Catch
the Libertarianism If You Can
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
There
are some great libertarian themes in "Catch
Me If You Can," the DVD of which was released earlier this
month. Leonardo DiCaprio stars in the more-or-less true story of
Frank Abagnale, Jr., a kid and master of deception who managed to
work as a teacher, a physician, an attorney and prosecutor, and
an airline pilot, all before his 18th birthday.
Frank
sets out on his life of lies after a family tragedy, draws the attention
of the FBI for his financial scams, and eludes agent Carl Hanratty
(played by Tom Hanks) for a very long time. Then he cuts his prison
term short by agreeing to work for the FBI in its financial crimes
division.
Before
we get to the libertarianism implied in the film, there is a downside.
The film is no more or less complicated that those three sentences
above. There are no interesting twists or turns. It is a linear
story, and the plot, sequence of action, and ending are known by
viewers from the outset. It's a fine story for an hour-long show
or perhaps 100 minutes. But to drag this out to 2 hours and 20 minutes
is painful, and excruciatingly so.
There
is no such thing as a captive audience, which Steven Spielberg surely
knows. The problem is that he is the director and producer, and
also owns Dreamworks, which released the film. There must not be
anyone at the studio in a position to tell him that this movie needed
to be cut by half. So, I cannot entirely recommend this movie for
these reasons alone.
That
said, the movie is packed with insights concerning the relationship
of the individual to the state. For starters, Frank's family life
is shattered by the IRS, which begins to hound his father for tax
evasion. There is no indication that his dad did anything other
than attempt to keep the money he made. He was found out, and financially
ruined, the family house, car, and income all taken by the state.
(Throughout the ordeal, Frank's dad issues idle threats to sue the
IRS.) Seeking financial security, Frank's mom then runs off with
Frank's father's boss.
Young
Frank is overcome with shock that his father, once a corporate bigshot
and pillar of the community, is being ground down by the government
into the status of a pauper, that his family that was once so stable
is no more, that he himself, once a privileged child of wealth,
is suddenly thrust into the public-school miasma. Thus begins the
cynicism and the perception that life is all a racket anyway, that
we live in world in which what we think is true turns out to be
a fragile construction. Social and professional standing can be
granted or taken away by arbitrary edicts issued by powerful people.
Being
17 years old, he doesn’t adopt a political ideology but there is
a tacit force at work in his later decisions to deceive the world:
he is setting out to prove that a world so imposed upon by state
edict is something of a hoax and hence easy to trick. He wants to
do the honors as a way of showing that his father was not so much
guilty as unlucky. In this way, he seems to be working to avenge
his father’s humiliation at the hands of the government.
The
life of deception begins in public school. Treated rudely by the
other students on the first day, he decides to affect the manner
of a teacher and rules over the French class as a substitute teacher
for a full week. Next he tries the same trick to become an airline
pilot by merely having the right badge and uniform, then a doctor
by merely forging a diploma, and finally an attorney through forgery
and various distraction tactics. He finances his operations through
check fraud, turning pieces of paper into spendable cash through
elaborate financial trickery.
The
choice of these professions is significant. They are all professions
in which the government exercises an unusual degree of control over
who is in and who is out. To understand the difference between these
professions and others, imagine a person who attempts to fool people
by pretending to be a software designer. Now, if such a fellow designs
great software, who is to say that he really isn’t a software designer?
He has a marketable skill and markets it. If he doesn't design useful
software, he is fired and that is the end of the story. If he lied
in his application, he is a jerk but not a criminal.
In
a free market, what a person is is determined by how well
a person does. But it's different in state-controlled professions.
You can be a great doctor but without the license to practice, you
are guilty of a serious crime. The same is true in aviation and
law. It is not enough to be good at what you do. You must jump through
hoops held by politicians and bureaucrats. The fraud at the heart
of pretending to be a lawyer is not that you are not a good one
but that you have not obeyed the regulations that govern who is
in and who is out. What's more, the film doesn’t encourage us to
be scandalized by Frank's deceptions but rather to admire his ability
to work within and around the system.
The
FBI is after him mainly for his financial crimes. He forges checks
and cashes them, being careful to time his activities in such a
way that he gets the cash before the hoax is revealed. The film
makes no comment on the activities of the Federal Reserve, but when
this institution buys bonds from the government, it is merely creating
the money out of thin air and pumping it into the economy via its
preferred bond dealers. Is what Frank is doing privately really
that much more shocking than what the Fed does as a matter of its
own daily operations? After all, it was a Fed official who only
recently bragged of the institution’s ability to engage in a kind
of alchemy.
Eventually,
of course, Frank is caught, but the story doesn't end there. He
had become so skilled at forgery that his services at spotting the
real from the fake are sought out by the FBI. His prison term is
lessened in exchange for his agreement to work for the state. By
agreeing to help the government, presto, he goes from world-class
criminal to respectable bureaucrat, one who is helping enforce the
law. His shift from jailbird to jailer was officially sanctioned
and hence not considered deception.
The
switch seems to be the mirror image of the same switch in his father,
who went from respectable professional to an impoverished member
of the working class, also at the stroke of a pen. When the state
defines who is rich and who is poor, who is a lawyer and who is
not, who is a criminal and who is a criminal catcher, we enter into
a world driven by the arbitrariness of power, and that power has
real and shocking effects on people's lives: making and breaking
the human will itself.
Spielberg
is a specialist at Americana, and with this film he has captured
the hidden resentment that many feel toward the regimentation of
life that has come with the hegemony of state over society. The
distinctions between real and phony, even between criminal and crime-stopper,
become blurry and fleeting. Frank Abagnale, Jr., was brilliant at
playing a game that the state plays on an ongoing basis.
May
28, 2003
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
Jeffrey
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