Hardly a day passes without some people-pusher emerging to propose
yet another intrusion upon the liberties of people to control
their own lives. A California legislator has proposed legislation
that would make spanking a child under three years of age a crime,
subject to a $1,000 fine or one year in prison. This measure follows
in the trail of such offerings as prohibitions upon smoking, the
criminalization of parents who allow their children to get sun-burned,
the banning of trans fats in food preparation, the regulation
of eating habits to prevent obesity, penalizing motorists who
express anger while driving, and, well, the pattern is doubtless
already familiar to you. Not to be left out of the collective
mania, the mayor of a Texas town has now proposed making it a
misdemeanor to utter a racial slur.
Such statist programs have elicited the expected responses from
rational minds: they intrude upon matters which, whether one approves
of the targeted actions or not, are best left to the determination
of individuals or families. That these efforts violate the free
speech, liberties, and/or property rights of people – interests
that government officials took an oath to defend but now scurry
to violate in the most detailed manners – is beyond question.
But there is a deeper meaning to these intrusions that is overlooked,
the implications of which portend the continuing collapse of vertically-structured
institutional systems.
It is part of the nature of conscious beings to focus attention
on events that are immediately before us, and to overlook the
more distant consequences of our actions. Frédéric Bastiat addressed
such tendencies in his essay on “what is seen and what is not
seen.” In a lesson long since lost on modern minds, Bastiat informed
his readers of how the immediate benefits of a government program
masked adverse consequences that get lost in the allure of the
moment. Thus, do we now understand how minimum wage laws increase
unemployment, the prohibition of alcohol and drug usage generate
more consumption of the banned substances, and the coercive nature
of American foreign policies have produced the reactions of “terrorist”
groups that the institutional order tries to explain away as nothing
more than hatred of our virtues and lifestyles.
It is becoming increasingly evident from the study of complexity
that what our dualistic minds have learned to separate into mutually
exclusive categories conceals an “interrelatedness” essential
to the well-being of each. Thus does the police system depend
upon criminals, just as lawyers require disputes, the morally
self-righteous need sinners, and orthodontists need overbites.
Such interconnected relationships, I believe, help to explain
the current frenzy to have the state micromanage every conceivable
expression of human behavior.
The institutionally-structured world we have been conditioned
to regard as essential to both our individual and social well-being,
has been in a state of collapse for a number of decades. The unexpected
end of the Soviet Union has been, perhaps, the most dramatic example
of this centrifugation of authority. But the decentralization
of social systems has also found expression in such areas as the
education of children, alternative health care practices, and
the development of technologies that place more decision making
in the hands of individuals. The Internet now threatens the influence
– if not the very existence – of the long-established “mainstream
media.” Broadcast and print journalism – premised upon the top-down
model in which an authoritative few communicate to the rest of
mankind what it is in their interests to have others believe –
now face a horizontal system in which hundreds of millions of
people exchange information over tens of thousands of independent
websites, such as the one you are now reading.
All of this foreshadows what appears to be the breakdown of traditional
social systems that operate on the pyramidal model of the vertical
and bureaucratic direction of mankind. The presumed capacity of
those at the top of the pyramid to gather information imagined
to be otherwise unavailable to ordinary people and to promulgate
policies and practices that would lead to predictable and favorable
results, has been the central article of faith in society. The
premise is virtually synonymous with all forms of political behavior,
but also finds itself generally expressed throughout the business
community, organized religions, and school systems. Its underlying
assumption has never been more clearly expressed than it was by
former Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, who employed it to help
engineer the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of human beings
during the Vietnam War: “Vital decision-making, particularly in
policy matters, must remain at the top. This is partly, though
not completely, what the top is for.”
As institutional authority continues to collapse into decentralized
networks of autonomous individuals, those whose conditioned mindset
is unable to imagine a world functioning without formal direction
and control experience a chilling fear. To such people, social
systems that run themselves without superintendence is not only
disturbing to their ambitions for power, but a form of fanciful
thinking. At what is no doubt an unconscious level, such persons
seek to revivify the dying model by its endless reiteration throughout
the realm of human activity. Such people bear a sad but frightening
resemblance to brain-injured people described by Abraham Maslow
as wanting “to manage to maintain their equilibrium by avoiding
everything unfamiliar and strange and by ordering their restricted
world in such a neat, disciplined, orderly fashion that everything
in the world can be counted upon.”
There is a compulsiveness to such behavior; a faith that the
rote repetition of a familiar pattern will reconfirm its vibrancy.
I have often used the metaphor of a chicken that has just had
its head chopped off: it reflexively flails about in a wild, noisy,
and bloody display, but its fate is sealed. Such, I believe, helps
to explain the reactive mindset of modern people-pushers who see
their world of vertical power-structures being enervated by life
forces over which they are losing control.
Those who wish to criminalize the spanking of children, or the
uttering of racial slurs, or eating the wrong foods, are being
driven by the same energy that now leads the United States into
an obsession with conducting wars. It matters not who the momentary
enemies happen to be: Afghans, Iraqis, Somalians, or Iranians.
As we have seen, war is a way of revitalizing the authority of
the state. The crumbling foundations of vertical power systems
can be shored up temporarily by making people fearful, for
fear restores the herd impulse. I wonder whether previous civilizations
whose collapses were preceded by expansions of the war system,
were playing out the same dynamics one sees in modern America.
But as we have learned so painfully since 9/11, war itself has
become decentralized. American soldiers – whose behaviors and
modes of organization represent the centralized order as much
as did the British “redcoats” during the Revolutionary War – continue
to die at increasing rates at the hands of decentralized Iraqi
“insurgency” forces. The interests of the American political establishment
– both Republican and Democrat – are grounded in the perpetuation
of the dying model, which leads its political voices to continue
advocating centrally-directed solutions grounded in the presumptions
of power. The statists need the problems they seek to overcome
in order to rationalize their appetites for authority over others.
If such “problems” were to disappear, new ones – such as fattening
foods or parents who spank – will have to be fabricated. This
is why Republicans and Democrats continue to read from the same
script: to propose a fundamental change in direction would be
to abandon the state’s vertically-structured model altogether.
President
Bush has proposed sending an additional 20,000 troops to Iraq,
a move grounded in the political assumption that resistance to
state violence can be overcome by increasing the level of violence!
Such an effort can only reinforce the destructive consequences
– to both Iraqis and Americans – of a desperate policy driven
by a desire to reverse the inevitable decentralization of human
society and the dismantling of power structures. As with all political
action, such thinking suffers from the failure to ask the right
questions and, when the answers continue to be self-defeating,
to respond with the same thinking.
Both
President Bush as well as those who want to send parents to prison
for swatting their children’s behinds, are each seeking to reconfirm
the validity of an antiquated system that no longer satisfies
people’s expectations. Such statists are trying to ride the same
dying horse, whose failure to respond, they believe, can only
be overcome by a stronger whip.