A Foundation for Panarchy
by
Michael S. Rozeff
by Michael S. Rozeff
DIGG THIS
Governments
do not have what I call primary or originary rights.
Only persons, taken one at a time, have these rights. In the words
of Thomas Jefferson in the Declaration of Independence:
"We
hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created
equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of
Happiness."
In Jefferson’s
theory, Persons have unalienable Rights, to Life, Liberty and the
Pursuit of Happiness. If a Government has what appears to be rights,
these are powers that are lodged in that Government by a voluntary
agreement by those who choose to associate themselves with that
Government. I call those derivative rights or powers secondary
rights. Governments have no primary rights but only secondary
rights.
Jefferson continued:
" –
That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among
Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed...,"
This is a statement
that the Governments have only secondary rights (or just powers),
not primary rights; and these secondary rights stem from the voluntary
agreement of the persons being governed, from the "consent
of the governed."
Jefferson either
understood or proposed that such an agreement to form a Government
had the purpose of securing the primary rights. The purposes for
which men choose Governments are actually many and complex, such
as providing for the common defense and promoting the general Welfare.
However, later in the Declaration, Jefferson indicates that Government
gains its secondary rights with the object of Safety and Happiness
of the People. This can be reconciled with Jefferson’s idea that
the overarching goal is to secure rights if we understand that he
thought that securing rights is the road to attaining Safety and
Happiness.
There are probably
several reasons why Jefferson stressed the securing of rights. One
was that the intent of the Declaration was to gain Independence
from an authority that was violating rights. Jefferson also intended
to limit Governments in their powers. He wanted them to secure the
rights of those whom they governed. He believed that was their legitimate
purpose. He looked upon securing rights as the main purpose of Governments.
But here enter
two very large gaps in Jefferson’s theory. The manner in which the
Governed combine to become a People to be Governed and how this
People provides its consent are critical processes, and the Declaration
doesn’t say how these are to be accomplished.
Jefferson apparently
conceived of "the governed" as a body, because he refers
to them as "the People," and he speaks of "the Right
of the People":
" –
That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these
ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it,
and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such
principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them
shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness."
The important
thing here is the notion of the People acting as a Body. The Declaration
says "We" hold these truths to be self-evident. And it
closes with
"We,
therefore, the Representatives of the united States of America,
in General Congress, Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge
of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the Name,
and by Authority of the good People of these Colonies, solemnly
publish and declare..."
Jefferson and
others conceived of a Representative Congress as a rightful voice
for the People, itself deriving the right to speak for them by virtue
of its members being Representatives.
The U.S. Constitution
continues this concept by beginning with "We the People of
the United States..."
The notion
of "We the People" hides a critical weakness in this political
theory of Government, which otherwise is extremely attractive in
its affirmation of a person’s rights and in its view of the derivative
rights (or powers) of a Government. The theory leaves unanswered
two questions. First, how do good People become a People? Second,
how does a People provide its consent to a Government?
Shouldn’t they
logically become a People in such a way as to maintain their primary
rights? Shouldn’t they logically provide their consent to a Government
while maintaining their primary rights? They should. Otherwise,
the foundations of the theory are being contradicted.
Furthermore,
there is another very important gap in the theory. As time passes
and new persons are born and grow to maturity, how do they exercise
their rights to choose a People and a Government? Are they automatically
deemed to be part of a People "under" a Government simply
by virtue of living in the territory over which that Government
claims autonomous rule? That cannot be so, because that assumes
they have made choices based on their rights, but such choices are
not in evidence. The newcomers do not make the fundamental choices
of People and Government. They merely make the choice of who is
in Government, and even that is circumscribed. Its form, its many
laws, its taxes, its debts, and its powers lie well beyond their
choices.
This leads
me to conclude with a strong statement of political theory: If a
Government’s justifiable powers or secondary rights stem from the
People, then the processes of forming that People under that Government
must be consistent with people possessing those primary rights
while they form that Government and make themselves a People
under that Government. In addition, as time passes, the process
of continuous affirmation or non-affirmation of belonging to a People
and a Government must also honor the primary rights of newcomers.
If each person
has the rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, and
if each person is to maintain those absolute and complete rights,
they must maintain them in all their choices. This includes the
two important choices alluded to: With whom do I as a person choose
to be associated so as to form a People? What Government do I as
a person choose to be associated with?
As applications
of a person’s basic primary rights, these two choices, of People
and Government, are clearly exceedingly important. Yet historically
they have not been brought to the forefront. They have not been
clearly articulated. They have been relegated to the background,
and not even the background. They have virtually been buried. And
I would hypothesize that the reason for this burial is that they
are explosive questions. They raise issues about the very legitimacy
and proper powers of any Government whatsoever. Governments and
Government-sympathizers do not want their foundations to be questioned,
and they will by all means ignore such questions as these.
A person may
conceivably answer these questions by allowing his choice to be
merged with the choices of others through voting, or through a majority
rule, or through electing representatives. These procedures already
presume the amalgamation of persons into a People under a Government.
Such procedures are therefore by no means necessary. They are not
the only way that such choices can be made. As modes of choice,
they are deficient. They do not fully and fundamentally allow persons
as sovereign beings to choose their People and their Government,
because the outcomes of the choices of each person depend on what
everyone else chooses. Imagine choosing one’s place of worship (or
non-worship) by majority rule. It is really no choice at all.
And because
these sorts of voting measures are not necessary as modes of choice,
and fail even to reflect what each person wants, they cannot be
assumed to be proper and appropriate measures. Such measures as
these cannot be taken for granted, although these are the measures
that all Governments emphasize. And with good reason, for these
measures are the ones that subdue the minorities and ensure that
a single Government will prevail.
But if we follow
the logic of personal rights and step away from the various stories
that are designed to legitimize the monopoly State, if we move our
eyes away from those magicians among orators and intellectuals who
divert us while they do their tricks to make us accept our subordinate
and choiceless positions, or our positions diluted by means of voting,
majority rule, and Representatives, then we realize this. The only
measure we can be sure that is essential when a person chooses a
People and a Government is that each person must make his own choices,
for that is the only procedure that maintains his or her primary
rights.
This conclusion
is the true revolutionary insight and result of the Jeffersonian
thinking. It is his thought carried to its logical conclusion. And
by this reasoning, we arrive at the political theory known as Panarchy.
The affirmation of those rights that Jefferson outlined for each
person, combined with a consistent application of those rights when
a person chooses a People and a Government, lead directly to Panarchy.
They are a foundation for it.
Panarchy, in
the words of John
Zube, is as follows.
"PANARCHY:
The realization of as many different and autonomous communities
as are wanted by volunteers for themselves, all non-territorially
coexisting, side by side and intermingled, as their members are,
in the same territory or even world-wide and yet separated from
each other by personal laws, administrations and jurisdiction,
as different churches are or ought to be."
In Panarchy,
in the same way that persons choose friends, a club, a spouse, and
a church, they choose a Community and a Government. They are not
automatically inducted into a Government and Laws that are not of
their choosing, as is the case today. And the Government that reigns
over a given territory and People in today’s world does not exist
and cannot therefore, as it does today, prevent other Governments
and Peoples from forming by the exercise of their primary rights.
Furthermore, the notion that today’s States and Governments are
legitimate is seen to be entirely fallacious. The very foundations
of their being are called into question by a thorough application
of the Jeffersonian ideas of primary and secondary rights.
Indeed, we
can now see even more clearly that the Governments of today, which
are the operating arms of the States of this world, all of whom
claim to rule uniquely over a People and a Territory, necessarily
are violating the primary rights of all those People who prefer
to choose another People and Government for themselves. It is as
if each person awoke to find himself or herself belonging to the
Church of the U.S.A., and the only way to register an alternative
belief would be every so often to vote along with many others. One’s
right to choose would be severely limited. And wouldn’t it be far
better simply to choose the church that one prefers? Wouldn’t that
be a far more direct expression of one’s preferences? One could
at any time leave one church and join another. Panarchy is that
idea applied to Government.
The Panarchic
choices can include choosing no People and Government whatever,
or choosing a small group or community, or choosing what others
may view as an oppressive Government with many and great powers
over its People. And since today’s Governments, which are the visible
workings of the world’s States, violate primary rights and those
rights (following Jefferson) are the means by which persons achieve
Welfare, Safety, Security, and Happiness, then we can be certain
that today’s Governments reduce the Welfare, Safety, Security, and
Happiness of great numbers of persons who do not voluntarily wish
to associate themselves with those Governments. The People under
such Governments are by no means unanimous in their endorsement
of those Governments. Indeed, the Peoples of this world (that is,
great numbers of them) ache to be out from under the authoritarian
rule of most, if not all, Governments. They have not yet found the
means to accomplish that goal. The theory of Panarchy is a step
in that direction, and as people understand this theory and understand
its inherent merit and why Panarchy enhances Well-Being, then the
world will move in that direction.
We can be certain
that in Panarchy, the Welfare, Safety, Security, and Happiness of
Peoples will rise, because persons form and dissolve their own Peoples
and Governments peacefully and bloodlessly. And such an inference
uses the same logic that now underlies the Declaration of Independence,
which is that secure rights result in greater happiness, only that
logic is now being consistently pursued in developing the theory
of Panarchy.
In Panarchy,
those who choose to have a Government like that of the current U.S.A.
can have it. But that sort of Government will exist beside many
other possible Peoples and Governments in the regions now known
as the U.S., and it will have no secondary rights (or powers) over
those other Peoples and Governments.
Since persons
can choose a Government, they can choose to leave a Government.
They need only retain the option to exit in their choice of Government.
But persons actually cannot give up that option. They cannot voluntarily
give up their wills. A person might commit himself to stay with
a given Government, but there is no guarantee that he will live
up to this commitment, the reason being that he cannot give up his
will. The Government cannot be sure that this commitment will not
be broken in the future because it has no direct ownership of that
person’s will. Therefore, exit is always hanging over the heads
of those deputed with Governance functions.
Because
people can exit and enter Governments freely, a pervasive system
of checks and balances over Governments occurs in Panarchy, one
that is far superior to what we witness today, which is a system
that is dreadfully deficient and defective.
Panarchy is
the true American revolutionary political system, in the spirit
of Jefferson. It’s about time we realized this and put it into practice.
That is the only way that America has a chance to redeem itself.
That is the only way we have a chance to end Empire and get back
to what America is really about. That is the only way we have a
chance once again to lift our heads in pride and not bow them in
shame. That is the only way we can again become a beacon that illuminates
a progressive path for the world.
July
19, 2008
Michael
S. Rozeff [send him mail]
is a retired Professor of Finance living in East Amherst, New York.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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