Conservative
Euphemisms for State Aggression
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Every
season there is a new contender for the conservative mini-treatise
of the day. Usually written by the newest would-be Buckley, it offers
readers a new way of understanding the ideological climate and a
new perspective on how conservatives should fit within it. National
Review used to publish these all the time in the 60s and 70s,
and the conclusion was always the same: feel no guilt about your
support of big government in such and such an area because conservative
philosophy can be twisted and re-rendered to make that not only
permissible but necessary.
In
more recent years, the cause has been picked up by other publications.
The American Conservative calls for supporting the protectionist
state. The Weekly Standard calls for supporting the national-greatness
state. The Wall Street Journal is all for boosting welfare
for warfare. Many formerly libertarian writers have seen the light
and come to support the interventionist state in foreign policy.
Innumerable e-zines call for tearing down the Democratic Partyruled
state in order to support the Republican Partyruled state.
And vast numbers of religious right outlets see a rationale for
the moralizing state.
The
upshot after all these decades is bitterly ironic. The only thing
that seems to unite the myriad special interests on the right is
that each one has some special project for the state to support,
so they all agree to support big government as a kind of vast logrolling
project. If each group does its part, everyone stays on top.
If
this plan sounds familiar, it is because the political right
the red-state fascist right has only recently fully come
around to discovering what the left discovered long ago: you don’t
have to agree with the goal of your compatriots so long as you agree
on the statist means to achieve that goal. This is how the Democratic
National Convention can look like the cantina scene in Star Wars,
but somehow it all works. What has been lacking on the right has
been an attempt to present a rationale to the multitudes on how
the right can operate the same way.
Thus
do we have "The
New Fusionism" by Joseph Bottum appearing in First Things.
He begins by pointing out that the many factions on the right have
hugely disparate interests "abortion, tax cuts, school vouchers,
judicial overreach, the government’s bloated budget, bioethics,
homosexual marriage, the creation of democracies in the Middle East,
federalism, immigration, the restoration of religion in the public
square on and on."
These
interest groups would not otherwise get along and yet they appear
to, says Mr. Bottum. Let’s cut to the last scene: they have all agreed
to favor state intervention in their area, in exchange for which
they support state intervention in everyone else’s area. This is
the new fusionism: everyone agrees to back state building. This
much we can say about his essay: at least it treats the only political
question worth asking, namely what do you want the state to do?
Libertarians are constantly criticized for single-mindedly focusing
on this, but all other questions concerning politics are really
irrelevant by comparison.
And
yet here is what is strange about this essay. Mr. Bottum never quite
puts it this way. Reading his essay, you find a long string of euphemisms
for state intervention. We are in the end talking about groups supporting
the only thing that the state does: namely roughing people up through
violence and threats of violence. That’s what every line of every
regulation comes down to. That’s the meaning of every tax. That's
the whole upshot of every tariff, expenditure, prohibition, and
bomb. It all amounts to increased use of violence in society. Strip
away the banners, songs, uniforms, and speeches: that’s all that
the state really is.
The
reason people don’t want to say that, however, is that it sounds
rather unseemly and ugly to admit that one wants to expand the sphere
of coercion and aggression in society. No one wants to be known
as an advocate of using violence. And so a major art of statecraft
is to come up with other words for state action besides the ones
that actually describe what the state does. Mr. Bottum seems to
be a specialist at this.
Now,
to be sure, he justifies his call for a dramatic expansion of the
state in the name of the end of violence. In the case of abortion,
his concern is violence against the unborn, but as with most other
prolifers, there is nary a word about the violence that is inherent
in the enforcement of a national antiabortion policy: the army of
social workers, the impositions on localities, the intrusions into
family life, the criminal penalties against women and doctors and
others that would naturally be implied. Nor is there any concern
expressed for what an unprecedented expansion of government power
this would amount to.
So
too for war. We are told that it is America’s job to enforce human
rights abroad, but we are not told about the tens of thousands who
die in even America’s small wars, the destruction, the suffering,
the expense, the death and injury of our own troops, the stolen
lives, the lies and corruption of the political class and the media
and the universities, and on and on. What do war and morality have
to do with each other? It’s dirty, evil business.
From
Rome to the US 2005, empires have always justified themselves on
grounds of their violence preventing greater violence. But the essence
of the means remains the great taboo. Mr. Bottum’s fusionism, for
example, proposes a grand statist project without ever telling you
what it really is. His whole essay makes for a fascinating study
in the euphemisms for state power. Here are a few we can cut and
paste from his piece:
- there
are truths about human life and dignity that must not be compromised
in international politics
- intellectual
and moral seriousness in one realm can breed the desire to find
intellectual and moral seriousness in another
- to reawaken
a sense of national purpose
- to restore
American patriotism
- a forceful
American foreign policy
- led the
fight against international sex trafficking and a host of other
human-rights abuses
- what we
do at home and what we do abroad
- to enact
certain domestic agendas and the attitudes that drive our foreign
policy
- summon
the political will
- to believe
its founding ideals are true for others
- the active
advance of democracy
- reversing
the failure of nerve that has lingered in America
- to restore
confidence
- an admirable
patriotism
- deep changes
that might reawaken and remoralize the nation
- the sense
of national purpose regained by forceful response to the attacks
- help summon
the will to halt the slaughter
- revitalize
belief in the great American experiment.
Interesting
that the words government and state do not appear anywhere in the
substance of the argument. But the first goal of statecraft is always
to disguise itself. How many cloaks has the left woven for a hundred
years? How many more will the right weave for the next hundred?
Mr. Bottum
is right about this much: "This isn’t conservatism, in several
older senses of the word…. Call it the new moralism, if you like.
Call it a masked liberalism or a kind of radicalism that has bizarrely
seized the American scene. Mutter darkly, if you want, about the
shotgun marriage of ex-socialists and modern puritans, the cynical
political joining of imperial adventurers with reactionary Catholics
and backwoods Evangelicals."
I
would rather mutter darkly than dissemble about the bloody essence
of statism.
May
27, 2005
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
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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