Longing for Dictatorship
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
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Politics brings
out the worst in everyone, which is one good reason to completely
depoliticize society. This way we can all busy ourselves in productive
work or leisure, instead of wasting vast time watching these clowns
on television promise the impossible to us.
What we are
being offered on television is two flavors of dictatorship. One
party imagines Athens, with fairness and justice for all, international
brotherhood and sisterhood, a world free of hate and discrimination
in which all wealth is shared and no wealth is made at the expense
of nature.
Of course,
this is an Athens of their own invention, since the original’s culture
and accomplishments depended on free trade, private ownership, sound
money, and low taxes. What the Democrats are offering is a monstrously
larger state that assumes control of all property, the crushing
of private initiative, and an end to economic freedom.
Note that they
don't talk about this. But that is the core of all their plans for
fairness and justice: an increased use of violence in society, and
an increased centralization of political power. Often the person
who recommends this path imagines that he will be the dictator,
and that his plans alone will prevail.
They don't
consider that the state they advocate is also wholly capable of
doing things that they do not like, like crushing civil liberties
and starting wars all over the world. Note that the left's critique
of Bush's big government is not that it is crushing liberty; rather,
they believe that government power is being used for the wrong purposes.
Another problem
with these people: they can't stand capitalism. They resent the
commercial society. They have not come to terms with the fact that
without capitalism, most of the human race would starve to death.
Why do they hate it? Because wealth under capitalism will always
be unequally distributed.
They favor
a different form of dictatorship.
Now to the
Republicans, who imagine themselves creating a modern form of Sparta,
with military strength and a disciplined citizenry unified in the
drive to national greatness, courage, and heroism. Along with this
comes support for national service (the draft) and a demand that
Congress stop meddling in executive-branch matters.
They also say
that they are for free enterprise, but what they really mean is
that they support their main constituents who are large corporations
dependent on government contracts and privileges. That goes for
the banks and the mortgage companies too, whose interests they defend
through a fiat money system that further fuels state growth.
This too is
their version of dictatorship.
It is long
past time for both of these parties to admit it. They won’t of course,
so it is incumbent on the rest of us to at least recognize it for
what it is. It is often said that there is not a dime's worth of
difference between the parties, but there is little reflection on
what precisely they have in common. It comes down to a love of some
version of dictatorship, of which they believe they will be the
administrators.
What is the
alternative? It is pure liberty, a word that is used only as a slogan
in public affairs these days. By liberty, I mean only one kind:
a life without badgering from the state. There is nothing on God's
green earth that the state can do better than we can as individuals
and communities and voluntary associations. What I mean by liberty
is no more or less than firing the state as the administrator of
society.
The politicians
are forever talking about their plans for us. We should reject them
all, left, right, and center. Would this leave chaos in its wake?
Not at all. It would leave the orderliness of the private property
society.
As Mises wrote,
"The truth is that the choice is not between a dead mechanism and
a rigid automatism on the one hand and conscious planning on the
other hand. The alternative is not plan or no plan. The question
is: whose planning? Should each member of society plan for himself
or should the paternal government alone plan for all? The issue
is not automatism versus conscious action; it is spontaneous
action of each individual versus the exclusive action of the government.
It is freedom versus government omnipotence."
Mises wrote
those words in 1949. People said that he was being hyperbolic, that
he was nuts and inflammatory. Surely our system has nothing in common
with the German system we had just fought a war to destroy, and
nothing in common with the Russian system that was becoming our
new enemy.
But
people forget that in the 1930s, it was conventional wisdom that
our essential choice was between two forms of dictatorship, socialism
or fascism. People were more open back then, using these words not
in a derogatory way. Here we are all these years later, and we no
longer speak with deference toward socialism and fascism as systems
of government.
Even so, the
intellectual assumptions remain the same. Watch the conventions
with an eye to what the political class wants to do for you. Everything
they promise has a flip side of what they want to do to you.
And the power to do these things has to come from the violence of
the state, and using that violence requires a form of total control
over government and society. They may look nice and sweet. They
may claim to love you and your family and community. But their political
ideology is actually steeped in hatred for your liberty and property.
They seek an end to your freedom to seek a better life.
They seek dictatorship.
All the rest is illusion.
August
29, 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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