The Sinful State
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
The
following article is based on a talk delivered in Federal Way, Washington,
on November 26, 2002, for Thomas
Dorman, MD.
Hardly
anyone talks of the table of virtues and vices anymore – which includes
the Seven Deadly Sins – but in reviewing them, we find that they
nicely sum up the foundation of bourgeois ethics, and provide a
solid moral critique of the modern state.
Now,
libertarians don't often talk about virtues and vices, mainly because
we agree with Lysander
Spooner that vices are not crimes, and that the law ought only
to address the latter. At the same time, we do need to observe that
vices and virtues – and our conception of what constitutes proper
behavior and culture generally have a strong bearing on the
rise and decline of freedom.
Culture
Matters
Let
me illustrate. A speaker at a Mises Institute conference two years
ago was explaining how problems of welfare, charity, and support
for the poor could be handled through voluntary means, that is,
through philanthropy. His explanation was brilliant, but a hand
shot up.
A
student from India had a question. What if, he said, one lives in
a society in which the religion says that a person’s lot in life
is dictated by God, and thus it would be sin to change it in any
way. The poor, in this view, are supposed to be poor, and to help
them would violate God’s will. In fact, a charitable person is committing
a crime against God.
The
speaker stood there in stunned silence. The students around the
room looked at the questioner with their mouths open. We were all
amazed to confront a reality too often ignored; namely, that the
ethics undergirding our culture, which we so often take for granted,
are essential to the functioning of what we call the good society,
based on the dignity of the individual, and the possibility of progress,
freedom, and prosperity.
In
our country and in our times, a productive free-market economy,
one supported by a strong sense of personal responsibility and a
moral commitment to the security of property rights, has one great
enemy: the interventionist state. It is the state that taxes, regulates,
and inflates, distorting a system that would otherwise operate smoothly,
productively, and to the great benefit of all, generating wealth,
security, and peace, and creating the conditions necessary for the
flourishing of everything we call civilization.
The
name that Karl Marx gave to this system was capitalism, because
he believed that the free market was the system that empowered the
owners of capital – the bourgeoisie – at the expense of the workers
and peasants of the proletarian class.
The
name capitalism is somewhat misleading, because free enterprise
is not, in fact, a system of economics organized for the sole benefit
of the property-owning classes. And yet, the advocates of free markets
have not been entirely unhappy with having to use the term capitalism,
precisely because capital ownership and accumulation is indeed the
engine that drives the operation of a productive free market.
While
the system works not to the sole benefit of the capitalists, it
is certainly true that private ownership of the means of production,
and the creation of this class of citizens, are crucial for us to
enjoy all the glories of a productive economy to bestow themselves
on society.
Along
with the creation of this class comes the formation of what are
called bourgeois ethics – a term used derisively to describe the
habitual ways of the business class. Hard-core Marxists still use
the phrase as if it described the exploiter class. More commonly,
it is used by intellectuals to identify a kind of white-bread sameness
and predictability that lacks an appreciation for the avant-garde.
Usually
it is used to describe people who have an affection for hometown,
faith, and family, and a suspicion of lifestyle experiments and
behaviors that skirt commonly accepted cultural norms. But those
who use the term derisively are not generally appreciative of the
extent to which bourgeois ethics make possible the lifestyle of
all classes, including the intellectual class.
The
bourgeoisie is a class of savers and contract keepers, people who
are concerned for the future more than the present, people with
an attachment to family. This class of people cares more for their
children’s welfare, and for work and productivity, than for leisure
and personal indulgence.
The
Four Virtues
The
virtues of the bourgeoisie are the traditional virtues of prudence,
justice, temperance, and fortitude. Each has an economic component
– many economic components in fact.
Prudence
supports the institution of saving, the desire to get a good education
to prepare for the future, and the hope to pass on an inheritance
to our children.
With
justice comes the desire to keep contracts, to tell the truth in
business dealings, and to provide compensation to those who have
been wronged.
With
temperance comes the desire to restrain oneself, to work before
play, which shows that prosperity and freedom are ultimately supported
by an internal discipline.
With
fortitude comes the entrepreneurial impulse to set aside inordinate
fear and to forge ahead when faced with life’s uncertainties. These
virtues are the foundation of the bourgeoisie, and the basis of
great civilizations.
But
the mirror image of these virtues shows how the virtuous mode of
human behavior finds its opposite in public policies employed by
the modern state. The state sets itself against bourgeois ethics
and undermines them, and the decline of bourgeois ethics allows
the state to expand at the expense of both freedom and virtue.
Spiritual,
Social Death

In
the Western religious tradition, the Seven Deadly Sins are not the
only ones. They are called the deadly ones because in traditional
teaching, they result in spiritual death. Let’s take each one in
turn.
Vainglory.
This is also called pride, or, more precisely, excessive or disproportionate
pride. We know what it means for a person to be excessively vainglorious
or prideful. It means that he puts his interests before that of
anyone else, even if doing so may cause harm to another. It is the
overestimation of the worth of oneself and one’s interests and entitlements
at the expense of others.
In
public policy, we can think of many pressure groups who believe
their interests are more important than anyone else’s. In fact,
this trait of vainglory describes the appalling clamor for all sorts
of new rights. We have disability lobbyists who believe they are
entitled to violate everyone else’s property rights and freedom
for their own sake.
The
same is true of many groups identified by various racial and sexual
categories. They are convinced by their own pride to believe that
they are owed special privileges. The rule of law and its equal
application becomes distorted by the demands of the few against
the many.
This
is hardly the route to long-term social peace. Consider the issue
of discrimination in hiring. Why anyone would want to work for an
employer who does not really want to hire him is beyond me. In a
competitive market, employers are permitted to discriminate, but
the costs of discriminatory hiring are wholly born by the employer,
whose success or failure is determined by the consumer.
Because
employers are in competition with each other, everyone can find
a place for himself within the vast network of the division of labor.
The pride that leads to short-circuiting this process is not in
the long-term interests of society.
The
same is true of nations. There is nothing wrong with having a natural
and normal pride in one’s nation. But to be vainglorious and to
overestimate the merit of one’s nation can have bad economic effects.
Among these bad effects may be chauvinism and belligerence in foreign
affairs, as well as mercantilism in international trade policy.
If,
for example, we are so convinced that American steel is so much
better than foreign steel that we must punish any foreigner who
would attempt to sell us steel, we are guilty of vainglory. We are
also doing ourselves economic harm by forcing consumers of steel
– at all stages of production – to pay higher prices for lesser
quality steel than would prevail in a free market.
This
is an unsustainable state of affairs. Any industry that is protected
from competition becomes ever less efficient. The nation that comes
to practice this form of mercantilism can end up producing all sorts
of things inefficiently and displacing new lines of production that
would be efficient but are not being undertaken.
Pride
in public policy can result in a failure to use critical intelligence
in assessing our system of government. We might say, for example,
that the United States is the greatest nation on earth. But does
that mean that our tax and regulatory polices are what they should
be, and that to criticize them is somehow anti-American? Not by
any means. To say so is to be guilty of vainglory.
The
truth is that the US system of government is gravely flawed and
woefully contrary to most of what the founders hoped to bring about
when they set up a new government.
The
framers never imagined such a thing as the monstrous Department
of Homeland Security, or an income tax, or a Federal Reserve, or
a far-flung military empire that spends more than most of the world’s
other nations combined.
These
institutions and the change of public-policy culture generally have
created the most vainglorious state in the history of the world,
especially under the leadership of the current president, whose
speeches and statements give new meaning to the word messianic.
Anger.
Western civilization over the last 2,000 years has regarded anger
as a grave vice because it leads to destruction rather than peace
and productivity. Thus the institution of courts in domestic affairs,
and diplomacy in foreign affairs.
But
in our own country, the taboo against anger in public affairs came
to be violated, in particular by the war crimes of federal armies
during the civil war. Civilians were deliberately targeted. Homes
were looted, crops were burned, livestock killed. This was an expression
of anger.
The
institutionalization of anger has persisted ever since, in massacres
of civilians in the Philippines, in the hunger blockade of WWI,
in the bombing of cities in World War II, in the destruction of
churches in the war on Serbia, and in the war on Iraq, 11 years
running.
When
officials say they are angry and plan to unleash Hell on some foreign
country, they are partaking in this deadly vice, which also has
cultural effects.
The
man who was behind the bombing of the Oklahoma City federal building
developed his taste for violent anger during the first Gulf War.
Many of the killers who have shot up public schools were later revealed
to be obsessed with military means and wars.
What
lesson is the current generation learning from the speeches and
attitudes of the current ruling class and its taste for blood? I
shudder to think.
The
modern military arsenal, combined with a shredding of all restraints
on what is permissible and impermissible in warfare, has unleashed
the angry state on the world. Its relentless mode in foreign policy
is vengeance, and its main product is human suffering and death.
Envy.
Again, this is a word hardly heard anymore. Envy is not the same
as jealousy. Jealousy is merely wishing that you enjoyed the same
property and status as another. Envy means the desire to harm someone
else solely because he enjoys some quality, virtue, or possession,
and you do not. It is the desire to destroy the success or good
fortune of another.
In
the current round of corporation bashing, I fear the unleashing
of envy against people because of their personal accomplishments.
And we see the work of envy in the redistributionist welfare state.
Some
people say that what matters most is not that the welfare state
helps the poor but rather that it hurts the rich. So too with the
inheritance tax, which collects relatively little revenue, but does
grave damage to would-be family dynasties.
How
many Congressional speeches against the business class and the rich
are driven by this deadly sin? All too many. Antitrust policy that
seeks to smash a business solely because it is big and successful
is a working out of envy. I recall an article by Michael Kinsley
several years ago in Slate Magazine that honestly asked the
question: what is wrong with envy?
Nothing,
he concluded. In fact, he rightly observed, it is the foundation
of much modern public policy. Even so, it is a deadly sin. It is
one that will destroy society if it is fully unleashed. And nowhere
is it more relentlessly unleashed than within the culture of the
state itself, which attacks success in business and private life
in every way.
A
century ago, many private dynasties had more wealth at their disposal
than the federal government. Would the modern Envy State tolerate
such a thing? Not likely. All wealth apart from the state's own
is up for grabs but particularly dynastic wealth.
Covetousness.
The related sin of desiring to grasp what belongs to another, through
whatever means one can assemble, is also socially harmful. Through
taxation and welfare programs, the state is effectively blessing
the sin of covetousness.
Now,
let us be clear. To covet something is not the same as an innocent
desire to improve one’s lot in life. This is a good impulse, one
that drives people to succeed. Covetousness is different because
it cares nothing for the means used to achieve one’s goals.
Instead
of productive exchange, covetousness resorts to theft, whether private
theft or public theft that uses the government. We saw covetousness
turn to a public clamor after the collapse in stock prices in 1999
and following, when the public demanded that the Fed do something
to stop their investments from going belly up.
Here
again, we see the desire for money outstrip the moral consideration
of how precisely this money is to be acquired. And the more the
state feeds the sin of covetousness, the more of it we are likely
to see, and the more bourgeois ethics fall into disuse.
The
modern state is nothing if not covetous. It has its gaze constantly
fixed on our liberty, privacy, wealth, and independence, and desires
to take through any means possible. In the covetous state, liberty
is always declining, the percentage of wealth subject to taxation
always growing, and the ability for institutions and individuals
to thrive apart from government blessing always in doubt.
Gluttony.
We think of gluttony as solely related to eating. But it can also
mean the excessive desire for comfort, luxury, and leisure at the
expense of work and productivity. Senior citizens lobbies, when
they demand that the public provide comfy living for all septuagenarians
at the expense of young workers, are playing into the deadly sin
of gluttony.
The
problem doesn’t only afflict seniors. It is a problem among the
poor, who have been conditioned by the welfare state to believe
they are entitled to live well without earning their money. Interestingly,
rates of obesity among the poor far outstrip those among the bourgeoisie.
The
pervasiveness of gluttony also shows up in the appalling consumer
debt load. This implies a desire to consume now regardless of the
later consequences. The gluttonous consumer cares nothing about
the long term, only that his appetite is satisfied today.
The
Federal Reserve encourages this deadly sin through loose credit
policies and bailouts, which create the illusion that there is no
downside to living for the present at the expense of the future.
So too with the policy of inflation, which encourages us to spend
money today because it will have less buying power tomorrow. Inflation
institutionalizes the sin of gluttony and makes it appear rational.
It
only takes a quick look at a detail map of Washington, D.C. to see
the ultimate display of gluttony, for land, money, and power. From
the point of view of the state, it never has enough land, money,
and power. It eats and eats, grows ever fatter, and you to take
a risk in merely pointing this out.
Sloth.
The story of how the welfare state has created a slothful class
is an old one, hardly disputed anymore, but no less true. The promise
of something for nothing at others' expense has corrupted the poor,
but also the aged and another group as well: students between the
ages of 18 and 25.
On
the aged, it is pathetic to see how a class of people that should
be leading society with wisdom and through experience to the highest
ideals has become a grasping group of vacationers with ever-more
time on their hands. Let us be clear: in a free society, there is
no right to retirement, and certainly no right to a comfortable
retirement. The concept itself was invented by the late New Deal.
Before then, sloth was something to be purchased with one's own
money. Now, one can enjoy it via the tax state.
As
for students, our school system has socialized them into believing
that the more official credentials one earns, the more one has the
right to extract from society, a payment in return for blessing
the world with one's mere presence. Talk to anyone who is in the
hiring business these days. He will tell you that it is extremely
rare to find a young person who understands that employment is not
a tribute paid but an exchange of work for wages. All these trends
are worse in Europe, where school welfare is more generous
but we are catching up.
The
subsidization of sloth creates a vicious circle. The more the state
rewards not working, the less people have by way of personal and
financial resources to live independently from the state. The slothful
are naturally inclined to develop dependencies, which is exactly
the way the state likes it.
Meanwhile,
consider the slothfulness of the state itself. There is no more
risk-averse class than the bureaucratic one. Whether it is in the
FDA process of approving drugs or the loan-application department
at HUD, getting bureaucrats to work is like getting hogs to run
a race.
Some years ago, a federal bureaucrat sent us the following article,
to which he refused to attach his name. It noted:
"What draws people to government work? What keeps them there for
a lifetime? It's simple: overcompensation, huge benefits, and great
working conditions. It's attractive to sign up and nearly impossible
to leave…. What would I lose if I left the government? The short
work week would be out the window…. Right now, I can spend 8.7%
of my work time on vacation. That's six weeks per year in perpetuity….
I could also forget about the unofficial "bennies": for example,
I take an hour-long jog every day, followed by a shower and a leisurely
lunch. It keeps me in tip-top condition for my vacations. And shopping
excursions during work are always possible. What about stress? If
relaxation lengthened life, bureaucrats would live to be 150 years
old."
And yet, in this one area, perhaps we should be grateful. The only
thing worse than the slothful state is an energized one that awakes
early to take away our liberty.
Finally:
Lust.
This is thought of as a personal problem only. But we see its destructiveness
at work in any government policy that fails to appreciate the family
as the foundation of bourgeois society. In public life today, we
pretend as if the family is dispensable, when it is the essential
bulwark between the individual and the state.
Thoughtful
economists like Ludwig von Mises and Joseph Schumpeter saw that
the family is the training ground for the ethics of capitalism.
It is here where we learn about the evil of theft and to respect
others’ property, to save and to plan for the future, to keep our
word.
It
is no accident that Marxists have long sought to smash the family
as an institution, and reduce all of society to atomistic individuals
who lack the resources to provide security for themselves and who
inevitably turn to the state, instead of parents and kin, for help.
Revolutionary
Virtue
These
are the Seven Deadly Sins, and in each case, and in a hundred ways
I have not mentioned, current government policy encourages them
at the expense of bourgeois ethics, which are the ethics of a free
market, of a society that is productive, peaceful, and secure from
arbitrary power.
Why
do we hear so little of the Seven Deadly Sins? Perhaps because no
institution is more gluttonous, covetous, prideful, or angry than
the state itself. In the private sector, market institutions correct
these abuses over time. In the state, with no market test and no
check on unethical behavior, these deadly sins thrive with a vengeance.
I
am by no means despairing of the future of the bourgeoisie. If there
were a danger that this class could be destroyed, sixty or so years
of government policy designed to kill it would have accomplished
its goals by now.
And
yet, we should not become complacent. To the same degree that so
many current political struggles are reduced to a conflict of cultures,
our best means of fighting back is to live and practice bourgeois
ethics in our homes, communities, and businesses.
Let
us instead recall the four great bourgeois virtues of prudence,
justice, temperance, and fortitude, and, in doing so, do our part
to build freedom and prosperity, even in our times. May we never
take these cultural foundations of our civilization for granted.
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send
him mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, and editor of LewRockwell.com.
Copyright
© 2002 LewRockwell.com
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