Ron
Paul on Peace and Freedom
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
Foreword
to Ron Paul’s new
book: A
Foreign Policy of Freedom: ‘Peace, Commerce, Honest Friendship’
Ron Paul has
always believed that foreign and domestic policy should be conducted
according to the same principles. Government should be restrained
from intervening at home or abroad because its actions fail to achieve
their stated aims, create more harm than good, shrink the liberty
of the people, and violate rights.
Does that proposition
seem radical? Outlandish or farflung? Once you hear it stated, it
makes perfect sense that there is no sharp distinction between the
principles of domestic and foreign policy. They are part of the
same analytical fabric. What would be inconsistent would be to favor
activist government at home but restraint abroad, or the reverse:
restraint at home and activism abroad. Government unleashed behaves
in its own interests, and will not restrict itself in any area of
life. It must be curbed in all areas of life lest freedom suffer.
If you recognize
the line of thinking in this set of beliefs, it might be because
you have read the Federalist Papers, the writings of Thomas Jefferson
or George Washington or James Madison, or examined the philosophical
origins of the American Revolution. Or you might have followed the
debates that took place in the presidential election of 1800, in
which this view emerged triumphant. Or perhaps you read the writings
of the free traders prior to the Civil War, or the opponents of
the War on Spain, or those who warned of entering World War I.
Or perhaps
you have read the speeches and books against FDR's New Deal: the
same group warned of the devastating consequences of World War II.
Or maybe, in more recent history, you understood the animating principles
behind the Republican takeover of Congress in 1994: a generation
had turned away from all forms of foreign and domestic "nation building."
Not only does
this Paulian view have a precedent in American history; it sums
up the very core of what is distinctive about the American contribution
to political ideas. The proposition was and is that people are better
able to manage their lives than government can manage them. Under
conditions of liberty, the result is prosperity and orderly civilization.
Under government control, the result is relative poverty and unpredictable
chaos. The proof is in the news every day.
How unusual,
how incredibly strange, that Ron Paul, who has stood for these principles
his entire public life, is criticized by some as a radical, outside
the mainstream, and influenced by experimental ideas that are marginal
at best. And why is he treated this way? Because he takes the ideas
of Washington and Jefferson seriously, just as seriously as he takes
the idea of freedom itself, and he does so in times when faith in
Leviathan remains the dominant political ideology.
Ideology is
such a powerful force that it has propped up policy inconsistency
for more than a century. The left has a massive agenda for the state
at home, and yet complains bitterly, with shock and dismay, that
the same tools are used to start wars and build imperial structures
abroad. The right claims to want to restrain government at home
(at least in some ways) while whooping it up for war and global
reconstruction abroad.
It doesn't
take a game-theory genius to predict how this conflict works itself
out in the long run. The left and the right agree to disagree on
intellectual grounds but otherwise engage in a dangerous quid pro
quo. They turn a blind eye to the government they don't like so
long as they get the government they do like.
It's one thing
for the left to grudgingly support international intervention. It
makes some sense for a group that believes that government is omniscient
enough to bring about fairness, justice, and equality at home to
do the same for people abroad. In fact, I've never been able to
make much sense out of left-wing antiwar activism, simply because
it cuts so much against the idea of socialism, which itself can
be summed up as perpetual war on the liberty and property of the
people.
What strikes
me as ridiculous is the right-wing view that government is incompetent
and dangerous domestically – at least in economic and social affairs
– but has some sort of Midas Touch internationally such that it
can bring freedom, democracy, and justice to any land its troops
deign to invade. Not that the right wing is principled enough to
pursue its domestic views, but I'm speaking here of its campaign
rhetoric and higher-level of critique of government that you find
in their periodicals and books. The precise critique of government
that they offer for the welfare state and regulatory measures –
they are expensive, counterproductive, hobble human energies – applies
many times over to international interventions.
But the right
always seems to have an excuse for its inconsistency. In the early
fifties, many on the right said that the usual principle of nonintervention
had to give way to the fight against communism because this was
a uniquely evil threat facing the world. We have to put up with
a "totalitarian bureaucracy" within our shores (words used by W.F.
Buckley) for the duration in order to beat back the great threat
abroad. And so Leviathan grew and grew, and never more than under
Republican presidents. Then one day, communism went away, the regimes
having collapsed from self-imposed deprivation and ideological change.
A few years
went by after 1990 when the right was inching toward a Paulian consistency.
Then 9-11 happened, and the great excuse for Leviathan again entered
the picture. Never mind that, as Congressman Paul pointed out, the
crime of 9-11 was motivated by retribution against ten years of
killer US sanctions against Iraq, US troops on Muslim holy lands,
and US subsidies for Palestinian occupation. No, the American right
bought into the same farce that led them to support the Cold War:
Islamic fanaticism is a unique evil unlike anything we've ever seen,
so we have to put up with Leviathan (again!) for the duration.
Well, Ron Paul
didn't buy into it. He is unique in this respect, and this is especially
notable since he has been under pressure from his own party and
at a time when his party has ruled the executive, judicial, and
legislative branches. He stuck by his principles, and not merely
as a pious gesture. His critique of the post 9-11 warfare state
has been spot on in speech after speech. He foresaw the failure
of the US invasion of Afghanistan. He never believed the nonsense
about how US bombs would transform Iraq into a modern democracy.
He never went along with the propaganda lies about weapons of mass
destruction. Nowadays, we often hear politicians say that they have
changed their minds on the Iraq War and that if they had known then
what they know now, they never would have gone along. Well, hindsight
is child's play in politics. What takes guts and insight is the
ability to spot a hoax even as it is being perpetrated. In any case,
they have no excuse for not knowing: Ron Paul told them!
The freedom
to trade internationally is an essential principle. It means that
consumers should not be penalized for buying from anyone, or selling
to anyone, regardless of the residence. Nor should domestic suppliers
be granted anything like a monopoly or subsidized treatment. Nor
should trade be used as a weapon in the form of sanctions. Ron Paul
has upheld these principles as well, which makes him an old-fashioned
liberal in the manner of Cobden and Bright and the American Southern
tradition. He has also rejected the mistake of many free traders
who believe that a military arm is necessary to back the invisible
hand of the marketplace. For Ron Paul, freedom is all of a piece.
Ron
Paul's singular voice on foreign affairs has done so much to keep
the flame of a consistent liberty burning in times when it might
otherwise have been extinguished. He has drawn public attention
to the ideas of the founders. He has alerted people to the dangers
of empire. He has linked domestic and foreign affairs through libertarian
analytics, even when others have been bamboozled by the lies or
too intimidated to contradict them. He has told the truth, always.
For this, every American, every citizen of the world, is deeply
in his debt. In fact, I'm willing to predict that a hundred years
from now and more, when all the current office holders are all but
forgotten, Ron Paul's name will be remembered as a bright light
in dark times.
We
can't but be deeply grateful that Ron Paul's prophetic words have
been collected in this book. May it be widely distributed. May its
lessons be absorbed by this and future generations. May this treatise
stand as an example of how to fight for what is right even when
everyone else is silent. May it always be regarded as proof that
there were men of courage alive in the first decade of the third
millennium. May public and intellectual opinion someday rise to
its level of intellectual sophistication and moral valor.
May
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
Lew
Rockwell Archives
|