The
Boiling Frog Syndrome
Just
recently my father drew my attention to Ric Edelman’s financial
planning website, which has a wealth of information and strategies
on the subject. While exploring the site I ran across what Edelman
called the Boiling Frog Syndrome. He introduced the idea to explain
how the American public has come to accept a certain amount of inflation
as normal, despite the ease of producing sound arguments that inflation
works against our best efforts to plan and build wealth over the
long term. Here is Edelman’s account of the Boiling Frog Syndrome:
"If you throw a frog into a pot of boiling water, he’ll jump out.
But if you place a frog into a pot of lukewarm water and slowly
turn up the heat, it will boil to death. And so it is with inflation.
We’ve grown accustomed to inflation over the past 25 years, but
that doesn’t mean we don’t continue to be hurt by its effect."
In
other words, if people become acclimated to some policy or state
of affairs over a sufficient period of time, they come to accept
the policy or state of affairs as normal. It struck me that we have
on our hands a principle that can be generalized beyond explaining
the acceptance of the slow devaluing of our currency. The Boiling
Frog Syndrome explains how the American public has come to accept
breaches of Constitutional government that would have provoked armed
resistance a hundred years ago. The public has grown accustomed
to these breaches, and to the federal government conducting myriad
activities that are nowhere authorized by the Constitution and accepts
them as normal.
The
principle is one of gradualism, or what might be called piecemeal
social engineering rather than calls for the kinds of revolutions
that led to the Soviet Union and Red China. Most people will instinctively
resist abrupt, revolutionary change. Nor can they really accommodate
it. Large scale revolutions attempting to change all the institutions
of society at once make it impossible for anyone including the revolutionaries to
plan rationally. This is why, with very rare exceptions such as
our own War for American Independence, they tend to leave everything
worse off than it was before.
Anyone
who has studied systems theory grasps what is operating here. Systems
theory (sometimes called cybernetics) is the general science of
organization. It attempts to understand the behavior of complex,
integrated structures involving multiple and often interdependent
components and their responses to both internal and external sources
of potential disruption. System is a very general concept.
What counts as a system can be a cell in an organism’s body or a
business corporation or the U.S. economy and every other kind of
organization in between, including an acting person. A central aspect
of systems theory is to reflect on the primary need of all systems,
which is to maximize stability or equilibrium. Systems of whatever
sort automatically attempt to enhance their own stability or equilibrium
by influencing their environment (everything outside their boundaries).
This may mean coordinated actions with other systems, it may mean
acting directly on some potentially disruptive agent in the environment,
or it may mean adjusting its own internal function so as to minimize
the potential for disruption. In sum: systems, to maintain or enhance
their own stability, must be able to anticipate and prepare for
potential sources of destabilization from outside, where the source
is a disease source or other harmful agent affecting the health
of an organic body or a revolutionary army that threatens to disrupt
a country. And they must be able to deal with sources of potential
disruption from inside, from violent criminals to power-hungry politicians.
Thus
revolutions tend to bring about bloody dictatorships rather than
improved social systems by forcing abrupt change on entire, complex
societies (political arrangements, economic relations, etc., at
multiple levels) and they destabilize everything. Relations that
have formed over generations are suddenly broken apart. Human beings,
like all systems, dislike instability intensely. In practice, they
will turn to the first person who promises to restore stability
to the system, and that person is usually a dictator who clamps
down on the entire society from the center.
But
there are other ways of changing one kind of socioeconomic system
to a fundamentally different kind of system that minimize or localize
abrupt, destabilizing change. Gramscian "revolutionaries"
have learned this lesson well although they do not speak the vocabulary
of systems theory, of course. They have learned to get what they
want by pursuing their goals gradually, one step at a time, through
infiltrating and modifying existing institutions and other systems
rather than overthrowing them and trying to create new ones from
scratch. Clearly, a central-government initiative calling for abolishing
the U.S. Constitution would have provoked an armed upheaval at any
time in U.S. history, and it is at least possible that anything
this abrupt still would. U.S. citizens, that is, would jump out
immediately if thrown into that pot of boiling water. But if the
haters of Constitutional government proceed in small increments,
they eventually gut the Constitution almost unnoticed particularly
if they carry out their initiatives in multiple components of U.S.
society (so-called public schools, the banking system, the major
news media, the legal system, etc.). Moreover, Gramscians have found
that the road to centralization is much easier if "paved with
good intentions," expressed in pseudo-moral language and portrayed
as a source of stability to come. Myriad small disruptions in the
lives of individuals and local communities can be rationalized as
the price to be paid for the utopia just over the horizon. "You
can’t make an omelet," so the saying goes, "without breaking
a few eggs." So systems accommodate and incorporate these small
steps, absorbing the disruptions as best they can and not allowing
them to threaten the system’s overall stability. But when a system
absorbs these small steps instead of repelling them, it incorporates
them into its basic functioning and its transformation to a different
kind of system with entirely different arrangements between its
components has begun. Or in terms of the Boiling Frog Syndrome,
the frog is in the pot, and the temperature of the water has begun,
very slowly, to rise.
Among
the earliest steps toward the transformation of the U.S. from Constitutional
republic to politically correct police state seem to have occurred
with federal intrusions into education prior to the War for Southern
Independence. These, of course, were very minor by today’s standards,
but met with skepticism even then because of the lack of any mention
of a federal role in education in the Constitution. (And speaking
of the War for Southern Independence, it seems useful to observe,
somewhere along the line, that there is room in systems theory for
understanding how systems may split apart, disintegrate or dissolve,
when facing uncontrollable internal or external sources of disruption.
Lincoln’s war alone, it is now clear, changed the character of the
American system in fundamental ways.) However, the water in the
pot was still relatively cool and comfortable overall in comparison
to what was to come, of course. Those who wanted power would turn
up the heat very slowly, and their actions conform quite well to
the idea that one can modify systems very gradually and change them
into entirely different systems simply by acclimating their components
(the American public) each step along the way. Those who wanted
centralization would begin agitating for a central bank, for example,
even though the Framers had warned against central banks. The power-hungry
would begin agitating for more U.S. involvement overseas, despite
George Washington’s wise admonition that we avoid "foreign
entanglements" in which we have no legitimate stake. The power-hungry
would start calling for more federal interventions in the economy
generally, usually promising enormous payoffs. Since someone would
have the pay the bureaucrats entrusted to administer the intervening,
we soon saw a call for a progressive income tax something that would
have provoked an armed revolt had it occurred during the generation
following the country’s founding. (A far lesser tax provoked the
"whiskey rebellion" of the early 1790s, after all!)
The
temperature of the water was slowly rising, and while the frog’s
brows may have risen somewhat, he was not sufficiently alarmed to
jump out of the pot. We soon had the Federal Reserve and the Internal
Revenue Service and found ourselves smack in the middle of the first
World War. All of this was before 1920. The American system was
slowly being transformed, its components incorporating rather than
repelling the changes. The temperature of the water was rising,
and would rise still more during the Roosevelt era, as federal expansion
occurred always in relatively small steps instead of all at once.
The American system continued to incorporate the changes, and few
members of the public sensed that anything was amiss (indeed, courtesy
of "public schools," most were "learning" to
welcome the transformation in progress).
Following
the Roosevelt Era which gave us the Social Security system and so
much more came the Civil Rights Era, which began essentially with
the Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kan. Supreme Court
decision. This decision was based for the first time not on the
Constitution or any legal precedent whatsoever but what has since
been shown to be a poorly controlled sociology experiment. With
that decision, the temperature of the water in the pot went up perhaps
ten degrees. With the coming of affirmative action programs and
radical feminist activism, it went up perhaps ten degrees more.
There was unrest, but not organized resistance; the system absorbed
and incorporated the changes. Assisting the changes were slowly
escalating rates of taxation. More Americans were working longer
and harder in order to feed the increasingly bloated Uncle Sam.
As taxes climbed, one breadwinner per family of four slowly became
a thing of the past; women were forced into the work force whether
they wanted to be there or not. All these things became accepted,
incorporated into the mainstream. The water had begun to get uncomfortably
warm, but the frog stayed in the pot.
Since
then, we have seen the so-called "war on drugs." We have
seen the Ruby Ridge massacre and the Waco holocaust, among myriad
other evidence of federal wrongdoing. We have seen foreign interventions
that have succeeded only in harming the general population (e.g.,
Iraq) or destabilizing regions (e.g., the Balkans). From January
1993-January 2001 we saw in action the most corrupt presidential
regime ever, alongside the rise of public apathy in which people,
like frogs in pots of warming water, were largely contented because
they found all the new technology fascinating and perceived the
economy to be doing well. The adoption of an entire philosophy by
a society helps enhance a sense of stability in the mainstream,
even if the philosophy is a calculating, hard-line materialism.
So
where are we now? The water in the pot has gotten pretty hot. It
has probably begun to steam. The frog that would have jumped out
long ago, had he been thrown in abruptly, is still accommodating
these slow increases in temperature. Will our frog eventually awaken
in alarm to the truth of his situation, that if he stays in the
water he’s about to be cooked alive, or will he remain in a state
of warm contentment until it is too late? The Boiling Frog Syndrome,
I submit, is more than simply a warning about the true nature of
inflation and its effects on long-term financial planning (although
it serves its purpose there quite well). It is a general warning
about the times we live in today, and we had better start paying
attention.
We
who write for LewRockwell.com and other (more or less) underground
publications bemoan this society’s abandonment of Constitutional
principles, and are all-too-aware that we are a minority. Even mainstream
so-called conservatives of the National Review stripe hate our guts.
They would ignore us completely if they could. (Never mind what
the extreme leftists think!) None of this changes the fact
that we now live in a vastly different political system from the
one the Framers created; it has been transformed very slowly, with
the potential disruptions minimized and then incorporated, changing
the basic function of the system. As with inflation in Ric Edelman’s
account, we have been are being harmed by these changes no matter
how slowly and gradually they have been brought about, no matter
how much acceptance they have won, or comfortable the masses are.
Over the past 140 years, we have gone very slowly from being a mostly
free people to a mostly enslaved people with the primary source
of slavery being the tax system. We continue to speak the language
of freedom. But to paraphrase Goethe, no one is so completely enslaved
as the person who thinks he is free. Some of us write passionately
on behalf of the secession stirrings occurring in various places
around the country, but by and large the public seems content with
the status quo and doesn’t sense any danger. While there have been
plenty of warning signs, all more or less independent of one another,
so far, there have been no catalysts, no major sources of disruption
that can be obviously blamed on the purveyors of centralization,
and which could therefore capture the attention of the critical
mass of people necessary to propel a successful secession movement.
Something more than what we have seen so far is going to be necessary
to awaken this critical mass.
Let
us hope that what finally awakens the American public is not the
boiling of the water with all of us still in the pot!!
August
11, 2001
Steven
Yates [send him mail]
has a Ph.D. in Philosophy and is the author of Civil
Wrongs: What Went Wrong With Affirmative Action (ICS Press,
1994). He is a professional writer at work on a number of projects
including a work of political philosophy, The Paradox of Liberty.
He also writes for the Edgefield
Journal, and is available for lectures. He has started writing
a novel and also set up a small freelance writing business, Millennium
3 Communications, in the hope that one or the other will eventually
lead to an escape from underemployment. He lives in Columbia, South
Carolina.
Copyright
© 2001 LewRockwell.com
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Yates Archives
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