology was to escalate the conditions
that breed terrorism and put government ever more in charge of airline
security.
From Shays'
Rebellion to 9-11, we see two worldviews of society at work. One
sees the government as a source of liberty and order, and fears
society without the state more than any conceivable alternative.
The other sees government as a source of disorder that uses that
disorder to enhance its power and material resources at the expense
of society.
The left and
the right in this country hold to the first view. The successors
to Jefferson hold to the second view, which in Jefferson's time
was called the liberal view, and which today is called the libertarian
view.
There are international
parallels in each of these positions. Conservatives are of the view
that a world without a single superpower is chaos and darkness.
The left believes in internationalizing their version of the domestic
welfare state under the management of a single supra-national institution.
Libertarians, on the other hand, believe that international society
thrives best without either a superpower or a supranational manager.
I maintain that these two views of order constitute the decisive
ideological conflict of our time, that which pits the libertarians
against the two prevailing ideologies.
The old liberal
view lives in the writings of such people as John Locke, Frédéric
Bastiat, Lord Acton, Alexis de Tocqueville, and, in the 20th century,
in the work of Mises, Hayek, and Rothbard. Hayek himself traced
the liberal tradition from Cicero, through the Middle Ages, to John
Locke, David Hume, and Immanuel Kant. The thread that connects all
their thought is the idea that society is more capable than government
elites in shaping a prosperous order. In the same way that Locke
believed that the nation-state was a threat to human rights and
social peace, so Kant envisioned an international order that was
unmanaged from the top down but rather generated its own orderly
peace.
What was critical
for Hayek in the liberal tradition was the conviction that liberty
and law could exist in harmony with each other. Law itself emerged
spontaneously from within society as its members sought better ways
of managing their own affairs. The law of which Hayek speaks is
law adhered to as a matter of voluntary contract, or what we more
commonly refer to as rules. We have rules that govern the management
of subdivisions, or civic organizations, or businesses, or churches.
Or think of merchant law that emerged over many centuries of international
trade. This law exists apart from the state, and reflects the desire
of individuals to cooperate toward their own betterment, and the
rightful conviction that their own betterment is consistent with
the flourishing of society.
In contrast,
writes Hayek, there is another tradition of law that sees all rules
in society as rising from the state, and always and everywhere must
amount to a restriction on the liberty of individuals. The exponents
of this view include the tyrants and despots of the ancient world,
and, in modern times, Thomas Hobbes and Karl Marx. The writings
of the latter two are the preeminent influence over what we today
call the right and the left.
It is impossible
to understand this view of government without first understanding
the illiberal view of society. The illiberal view regards society
as essentially unworkable on its own because it is riddled with
conflicting interests.
Let us begin
with the left. They believe society has fundamental flaws and deep-rooted
conflicts that keep it in some sort of structural imbalance. All
these conflicts and disequilibria cry out for government fixes,
for leftists are certain that there is no social problem that a
good dose of power can't solve.
If the conflicts
they want are not there, they make them up. They look at what appears
to be a happy suburban subdivision and see pathology. They see an
apparently happy marriage and imagine that it is a mask for abuse.
They see a thriving church and think the people inside are being
manipulated by a cynical and corrupt pastor. Their view of the economic
system is the same. They see poor peasants in the third world drinking
a Coke or making Nikes, and they cry foul. They figure that prices
don't reflect reality but instead are set by large players. There
is a power imbalance at the heart of every exchange, domestically
and internationally. The labor contract is a mere veneer that covers
exploitation.
To the brooding
leftist, it is inconceivable that people can work out their own
problems, that trade can be to people's mutual advantage, that society
can be essentially self-managing, or that attempts to use government
power to reshape and manage people might backfire. Their faith in
government knows few limits; their faith in people is thin or nonexistent.
This is why they are a danger to liberty.
The remarkable
fact about the conflict theory of society held by the left is that
it ends up creating more of the very pathologies that they believe
have been there from the beginning. The surest way to drive a wedge
between labor and capital is to regulate the labor markets to the
point that people cannot make voluntary trades. Both sides begin
to fear each other. It is the same with relations between races,
sexes, the abled and disabled, and any other groups you can name.
It is the same with international relations. A tariff or trade sanction
is nothing but war by another means. The best path to creating conflict
where none need exist is to put a government bureaucracy in charge.
This view is
the very heart of the old socialist vision. They believed that the
key conflict in history was between those who owned capital and
those who worked for capital. The gain of the capitalists always
comes at the expense of labor; similarly, the advance of labor can
only come from the expropriation of the capitalist class through
a revolution that is just because the laborers are only taking back
what was expropriated from them.
Now, as time
has passed, we've come to see the error of this view. Capital and
labor do not exist in fundamental conflict. Their relations are
managed by contract in the same way that relations between laborers
and capitalists are managed by contract. Moreover, these two groups
are not hermetically sealed off from each other. Capitalists are
workers, and workers can be capitalistic owners of their own property.
Only in the most primitive stages does it appear otherwise.
Once it became
obvious that Marxism had mischaracterized the workings of capitalism,
the left looked for other forms of conflict to confirm their worldview.
Most recently, they have begun to advance the idea that man's interests
can only be pursued at the expense of nature. The flourishing of
one occurs at the expense of the other. Thus it is that a seemingly
happy and prosperous people could in reality be doing deadly damage
to the earth, the interests of which can only be advanced at the
expense of prosperous consumers and producers. The left accepts
the reality that this will make everyone poorer, as all forms of
socialism do, but they tell us that this is good for us and good
for the planet.
The traditional
and correct answer to the conflict theory is that there is essentially
nothing government can do to improve the workings of society. During
the Great Depression, for example, most everyone on the left thought
that government was the only way out. The hard left favored Communist
revolution. The soft left favored the New Deal. The old liberals
pointed out that it was government itself that brought about the
crisis, and that more government intervention could only make matters
worse. This was a rational response, but it did not carry the day.
After the Second
World War, we saw the emergence of a strange creature in American
life, something that called itself conservatism. It was opposed
to the left in American life, particularly that branch that was
sympathetic to Communism. It counseled vagaries like prudence in
public affairs. But in a crucial way, it adopted one tenet of the
leftist worldview: it rejected old liberalism as a vision for how
society can work in absence of government. It adopted a conflict
view of society, a different brand rooted in the assertions of Hobbes
rather than Marx. The idea that conflict was at the very heart of
society, absent government, was a key aspect of this.
This new thing
called conservative adopted some of the rhetoric of the old right.
It defended property and enterprise in economic affairs. But what
was critical was the introduction of a notion that society, if left
to its own devices, would collapse into chaos. This was particularly
true in international affairs. So while the Cold War was originally
an invention of the Democrat Harry Truman, it was tailor-made to
appeal to conservatives who were looking for an ideological enemy
to slay. It is one thing to say that Communism is an evil ideological
system; it is another to say that we cannot rest until every communist
is killed and every Communist government wiped off the face of the
earth.
What happened
to the non-interventionist views of the old right? They were predicated
on the idea that there could be a leaderless world order, that nations
could get along without one overarching authority and source of
law. But after the war, that too began to change. A new conviction
arose.
Russell Kirk
wrote in 1954 that "civilized society requires distinctions of order,
wealth, and responsibility; it cannot exist without true leadership…
society longs for just leadership…." He contrasted this view with
what he considered the erroneous opinion of Ludwig von Mises, whom
he attacks over the course of many pages. Mises, wrote Kirk, had
exaggerated faith in the rationality of individuals. Kirk, in contrast,
sees that all of history is governed by two great forces: love and
hate. Neither are rational impulses. In order to achieve the triumph
of love over hate, wrote Kirk, the conservative "looks upon government
as a great power for good."
And so conservatives
threw themselves behind the force of government to achieve their
aims, and no matter how many wicked things government did over the
years under conservative control, they always told themselves that
it was surely better than the much-feared alternative of an unmanaged
society.
Kirk became
more explicit as the years went on, and after the old liberalism
was refashioned by Rothbard as libertarianism, conservatives began
to define themselves in opposition to all forms of liberalism. The
government had many things to do in this world, they said. The police
were the thin blue line that separated chaos from order – and forget
just how awful the police often are in reality. The US military
empire was all that stood between us and Soviet domination – and
pay no attention to the fact that the Soviet economy was itself
a basket case. They became cheerleaders of government power of a
different sort.
Frank Chodorov
was so fed up with tendencies on the right that he once said: "anyone
who calls me a conservative gets a punch in the nose."
We have lived
through six years of a Republican president who was backed by conservatives
but who still escapes fundamental criticism by them. After promises
of a humble foreign policy, war and war spending define our era.
We're told that every problem with war can be solved through more
force, there is nothing necessarily wrong with imprisoning people
without cause and without legal representation, that torture can
be a legitimate wartime tactic, that some countries have to be destroyed
in order to be made free, and that we can have all the warfare and
welfare we desire at virtually no cost, thanks to the miracle of
central banking and debt-driven economic growth.
Some people
say that the real problem with the Bush administration is that it
is too far left, and that a genuine right-wing government would
be better. I'm disinclined to believe that, for I detect in the
Bush administration a philosophy of governance that departs from
that of the left in many ways, except in its unlimited faith in
government to keep order, that is, to exercise force and the threat
of force.
Elsewhere,
I've referred to members of political groups that support the conservative
right as "red-state fascists," and I don't use that phrase merely
for rhetorical purposes. There was and is such a thing as fascism
as a non-leftist form of social theory that puts unlimited faith
in the state to correct what they see as flaws in society and the
world.
Let's look
more closely at the conservative view of police power. While it
is true that law itself is critical to freedom, and police can defend
rights of life and property, it does not follow that any tax-paid
fellow bearing official arms and sporting jackboots is on the side
of the good. Every government regulation and tax is ultimately backed
by the police power, so free-market advocates have every reason
to be as suspicious of socialist-style police power as anyone on
the left.
Uncritical
attitudes toward the police lead, in the end, to the support of
the police state and, in turn, to the celebration of American imperialism
as somehow filling a void in the world. And to those who doubt that,
I would invite a look at the U.S.-backed regime in Iraq, which has
been enforcing martial law since the invasion even while most conservatives
have been glad to believe that these methods constitute steps toward
freedom. I don't see this as a contradiction of conservative principles;
it appears as the fulfillment of their essentially Hobbesian view
of how society must function.
The problem
of police power is hitting Americans very close to home. It is the
police, much militarized and federalized, who are charged with enforcing
the on-again-off-again states of emergency that have characterized
American civilian life. It is the police that confiscated guns from
New Orleans residents during the flood, kept residents away from
their homes, refused to let the kids go home in the Alabama tornado
earlier this spring, and will be the enforcers of the curfews, checkpoints,
and speech controls that the politicians want during the next national
emergency.
If we want
to see the way the police power could treat US citizens, look carefully
at how the US troops in Iraq are treating the civilians there, or
how prisoners in Guantánamo Bay are treated. A leading contender
for the Republican nomination received wild cheers when he proposed
to double the capacity of Guantánamo.
This ideology
of power that is inherent in postwar conservatism is particularly
clear when it comes to war. In the 1970s, there developed a myth
on the right that the real problem with Vietnam was not the intervention
itself, but the failure to carry it out to a more grim and ruthless
end. This seems to be the only lesson that the Bush administration
garnered from the experience.
So the solution
to every problem in Iraq at least I can't think of an exception
to the rule has been to apply more force through more troops, more
bombs, more tanks, more guns, more curfews, more patrols, more checkpoints,
and more controls of all sorts. They believe that another surge
will work wonders because they are out of ideas. It's as if the
administration were on an intellectual trajectory that it cannot
escape.
Even after
all the evidence that the war on terror has produced ever more terrorism
– and this evidence is offered up by the government’s own statistics
– the champions of the war on terror cannot think their way out
of the intellectual trap into which their ideology of force has
locked them.
How is it that
the war planners and their vast numbers of supporters do not question
the underlying assumption that government is capable of achieving
all its aims, provided that it is given enough time and firepower?
Let's look
more carefully at their crude form of Hobbesianism. Thomas Hobbes's
book Leviathan was published in 1651 during the English Civil
War in order to justify a tyrannical central government as the price
of peace. The natural state of society, he said, was war of all
against all. In this world, life is "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish,
and short." Conflict was the way of human engagement. Society is
rife with it, and it cannot be otherwise.
What is striking
here is the context of this book. Conflict was indeed ubiquitous.
But what was the conflict over? It was over who would control the
state and how that state would operate. This was not a state of
nature but a society under Leviathan’s control. It was precisely
the Leviathan that bred that very conflict that Hobbes was addressing,
and he proposed a cure that was essentially identical to the disease.
In fact, the
result of the Civil War was the brutal and ghastly dictatorship
of Oliver Cromwell, who ruled under democratic slogans. This was
a foreshadowing of some of the worst political violence of the 20th
century. It was Nazism, Fascism, and Communism that transformed
formerly peaceful societies into violent communities in which life
did indeed become "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short."
Leviathan didn't fix the problem; it bred it, and fastened it on
society.
What is striking
about Hobbes is that he thought not at all about economic problems.
The problem of human material well-being was not part of his intellectual
apparatus. He could not have imagined what England would become
a century to a century and a half later: a bastion of freedom and
rising prosperity for everyone.
He wrote at
the tail end of an epoch before the rise of old-style liberalism.
At the time that Hobbes was writing, the liberal idea had not yet
become part of public consciousness in England. In this respect,
England was behind the Continent, where intellectuals in Spain and
France had already come to understand the core insights of the liberal
idea. But in England, John Locke's Two
Treatises on Government would not be written for another
thirty years, a book that would supply the essential framework of
the Declaration of Independence and lead to the formation of the
freest and most prosperous society in the history of the world.
Because Hobbes
didn't think about economic issues, the essential liberal insight
was not part of his thinking. And what is that insight? It is summed
up in Frédéric Bastiat's claim that "the great social tendencies
are harmonious."
What he means
by this is that society contains within itself the capacity to resolve
conflicts and create and sustain institutions that further social
cooperation. By pursuing their individual self-interest, people
can come to mutual agreement and engage in exchange to their mutual
benefit. A critical insight here, one that needs to be taught to
every generation, relates to the law of association.
The law of
association points out that people of radically different abilities,
backgrounds, religions, races, and capacities can successfully cooperate
to achieve ever-higher levels of social welfare through negotiation
and trade. The law of association is what explains the method by
which humans were able to move out of caves, away from isolated
production, beyond the hunter-gatherer stage, and into what we call
civilization. This law makes it possible for people not to steal
from each other and kill each other but cooperate. It is the basis
of society. It is also the basis of international order.
Note that the
law of association does not suppose that everyone in society is
smart, enlightened, talented, reasonable, or educated. It presumes
radical inequality and points to the paradox that the world's smartest,
most talented person still has every reason to trade with his polar
opposite because scarcity requires that the tasks of production
be divided between people. Under the division of labor, everyone
plays an essential role. It is the basis of families, communities,
firms, and international trade. Another fact that needs to be understood
is this: the law of association is a fact of human existence whether
or not there is a state. Indeed, the foundation of civilization
itself precedes the existence of the state.
What the law
of association addresses is the core problem of freedom itself.
If all people were equal, if everyone had the same skill level,
if there were racial, sexual, and religious homogeneity in society,
if people did not have differences of opinion, there would be few
if any problems in society to overcome because it would not be a
human society. It would be an ant heap, or a series of machine parts
that had no volition. The essential problem of social and economic
organization, aside from scarcity, is precisely how to deal with
the fact of inequality and free will. It is here that freedom excels.
Let us be clear.
The old liberals were not saying that there are no such things as
criminals. They were saying that society can deal with malevolence
through the exchange economy, and in precisely the way we see hinted
at today: private security companies, private production of locks
and guns, private arbitration, and private insurance. The free market
can organize protection better than the state. Private enterprise
can and does provide the police function better than the state.
As Hayek argued, the state is wildly overrated as a mechanism of
order keeping. The state is and has been in history a source of
disorder and chaos.
This essential
insight of liberalism is what led the founding fathers to take such
a radical step as throwing off the rule of Great Britain. They had
to be firmly convinced that chaos would not ensue, that the American
people could manage their own affairs without overarching Leviathan
control. They believed that the source of any conflict in their
society was the central state, and that society itself could be
self-regulating. In place of control by the king, they put the Articles
of Confederation, which was a type of government that more closely
approximated anarchy than any system in the modern period. The central
government was barely in existence, and had essentially no power.
Why did anyone
believe it could work? It was the new science of liberty that led
to this conviction. The American consensus was that Hobbes was wrong.
In the state of nature, life is not nasty and brutish, or, rather
if it is, there is nothing that a nasty and brutish state can do
to improve it. The only way a society can advance out of barbarism
is from within by means of the division of labor.
This logic
has been forgotten by the American right. Instead they have bought
into the view that society is fundamentally unstable and rife with
a conflict that only the state can solve. That root conflict is
between those who adhere to the law and those who are inclined to
break it. These they define as good guys and bad guys, but it is
not always true, since "the law" these days is not that
written by God on our hearts, but rather the orders handed down
by our political masters.
This seemingly
important point is completely lost on the Republican mind, since
they believe that without the state as lawmaker, all of society
and all the world would collapse into a muddle of chaos and darkness.
Society, they believe, is a wreck without Leviathan. This is why
they celebrate the police and the military far more than merchants
and entrepreneurs, and why they think that war deserves more credit
than trade for world prosperity.
The conviction
that society, no matter how orderly it appears, is really nothing
more than a gloss on deep-rooted conflict, expresses itself in the
romantic attachment to the police power and war.
But it also
affects the right's attitude toward religion. Many people are convinced
that, in the end, it is not possible that society can be religiously
heterogeneous. In particular, these days, most conservatives believe
that the United States cannot abide the presence of Muslims and
other religious minorities.
I'm sure you
have heard, as I have, conservatives telling us that there can be
no peace in the world so long as the Muslim religion exists. It
is inherently bent on violence. They have always been our enemy
and always will be. When I hear such claims, I can't help but think
of Orwell's 1984,
in which the enemies were always changing and the history always
being rewritten. For it wasn't too long ago that we were told that
Islam, and its fundamentalist branch in particular, was a wonderful
ally in the war against Communism, and, moreover, that they share
with us the virtues of faith and family.
So with a sigh,
we must point out that so long as Western troops are not invading
their countries and starving their people, we tend to get along
rather well.
Indeed, in
conditions of freedom, there is no reason why all religions cannot
peacefully coexist. The current-day view of conservatives that we
are in an intractable war against Islam also stems from the conflict-based
view of society. In absence of the state, people find ways to get
along, all preserving their own identities. Religious heterogeneity
presents no problems that freedom cannot solve.
And yet, conservatives
today are disinclined to accept this view. They seem to have some
intellectual need to identify huge struggles at work in history
that give them a sense of meaning and purpose. Whereas the founding
generation of old liberals was thrilled by the existence of peace
and the slow and meticulous development of bourgeois civilization,
the right today is on the lookout for grand morality plays in which
they can throw themselves as a means of making some mark in history.
And somehow they have come to believe that the state is the right
means to use to fight this battle.
In short, their
meta-understanding of politics bypassed the liberal revolution of
the 18th century and embraced the anti-liberal elements of the Enlightenment.
Liberty is fine but order, order, is much more important, and order
comes from the state. They can't even fathom the truth that liberty
is the mother, not the daughter, of order. That thought is too complex
for the mind that believes that "the law" alone, legislated
or by executive fiat, is what separates barbarism from civilization.
Freedom, to them, is not a right but something conferred as a reward
for good behavior. The absence of good behavior justifies any level
of crackdown.
At the end
of the Cold War, many conservatives panicked that there would be
no more great causes into which the state could enlist itself. There
were about 10 years of books that sought to demonize someone, somewhere,
in the hope of creating a new enemy. Maybe it would be China. Maybe
it would be the culture war. Maybe it should be drugs. At last,
from their point of view, 9-11 presented the opportunity they needed,
and thus began the newest unwinnable war: The Global War on Terror.
So must government
rule every aspect of life until every last terrorist is wiped off
the face of the earth? Must we surrender all our liberty and property
to this cause, as the regime and its apologists suggest?
This view of
society is certainly not sustainable in these times and in the future.
Ever more of daily life consists in seceding from the state and
its apparatus of edicts and regulations. In the online world, billions
of deals are made every day that require virtually no government
law to enforce. The technology that is pushing the world forward
is not created by the state but by private enterprise. The places
we shop and the communities in which we live are being created by
private developers. Most businesses prefer to deal with private
courts. We depend on insurance companies, not police, to reduce
the risks in life. We secure our homes and workplaces through private
firms.
What's more,
these days we see all around us how liberty generates order and
how this order is self-sustaining. We benefit daily, hourly, minute-by-minute,
from an order that is not imposed from without but rather generated
from within, by that remarkable capacity we have for pursuing self-interest
while benefiting the whole. Here is the great mystery and majesty
of social order, expressed so well in the act of economic exchange.
Many
Republicans by contrast live intellectually in a world long past,
a world of warring states and societies made up of fixed classes
that fought over ever-dwindling resources, a world unleavened by
enterprise and individual initiative. They imagine themselves to
be the class of rulers, the aristocrats, the philosopher kings,
the high clerics, the landowners, and to keep that power, they gladly
fuel the basest of human instincts: nationalism, jingoism, and hate.
Keeping them at bay means keeping the world of their imaginations
at bay, and that is a very good and important thing for the sake
of civilization.
I’ve
spoken about the problem of those who look at society and see nothing
but conflict and no prospect for cooperation. It is a view shared
by the left and the right. Truly there is an actual conflict at
the root of history but it is not the one most people understand
or see. It is the great struggle between freedom and despotism,
between the individual and the state, between the voluntary means
and coercion. But we know where we stand. We stand with the future
of freedom.
June
5, 2007
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
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