L'Accuse!
by Llewellyn H.
Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Among
those that accuse libertarians of being wrong on some aspect of
politics or history, the same themes come up again. I won't list
the really stupid ones, such as those accusing me of being anti-American,
unpatriotic, a traitorous left-liberal Democrat, a capitalist pig,
an apologist for the corporatist hegemon, an uncritical defender
of the rich, a dangerous Southern demagogue who longs for hoop skirts
and plantations, or any of the other ad hominem attacks that some
people confuse with argument.
But
I would like to address some of the more substantial common remarks.
Your
suggestions are too extreme to be helpful.
This
claim seems to leave out the last part of the sentence, and thereby
makes one wonder: helpful to whom? If we were to fill in the blank,
we would have to say helpful to policy makers, legislators, bureaucrats,
journalists, and every other person who has an investment in the
system as it is. The person making the attack, one presumes, is
"helpful," but I am not.
This
"helpful" issue comes up in just about any area of political analysis.
The proposal to abolish public school is "not helpful" to those
who profit from the system as it is. The idea of getting rid of
the Fed is "not helpful" for those who depend on an endlessly expanding
money supply. The idea of scrapping Social Security is "not helpful"
for those who use the system to loot the rest of us, and so on.
The
"helpful" ideas are said to be the ones that remain within the confines
of the established terms of debate and do not thus threaten the
special interests. Extreme means to offer suggestions that do threaten
entrenched interests. To play this game is to buy into the existing
structure of ideological opinion that is designed to support the
regime.
On
the Iraq War, for example, we are often told that our demand for
an immediate withdrawal of troops is not helpful at a time when
economists are needed to fashion privatization plans and otherwise
make suggestions for improving US security there. In other words,
we are being told that we must accept the great imperial project
as a given.
Now,
it strikes me as ridiculous to claim to want fundamental change
and yet avoid advocating fundamental change for fear of being
dismissed. The only way to make a difference in this world is through
forthrightly stating what is true. And yes, doing so is not helpful
to those who resist all significant change.
You
make the perfect the enemy of the good.
This
would be perverse if true. For example, let's say some want to cut
the budget of the Department of Education by half. It would certainly
be wrong for libertarians to lobby to prevent this on grounds that
the entire bureaucracy should be abolished. Improvement should be
celebrated whenever it appears.
As
another example, we should favor the legalization of medical marijuana
even if other uses and narcotics will not be similarly legalized.
We can champion the full loaf while still being happy at half a
loaf. One of the reasons is our conviction that freedom works and
the best way to demonstrate this is with real life examples. Perhaps
improvement in one area will inspire moves to go further.
By
the way, I'm actually unaware of any libertarian who opposes the
good on grounds that it is not perfect. For example, most of us
want to eliminate income taxes. But we could still be pleased with
a 1 percent reduction, even if that should not stop us from calling
for eliminating the whole system of robbery.
Roderick
Long notes that whenever he hears the phrase above, he suspects
that some compromise of principle is in the offing. How true. Lately
it has been said that those of us who oppose school vouchers and
Social Security "privatization" are making the perfect the enemy
of the good.
That's
not it at all. It's that we think these programs will make the existing
system worse by increasing spending, nationalizing schools, and
bringing about a new forced savings program. What we oppose are
tricks that would use libertarian language to fasten the state more
tightly around society.
That's
doesn't mean that libertarians should not be practical. Nor does
it mean that we should not advocate marginal changes. It only means
that we must not be deceptive and we must not favor evil in the
hope that good may come of it. Above all, we must never be tricked
into backing ideas that will actually end up expanding statism.
You
head the Mises Institute but you contradict (or adhere too slavishly
to) Mises.
It
is evenly weighted between those who say that our work too closely
adheres to everything Mises says or that we dangerously depart and
thus fail to show piety toward our intellectual inspiration. In
fact, piety and development are not necessarily at odds.
We
think of Misesianism as way of thought, a mode of analysis, a research
agenda, and a model and ideal of how to be principled in times when
freedom and rationality are constantly under attack. It is not a
precise blueprint to follow on all matters of policy or news interpretation.
Anyone
reading Mises cannot be but amazed at his prescience and brilliance,
but to learn from him doesn't require parroting back all that we
hear. The whole point of cultivating a new generation is to teach
what is known and then hope its members advance beyond the masters
in making a contribution.
The
same is true of Rothbard, Menger, Hayek, Böhm-Bawerk, or any of
the greats. They all went beyond their teachers. The biggest problem
we face today, however, is students that know nothing of these people.
Our first job is to draw people's attention to their legacy and
then to tolerate differences among thinkers and cultivate an environment
of principled but free inquiry.
You are preaching to the choir.
The
implication is that we are only talking to each other. That is not
such a bad thing, by the way, if the group that consists of "each
other" or the "choir" is brilliant and forever expanding. It can
become terribly dull to only talk to people who are not in
the "choir" and thus have no knowledge of the theory and history
of the Austro-libertarian intellectual apparatus. There is no development
if you only repeat the fundamentals.
In
truth, we make every effort to reach out without giving up principle.
We don't slavishly write for venues solely because we are asked,
but we are glad for most any venue to publish our writings.
In
any case, with the web, this criticism concerning internal development
has become patently absurd. The reach of libertarian websites is
global and stretches to all ages and classes. One of the reasons
for this is that we have a good product to offer the world a direct
result of having spent so many years on internal development.
There are many more accusations
made against what we do, but that's enough for part one.
November 26, 2004
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 © 2004 LewRockwell.com
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