Rothbard
Vindicated
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell,
Jr.
Not
a news event passes when anyone who knew him doesn't wonder: what
would Rothbard say about this? It's a fun game to play, because
Murray provided the outstanding example of how adherence to principle,
and strategic application of principle, work themselves out in the
real world. Reading or hearing his take on the passing scene was
always a radicalizing experience. His turn of mind smashed through
conventional categories of thought, made us acutely aware of injustice,
and inspired us to throw ourselves into the intellectual battle.
Rothbard's
principles were, of course, consistent from the time he first put
pen to paper, and they made him a lightning rod for controversy
and the standard by which all pro-liberty thought is measured to
this day. But it was often the application of the principles, as
much as the principles themselves, that earned him passionate detractors
and defenders. His enemies were also driven crazy by his unfailing
good humor: he was completely unflappable, always found joy in smashing
evil, and somehow always won in the end.
The
Clearest Picture Yet
Rothbard
was, as the title of Justin Raimondo's new biography says, An
Enemy of the State (Amherst, NY: Prometheus, 2000).
He was also the architect of the body of thought known
around the world as libertarianism. This radically anti-state political
philosophy unites free-market economics, a no-exceptions attachment
to private property rights, a profound concern for human liberty,
and a love of peace, with the conclusion that society should be
completely free to develop absent any interference from the state,
which can and should be eliminated.
Rothbard
worked his entire life to shore up this ideological apparatus-in
economic theory, historical studies, political ethics, cultural
criticism, and movement organizing. As Raimondo says, no biography
can be complete without coming to terms with the simultaneous occurrence
of all these professional contributions-a tough job when you are
dealing with a legacy that includes 25 books and tens of thousands
of articles. This is the first account of his life that valiantly
struggles to treat them all between two covers, though in the end
even Raimondo too must specialize, in this case on Rothbard the
cultural-political commentator and organizer.
Appearing
five years after the death of the most compelling public intellectual
in the latter half of the 20th century, this volume presents
the clearest picture we have yet of the man whose life and work
is today the subject of new scholarly and popular attention. The
book does more than present biographical details and assess his
intellectual contributions. Raimondo recognizes that Rothbard was
the subject of enormous controversy in his life, controversy that
has continued and even escalated since his death.
"If
ever the antipode of the Court Intellectual existed," Raimondo writes,
"then surely his name was Murray Newton Rothbard." True indeed.
Even today, radical thinkers are tolerated insofar as they stick
to high theory. But this was not Rothbard's way. He never remained
aloof from the passing scene: I've seen 30-page private memos from
Murray written weeks before elections evaluating candidates in even
the smallest House races (this was at a time when politics mattered
more than it does now). It was in his application that he instructed
us, not only in the ideals we should seek, but also in the all-important
area of how we might go about achieving them, and do so without
compromising ideals.
Applied
Radicalism
In
1952, for example, Rothbard (at the age of 28) was very concerned
about what was happening to the American Right. The old isolationist,
classical-liberal, anti-New Deal forces were being shoved aside
in favor of a new breed of Cold Warriors agitating to use the state
against Russia, our ally in war only a few years earlier. How could
conservatives champion small government and also call for vastly
expanded nuclear weapons and a US global empire? He kept asking
the question but wasn't getting satisfactory answers. Barely beginning
his career as an economist and public intellectual, he flew into
the opposition mode.
"What
we really have to combat is all statism, and not just the Communist
brand," Rothbard wrote in a column appearing in the periodical Faith
and Freedom. "Taking up arms against one set of socialists
is not the way to stop socialism-indeed it is bound to increase
socialism as all modern wars have done" (p. 72). China should be
recognized. Nuclear weapons should be dismantled. Not one dime should
be spent building the US empire. As for the "captive nations" problem,
Rothbard suggested that the US free its own: Hawaii, Alaska, and
Puerto Rico!
The
election of 1956 pitted Dwight Eisenhower against Adlai Stevenson,
both of whom offered statist domestic policies. But Stevenson was
against conscription and less pro-war, and thus garnered Rothbard's
support, the moral priority being the prevention of another massacre
of young men. Rothbard even worked the phones from the Stevenson
campaign headquarters in Manhattan. His turn against the Republicans
got him tossed off the Faith and Freedom masthead, led
him to appeal leftward for allies, and sparked a lifelong war with
William Buckley and the mainstream of the conservative movement.
Very
little changed throughout his life. He was radically in favor of
free markets and radically opposed to war, a wholly consistent opponent
of the welfare-warfare state. But in the intellectual-political
history of 1952-1989, there was no place for such a person. Official
opinion required philosophical inconsistency, and the segmentation
of intellectual camps followed the same course.
Idealist
and Strategist
So
Rothbard often had to make political decisions by weighing the foreign-policy
question against a candidate's domestic program. For example, let's
fast-forward 40 years to the presidential elections of the 1990s.
Pat Buchanan challenged George Bush for the Republican nomination,
saying that Bush had made two unforgivable errors: he waged an unjust
war against Iraq and he raised taxes. Did Rothbard support Buchanan?
You bet. And he worked overtime trying to get Buchanan up to speed
on broader economic issues while defending him against the ridiculous
charges of the left.
But
Buchanan lost the nomination, and refused to pursue a third-party
option. Rothbard then turned to Perot as the candidate worth rooting
for, and on the same grounds: Perot blasted Bush's war and his taxes.
Then Perot suddenly pulled out. That left Bush and Clinton, whose
foreign policy was no different from Bush's but whose domestic policy
was worse.
Rothbard
then supported Bush against Clinton. His very controversial column
appeared in the Los Angeles Times, and it garnered more
hate mail than Rothbard had ever received in his life. Many libertarians
(not famous for strategic acumen or catching the subtleties of such
matters) were shocked by his non-interest in the LP nominee. But
by that time, Rothbard was convinced that the LP was running a presidential
campaign in name only, that it was a clique devoted not to politics
but to lifestyle.
Had
Rothbard become a Republican? Far from it: two years later, he blasted
Newt Gingrich in the Washington Post even before the new
Republican Congress under Newt's leadership had assembled. Had he
become a Buchananite? Take a look at his 1995 piece, reprinted in
The
Irrepressible Rothbard, in which he predicts that in 1996
Pat would concentrate on protectionism to the exclusion of every
other important subject. He was getting trapped into "becoming just
another variety of 'Lane Kirkland Republican'." That article sent
the Buchananites through the roof. But it foreshadowed the fall
of yet another promising political force.
The
point that few people could fully grasp about Rothbard was his complete
independence of mind. He had one party to which he was unfailingly
loyal: the party of liberty. All institutions, candidates, and intellectuals
were measured by their adherence to that standard and their ability
to promote it. Neither did he make (as the old conservative cliché
has it) "the perfect the enemy of the good," as his argument for
Bush over Clinton demonstrates. He was always eager to prevent the
greater evil in the course of advancing human liberty.
Indeed,
Rothbard was a tough-as-nails strategist and thinker, one who was
breathtakingly creative as an intellectual force but refused blind
devotion to conventional wisdom or any institution or individual
that promoted it. Such a man is bound to make enemies. Hardly a
day goes by when I don't run across some wild misunderstanding of
his life and work, some outrageous calumny spread by those who know
he can no longer answer them, some crazy theory claiming to be an
extension of Rothbardian ethics, or, worse, a wildly distorted presentation
of history that demonizes Rothbard's role in some political affair.
Conventional
Critiques
It's
usually best to not pay attention to these smears. As Raimondo points
out, "he was a giant among pygmies, too large to be consumed by
the struggle with his errant followers." There's no reason why today's
Rothbardians should be consumed by the claims against him either.
And yet, a main virtue of this book is precisely that it debunks
a room-full of myths about the man, and it does so not with conjecture,
but with primary documentation. Let's take them one by one.
He
wasn't consistent. Raimondo produces letters and articles from
his earliest writings showing that he had mapped out most of his
life's work. That goes for his attachment to Austro-free-market
theory, his anarcho-capitalism, his devotion to natural rights,
his love of the Old Right political paradigm, his optimistic outlook
for liberty, his hatred of war, his essential Americanism, and even
his reactionary cultural outlook. The ideas were all developed throughout
the course of his life, but the seeds seemed to be there from the
beginning. The attacks were too. Ralph Lord Roy's 1953 book Apostles
of Discord blasted some early Rothbard articles as dangerously
supporting "unregulated laissez-faire capitalism." Exactly. He learned,
he developed, he elaborated, but he never made a fundamental shift.
He
wasn't original. Rothbard never claimed complete
originality, as his attackers imply. His economic theories came
from the work of Ludwig von Mises, his political ethical views from
the Jeffersonian-Thomist tradition, his foreign policy from the
American Old Right, his anarchism from the Tucker-Nock American
tradition of political radicalism. What Rothbard did was draw them
together into a complete and coherent apparatus, and anchor them,
as had never been done before, to a complete theory of private property.
This is his unique contribution, and Raimondo demonstrates it. Austrian
economics and libertarian theory might not have survived into the
21st century but for Rothbard's work. And that doesn't
count his hundreds of micro-discoveries along the way. Yes, he was
original, and he always underestimated the originality and power
of his ideas.
He
was just an ideologue. Rothbard wrote volumes
and volumes of economic history and economic theory having nothing
expressly to do with libertarian theory, or political advocacy,
except to the extent that they dovetailed with the rest of his research
program. Raimondo also skewers the claim that Rothbard turned to
non-mathematical Austrian economics because he didn't know math.
Absurd! His Columbia undergraduate degree was in mathematics, with
highest honors. He rejected the use of math in building economic
theory on strict methodological grounds. In any case, even as he
was engaged in political polemics in the 1950s and early 1960s against
the Buckley takeover of the Right, he was writing Man,
Economy, and State, as well as long scholarly pieces for
the economic journals. He was accused of pamphleteering early on,
but his scholarship kept pace with his journalism, as if there were
two or three Rothbards working continuously.
He
had no lasting influence. As you read Raimondo, you are struck
by how far and wide this man's influence extended (and extends!)
in the world-wide classical liberal movement. He was the founder
of the Cato Institute and the Center for Libertarian Studies, the
founding editor of the Journal of Libertarian Studies,
the founder of the first Austrian School economics journal, the
inspiration behind the Mises Institute, the muse at the New
Individualist Review, the leader of the split in YAF, the motivator
behind the whole libertarian movement, the recruiter for Mises's
seminar, and much more. His speeches appeared in amazing places,
from Joe McCarthy rallies to the floor of Congress. His "Circle
Bastiat" provided the intellectual infrastructure for decades of
growth in the movement. The world today is populated by Rothbardians,
and they are wielding surprising influence. Indeed, so much Rothbardian
material appears today that I run a daily news website, www.lewrockwell.com,
to present and archive it.
He
should have stuck to high theory. The implication here is that
Rothbard would have had greater influence had he not reached out
to popular audiences. That's nonsense. Like Mises, Rothbard believed
in waging a multi-front battle. But Rothbard himself granted that
his course was not wise, if what he sought was professional advancement.
As he explained in a letter to Robert Kephart:
"Bob,
old and wiser...heads have been giving me similar advice all my
life, and I'm sure all that advice was right....When I was a young
libertarian starting out, I was advised by Leonard Read: 'Only
be critical of bad measures, not of the people advocating them.'
It's OK to criticize government regulation, but not the people
advocating them. One big trouble with that is that then people
remain ignorant of the ruling class, and the fact that Business
often pushes regulatory measures to cartelize the system, so I
went ahead and named names....
"Then,
when I became an anarchist, I was advised, similarly: 'Forget
this anarchist stuff. It will injure your career, and ruin your
scholarly image as a laissez-faire Austrian.' I of course didn't
follow that perfectly accurate advice. Then, come the late 1950s,
I was advised by friends: 'For god's-sakes, forget this peace
crap. Stick to economics, that's your scholarly area anyway. Everybody
is against this peace stuff, and it will kill your scholarly image,
and ruin you with the conservative movement.' Which of course
is exactly what happened. And then: 'Don't attack Friedman directly.
Just push Austrianism.' And 'don't push Austrianism too hard,
so you can be part of one big free-market economics family.'
"So
you see, Bob, my deviation from proper attention to my career
image is lifelong, and it is too late to correct at this point.
I'm sure that if, in Ralph [Raico]'s phrase, I had been 'careful,'
and followed wise advice, I would now be basking in lots of money,
prestige, and ambiance.... Why did I take the wrong course?...
If there had been lots of libertarians who were anarchists, lots
who were antiwar, lots who named names of the ruling elite, lots
attacking Hoover, Friedman, etc., I might not have made all these
choices, figuring that these important tasks were being well taken
care of anyway, so I may as well concentrate on my own 'positioning.'
But at each step I looked around and saw indeed that nobody else
was doing it. So then it was up to me" (p. 241-43).
He
quit doing serious economics after the early 1960s. This accusation
seems to credit the greatness of Man, Economy, and State
and America's
Great Depression from the early 1960s, but suggests that
he peaked in these years and went downhill from there. This charge
can only be sustained by failing to carefully examine his 100-page
bibliography. He wrote for the International Encyclopedia
of the Social Sciences in 1968, and his articles "Lange, Mises,
and Praxeology," "Freedom, Inequality, Primitivism, and the Division
of Labor," and "Ludwig von Mises: Paradigm for our Age" appeared
in 1971, and, in 1972, he had chapters in several scholarly books
on World War I, Herbert Hoover, and economic method. So it goes
in 1973, the year he wrote a long piece on method for a volume devoted
to phenomenology (oh, yes, he also came out with For
a New Liberty that year), and several more articles for
economic journals.
And
in 1975, the first and second volumes of Conceived
in Liberty came out-a detailed narrative history of the
Colonial period. A year later, fully eight long scholarly pieces
appeared, as well as another volume of Conceived. On and
on it goes throughout his career (including his studies of Fetter's
interest rate theory in 1977, his three seminal pieces on Austrian
theory for the first post-Mises books on Austrian theory, his introduction
to Mises's Theory
of Money and Credit in 1981, his eight large scholarly
pieces on economic theory in 1987 (including his many entries in
the Palgrave, etc. etc.), culminating in his two-volume
History
of Economic Thought, which Raimondo regards as his crowning
achievement.
He
abandoned radical libertarianism after the early 1970s. This
is the opposite charge from the one made above, made by people who
were irritated that he did not keep writing For A New Liberty
again and again. But in fact, Rothbard kept plugging away on extending
the libertarian framework, with pieces throughout the 1970s (one
on punishment is cited and extended in Randy Barnett's new book
on libertarian legal theory). "Society Without a State" appeared
in 1978, "Quest for the Historical Mises" appeared in 1981, and,
most importantly, The
Ethics of Liberty appeared in 1982. "World War I as Fulfillment"-one
of his most radical pieces ever-appeared in 1989, and, of course,
throughout the 1980s, he was blasting away at Ronald Reagan's foreign
and domestic policy (a time when many ex-libertarians were cozying
up to the government).
He
didn't do any serious scholarly work after the late 1970s.
This is another related charge, and it is equally as absurd. Take
a look at Edward Elgar's Logic
of Action, a two-volume collection of his scientific writing
appearing in that publisher's Economists of the Century series.
Most of the pieces come from the 1980s and 1990s, when he was, if
possible, more productive than he had been during any other period.
Also, see above.
He
allowed Libertarian activities to distract him from scholarship.
This line is repeated by those who were actively involved with
his struggles over the leadership of the Libertarian Party. Certainly
those battles consumed his enemies. There are even times when these
activities threaten to consume Raimondo! But, as he points out,
during the worst of the battles (1979-1983), Rothbard wrote and
published The
Mystery
of Banking and The Ethics of Liberty "in addition
to several major scholarly articles, and was simultaneously researching
a book on the Progressive era in American history" (manuscript in
the archives of the Mises Institute). "How he managed this level
of productivity while engaged in this increasingly acrimonious dispute
is a testament to the scale of his intellectual gifts," Raimondo
writes.
Some
respond: but if he hadn't been involved in these petty political
struggles, how much more might he have produced! This is a fallacy.
For Rothbard, activism of this sort was a habit, a means of relaxation,
a source for diverting his energies in order to replenish them for
the heavy lifting he had to do. It is as silly to imagine "what
might have been" as it is to think what the average person could
accomplish at work if he never had to sleep. By the way, Rothbard
also spent countless hours reading about chess, attending classes
on music and architecture, watching his beloved soap operas, and
keeping up with sports. Are we to say that these "distracted" him,
or should we say that they made him a well-rounded person?
He
left libertarianism to become a leftist in the 1960s. Raimondo's
book puts all this in perspective, at long last. The upshot: Murray
never became a leftist. Again, his views never changed. His "New
Left Period" had nothing to do with hippies; it was an attempt to
seek soldiers for the libertarian cause within the ranks of the
Left because it was here you found the anti-statism of the day:
the complaints about federal police, the anti-draft protests, the
anti-war sentiment, war revisionism, the praise of civil disobedience,
and all the rest. Murray worked to find the best parts of the New
Left and steer its leadership to a pure position. It didn't work,
though it didn't entirely fail either. In any case, it was the best
hope he had at the time.
He
departed libertarianism during his paleo period. Again, Murray
never left libertarianism. He did leave the Libertarian Party and
its surrounding movement (including the DC crowd trying to ingratiate
itself with the state) in 1989. I was there when Murray was hooted
down during a convention when he rose to speak on behalf of his
candidate for party chairman. Yes, it's true: outrageously, they
booed him because his candidate was too bourgeois and too middle
class, despite being politically radical. Recall that 1989 was the
year the Cold War ended, and a new opening appeared to achieve Rothbard's
dream of bringing about a middle-class revolution against the state.
He saw that the Libertarian Party was not the vehicle for doing
this, and the truth is that he stayed far longer than he should
have. LP-types, Murray concluded, had much in common with those
of the sixties Left, more interested in lifestyle than hard-nose
politics. Moreover, he was fed up with their ideological sellouts:
they were soft on civil rights, uninterested in foreign policy,
and vaguely conventional on political issues. By 1989 and 1990,
he had had it with them.
In
later years, he sucked up to the Right. This is a very odd
claim given that most of his popular writings from the 1990s, as
collected in The Irrepressible Rothbard, consist of attacks
on the mainstream of right-wing individuals and organizations, particularly the
welfare-warfarism of the neoconservatives. This claim also fails
to understand a point that Raimondo hammers again and again: foreign
policy was a top concern for Rothbard. He saw that the Left was
becoming committed to "humanitarian imperialism" after the destruction
of the Soviet Union, while the grass-roots Right was becoming isolationist
on foreign policy. He sought to encourage this trend. In the meantime,
a dozen articles in mainstream venues have taken notice of the very
rise of isolationist sentiment that Rothbard noted earlier than
anyone else. To a surprising degree, he was responsible for turning a trend into a movement, especially among a new generation of scholars and political activists who had no intellectual investment in Cold War political opinion. As for his Confederate sympathies, he was calling Lincoln
the "butcher of the South" in the early fifties, just as John T.
Flynn, Mencken, and Nock did in earlier generations.
He
was a great theorist but a terrible strategist. Also absurd.
Raimondo demonstrates the acuity of his strategic thinking even
in some of his most controversial moves to reach out to the Left
and reach out to the Right. In its time, each move made sense and
fit with the overall strategic plan. In fact, one of Rothbard's
seminal contributions was developing libertarian strategy (a point
neglected on the Right). Moreover, Raimondo also shows that his
detractors, who were always anxious to sell out to the powers-that-be,
invariably flamed out. Raimondo only takes issue with one strategic
judgement Rothbard made over a particularly bitter LP nomination
fight, but even here he provides the reader with enough information
so that you can see it from Rothbard's point of view. Rothbard was
a radical before his time, and he couldn't stand the idea of the
LP being taken over by Ed Crane's "low-tax liberals" and would-be
DC power brokers.
He
loved Khrushchev and was objectively pro-communist. This accusation
circulated in the 1960s and resurfaced in Bill Buckley's bitter
and malevolent obituary of his old nemesis. "Rothbard physically
applauded Khrushchev in his limousine as it passed by on the street,"
wrote Buckley. Nonsense. What was at issue was Rothbard's refusal
to join the ridiculous National Review campaign to whip
up a protest against Khrushchev's visit to the US (taken, we now
know, over the vociferous objections of hard-liners in the Kremlin).
Raimondo quotes Rothbard noting that Buckley and Co. are always
eager to extend their hand to any other "Bloody Butcher" in the
world, including "Winston Churchill, Bloody Butcher of the refugees
of Dresden, and countless others." Rothbard refused to join Buckley's
call for "a totalitarian bureaucracy within our shores" to fight
the Cold War, and for that, Buckley never forgave him. (A must read:
the epilogue skewering Buckley's obit point by point.)
He
broke with former friends. The implication behind this attack
is that Murray was a nasty guy who liked to stab people in the back.
Raimondo shows that Rothbard's legendary breaks-including those
with Rand, with Cato, with the LP, with the Buckleyite Right, etc.-were
of two types: people stabbing him in the back or Rothbard
getting fed up with a long series of despicable sellouts. There
were no other kinds of breaks, and, actually, the reader will be
surprised at how long-suffering Rothbard proved to be, especially
considering the characters and nonsense he was confronted with.
It may seem a petty point, but Raimondo's book very ably demonstrates
this long-suppressed truth. Moreover, he shows that Rothbard was
often the victim of campaigns against him, whereby former associates
tried to wield their influence to suppress his writings. A very
special treat is the truth about the Cato-Rothbard split, in print
for the first time: Rothbard couldn't take the growing conventionalism
of the outfit. Obviously, Rothbard's instincts were born out by
later events: he would have left anyway when Cato starting backing
vouchers, new long-range bombers, forced savings, etc.
He
stole natural rights from Rand without giving her credit. Somehow
this one keeps coming back. The source is a letter Rothbard wrote
Rand after Atlas
Shrugged appeared in which he says "you introduced me to
the whole field of natural rights and natural law philosophy." This
was later used against him as he reverted to his older position
that the Randians constituted a real menace. As an act of vengeance,
the Randians threatened a lawsuit against Murray for plagiarism.
Ever since, Randians have been smearing Rothbard as an unjust appropriator.
But Raimondo shows that Rothbard's interest in and devotion to natural
rights dates to the early fifties; Rothbard was only flattering
Rand (as she required everyone to do). The pages in Raimondo devoted
to this topic settle the issue.
He
talked Karl Hess into not paying taxes, thereby ruining his life.
This charge, which first emerged in an early draft of Hess's autobiography
and has otherwise circulated for years, is outrageous on the face
of it. Murray cheered on every tax revolt, but he never counseled
anyone to be a personal martyr. You can do very little work for
liberty from jail, he used to say. Raimondo brilliantly quotes from
an old book of Hess's describing the moment he became a tax protestor,
and it had nothing to do with Rothbard's urgings and everything
to do with Hess's penchant for making bad judgement calls out of
anger.
He
became a Buchananite. When Pat Buchanan criticized
Bush's war and tax increases, and was smeared as an anti-Semite,
Rothbard rose to his defense, and heroically so. He also worked
very hard to turn Buchanan into a consistent libertarian, or at
least to make him into the model of what he claimed to be: an Old
Right isolationist constitutionalist. Raimondo points out that Rothbard
was frustrated that he did not achieve his goal. Further, he points
out that Rothbard "chided Buchanan for being a classic case of the
old adage that some people (especially politicians) often concentrate
on those issues in which they have the least expertise; in Buchanan's
case, this is undoubtedly the realm of economics." Special credit
goes to Raimondo for pointing this out, since he is personally far
more favorable to Buchanan than Rothbard was from 1992 forward.
He
abandoned libertarianism for the Christian Right. How tedious!
Rothbard wrote for conservative Christian publications in the early
1950s and onward because he saw in Christianity a devotion to law
and morality, not of state but of transcendent origin. Early memos
even have Rothbard praising Catholicism for its implicit universalist
anarchism as opposed to the nationalist-statist strains in Protestant
history. Moreover, Rothbard showed how the demands of the rank-and-file
Christian Right were mostly libertarian: keep government out of
our churches, families, communities, and schools. Even today, libertarians
have yet to understand the potential for strategic alliances here.
He
worshiped Mises. Absurd. Raimondo quotes affectionate letters
about Mises, and demonstrates that Rothbard saw Mises as the greatest
living economist. But he also worked to improve Mises in many areas,
including utility theory, the economics of law and intervention,
public goods, and many other areas, giving rise to the claim that...
He
departed from Mises. Raimondo further shows that Rothbard was
far and above Mises's leading expositor and defender, in economic
theory and policy. They had a warm relationship. Mises, moreover,
had the greatest respect for Rothbard as a man and an economist.
He
changed his view of immigration. Actually,
Rothbard held the same position his whole life: there is no right
to immigrate (as he writes in Ethics of Liberty) but rather
immigration should be by invitation, not invasion, as consistent
private-property rights economics would dictate. In the exact opposite
of what a market policy would be, the state forbids invited people
to immigrate, but permits hordes who have no invitation to come
on down.
He
refused to learn from others. Throughout his life, Murray read
voraciously and never stopped learning from the good scholarship
of those working in many fields. He was always on the cutting edge
of the newest valuable literature, drawing the attention of libertarian
scholars toward recent discoveries in historical scholarship, economic
theory, and philosophical reflection. He also acquired knowledge
during his forays with diverse ideological groups: from the Left,
he came to fully appreciate the power of protest and from the paleoconservatives,
he came to fully appreciate the political implications of cultural
institutions as well as the moral necessity of decentralized politics.
Moreover, he was ever-anxious to credit those around him for insights,
as a quick glance at his footnotes indicates.
He
was a failure. In his obit, William Buckley said that Rothbard
was left "with about as many disciples as David Koresh had in his
little redoubt in Waco." Interesting, since National Review
Online seems to be working overtime to distance itself from
Buckley's legacy. Despite its policy deviations, NR.com is far more
Rothbardian than Buckelyian in spirit, as is the entire new generation
of dissident writers and thinkers that form what is called The Right.
Meanwhile,
the scholarly branch of Rothbardianism is so huge, interdisciplinary
and international, I can no longer keep up with it. Not a week goes
by when new translations of his work do not appear. And his books
keep coming out, selling well, and staying in print. I note, for
example, that James Powell does not feature Buckley in his recent
book The
Triumph of Liberty (Free Press, 2000), but he does have
a large chapter on Rothbard. Another book on Rothbard's political
philosophy will appear at the end of 2000 from Chris Matthew Sciabarra.
Enemy
of the State goes way beyond documenting the life and work
of Rothbard. Raimondo argues for Murray's strategic judgement in
a huge range of political and ideological controversies. He also
explains why Rothbard was so hated and attacked during his lifetime:
he was the victim of envious and unprincipled types who couldn't
stand his willingness to speak truth to power. And yet Rothbard
always maintained his cheerfulness, productivity, and optimistic
outlook. Raimondo rightly gives much credit for this to Murray's
wife of almost 40 years, JoAnn. He called her, in a dedication,
"the indispensable framework," and indeed she was.
A
Personal Note
From time to time, I have had differences, sometimes strong ones, with
Raimondo's political views as expressed in his feisty column on
Antiwar.com, and I've told
him so. Moreover, I knew Murray very well, and no biography, not
even this one, can fully capture all the reasons I had such profound
respect and love for this man. And yet, Raimondo worked very hard
to make this book fair and comprehensive: an authentic reflection
of Rothbard the man. There will be other biographies forthcoming,
but the success of this one will endure in many, many areas: it
is energetic, well-researched, factual (the few mistakes have no
bearing on the thesis), and achieves something of a balance between
advocacy and pure biography.
Reading
it, you can't help but thrill at how this book will affect a new
generation of readers, giving them a fresh perspective on post-war
intellectual and political history and also inspiring them to radical
thinking in defense of human liberty. Even if you have never heard
of Murray Rothbard, you will be drawn to his life, his mind, his
spirit. To understand his times and ours, you must have this book.
As
Raimondo concludes: "Whether it is exercised upon the minds of this
generation, or the next, the liberating force of Rothbard's ideas
is gathering momentum. He built a monument to liberty, a mighty
edifice that towers over the horizon and cannot be ignored
a challenge and a reproach to the guardians of the status quo, and
an inspiration to the revolutionaries of tomorrow."
July
27, 2000
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr., is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama. He
also edits a daily news site, LewRockwell.com.
Lew
Rockwell Archives
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