This
essay is from Egalitarianism
as a Revolt Against Nature and Other Essays by Murray
N. Rothbard (Auburn: Mises Institute, 2000 [1974]), pp. 5588.
What the
State Is Not
The
State is almost universally considered an institution of social
service. Some theorists venerate the State as the apotheosis of
society; others regard it as an amiable, though often inefficient,
organization for achieving social ends; but almost all regard
it as a necessary means for achieving the goals of mankind, a
means to be ranged against the "private sector" and often winning
in this competition of resources. With the rise of democracy,
the identification of the State with society has been redoubled,
until it is common to hear sentiments expressed which violate
virtually every tenet of reason and common sense such as, "we
are the government." The useful collective term "we" has enabled
an ideological camouflage to be thrown over the reality of political
life. If "we are the government," then anything a government does
to an individual is not only just and untyrannical but also "voluntary"
on the part of the individual concerned. If the government has
incurred a huge public debt which must be paid by taxing one group
for the benefit of another, this reality of burden is obscured
by saying that "we owe it to ourselves"; if the government conscripts
a man, or throws him into jail for dissident opinion, then he
is "doing it to himself" and, therefore, nothing untoward has
occurred. Under this reasoning, any Jews murdered by the Nazi
government were not murdered; instead, they must have "committed
suicide," since they were the government (which was democratically
chosen), and, therefore, anything the government did to them was
voluntary on their part. One would not think it necessary to belabor
this point, and yet the overwhelming bulk of the people hold this
fallacy to a greater or lesser degree.
We must,
therefore, emphasize that "we" are not the government;
the government is not "us." The government does not in
any accurate sense "represent" the majority of the people.[1] But, even if it did, even if 70 percent of the
people decided to murder the remaining 30 percent, this would
still be murder and would not be voluntary suicide on the part
of the slaughtered minority.[2] No organicist metaphor, no irrelevant bromide that
"we are all part of one another," must be permitted to obscure
this basic fact.
If, then,
the State is not "us," if it is not "the human family" getting
together to decide mutual problems, if it is not a lodge meeting
or country club, what is it? Briefly, the State is that organization
in society which attempts to maintain a monopoly of the use of
force and violence in a given territorial area; in particular,
it is the only organization in society that obtains its revenue
not by voluntary contribution or payment for services rendered
but by coercion. While other individuals or institutions obtain
their income by production of goods and services and by the peaceful
and voluntary sale of these goods and services to others, the
State obtains its revenue by the use of compulsion; that is, by
the use and the threat of the jailhouse and the bayonet.[3] Having used force and violence to obtain its revenue,
the State generally goes on to regulate and dictate the other
actions of its individual subjects. One would think that simple
observation of all States through history and over the globe would
be proof enough of this assertion; but the miasma of myth has
lain so long over State activity that elaboration is necessary.
What the
State Is
Man is born
naked into the world, and needing to use his mind to learn how
to take the resources given him by nature, and to transform them
(for example, by investment in "capital") into shapes and forms
and places where the resources can be used for the satisfaction
of his wants and the advancement of his standard of living. The
only way by which man can do this is by the use of his mind and
energy to transform resources ("production") and to exchange these
products for products created by others. Man has found that, through
the process of voluntary, mutual exchange, the productivity and
hence the living standards of all participants in exchange may
increase enormously. The only "natural" course for man to survive
and to attain wealth, therefore, is by using his mind and energy
to engage in the production-and-exchange process. He does this,
first, by finding natural resources, and then by transforming
them (by "mixing his labor" with them, as Locke puts it), to make
them his individual property, and then by exchanging this
property for the similarly obtained property of others. The social
path dictated by the requirements of man's nature, therefore,
is the path of "property rights" and the "free market" of gift
or exchange of such rights. Through this path, men have learned
how to avoid the "jungle" methods of fighting over scarce resources
so that A can only acquire them at the expense of B and, instead,
to multiply those resources enormously in peaceful and harmonious
production and exchange.
The great
German sociologist Franz Oppenheimer pointed out that there are
two mutually exclusive ways of acquiring wealth; one, the above
way of production and exchange, he called the "economic means."
The other way is simpler in that it does not require productivity;
it is the way of seizure of another's goods or services by the
use of force and violence. This is the method of one-sided confiscation,
of theft of the property of others. This is the method which Oppenheimer
termed "the political means" to wealth. It should be clear that
the peaceful use of reason and energy in production is the "natural"
path for man: the means for his survival and prosperity on this
earth. It should be equally clear that the coercive, exploitative
means is contrary to natural law; it is parasitic, for instead
of adding to production, it subtracts from it. The "political
means" siphons production off to a parasitic and destructive individual
or group; and this siphoning not only subtracts from the number
producing, but also lowers the producer's incentive to produce
beyond his own subsistence. In the long run, the robber destroys
his own subsistence by dwindling or eliminating the source of
his own supply. But not only that; even in the short run, the
predator is acting contrary to his own true nature as a man.
We are now
in a position to answer more fully the question: what is the State?
The State, in the words of Oppenheimer, is the "organization of
the political means"; it is the systematization of the predatory
process over a given territory.[4] For crime, at best, is sporadic and uncertain; the
parasitism is ephemeral, and the coercive, parasitic lifeline
may be cut off at any time by the resistance of the victims. The
State provides a legal, orderly, systematic channel for the predation
of private property; it renders certain, secure, and relatively
"peaceful" the lifeline of the parasitic caste in society.[5] Since production must always precede predation,
the free market is anterior to the State. The State has never
been created by a "social contract"; it has always been born in
conquest and exploitation. The classic paradigm was a conquering
tribe pausing in its time-honored method of looting and murdering
a conquered tribe, to realize that the time-span of plunder would
be longer and more secure, and the situation more pleasant, if
the conquered tribe were allowed to live and produce, with the
conquerors settling among them as rulers exacting a steady annual
tribute.[6] One method of the birth of a State may be illustrated
as follows: in the hills of southern "Ruritania," a bandit group
manages to obtain physical control over the territory, and finally
the bandit chieftain proclaims himself "King of the sovereign
and independent government of South Ruritania"; and, if he and
his men have the force to maintain this rule for a while, lo and
behold! a new State has joined the "family of nations," and the
former bandit leaders have been transformed into the lawful nobility
of the realm.
How the
State Preserves Itself
Once a State
has been established, the problem of the ruling group or "caste"
is how to maintain their rule.[7] While force is their modus operandi, their
basic and long-run problem is ideological. For in order to continue
in office, any government (not simply a "democratic" government)
must have the support of the majority of its subjects. This support,
it must be noted, need not be active enthusiasm; it may well be
passive resignation as if to an inevitable law of nature. But
support in the sense of acceptance of some sort it must be; else
the minority of State rulers would eventually be outweighed by
the active resistance of the majority of the public. Since predation
must be supported out of the surplus of production, it is necessarily
true that the class constituting the State the full-time bureaucracy
(and nobility) must be a rather small minority in the land,
although it may, of course, purchase allies among important groups
in the population. Therefore, the chief task of the rulers is
always to secure the active or resigned acceptance of the majority
of the citizens.[8] [9]
Of course,
one method of securing support is through the creation of vested
economic interests. Therefore, the King alone cannot rule; he
must have a sizable group of followers who enjoy the prerequisites
of rule, for example, the members of the State apparatus, such
as the full-time bureaucracy or the established nobility.[10] But this still secures only a minority of eager
supporters, and even the essential purchasing of support by subsidies
and other grants of privilege still does not obtain the consent
of the majority. For this essential acceptance, the majority must
be persuaded by ideology that their government is good,
wise and, at least, inevitable, and certainly better than other
conceivable alternatives. Promoting this ideology among the people
is the vital social task of the "intellectuals." For the masses
of men do not create their own ideas, or indeed think through
these ideas independently; they follow passively the ideas adopted
and disseminated by the body of intellectuals. The intellectuals
are, therefore, the "opinion-molders" in society. And since it
is precisely a molding of opinion that the State most desperately
needs, the basis for age-old alliance between the State and the
intellectuals becomes clear.
It is evident
that the State needs the intellectuals; it is not so evident why
intellectuals need the State. Put simply, we may state that the
intellectual's livelihood in the free market is never too secure;
for the intellectual must depend on the values and choices of
the masses of his fellow men, and it is precisely characteristic
of the masses that they are generally uninterested in intellectual
matters. The State, on the other hand, is willing to offer the
intellectuals a secure and permanent berth in the State apparatus;
and thus a secure income and the panoply of prestige. For the
intellectuals will be handsomely rewarded for the important function
they perform for the State rulers, of which group they now become
a part.[11]
The alliance
between the State and the intellectuals was symbolized in the
eager desire of professors at the University of Berlin in the
nineteenth century to form the "intellectual bodyguard of the
House of Hohenzollern." In the present day, let us note the revealing
comment of an eminent Marxist scholar concerning Professor Wittfogel's
critical study of ancient Oriental despotism: "The civilization
which Professor Wittfogel is so bitterly attacking was one which
could make poets and scholars into officials."[12] Of innumerable examples, we may cite the recent
development of the "science" of strategy, in the service of the
government's main violence-wielding arm, the military.[13] A venerable institution, furthermore, is the official
or "court" historian, dedicated to purveying the rulers' views
of their own and their predecessors' actions.[14]
Many and
varied have been the arguments by which the State and its intellectuals
have induced their subjects to support their rule. Basically,
the strands of argument may be summed up as follows: (a) the State
rulers are great and wise men (they "rule by divine right," they
are the "aristocracy" of men, they are the "scientific experts"),
much greater and wiser than the good but rather simple subjects,
and (b) rule by the extent government is inevitable, absolutely
necessary, and far better, than the indescribable evils that would
ensue upon its downfall. The union of Church and State was one
of the oldest and most successful of these ideological devices.
The ruler was either anointed by God or, in the case of the absolute
rule of many Oriental despotisms, was himself God; hence, any
resistance to his rule would be blasphemy. The States' priestcraft
performed the basic intellectual function of obtaining popular
support and even worship for the rulers.[15]
Another successful
device was to instill fear of any alternative systems of rule
or nonrule. The present rulers, it was maintained, supply to the
citizens an essential service for which they should be most grateful:
protection against sporadic criminals and marauders. For the State,
to preserve its own monopoly of predation, did indeed see to it
that private and unsystematic crime was kept to a minimum; the
State has always been jealous of its own preserve. Especially
has the State been successful in recent centuries in instilling
fear of other State rulers. Since the land area of the
globe has been parceled out among particular States, one of the
basic doctrines of the State was to identify itself with the territory
it governed. Since most men tend to love their homeland, the identification
of that land and its people with the State was a means of making
natural patriotism work to the State's advantage. If "Ruritania"
was being attacked by "Walldavia," the first task of the State
and its intellectuals was to convince the people of Ruritania
that the attack was really upon them and not simply upon
the ruling caste. In this way, a war between rulers was
converted into a war between peoples, with each people
coming to the defense of its rulers in the erroneous belief that
the rulers were defending them. This device of "nationalism"
has only been successful, in Western civilization, in recent centuries;
it was not too long ago that the mass of subjects regarded wars
as irrelevant battles between various sets of nobles.
Many and
subtle are the ideological weapons that the State has wielded
through the centuries. One excellent weapon has been tradition.
The longer that the rule of a State has been able to preserve
itself, the more powerful this weapon; for then, the X Dynasty
or the Y State has the seeming weight of centuries of tradition
behind it.[16] Worship of one's ancestors, then, becomes a none
too subtle means of worship of one's ancient rulers. The greatest
danger to the State is independent intellectual criticism; there
is no better way to stifle that criticism than to attack any isolated
voice, any raiser of new doubts, as a profane violator of the
wisdom of his ancestors. Another potent ideological force is to
deprecate the individual and exalt the collectivity of
society. For since any given rule implies majority acceptance,
any ideological danger to that rule can only start from one or
a few independently-thinking individuals. The new idea, much less
the new critical idea, must needs begin as a small minority
opinion; therefore, the State must nip the view in the bud by
ridiculing any view that defies the opinions of the mass. "Listen
only to your brothers" or "adjust to society" thus become ideological
weapons for crushing individual dissent.[17] By such measures, the masses will never learn
of the nonexistence of their Emperor's clothes.[18] It is also important for the State to make its
rule seem inevitable; even if its reign is disliked, it will then
be met with passive resignation, as witness the familiar coupling
of "death and taxes." One method is to induce historiographical
determinism, as opposed to individual freedom of will. If the
X Dynasty rules us, this is because the Inexorable Laws of History
(or the Divine Will, or the Absolute, or the Material Productive
Forces) have so decreed and nothing any puny individuals may do
can change this inevitable decree. It is also important for the
State to inculcate in its subjects an aversion to any "conspiracy
theory of history"; for a search for "conspiracies" means a search
for motives and an attribution of responsibility for historical
misdeeds. If, however, any tyranny imposed by the State, or venality,
or aggressive war, was caused not by the State rulers but
by mysterious and arcane "social forces," or by the imperfect
state of the world or, if in some way, everyone was responsible
("We Are All Murderers," proclaims one slogan), then there is
no point to the people becoming indignant or rising up against
such misdeeds. Furthermore, an attack on "conspiracy theories"
means that the subjects will become more gullible in believing
the "general welfare" reasons that are always put forth by the
State for engaging in any of its despotic actions. A "conspiracy
theory" can unsettle the system by causing the public to doubt
the State's ideological propaganda.
Another tried
and true method for bending subjects to the State's will is inducing
guilt. Any increase in private well-being can be attacked as "unconscionable
greed," "materialism," or "excessive affluence," profit-making
can be attacked as "exploitation" and "usury," mutually beneficial
exchanges denounced as "selfishness," and somehow with the conclusion
always being drawn that more resources should be siphoned from
the private to the "public sector." The induced guilt makes the
public more ready to do just that. For while individual persons
tend to indulge in "selfish greed," the failure of the State's
rulers to engage in exchanges is supposed to signify their
devotion to higher and nobler causes parasitic predation being
apparently morally and esthetically lofty as compared to peaceful
and productive work.
In the present
more secular age, the divine right of the State has been supplemented
by the invocation of a new god, Science. State rule is now proclaimed
as being ultrascientific, as constituting planning by experts.
But while "reason" is invoked more than in previous centuries,
this is not the true reason of the individual and his exercise
of free will; it is still collectivist and determinist, still
implying holistic aggregates and coercive manipulation of passive
subjects by their rulers.
The increasing
use of scientific jargon has permitted the State's intellectuals
to weave obscurantist apologia for State rule that would have
only met with derision by the populace of a simpler age. A robber
who justified his theft by saying that he really helped his victims,
by his spending giving a boost to retail trade, would find few
converts; but when this theory is clothed in Keynesian equations
and impressive references to the "multiplier effect," it unfortunately
carries more conviction. And so the assault on common sense proceeds,
each age performing the task in its own ways.
Thus, ideological
support being vital to the State, it must unceasingly try to impress
the public with its "legitimacy," to distinguish its activities
from those of mere brigands. The unremitting determination of
its assaults on common sense is no accident, for as Mencken vividly
maintained:
- The average
man, whatever his errors otherwise, at least sees clearly that
government is something lying outside him and outside the generality
of his fellow men that it is a separate, independent, and
hostile power, only partly under his control, and capable of
doing him great harm. Is it a fact of no significance that robbing
the government is everywhere regarded as a crime of less magnitude
than robbing an individual, or even a corporation? . . . What
lies behind all this, I believe, is a deep sense of the fundamental
antagonism between the government and the people it governs.
It is apprehended, not as a committee of citizens chosen to
carry on the communal business of the whole population, but
as a separate and autonomous corporation, mainly devoted to
exploiting the population for the benefit of its own members.
. . . When a private citizen is robbed, a worthy man is deprived
of the fruits of his industry and thrift; when the government
is robbed, the worst that happens is that certain rogues and
loafers have less money to play with than they had before. The
notion that they have earned that money is never entertained;
to most sensible men it would seem ludicrous.[19]
How the
State Transcends Its Limits
As Bertrand
de Jouvenel has sagely pointed out, through the centuries men
have formed concepts designed to check and limit the exercise
of State rule; and, one after another, the State, using its intellectual
allies, has been able to transform these concepts into intellectual
rubber stamps of legitimacy and virtue to attach to its decrees
and actions. Originally, in Western Europe, the concept of divine
sovereignty held that the kings may rule only according to divine
law; the kings turned the concept into a rubber stamp of divine
approval for any of the kings' actions. The concept of parliamentary
democracy began as a popular check upon absolute monarchical rule;
it ended with parliament being the essential part of the State
and its every act totally sovereign. As de Jouvenel concludes:
- Many writers
on theories of sovereignty have worked out one . . . of these
restrictive devices. But in the end every single such theory
has, sooner or later, lost its original purpose, and come to
act merely as a springboard to Power, by providing it with the
powerful aid of an invisible sovereign with whom it could in
time successfully identify itself.[20]
Similarly
with more specific doctrines: the "natural rights" of the individual
enshrined in John Locke and the Bill of Rights, became a statist
"right to a job"; utilitarianism turned from arguments for liberty
to arguments against resisting the State's invasions of liberty,
etc.
Certainly
the most ambitious attempt to impose limits on the State has been
the Bill of Rights and other restrictive parts of the American
Constitution, in which written limits on government became the
fundamental law to be interpreted by a judiciary supposedly independent
of the other branches of government. All Americans are familiar
with the process by which the construction of limits in the Constitution
has been inexorably broadened over the last century. But few have
been as keen as Professor Charles Black to see that the State
has, in the process, largely transformed judicial review itself
from a limiting device to yet another instrument for furnishing
ideological legitimacy to the government's actions. For if a judicial
decree of "unconstitutional" is a mighty check to government power,
an implicit or explicit verdict of "constitutional" is a mighty
weapon for fostering public acceptance of ever-greater government
power.
Professor
Black begins his analysis by pointing out the crucial necessity
of "legitimacy" for any government to endure, this legitimation
signifying basic majority acceptance of the government and its
actions.[21] Acceptance of legitimacy becomes a particular
problem in a country such as the United States, where "substantive
limitations are built into the theory on which the government
rests." What is needed, adds Black, is a means by which the government
can assure the public that its increasing powers are, indeed,
"constitutional." And this, he concludes, has been the major historic
function of judicial review.
Let Black
illustrate the problem:
- The supreme
risk [to the government] is that of disaffection and a feeling
of outrage widely disseminated throughout the population, and
loss of moral authority by the government as such, however long
it may be propped up by force or inertia or the lack of an appealing
and immediately available alternative. Almost everybody living
under a government of limited powers, must sooner or later be
subjected to some governmental action which as a matter of private
opinion he regards as outside the power of government or positively
forbidden to government. A man is drafted, though he finds nothing
in the Constitution about being drafted. . . . A farmer is told
how much wheat he can raise; he believes, and he discovers that
some respectable lawyers believe with him, that the government
has no more right to tell him how much wheat he can grow than
it has to tell his daughter whom she can marry. A man goes to
the federal penitentiary for saying what he wants to, and he
paces his cell reciting . . . "Congress shall make no laws abridging
the freedom of speech.". . . A businessman is told what he can
ask, and must ask, for buttermilk.
The danger is real enough that each of these people (and who
is not of their number?) will confront the concept of governmental
limitation with the reality (as he sees it) of the flagrant
overstepping of actual limits, and draw the obvious conclusion
as to the status of his government with respect to legitimacy.[22]
This danger
is averted by the State's propounding the doctrine that one agency
must have the ultimate decision on constitutionality and that
this agency, in the last analysis, must be part of the
federal government.[23] For while the seeming independence of the federal
judiciary has played a vital part in making its actions virtual
Holy Writ for the bulk of the people, it is also and ever true
that the judiciary is part and parcel of the government apparatus
and appointed by the executive and legislative branches. Black
admits that this means that the State has set itself up as a judge
in its own cause, thus violating a basic juridical principle for
aiming at just decisions. He brusquely denies the possibility
of any alternative.[24]
Black adds:
- The problem,
then, is to devise such governmental means of deciding as will
[hopefully] reduce to a tolerable minimum the intensity of the
objection that government is judge in its own cause. Having
done this, you can only hope that this objection, though
theoretically still tenable [italics mine], will practically
lose enough of its force that the legitimating work of the deciding
institution can win acceptance.[25]
In the last
analysis, Black finds the achievement of justice and legitimacy
from the State's perpetual judging of its own cause as "something
of a miracle."[26]
Applying
his thesis to the famous conflict between the Supreme Court and
the New Deal, Professor Black keenly chides his fellow pro-New
Deal colleagues for their shortsightedness in denouncing judicial
obstruction:
- [t]he
standard version of the story of the New Deal and the Court,
though accurate in its way, displaces the emphasis. . . . It
concentrates on the difficulties; it almost forgets how the
whole thing turned out. The upshot of the matter was [and this
is what I like to emphasize] that after some twenty-four months
of balking . . . the Supreme Court, without a single change
in the law of its composition, or, indeed, in its actual manning,
placed the affirmative stamp of legitimacy on the New Deal,
and on the whole new conception of government in America.[27]
In this way,
the Supreme Court was able to put the quietus on the large body
of Americans who had had strong constitutional objections to the
New Deal:
- Of course,
not everyone was satisfied. The Bonnie Prince Charlie of constitutionally
commanded laissez-faire still stirs the hearts of a few zealots
in the Highlands of choleric unreality. But there is no longer
any significant or dangerous public doubt as to the constitutional
power of Congress to deal as it does with the national economy.
. . .
We had no means, other than the Supreme Court, for imparting
legitimacy to the New Deal.[28]
As Black
recognizes, one major political theorist who recognized and
largely in advance the glaring loophole in a constitutional
limit on government of placing the ultimate interpreting power
in the Supreme Court was John C. Calhoun. Calhoun was not content
with the "miracle," but instead proceeded to a profound analysis
of the constitutional problem. In his Disquisition, Calhoun
demonstrated the inherent tendency of the State to break through
the limits of such a constitution:
- A written
constitution certainly has many and considerable advantages,
but it is a great mistake to suppose that the mere insertion
of provisions to restrict and limit the power of the government,
without investing those for whose protection they are inserted
with the means of enforcing their observance [my italics]
will be sufficient to prevent the major and dominant party from
abusing its powers. Being the party in possession of the government,
they will, from the same constitution of man which makes government
necessary to protect society, be in favor of the powers granted
by the constitution and opposed to the restrictions intended
to limit them. . . . The minor or weaker party, on the contrary,
would take the opposite direction and regard them [the restrictions]
as essential to their protection against the dominant party.
. . . But where there are no means by which they could compel
the major party to observe the restrictions, the only resort
left them would be a strict construction of the constitution.
. . . To this the major party would oppose a liberal construction.
. . . It would be construction against construction the one
to contract and the other to enlarge the powers of the government
to the utmost. But of what possible avail could the strict construction
of the minor party be, against the liberal construction of the
major, when the one would have all the power of the government
to carry its construction into effect and the other be deprived
of all means of enforcing its construction? In a contest so
unequal, the result would not be doubtful. The party in favor
of the restrictions would be overpowered. . . . The end of the
contest would be the subversion of the constitution . . . the
restrictions would ultimately be annulled and the government
be converted into one of unlimited powers.[29]
One of the
few political scientists who appreciated Calhoun's analysis of
the Constitution was Professor J. Allen Smith. Smith noted that
the Constitution was designed with checks and balances to limit
any one governmental power and yet had then developed a Supreme
Court with the monopoly of ultimate interpreting power. If the
Federal Government was created to check invasions of individual
liberty by the separate states, who was to check the Federal power?
Smith maintained that implicit in the check-and-balance idea of
the Constitution was the concomitant view that no one branch of
government may be conceded the ultimate power of interpretation:
"It was assumed by the people that the new government could not
be permitted to determine the limits of its own authority, since
this would make it, and not the Constitution, supreme."[30]
The
solution advanced by Calhoun (and seconded, in this century, by
such writers as Smith) was, of course, the famous doctrine of
the "concurrent majority." If any substantial minority interest
in the country, specifically a state government, believed that
the Federal Government was exceeding its powers and encroaching
on that minority, the minority would have the right to veto this
exercise of power as unconstitutional. Applied to state governments,
this theory implied the right of "nullification" of a Federal
law or ruling within a state's jurisdiction.
In theory,
the ensuing constitutional system would assure that the Federal
Government check any state invasion of individual rights, while
the states would check excessive Federal power over the individual.
And yet, while limitations would undoubtedly be more effective
than at present, there are many difficulties and problems in the
Calhoun solution. If, indeed, a subordinate interest should rightfully
have a veto over matters concerning it, then why stop with the
states? Why not place veto power in counties, cities, wards? Furthermore,
interests are not only sectional, they are also occupational,
social, etc. What of bakers or taxi drivers or any other occupation?
Should they not be permitted a veto power over their own
lives? This brings us to the important point that the nullification
theory confines its checks to agencies of government itself.
Let us not forget that federal and state governments, and their
respective branches, are still states, are still guided by their
own state interests rather than by the interests of the private
citizens. What is to prevent the Calhoun system from working in
reverse, with states tyrannizing over their citizens and
only vetoing the federal government when it tries to intervene
to stop that state tyranny? Or for states to acquiesce
in federal tyranny? What is to prevent federal and state governments
from forming mutually profitable alliances for the joint exploitation
of the citizenry? And even if the private occupational groupings
were to be given some form of "functional" representation in government,
what is to prevent them from using the State to gain subsidies
and other special privileges for themselves or from imposing compulsory
cartels on their own members?
In short,
Calhoun does not push his pathbreaking theory on concurrence far
enough: he does not push it down to the individual himself.
If the individual, after all, is the one whose rights are to be
protected, then a consistent theory of concurrence would imply
veto power by every individual; that is, some form of "unanimity
principle." When Calhoun wrote that it should be "impossible to
put or to keep it [the government] in action without the concurrent
consent of all," he was, perhaps unwittingly, implying just such
a conclusion.[31] But such speculation begins to take us away from
our subject, for down this path lie political systems which could
hardly be called "States" at all.[32] For
one thing, just as the right of nullification for a state logically
implies its right of secession, so a right of individual
nullification would imply the right of any individual to "secede"
from the State under which he lives.[33]
Thus, the
State has invariably shown a striking talent for the expansion
of its powers beyond any limits that might be imposed upon it.
Since the State necessarily lives by the compulsory confiscation
of private capital, and since its expansion necessarily involves
ever-greater incursions on private individuals and private enterprise,
we must assert that the State is profoundly and inherently anticapitalist.
In a sense, our position is the reverse of the Marxist dictum
that the State is the "executive committee" of the ruling class
in the present day, supposedly the capitalists. Instead, the State
the organization of the political means constitutes, and is
the source of, the "ruling class" (rather, ruling caste),
and is in permanent opposition to genuinely private capital.
We may, therefore, say with de Jouvenel:
- Only those
who know nothing of any time but their own, who are completely
in the dark as to the manner of Power's behaving through thousands
of years, would regard these proceedings [nationalization, the
income tax, etc.] as the fruit of a particular set of doctrines.
They are in fact the normal manifestations of Power, and differ
not at all in their nature from Henry VIII's confiscation of
the monasteries. The same principle is at work; the hunger for
authority, the thirst for resources; and in all of these operations
the same characteristics are present, including the rapid elevation
of the dividers of the spoils. Whether it is Socialist or whether
it is not, Power must always be at war with the capitalist authorities
and despoil the capitalists of their accumulated wealth; in
doing so it obeys the law of its nature.[34]
What the
State Fears
What the
State fears above all, of course, is any fundamental threat to
its own power and its own existence. The death of a State can
come about in two major ways: (a) through conquest by another
State, or (b) through revolutionary overthrow by its own subjects
in short, by war or revolution. War and revolution, as the two
basic threats, invariably arouse in the State rulers their maximum
efforts and maximum propaganda among the people. As stated above,
any way must always be used to mobilize the people to come to
the State's defense in the belief that they are defending themselves.
The fallacy of the idea becomes evident when conscription is wielded
against those who refuse to "defend" themselves and are, therefore,
forced into joining the State's military band: needless to add,
no "defense" is permitted them against this act of "their own"
State.
In war, State
power is pushed to its ultimate, and, under the slogans of "defense"
and "emergency," it can impose a tyranny upon the public such
as might be openly resisted in time of peace. War thus provides
many benefits to a State, and indeed every modern war has brought
to the warring peoples a permanent legacy of increased State burdens
upon society. War, moreover, provides to a State tempting opportunities
for conquest of land areas over which it may exercise its monopoly
of force. Randolph Bourne was certainly correct when he wrote
that "war is the health of the State," but to any particular State
a war may spell either health or grave injury.[35]
We may test
the hypothesis that the State is largely interested in protecting
itself rather than its subjects by asking: which category
of crimes does the State pursue and punish most intensely those
against private citizens or those against itself? The gravest
crimes in the State's lexicon are almost invariably not invasions
of private person or property, but dangers to its own contentment,
for example, treason, desertion of a soldier to the enemy, failure
to register for the draft, subversion and subversive conspiracy,
assassination of rulers and such economic crimes against the State
as counterfeiting its money or evasion of its income tax. Or compare
the degree of zeal devoted to pursuing the man who assaults a
policeman, with the attention that the State pays to the assault
of an ordinary citizen. Yet, curiously, the State's openly assigned
priority to its own defense against the public strikes
few people as inconsistent with its presumed raison d'κtre.[36]
How States
Relate to One Another
Since the
territorial area of the earth is divided among different States,
inter-State relations must occupy much of a State's time and energy.
The natural tendency of a State is to expand its power, and externally
such expansion takes place by conquest of a territorial area.
Unless a territory is stateless or uninhabited, any such expansion
involves an inherent conflict of interest between one set of State
rulers and another. Only one set of rulers can obtain a monopoly
of coercion over any given territorial area at any one time: complete
power over a territory by State X can only be obtained by the
expulsion of State Y. War, while risky, will be an ever-present
tendency of States, punctuated by periods of peace and by shifting
alliances and coalitions between States.
We have seen
that the "internal" or "domestic" attempt to limit the State,
in the seventeenth through nineteenth centuries, reached its most
notable form in constitutionalism. Its "external," or "foreign
affairs," counterpart was the development of "international law,"
especially such forms as the "laws of war" and "neutrals' rights."[37] Parts of international law were originally purely
private, growing out of the need of merchants and traders everywhere
to protect their property and adjudicate disputes. Examples are
admiralty law and the law merchant. But even the governmental
rules emerged voluntarily and were not imposed by any international
super-State. The object of the "laws of war" was to limit inter-State
destruction to the State apparatus itself, thereby preserving
the innocent "civilian" public from the slaughter and devastation
of war. The object of the development of neutrals' rights was
to preserve private civilian international commerce, even with
"enemy" countries, from seizure by one of the warring parties.
The overriding aim, then, was to limit the extent of any war,
and, particularly to limit its destructive impact on the private
citizens of the neutral and even the warring countries.
The jurist
F.J.P. Veale charmingly describes such "civilized warfare" as
it briefly flourished in fifteenth-century Italy:
- the rich
burghers and merchants of medieval Italy were too busy making
money and enjoying life to undertake the hardships and dangers
of soldiering themselves. So they adopted the practice of hiring
mercenaries to do their fighting for them, and, being thrifty,
businesslike folk, they dismissed their mercenaries immediately
after their services could be dispensed with. Wars were, therefore,
fought by armies hired for each campaign. . . . For the first
time, soldiering became a reasonable and comparatively harmless
profession. The generals of that period maneuvered against each
other, often with consummate skill, but when one had won the
advantage, his opponent generally either retreated or surrendered.
It was a recognized rule that a town could only be sacked if
it offered resistance: immunity could always be purchased by
paying a ransom. . . . As one natural consequence, no town ever
resisted, it being obvious that a government too weak to defend
its citizens had forfeited their allegiance. Civilians had little
to fear from the dangers of war which were the concern only
of professional soldiers.[38]
The well-nigh
absolute separation of the private civilian from the State's wars
in eighteenth-century Europe is highlighted by Nef:
- Even postal
communications were not successfully restricted for long in
wartime. Letters circulated without censorship, with a freedom
that astonishes the twentieth-century mind. . . . The subjects
of two warring nations talked to each other if they met, and
when they could not meet, corresponded, not as enemies but as
friends. The modern notion hardly existed that . . . subjects
of any enemy country are partly accountable for the belligerent
acts of their rulers. Nor had the warring rulers any firm disposition
to stop communications with subjects of the enemy. The old inquisitorial
practices of espionage in connection with religious worship
and belief were disappearing, and no comparable inquisition
in connection with political or economic communications was
even contemplated. Passports were originally created to provide
safe conduct in time of war. During most of the eighteenth century
it seldom occurred to Europeans to abandon their travels in
a foreign country which their own was fighting.[39]
And trade being increasingly recognized as beneficial to both
parties; eighteenth-century warfare also counterbalances a considerable
amount of "trading with the enemy."[40]
How far States
have transcended rules of civilized warfare in this century needs
no elaboration here. In the modern era of total war, combined
with the technology of total destruction, the very idea of keeping
war limited to the State apparati seems even more quaint and obsolete
than the original Constitution of the United States.
When States
are not at war, agreements are often necessary to keep frictions
at a minimum. One doctrine that has gained curiously wide acceptance
is the alleged "sanctity of treaties." This concept is treated
as the counterpart of the "sanctity of contract." But a treaty
and a genuine contract have nothing in common. A contract transfers,
in a precise manner, titles to private property. Since a government
does not, in any proper sense, "own" its territorial area, any
agreements that it concludes do not confer titles to property.
If, for example, Mr. Jones sells or gives his land to Mr. Smith,
Jones's heir cannot legitimately descend upon Smith's heir and
claim the land as rightfully his. The property title has already
been transferred. Old Jones's contract is automatically binding
upon young Jones, because the former had already transferred the
property; young Jones, therefore, has no property claim. Young
Jones can only claim that which he has inherited from old Jones,
and old Jones can only bequeath property which he still owns.
But if, at a certain date, the government of, say, Ruritania is
coerced or even bribed by the government of Waldavia into giving
up some of its territory, it is absurd to claim that the governments
or inhabitants of the two countries are forever barred from a
claim to reunification of Ruritania on the grounds of the sanctity
of a treaty. Neither the people nor the land of northwest Ruritania
are owned by either of the two governments. As a corollary, one
government can certainly not bind, by the dead hand of the past,
a later government through treaty. A revolutionary government
which overthrew the king of Ruritania could, similarly, hardly
be called to account for the king's actions or debts, for a government
is not, as is a child, a true "heir" to its predecessor's property.
History
as a Race Between
State Power and Social Power
Just as the
two basic and mutually exclusive interrelations between men are
peaceful cooperation or coercive exploitation, production or predation,
so the history of mankind, particularly its economic history,
may be considered as a contest between these two principles. On
the one hand, there is creative productivity, peaceful exchange
and cooperation; on the other, coercive dictation and predation
over those social relations. Albert Jay Nock happily termed these
contesting forces: "social power" and "State power."[41] Social power is man's power over nature,
his cooperative transformation of nature's resources and insight
into nature's laws, for the benefit of all participating individuals.
Social power is the power over nature, the living standards achieved
by men in mutual exchange. State power, as we have seen, is the
coercive and parasitic seizure of this production a draining
of the fruits of society for the benefit of nonproductive (actually
antiproductive) rulers. While social power is over nature, State
power is power over man. Through history, man's productive
and creative forces have, time and again, carved out new ways
of transforming nature for man's benefit. These have been the
times when social power has spurted ahead of State power, and
when the degree of State encroachment over society has considerably
lessened. But always, after a greater or smaller time lag, the
State has moved into these new areas, to cripple and confiscate
social power once more.[42] If the seventeenth through the nineteenth centuries
were, in many countries of the West, times of accelerating social
power, and a corollary increase in freedom, peace, and material
welfare, the twentieth century has been primarily an age in which
State power has been catching up with a consequent reversion
to slavery, war, and destruction.[43]
In this century,
the human race faces, once again, the virulent reign of the State
of the State now armed with the fruits of man's creative powers,
confiscated and perverted to its own aims. The last few centuries
were times when men tried to place constitutional and other limits
on the State, only to find that such limits, as with all other
attempts, have failed. Of all the numerous forms that governments
have taken over the centuries, of all the concepts and institutions
that have been tried, none has succeeded in keeping the State
in check. The problem of the State is evidently as far from solution
as ever. Perhaps new paths of inquiry must be explored, if the
successful, final solution of the State question is ever to be
attained.[44]
Notes
[1]
We cannot, in this chapter, develop the many problems and fallacies
of "democracy." Suffice it to say here that an individual's true
agent or "representative" is always subject to that individual's
orders, can be dismissed at any time and cannot act contrary to
the interests or wishes of his principal. Clearly, the "representative"
in a democracy can never fulfill such agency functions, the only
ones consonant with a libertarian society.
[2]
Social democrats often retort that democracy majority choice
of rulers logically implies that the majority must leave certain
freedoms to the minority, for the minority might one day become
the majority. Apart from other flaws, this argument obviously
does not hold where the minority cannot become the majority,
for example, when the minority is of a different racial or ethnic
group from the majority.
[3]
Joseph A. Schumpeter, Capitalism,
Socialism, and Democracy (New York: Harper and Bros.,
1942), p. 198.
- The friction
or antagonism between the private and the public sphere was
intensified from the first by the fact that . . . the State
has been living on a revenue which was being produced in the
private sphere for private purposes and had to be deflected
from these purposes by political force. The theory which construes
taxes on the analogy of club dues or of the purchase of the
service of, say, a doctor only proves how far removed this part
of the social sciences is from scientific habits of mind.
Also see Murray
N. Rothbard, "The Fallacy of the 'Public Sector,"' New
Individualist Review (Summer, 1961): pp. 3ff.
[4]
Franz Oppenheimer, The
State (New York: Vanguard Press, 1926) pp. 2427:
- There
are two fundamentally opposed means whereby man, requiring sustenance,
is impelled to obtain the necessary means for satisfying his
desires. These are work and robbery, one's own labor and the
forcible appropriation of the labor of others. . . . I propose
in the following discussion to call one's own labor and the
equivalent exchange of one's own labor for the labor of others,
the "economic means" for the satisfaction of need while the
unrequited appropriation of the labor of others will be called
the "political means". . . . The State is an organization of
the political means. No State, therefore, can come into being
until the economic means has created a definite number of objects
for the satisfaction of needs, which objects may be taken away
or appropriated by warlike robbery.
[5]
Albert Jay Nock wrote vividly that
- the State
claims and exercises the monopoly of crime. . . . It forbids
private murder, but itself organizes murder on a colossal scale.
It punishes private theft, but itself lays unscrupulous hands
on anything it wants, whether the property of citizen or of
alien.
Nock, On
Doing the Right Thing, and Other Essays (New York: Harper and
Bros., 1929), p. 143; quoted in Jack Schwartzman, "Albert Jay Nock
A Superfluous Man," Faith and Freedom (December, 1953):
p. 11.
[6]
Oppenheimer, The State, p. 15:
- What,
then, is the State as a sociological concept? The State, completely
in its genesis . . . is a social institution, forced by a victorious
group of men on a defeated group, with the sole purpose of regulating
the dominion of the victorious group of men on a defeated group,
and securing itself against revolt from within and attacks from
abroad. Teleologically, this dominion had no other purpose than
the economic exploitation of the vanquished by the victors.
And de Jouvenel
has written: "the State is in essence the result of the successes
achieved by a band of brigands who superimpose themselves on small,
distinct societies." Bertrand de Jouvenel, On
Power (New York: Viking Press, 1949), pp. 10001.
[7]
On the crucial distinction between "caste," a group with privileges
or burdens coercively granted or imposed by the State and the
Marxian concept of "class" in society, see Ludwig von Mises, Theory
and History (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press,
1957), pp. 112ff.
[8]
Such acceptance does not, of course, imply that the State rule
has become "voluntary"; for even if the majority support be active
and eager, this support is not unanimous by every individual.
[9]
That every government, no matter how "dictatorial" over individuals,
must secure such support has been demonstrated by such acute political
theorists as Ιtienne de la Boιtie, David Hume, and Ludwig von
Mises. Thus, cf. David Hume, "Of the First Principles of Government,"
in Essays,
Literary, Moral and Political (London: Ward, Locke, and
Taylor, n.d.), p. 23; Ιtienne de la Boιtie, Anti-Dictator
(New York: Columbia University Press, 1942), pp. 89; Ludwig von
Mises, Human Action
(Auburn, Ala.: Mises Institute, 1998), pp. 188ff. For more
on the contribution to the analysis of the State by la Boιtie,
see Oscar Jaszi and John D. Lewis, Against the Tyrant (Glencoe,
Ill.: The Free Press, 1957), pp. 5557.
[10]
La Boιtie, Anti-Dictator, pp. 4344.
- Whenever
a ruler makes himself dictator . . . all those who are corrupted
by burning ambition or extraordinary avarice, these gather around
him and support him in order to have a share in the booty and
to constitute themselves petty chiefs under the big tyrant.
[11]
This by no means implies that all intellectuals ally themselves
with the State. On aspects of the alliance of intellectuals and
the State, cf. Bertrand de Jouvenel, "The Attitude of the Intellectuals
to the Market Society," The Owl (January, 1951): pp. 1927;
idem, "The Treatment of Capitalism by Continental Intellectuals,"
in F.A. Hayek, ed., Capitalism and the Historians (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1954), pp. 93123; reprinted in George
B. de Huszar, The
Intellectuals (Glencoe, Ill.: The Free Press, 1960), pp.
38599; and Schumpeter, Imperialism
and Social Classes (New York: Meridian Books, 1975), pp.
14355.
[12]
Joseph Needham, "Review of Karl A. Wittfogel, Oriental
Despotism," Science and Society (1958): p. 65. Needham
also writes that "the successive [Chinese] emperors were served
in all ages by a great company of profoundly humane and disinterested
scholars," p. 61. Wittfogel notes the Confucian doctrine that
the glory of the ruling class rested on its gentleman scholar-bureaucrat
officials, destined to be professional rulers dictating to the
mass of the populace. Karl A. Wittfogel, Oriental Despotism
(New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1957), pp. 32021 and
passim. For an attitude contrasting to Needham's, cf. John Lukacs,
"Intellectual Class or Intellectual Profession?" in de Huszar,
The Intellectuals, pp. 52122.
[13]
Jeanne Ribs, "The War Plotters," Liberation (August, 1961):
p. 13. "[s]trategists insist that their occupation deserves the
'dignity of the academic counterpart of the military profession.'"
Also see Marcus Raskin, "The Megadeath Intellectuals," New
York Review of Books (November 14, 1963): pp. 67.
[14]
Thus the historian Conyers Read, in his presidential address,
advocated the suppression of historical fact in the service of
"democratic" and national values. Read proclaimed that "total
war, whether it is hot or cold, enlists everyone and calls upon
everyone to play his part. The historian is not freer from this
obligation than the physicist." Read, "The Social Responsibilities
of the Historian," American Historical Review (1951): p.
283ff. For a critique of Read and other aspects of court history,
see Howard K. Beale, "The Professional Historian: His Theory and
Practice," The Pacific Historical Review (August, 1953):
pp. 22755. Also cf. Herbert Butterfield, "Official History: Its
Pitfalls and Criteria," History
and Human Relations (New York: Macmillan, 1952), pp. 182224;
and Harry Elmer Barnes, The Court Historians Versus Revisionism
(n.d.), pp. 2ff.
[15]
Cf. Wittfogel, Oriental Despotism, pp. 87100. On the contrasting
roles of religion vis-ΰ-vis the State in ancient China and Japan,
see Norman Jacobs, The
Origin of Modern Capitalism and Eastern Asia (Hong Kong:
Hong Kong University Press, 1958), pp. 16194.
[16]
De Jouvenel, On Power, p. 22:
- The essential
reason for obedience is that it has become a habit of the species.
. . . Power is for us a fact of nature. From the earliest days
of recorded history it has always presided over human destinies
. . . the authorities which ruled [societies] in former times
did not disappear without bequeathing to their successors their
privilege nor without leaving in men's minds imprints which
are cumulative in their effect. The succession of governments
which, in the course of centuries, rule the same society may
be looked on as one underlying government which takes on continuous
accretions.
[17]
On such uses of the religion of China, see Norman Jacobs, passim.
[18]
H.L. Mencken, A
Mencken Chrestomathy (New York: Knopf, 1949), p. 145:
- All [government]
can see in an original idea is potential change, and hence an
invasion of its prerogatives. The most dangerous man, to any
government, is the man who is able to think things out for himself,
without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost
inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he
lives under is dishonest, insane and intolerable, and so, if
he is romantic, he tries to change it. And even if he is not
romantic personally he is very apt to spread discontent among
those who are.
[19]
Ibid., pp. 14647.
[20]
De Jouvenel, On Power, pp. 27ff.
[21]
Charles L. Black. Jr., The
People and the Court (New York: Macmillan, 1960), pp.
35ff.
[22]
Ibid., pp. 4243.
[23]
Ibid., p. 52:
- The prime
and most necessary function of the [Supreme] Court has been
that of validation, not that of invalidation. What a government
of limited powers needs, at the beginning and forever, is some
means of satisfying the people that it has taken all steps humanly
possible to stay within its powers. This is the condition of
its legitimacy, and its legitimacy, in the long run, is the
condition of its life. And the Court, through its history, has
acted as the legitimation of the government.
[24]
To Black, this "solution," while paradoxical, is blithely self-evident:
- the final
power of the State . . . must stop where the law stops it. And
who shall set the limit, and who shall enforce the stopping,
against the mightiest power? Why, the State itself, of course,
through its judges and its laws. Who controls the temperate?
Who teaches the wise? (Ibid., pp. 3233)
And:
- Where
the questions concern governmental power in a sovereign nation,
it is not possible to select an umpire who is outside government.
Every national government, so long as it is a government, must
have the final say on its own power. (Ibid., pp. 4849)
[25]
Ibid., p. 49.
[26]
This ascription of the miraculous to government is reminiscent
of James Burnham's justification of government by mysticism and
irrationality:
-
In ancient
times, before the illusions of science had corrupted traditional
wisdom, the founders of cities were known to be gods or demigods.
. . . Neither the source nor the justification of government
can be put in wholly rational terms . . . why should I accept
the hereditary or democratic or any other principle of legitimacy?
Why should a principle justify the rule of that man over me?
. . . I accept the principle, well . . . because I do, because
that is the way it is and has been.