The Easy Conquest
by
Thomas Schmidt
by Thomas Schmidt
One advantage
of being an LRC writer is the educated and liberty-loving readership
that will provide feedback on one’s musings. Indeed, Norwich
on Byzantium has proven illuminating, even if (abridged) Norwich
does not spend much time on the economy of Byzantium. Another suggestion
to read Henri Pirenne was taken up tangentially, as it turns out
that Jane
Jacobs is Pirenne, digested. One seeks these sources in an effort
to understand that period when the Catholic Church overcame an empire,
when Islam rose to prominence, and when the modern city rose from
the feudal society that surrounded it in the West. All three are
addressed, without footnotes, by Catholic politician, travel
writer, and historian, Hilaire Belloc.
Belloc
credits the rise of Christianity to the widespread despair in
the Roman empire, born of a slave-owning society that could conquer
lands across thousands of miles and pile up untold riches but whose
poets, applying Tennyson’s phrase, were gripped with "the doubtful
doom of humankind." Belloc does not mention how the Christian
communities, not possessed of this doom, grew
organically through birth and conversion so that 300 years after
their initiation they numbered a cohort almost as large as the pagan
population; Christianity did not conquer the Roman Empire by the
sword.
Of course that
conquest faced a major challenge not 300 years after its full flush
of success: the rise of Islam. His
work on heresy finally revealed to one writer the mechanism
by which Islam grew so quickly. Belloc considered Islam a heresy
of Christian doctrine, removing certain elements like the divinity
of Christ but retaining others like its universality. As incomplete
Christian doctrine, it appealed to tribes outside of the Christian
area who had not been proselytized by Christians, and its growth
amongst those peoples he takes almost as a compliment to Christian
doctrine.
Islam, however,
did not merely convert non-Christians. It also sought widespread
conquest of territories that were Christian for hundreds of years,
including the African homeland of St. Augustine. Belloc lists four
conditions that created the tinder that Islam was to set alight:
there was widespread, heavy debt; taxes were very heavy; a large
proportion of the people were slaves; and law and theology had become
more complex than most people could follow. Adhering to new rulers
could resolve the first three conditions, while the simplicity of
Islamic law and theology addressed the fourth. Even so, Belloc notes
that most people did not convert en masse to Islam, but preferred
to remain Christian and pay a tax to their new conquerors. Their
conquerors, he insists, were welcomed, as the tax they levied was
lower than the burden of excessive taxation that had previously
supported the distant emperor in Constantinople.
This explains
the
wealth of the Islamic state so shortly after conquest: it was
not consumptive of existing wealth, but instead encouraged economic
growth through the removal of excessive taxation from a population
that had been long oppressed. Belloc later notes the tax that was
required of Christians and Jews over the following centuries led
to the eventual near-total abandonment of Christianity in its historic
lands, and the erasure of all but a token few Greek- and Latin-derived
names, like Tripoli.
Not far from
Tripoli, Ibn Khaldun
noticed the same process as the Islamic conquest occurring when
he wrote in the 14th century:
"It
should be known that at the beginning of a dynasty, taxation yields
a large revenue from small assessments. At the end of the dynasty,
taxation yields a small revenue from large assessments… Royal
authority with its tyranny and sedentary culture that stimulates
sophistication, make their appearance. The people of the dynasty
then acquire qualities of character related to cleverness. Their
customs and needs become more varied because of the prosperity
and luxury in which they are immersed. As a result, the individual
imposts and assessments upon the subjects, agricultural labourers,
farmers, and all the other tax payers, increase. Eventually, the
taxes will weigh heavily upon the subjects and overburden them.
Heavy taxes become an obligation and tradition, because the increases
took place gradually, and no one knows specifically who increased
them or levied them."
Khaldun was
concerned with the collapse of his own society as a result of injustice
in taxation; Ronald
Reagan famously quoted Khaldun’s observation on taxation in
support of his own tax cuts. In this regard, Khaldun reflects writers
like Gibbon, Tainter, and several
LRC authors,
who see in the collapse of Rome an allegory for the New Rome.
Belloc explained
in the Servile
State how having the state do more of daily activities would
weaken the population. Indeed, we can see the effect obtain in the
area of Social Security in the United States: because parents’ retirement
income depends on the money extracted from everyone else’s children,
not merely their own, there is a disincentive to have children or
to invest wealth in them; Juurikkala
covers this issue in greater detail. As a result, birthrates
have dropped to near or below replacement levels in black, white
and Asian American households.
Of course,
not all groups are exhibiting low birth rates. The Amish, famously
exempt from Social Security, demonstrate
a rate north of 6 children per woman. Mormons
also demonstrate higher birthrates, although that might drop
with increasing wealth. Outside the US, Islamic birthrates
remain high, but drop as literacy rates rise.
Meanwhile,
the Federal Government arrogates to itself increasing wealth through
taxation, borrowing and spending. All
the debt piled up since the start of the current crisis will
need to be paid through increased taxation on future generations,
or the Rothbardian solution of repudiation.
The great body of its taxpaying citizens will continue to suffer
decrease as its wealth is diverted to DC. This reflects again the
genius of Osama bin Laden, who understood both the history of Islam’s
rise outlined above, and that the costs
of the war on terror would bankrupt the US Government.
Conquest thus
appears easy, without a shot being fired. With taxation high in
the US to support the
largest military budget in the world that Martin
van Creveld demonstrated in 1990 to be obsolete, Islamic
nations could draw off the most productive citizens simply by
maintaining their opposition
to income taxation, leading to economic and thence military
collapse. Alternately, the decreased populations caused by oppressive
states’ taxation can allow outside groups to simply walk in, unopposed,
to practically homestead new territory in the best libertarian fashion.
Through either route, when reflecting on the oppressions of the
Federal State, recall that this, too, shall pass.
February
14, 2009
Thomas M.
Schmidt [send him mail],
a native of Brooklyn, recalls
Vox Day’s warning that a fence designed to keep immigrants
out can easily be turned into a fence to keep "taxpayers"
in.
Copyright
© 2009 LewRockwell.com
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