The Politics of Obedience: The Discourse of Voluntary
Servitude
By Étienne de La Boétie
Resolve to serve no more, and you
are at once freed.
Étienne de La Boétie was born in France in 1530 to an
aristocratic family. The date is
uncertain, but it is believed he wrote this discourse at the age of 22 or
23. He died when he was only 32 years
old.
In this discourse, La Boétie gets to the heart of the issue
regarding tyrants and tyranny: why do people submit to the tyrant? Or as
Rothbard says in the introduction, “why in the world do people consent to their
own enslavement?”
La Boétie cuts to the heart of what
is, or rather should be, the central problem of political philosophy: the
mystery of civil obedience. Why do
people, in all times and place, obey the commands of the government, which
always constitutes a small minority of the society? To La Boétie the spectacle of general
consent to despotism is puzzling and appalling.
Rothbard has neatly summed up the question being addressed
by La Boétie. La Boétie himself poses
the question as follows:
…I should merely like to understand
how it happens that so many men, so many villages, so many cities, so many
nations, sometimes suffer under a single tyrant who has no other power other
than the power they give him.
It is a curious question, especially considering that there
are countless more servants than there are served. Numbers alone cannot explain this submission:
If two, if three, if four, do not
defend themselves from the one, we might call that circumstance surprising but
nevertheless conceivable…. But if a
hundred, if a thousand endure the caprice of a single man, should we not say
they lack not the courage but the desire to rise against him, and that such an
attitude indicates indifference rather than cowardice?
Could it be that the large numbers explain the
submission? To protest when the
overwhelming majority of people are compliant is the act of true courage. It is here that La Boétie begins to explore
why it is that the majority submits to the minority – or even the one:
Let us therefore understand by
logic, if we can, how it happens that this obstinate willingness to submit has
become so deeply rooted in a nation that the very love of liberty seems no
longer natural…what evil chance has so denatured man that he, the only creature
really born to be free, lacks the memory of his original condition and the
desire to return to it.
In connection with this, let us
imagine some newborn individuals, neither acquainted with slavery nor desirous
of liberty, ignorant indeed of the very words.
If they were permitted to choose between being slaves and free men, to
which would they give their vote?
La Boétie rightly concludes that the newborns would choose
liberty – and liberty as properly understood, not the liberty of
state-worshipping songs and pledges, but the liberty grounded on a real understanding
and acceptance of property rights and the non-aggression principle.
It suggests the complete depravity of man that he today considers
his life as one lived in a state of liberty.
What kind of liberty is this?
Half of his work is confiscated by the state. The most fundamental commodity useful for
trade and division of labor is monopolized and then abused by the state. Every aspect of life is controlled by rules
and regulations promoted and enforced by the state. To acquire food, one must pay a tax. To acquire and hold property, one must pay a
tax. Now, to NOT acquire medical
insurance, one must pay a tax. After all
of this, when he dies, half of what he has managed to save is confiscated by
the state.
Yet many today count this as liberty. I think La Boétie uses the example of the
newborn to demonstrate that for one to truly answer this question one must be
free of the biased and false definitions of the term liberty. The true meaning of this term is virtually
unknown to a person raised under the current tyranny.
La Boétie then suggests the one possible exception of those,
previously free, willingly submitting to tyrannical rule:
The only possible exception might
be the Israelites who, without any compulsion or need, appointed a tyrant. I can never read their history without
becoming angered and even inhumane enough to find satisfaction in the many
evils that befell them on this account.
Here La Boétie is referring to 1 Samuel 8. The passage itself is worth a read, as God
warns the Israelites of the abuses awaiting them under a king, including a 10%
tax on all one produces. Ten Percent.
La Boétie believes that man willingly lives under this
tyranny because it is all he knows. The
first generation may fight it and hate it, but shortly subsequent generations
come to live under it as the only system they know.
...men born under the yoke and then
nourished and reared in slavery are content, without further effort, to live in
their native circumstance, unaware of any other state or right….the essential
reason why men take orders willingly is that they are born serfs and are reared
as such.
This certainly has truth to it, however it should be noted
that schooling, controlled and funded by the state, plays a significant role in
keeping the masses content with their lot in life.
La Boétie then observes that the very nature of the state
under tyranny will attract those with the worst nature – those that are the
worst choices for placing in such positions of power:
…whenever a ruler makes himself a
dictator, all the wicked dregs of the nation…those who are corrupted by burning
ambition or extraordinary avarice, these gather around him and support him in
order to have a share in the booty and to constitute themselves petty chiefs
under the big tyrant….they act as if their wealth really belonged to them, and
forget that it is they themselves who give the ruler the power to deprive
everybody of everything….
Individuals with well-centered ethics do not choose to lord
over others, telling them what to do, forcing them to comply under threat of punishment
up to and including death. One of the
worst characteristics of state power is that it attracts to it human beings of
the worst character.
La Boétie ends with what is almost a prayer or a plea, a
wish I am sure held by many who understand the true nature of the evil that is the
coercion unto submission under the tyrannical state:
There is nothing so contrary to a
generous and loving God as tyranny – I believe He has reserved, in a separate
spot in Hell, some very special punishment for tyrants and their accomplices.
La Boétie makes the case that the power of all tyrants comes
from the consent of the governed. Withdraw
the consent, and the tyrant will be toppled.
What to do with all of this?
La Boétie must be commended for these observations – observations made
almost 500 years ago. In a few short
pages he has laid bare the truth that the ruled far outnumber the rulers, and
that this truth offers some hope, a way through.
La Boétie identifies one problem in achieving a positive
change – there is a remnant, but they do not and cannot know each other – they
are too few in a land of the masses educated and trained to live in the service
of their masters.
…however numerous they may be, they
are not known to one another.
The internet today has certainly changed this dynamic, and
to a large extent Ron Paul has been the catalyst for the remnant to find each
other.
In the introduction, Rothbard outlines his views on the best
strategy to achieve positive results based on the observations made by La
Boétie:
…the primary task of opponents of
modern tyranny is an educational one: to awaken the public to this process, to
demystify and desanctify the State apparatus….[it] is not simply one of
educating the public about the “errors” committed by the government….We have to
realize that we are facing a mighty engine of power and economic exploitation,
and therefore that, at the very least, libertarian education of the public must
include an exposé of this exploitation, and of the economic interests and
intellectual apologists who benefit from State rule.
This is the task. It
is a task being accomplished by many, including Ron Paul, Lew Rockwell and the
Mises Institute, Gary North, and many others.
Rothbard ends with a note of real optimism:
…should State despotism ever be
removed, it would be extremely difficult to reimpose statism. The bulwark of habit would be gone, and
statism would be seen by all for the tyranny that it is. If a free society were ever to be
established, then, the chances for its maintaining itself would be excellent.
From Murray’s lips to God’s ears. If we live to see this day, may we never
again make the mistake the Israelites made.
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