The title of this post is taken from chapter 15 of Murray Rothbard’s “For a New Liberty: The Libertarian Manifesto.” Throughout the book, Rothbard has laid out the case for the libertarian solution to the problems of politics and government. In this chapter, he suggests how to get from here to there. He also deals with some of the common objections to the idea of liberty and to the approach taken by some. For these reasons, I found this chapter to be most valuable.
Education: Theory and
Movement
We face the great strategic problem
of all “radical” creeds throughout history: How can we get from here to there,
from our current State-ridden and imperfect world to the great goal of liberty?
On one point there can scarcely be
disagreement: a prime and necessary
condition for libertarian victory (or, indeed, for victory for
any social movement, from Buddhism to vegetarianism) is education: the
persuasion and conversion of large numbers of people to the cause.
Sadly, this point is missed by many. Without education – “the persuasion and
conversion of large numbers of people” – there is no hope ever to see a
movement toward liberty take hold. This
was the benefit of Ron Paul’s two recent presidential campaigns – through his
efforts, countless millions have had the scales lifted from their eyes.
Many individuals and organizations contribute today to this
education. Two of the most prominent are
The Mises Institute and LewRockwell.com.
There are many others that contribute as well: The Daily Bell, Justin Raimondo, Economic Policy Journal, and the Future of Freedom Foundation to name a few. I certainly am
leaving off many. Each one speaks to
people in different ways, yet each makes a valuable contribution to the
education of liberty.
Rothbard deals with one criticism often heard – “we” are
only talking to ourselves:
Furthermore, one often hears
libertarians (as well as members of other social movements) bewail that they
are “only talking to themselves” with their books and journals and conferences;
that few people of the “outside world” are listening.
Keep in mind that Rothbard wrote this book more than two
decades before there was even a semblance of a user-friendly internet – a world
of mimeo-graphs and snail-mail lists. With
the internet, the possibility of reaching out to others has increased
exponentially – and the facts have proven this out. It is still amazing to see this in tangible
results – twenty-four years ago Ron Paul received less than 1% of the vote as
the Libertarian Party candidate for President.
He might draw dozens to an event.
The difference today is like night and day. Yet, the charge is often made today, as if
nothing has changed – as if all the libertarians could fit in a phone booth or
something.
Rothbard finds fault in this charge; he sees value in such
internal dialogue:
But this frequent charge gravely
misconceives the many-sided purpose of “education” in the broadest sense. It is not only necessary to educate others;
continual self-education is also (and equally) necessary….Education of
“ourselves” accomplishes two vital goals. One is the refining and advancing of
the libertarian “theory….” Libertarianism… must be a living theory,
advancing through writing and discussion, and through refuting and combatting errors
as they arise.
This charge is often made – why get into debates about
oftentimes minor issues when all that this does is divide an already small
movement? Rothbard makes clear why this
is helpful. There is continual education
needed amongst even those who have embraced the political ideas of
libertarians.
But there is another critical
reason for “talking to ourselves,” even if that were all the talking that was
going on. And that is reinforcement—the psychologically
necessary knowledge that there are other people of like mind to talk to, argue
with, and generally communicate and interact with….A flourishing movement with a sense of
community and esprit de corps is the best antidote for giving
up liberty as a hopeless or “impractical” cause.
How true this is.
There is a remnant, and to know and be reminded that there are others of
like-mind offers hope and encouragement.
Are We “Utopians”?
This comes up regularly – it has never worked, who will
control the bad guys, you have to believe man is perfect if you advocate this,
etc. Libertarians are utopians.
Every “radical” creed has been
subjected to the charge of being “utopian,” and the libertarian movement is no
exception.
Some libertarians themselves
maintain that we should not frighten people off by being “too radical,” and
that therefore the full libertarian ideology and program should be kept hidden from view.
This is suggested by many as the right approach for
seemingly libertarian-leaning politicians – hide your true feelings, and then
spring it on the government once you are elected. If only Ron Paul wouldn’t say that. Or so-and-so-pseudo-libertarian-candidate is
only talking this way to get elected.
The major problem with the
opportunists is that by confining themselves strictly to gradual and
“practical” programs, programs that stand a good chance of immediate adoption,
they are in grave danger of completely losing sight of the ultimate objective,
the libertarian goal….If libertarians refuse to
hold aloft the banner of the pure principle, of the ultimate goal, who will?
This is why I support taking the approach to aim small. Those
who advocate the non-aggression principle will never come close to hitting the
target if they aren’t aiming for the target.
The free-market economist F. A.
Hayek, himself in no sense an extremist,” has written eloquently of the vital
importance for the success of liberty of holding the pure and “extreme”
ideology aloft as a never-to-be-forgotten creed.
We must make the building of a
free society once more an intellectual adventure, a deed of courage….We need intellectual leaders who are prepared
to resist the blandishments of power and influence and who are willing to work
for an ideal, however small may be the prospects of its early
realization.
How true, and in different ways demonstrated by many of the
organizations and individuals I have cited above.
They must be men who are willing
to stick to principles and to fight for their full realization, however remote…Free trade and freedom of opportunity are
ideals which still may rouse the imaginations of large numbers, but a mere
“reasonable freedom of trade” or a mere “relaxation of controls” is neither
intellectually respectable nor likely to inspire any enthusiasm.
The main lesson which the true liberal must learn from the success of the
socialists is that it was their courage to be Utopian which gained them the
support of the intellectuals and thereby an influence on public opinion which
is daily making possible what only recently seemed utterly remote.
How many times are libertarians blasted with the idea to be
gradual: don’t eliminate all foreign aid, just eliminate it from our enemies;
we should remove US troops from foreign zones where there is no identifiable
strategic interest; let’s eliminate all of the government waste before we worry
about reducing the scope of government; don’t end the Fed, let’s just make sure
that they stick to rules for inflation; we need to devise a fair taxation
scheme, but we cannot just eliminate income taxes. The list is long.
The problem is no one will get excited about these
proposals. They are all versions of what
every politician through time has ever proposed. Newt Gingrich, Dick Armey, and countless
others could be behind many of these statements. These statements fully support the status quo
as these statements accept the terms of the debate. The general policies are philosophically acceptable;
it is only the details or the magnitude that must be tweaked. It continues the desired conversation: policy
debate instead of debate regarding fundamental principles.
There is nothing in this approach that will inspire. There is nothing here to draw people to a
different, all-encompassing world-view.
In short, the libertarian must never advocate or prefer a
gradual, as opposed to an immediate and rapid, approach to his goal. For by doing so, he undercuts the overriding
importance of his own goals and principles. And if
he himself values his own goals so lightly, how highly will others value them?
Brilliant.
Such an “abolitionist” perspective
does not mean, again, that the libertarian has an unrealistic assessment of how
rapidly his goal will, in fact, be achieved. Thus, the libertarian abolitionist of slavery,
William Lloyd Garrison, was not being “unrealistic” when in the 1830s he first
raised the glorious standard of immediate emancipation of the slaves. His goal was the morally proper one, and his
strategic realism came in the fact that he did not expect his goal to be
quickly reached….Garrison himself distinguished: “Urge immediate abolition as earnestly
as we may, it will, alas! be gradual abolition in the end. We have never said that
slavery would be overthrown by a single blow; that it ought to be, we shall
always contend.” Otherwise, as Garrison trenchantly warned,
“Gradualism in theory is perpetuity in practice.”
Unless someone is holding tight to the objective and
regularly speaking forcefully for its implementation – the abolition of slavery
or the abolition of coercion in relationships – no one will ever take the
objective seriously. Why would the
objective be taken seriously if no one cares enough to defend and advocate for it? How can one come close to hitting the target
if he isn’t even aiming for it?
Rothbard then comes to identify the “true utopian” system:
The
true utopian is one who advocates a system that is contrary to the natural law
of human beings and of the real world. A utopian system is one that could not work
even if everyone were persuaded to try to put it into practice. The utopian system could not work, i.e.,
could not sustain itself in operation.
The utopian goal of the left: communism—the abolition of specialization
and the adoption of uniformity—could not work even if
everyone were willing to adopt it immediately. It could not
work because it violates the very nature of man and the world, especially the
uniqueness and individuality of every person, of his abilities and interests,
and because it would mean a drastic decline in the production of wealth, so
much so as to doom the great bulk of the human race to rapid starvation and
extinction.
Is it utopian to recognize that every individual is an
individual, with a desire to acquire and enjoy his possessions (not only
material) in quiet comfort, each individual with different preferences and
values? Is it utopian to understand that
certain men (and the ones most apt to use it abusively), when offered the
possibility of monopoly power, will do whatever is necessary to grab those
reins and then use the power to their own advantage?
Rothbard sees that there are two issues when it comes to the
idea of “utopian” and these must each be identified and dealt with separately:
In short, the term “utopian” in
popular parlance confuses two kinds of obstacles in the path of a program
radically different from the status quo.
One is that it violates the nature of man and
of the world and therefore could not work once it was put into effect. This is the utopianism of communism. The second is the difficulty in convincing
enough people that the program should be adopted. The former is
a bad theory because it violates the nature of man; the latter is simply a
problem of human will, of convincing enough people of the rightness of the
doctrine.
I have already mentioned the work of many who are providing
the latter: education. As to the former:
the communist ideology, for example, like all coercive and controlling
ideologies behind state power, holds to the implicit assumption that such
centralized power can be kept in check. What
is true for communism is equally true for any form of centralized, monopolized,
state power. In other words, equally
true for virtually every state in the world today.
But such power cannot be kept in check. To believe otherwise is quite utopian. It is utopian to believe that man can
fundamentally change the nature of his fellow man. That somehow monopoly power will not attract
those to whom monopoly power is attractive; that once in control, those in
power will keep themselves in check.
The libertarian is also eminently
realistic because he alone understands fully the nature of the State and its
thrust for power. In contrast, it is the seemingly far more realistic
conservative believer in “limited government” who is the truly impractical
utopian. This
conservative keeps repeating the litany that the central government should be
severely limited by a constitution….The idea of a strictly limited
constitutional State was a noble experiment that failed, even under the most favorable and propitious
circumstances….No, it is the conservative laissez- fairist, the
man who puts all the guns and all the decision-making power into the hands of
the central government and then says, “Limit yourself”;
it is he who is truly the impractical utopian.
The difficulty of limited government: the governed and the
governors won’t agree on the definition of “limited.” And as it is the governors to whom monopoly
power is granted, guess who will win that debate?
Rothbard leaves open the possibility for transitional steps,
but only with certain objectives kept at the forefront:
If, then, the libertarian must
advocate the immediate attainment of liberty and abolition of statism, and if
gradualism in theory is contradictory to this overriding end, what further
strategic stance may a libertarian take in today’s world? Must he necessarily confine himself to
advocating immediate abolition? Are “transitional demands,” steps toward
liberty in practice, necessarily illegitimate? No…
How, then, can we know whether any
halfway measure or transitional demand should be hailed as a step forward or
condemned as an opportunistic betrayal?
There are two vitally important criteria for answering this crucial
question: (1) that, whatever the transitional demands,
the ultimate end of liberty be always held aloft as the desired goal; and (2)
that no steps or means ever explicitly or implicitly contradict the ultimate
goal.
Always a reminder of the ultimate objective; only movement toward
the ultimate objective is acceptable.
An example of such counterproductive
and opportunistic strategy may be taken from the tax system. The libertarian looks forward to eventual abolition
of taxes. It is perfectly legitimate for him, as a strategic measure in that
desired direction, to push for a drastic reduction or repeal of the income tax.
But the libertarian must never support
any new tax or tax increase. For
example, he must not, while advocating a large cut in income taxes, also call
for its replacement by a sales or other form of tax.
Again, such arguments only play into the hands of those who
desire to control the dialogue. Instead of
always moving toward the elimination of taxes (as in this example), it turns
into a discussion of which taxes, some are better than others, some are more “efficient”
than others, one should replace another, etc.
Why Liberty Will Win
The case for libertarian optimism
can be made in a series of what might be called concentric circles, beginning
with the broadest and longest-run considerations and moving to the sharpest
focus on short-run trends. In the
broadest and longest-run sense, libertarianism will win
eventually because it and only it is compatible with the nature of ma n and of
the world. Only liberty
can achieve man’s prosperity, fulfillment, and happiness. In short,
libertarianism will win because it is true, because it is the correct policy
for mankind, and truth will eventually out.
I will add that it is not only the only system compatible
with man’s nature and desire for prosperity and happiness. It is also the only system that recognizes
the dark side of man and therefore disallows the concentration of political
power.
But such long-run considerations
may be very long indeed, and waiting many centuries for truth to prevail may be
small consolation for those of us living at any particular moment in history.
Fortunately, there is a shorter-run reason for hope….
Hooray, I hope.
The
clock cannot be turned back to a preindustrial age….We are
stuck with the industrial age, whether we like it or not.
But if that is true, then the cause
of liberty is secured. For economic
science has shown, as we have partially demonstrated in this book, that only freedom and a free market can run an
industrial economy. In
short…in an industrial world it is also a vital necessity. For, as Ludwig von Mises and other economists
have shown, in an industrial economy statism simply does not work.
This is an interesting observation. Drastic interruptions to the free-market can
only occur for a (relatively) short period without risking civilization.
In the twentieth century, Mises
demonstrated (a) that all statist intervention distorts and cripples the market
and leads, if not reversed, to socialism; and (b) that socialism is a disaster
because it cannot plan an industrial economy for lack of profit-and-loss
incentives, and for lack of a genuine price system or property rights in
capital, land, and other means of production.
We do not have to prophesy the
ruinous effects of statism; they are here at every hand.
Significant interruption to the free-market will end up in
destruction. Without relatively free
prices and the discipline of profit-and-loss, resources are wasted. Are we currently passing through the final
convulsions? Is this the root of the
calamity we are seeing – the protests and revolts due to high double-digit
unemployment throughout much of the developed world? The high unemployment brought on by the disruptive
policies of the state?
But now statism has advanced so far
and been in power so long that the cushion is worn thin; as Mises pointed out
as long ago as the 1940s, the “reserve fund” created by laissez- faire has been
“exhausted.”
It is interesting to note: this observation from Mises was
seven decades ago. Yet here we are,
continuing in the convulsions.
Indeed, we can confidently say that
the United States has now entered a permanent crisis situation, and we can even
pinpoint the years of origin of that crisis: 1973–1975. Happily for the cause of liberty, not only has
a crisis of statism arrived in the United States, but it has fortuitously
struck across the board of society, in many different spheres of life at about
the same time.
Rothbard goes on to list the many economic and social
problems of the 1970s.
Rothbard’s observations are almost four decades old, yet the
convulsions continue – still no final collapse.
Perhaps this serves to demonstrate the vast amount of wealth in reserve available
to be destroyed (see here and here). The west had behind it centuries of wealth
(not only or even primarily financial, but cultural and intellectual) – see “From Dawn to Decadence” by Jacques Barzun.
Conclusion
There is no magic formula for
strategy; any strategy for social change, resting as it does on persuasion and
conversion, can only be an art rather than an exact science. But having said this, we are still not bereft
of wisdom in the pursuit of our goals. There can be a fruitful
theory, or at the very least, theoretical discussion, of the proper strategy
for change.
Rothbard does this wonderfully well. Throughout this book and especially in this
chapter he gives much to those who remain open to consider that there can be
success in achieving this “radical creed” of libertarianism.
just read this over at lew rockwell. wonderful essay. thanks for a great piece.
ReplyDeleteBrian
Thank you for the encouraging comment. I am glad you enjoyed it.
DeleteI took so much from Rothbard on this one that the credit must all go to him. My purpose was only to highlight some of the wonderful possibilities he demonstrates in his typically simple-to-understand, straightforward manner.