The
Hegelianism of the 2008 Election
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
If the political
prediction markets are right, we are going to end up with a presidential
contest between two people who agree on the pressing need to expand
the entire welfare-warfare state. They can argue about priorities,
but they agree on the overall goal. With the campaign lacking serious
issues, something tells me that the great American obsession over
race is going to play a major role, which is gravely unfortunate
since the discussion is unlikely to be enlightening.
Of course it's
all politics, that is, equal parts dissembling and illusion, and
designed to confer on some groups more power over other groups.
But it does
raise important questions: what is racism and how can we tell if
it exists? I'm not talking about someone who dislikes African-Americans
or whites or Latinos. We might call that racism on the level of
individual ethics, but there are no inevitable and widespread social
consequences of a bad attitude. Defining racism, a notion highly
charged with political implications, also raises the specter of
the Thought Police: did you or did you not think politically incorrect
thoughts?
Let's
deepen and broaden the discussion in light of what Ludwig von Mises
says about racism in contrast to the liberal view of the social
order. In Omnipotent
Government, he shows that the modern doctrine of racism
originated with the Frenchman Joseph Arthur Comte de Gobineau as
a way to justify aristocratic privilege. In the hands of the Nazis,
the doctrine was extended to the alleged superiority of Aryans as
versus everyone else. They claimed that the races were inherently
incompatible, and advocated state policies to bring about their
desired outcome.
Mises first
regards racism as a particular species of a general social theory
that posits the existence of intractable conflicts in society, and
that therefore it is impossible for society to work properly absent
some fundamental structural change brought about by the state. In
the old Marxist variety, this conflict was between capital and labor.
That view doesn't have many adherents anymore since real-world events
have disproved the Marxian vision for more than a century. The poor
didn't get poorer under capitalism; they became richer than ever
before in human history.
In a similar
way, the racialists must also confront the reality of the market
economy. As Mises said, in a market economy, there is no legal discrimination
against anyone. Freedom prevails, and "whoever dislikes the Jews
may in such a world avoid patronizing Jewish shopkeepers, doctors,
and lawyers." The problem is that this does not produce the results
racists want. Indeed, the market always tends to bring people together
in peace, neither compelling nor forbidding exchanges.
"Many decades
of intensive anti-Semitic propaganda did not succeed in preventing
German 'Aryans' from buying in shops owned by Jews, from consulting
Jewish doctors and lawyers, and from reading books by Jewish authors."
What the racists wanted required more. "Whoever wanted to get rid
of his Jewish competitors could not rely on an alleged hatred of
Jews; he was under the necessity of asking for legal discrimination
against them."
The end result,
then, is a policy of interventionism. This interventionism is required
if a racist result is to be brought about, and the allegedly intractable
conflict finally resolved. If this logic is carried to its end point,
the result is mass suffering and death. The Jews were the problem
in Germany, so they had to be eradicated. The Kulaks in Russia similarly
had to be destroyed. Same with anyone with Western or bourgeois
attachments in Mao's China or Pol Pot's Cambodia. The Hegelian synthesis
in each of these cases is achieved through mass slaughter. The supposedly
persistent conflict between groups is washed away in rivers of blood.
Even as Marxists
abandoned their old view of capital-labor relations, they promoted
the conflict view of society – one entirely at odds with the old
liberal idea – in other forms. This is because the Marxian view
itself has deeper roots in Hegel's view that history must tend toward
a synthesis of two opposing forces, culminating in some transforming
moment. Socialism is one way to render the Hegelian view in material
terms. But there are other ways. So long as you have the perception
of a war-to-the-knife conflict, history cries out for a resolution.
Thus does the
Marxian view easily mutate to take on a different caste depending
on the political moment. The sexist view of the world, for example,
holds that men and women have opposing interests, and that a gain
by one sex always comes at the expense of the other. A forced rearrangement
of social institutions, they believed, was required to fix the problem.
Now, keep in
mind that this view of society is not necessarily held by one group
or another. We think of anti-male women's activists who believe
that women can only advance through political action, but the view
can also be held by men. The misogynist male might also believe
that women are the key problem with the world, and so social structures
need to be forcibly rearranged to favor men.
The conflict
view is a part of the environmentalist agenda too. The notion that
humans cannot advance without killing nature is widely held today.
People look at China's advancing economy and their first thought
is not human flourishing, but environmental catastrophe. Think too
of those who accept as an article of faith that changes in weather
patterns are due to us humans living it up too much.
We see this
further today in the area of religion. Some people are dead set
on the idea that a free society is incompatible with a multiplicity
of religious faiths. This view is particularly popular among Christian
fundamentalists, who claim that Islam will never be satisfied until
it wipes out Christianity, and that every new mosque is a mortal
threat to Christendom. They can't imagine that people can co-exist
in peace, tolerance, and trade, leaving religion to personal conscience.
So too with
race. Decades after Gobineau, in the 1930s, it became the intellectual
fashion to believe that state eugenics was necessary to cull the
population of its inferior elements, so that the superior elements
could thrive. Behind this was an elaborate argument about human
evolution and the need for planned reproduction. This view was widely
held on the left and the right, in highbrow and lowbrow circles.
Why was state planning necessary? Because, it was believed, there
was a genetic competition that pitted all racial groups against
all, and only one group could win.
Thus did the
racialist view sample Marxism, changing the posited conflict from
capital and labor to the races. What they failed to understand,
or understood but hated, was the capacity for voluntary institutions
to harmonize racial interests. The United States showed this to
be true. After the ghastly civil war came the blessed abolition
of slavery, and then the end of laws requiring racial segregation.
We saw how the free market can bring about cooperative trading relationships
among all people. (Of course, the laws hindering freedom of association
and contract in the name of antiracism retarded social cooperation.)
What freedom
has illustrated is that differences among people do not need to
lead to intractable conflicts. More and more social cooperation
is possible and fruitful, to the extent that people are granted
the freedom to associate, trade, make contracts, and work together
toward their mutual advantage.
Sadly, however,
among many people in this country, there is still the impression
that state-mandated institutional change, even revolution, is required
to end intractable conflicts. They believe that the very essence
of the social structure captures this racial conflict. Some blacks
hold this view, some whites hold this view, some Latinos hold this
view – the ideology of racism does not elude any group.
It should be
no surprise, then, that Mises's ideas have drawn fire from white
racialists who insist that by talking about markets and freedom,
we are evading the real issue, which is who will dominate. And there
is the view that prosperity is not really about the question of
freedom, but about the purity of the genetic stocks. Such views
are not limited to whites; black activists too speak as if the only
issue that really matters is gaining legal preferences for their
group. In either case, the agenda is all about who has power over
whom, rather than ending the ability of any group to have power
over any other group.
The state is
not a neutral observer. It will pass environmental legislation.
It will regulate relations between races and sexes. It will put
down this religion in order to raise that one up. In each case,
the intervention only exacerbates conflicts, which in turn creates
the impression that there really is an intractable conflict at work.
For example, if the state taxes one group to give to another group,
it fuels conflict and gives the impression that legislation is the
route to liberation.
But who is
the real winner in this game? The state and the state alone. By
purporting to be the great social referee, it accumulates more power
unto itself and leaves everyone else with less freedom to work out
their own problems. And here is the real problem with racism or
any -ism that fails to understand the capacity of the free society
to work out its own problems through exchange and mutual benefit.
Thus can we
see that racism is not a unique problem in society but part of a
larger misconception about the basis of social cooperation.
Of course,
it is essential to retain the old liberal view even in the midst
of all the coming conflicts, both in rhetoric and in policy. Always
and everywhere, the only serious political issue is what the state
should and should not do. All the rest distracts.
February
27, 2008
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is founder and president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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