Why
the Republicans Are Doomed
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
Imagine that
you are blindfolded and told that the food you are about to eat
is ice cream. It turns out to be chicken liver. Or imagine that
you think you are diving into warm water but instead it turns out
to be near-freezing.
This is pretty
much what it is like to be governed by Republicans, and there is
no better case in point than George W. Bush. He, like all Republicans
since the 1920s, campaigned as a shrink-the-government man. More
incredibly to recall, he blasted the "nation-building" of Bill Clinton
and insisted that the US needed a "humble" foreign policy.
What we got
instead is, well, what we got, is the polar opposite. The man who
wailed over Bill Clinton’s big government has made Clinton’s spending
record look great by comparison. The guy who decried "nation-building"
has decided that bombs and tanks are a great means to inspire a
wholesale upheaval in the Gulf region.
What’s interesting
here is what motivates big-government Republicanism. The party itself
has no strong investment in the public sector as it currently stands,
apart from the prison bureaucracy and the military. Most civil servants
and teachers and postal workers support the Democrats, knowing full
well who is buttering their bread. Republicans, essentially, see
the public purse as something not to conserve but to rob and give
to those who do vote Republican.
Thus is the
government contracted out – and vastly so. Thus are religious charities
eligible for public funding. Thus are private schools encouraged
to get on the dole. Thus are industrialists eligible for every privilege
one can imagine. Heck, if you are big enough and powerful enough,
the Republicans might even start a war on your behalf. This gets
very expensive indeed, even more expensive than old-fashioned, reformed-minded,
repair-the-schools, renew-the-cities, make-the-government-work social
democracy!
And you know
how the left says that the Republicans care nothing for your privacy
or for individual rights? The Republicans seem to be living up to
a caricature of their reputation. Anyone who questions whether the
FBI ought to be permitted to tap your phone or read your email,
or whether the CIA ought to be able to lock people up forever without
a formal charge, is denounced as a leftist.
Where have
Republican grassroots been? Here we find disgrace. They were charmed
by Bush going into all this, and they have not ceased to be loyal.
Yes, along the way – this always happens – some of the rank-and-file
become irritated that Bush isn’t doing more to stand up to the Democrats.
But a Republican White House always, always, always knows how to
deal with this problem. The prez sets up a 15-minute meeting with
"conservative leaders" at which they fawn all over him.
They then report back to their minions that the president is a great
guy and needs our support. Most people comply since they fear the
devil Democrats more.
As for foreign
policy, my goodness, the rank and file are gullible in the most
ghastly way. These people went from scorning Clinton’s exertions
in Somalia to calling anyone who doesn’t support the war on Iraq
a traitor to America itself. The display of Nazi-style jingoism
has been nearly unbearable. The flag is worshipped as a holy object,
the national anthem is treated as a sacred hymn, every character
in a military costume is canonized, and the president himself is
exalted as a godhead incarnate. Now we know – because we are living
through it – the stuff of which fascism is made.
We could go
on. But rather than decry the hypocrisy, lies, and unrelenting bamboozlement,
it would be more productive to examine the underlying social theory
that leads Republicans to campaign one way and govern another. Elsewhere
we discussed how the Democrats believe in a conflict-based model
of society, with their imagined society consisting of groups of
warring tribes (men v. women, blacks v. whites, etc.). In the same
way, the Republicans imagine that the social order is rife with
conflict, but a conflict of a different sort.
Republicans
believe that all of society, whether your town, the nation, or the
whole world, is divided 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 the law written on our hearts but rather the rules as laid
down by state masters. But 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 of the world would collapse
into a muddle of chaos and darkness.
This view they
get from Hobbes. Not that the average buyer of Ann Coulter’s books
reads political philosophy. They rather accept a popular version
of the fundamental anti-liberal idea: society is a wreck without
Leviathan. This is why they celebrate the police more than merchants,
why they think that war deserves more credit than trade for world
prosperity, why they call drafted killers for the state the "greatest
generation," whereas the pioneers of the 19th century
are merely historical curiosities.
In short, their
meta-understanding of politics bypassed the liberal revolution of
the 18th century and embraced the anti-liberal elements
of the Enlightenment. Up with Hobbes, down with Locke: that is their
implied creed. 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 Manichean mind.
Now, it is
true that Republicans tend to be better on issues of welfare, environmentalism,
social legislation and the like. They reject egalitarianism, more
or less, and have no strong beef with business. But none of this
matters in the defense of liberty because they are intellectually
wedded to the state in the most fundamental way. They believe that
it and not voluntary cooperation is the source of order in society,
and what they fear more than anything is revolution. Freedom, to
them, is not a right but something conferred as a reward for good
behavior.
It is a curiosity
that these same people tend to herald the Declaration of Independence.
This was a revolutionary document that postulated that government
was the source of disorder, and imagined that society could be forged
in absence of the state. The replacement government under the Articles
of Confederation was a government in name only, and like the anarchy
that Republicans fear more than anything else.
I once heard
a leading Republican intellectual, a respected figure with lots
of books on everyone’s shelves, express profound regret when the
Soviet Union was falling apart. The problem, from this person’s
perspective, is that this led to disorder, and order – meaning control
even by the Soviet state – is the fundamental conservative value.
That about sums it up. Even communism is to be tolerated so long
as it keeps away what they dread more than death: people within
their rights doing whatever they want.
But
these days we see all around us how liberty generates order and
how this order is self-sustaining. We live in private communities.
We see the glorious world of the web. 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
are the great mystery and majesty of social order, expressed so
well in the act of economic exchange.
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.
February
21, 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
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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