Leftism:
From de Sade and Marx to Hitler and Marcuse, by Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn
(EvKL)
EvKL offers an examination of three thinkers (well, two
thinkers and one movement) that continued and accelerated the move toward
radical thought during the nineteenth century, Pierre Joseph Proudhon, Karl
Marx, and the Fabian Society. Following
is a brief examination of each.
Pierre Joseph
Proudhon
Proudhon was certainly an enemy of the omnipotent state, but
he was an enemy of many other ideas and realities: some for the good, some not
so much.
First, for the good: he certainly made an enemy of Karl
Marx. While both had similar ends in
mind – the withering away of the state, the end of a concentration of wealth,
etc. – they had different means. For
Proudhon the means was to be through evolutionary change, where the proper end
was discovered. For Marx it was the
other way – we saw this way in Lenin and Stalin.
Now for the not so much: Proudhon, while not collectivist
was a socialist favoring distribution of income – a mutualist.
He was strongly opposed to economic
liberalism because he feared bigness, the concentration of wealth, mammoth
enterprises, yet he was equally an enemy of the omnipotent centralized state
which figures as the keystone in all leftist thinking.
His ideas were bound to come into conflict with the later
socialist ideas of dictatorial and centralizing power.
While EvKL believes that had Proudhon’s methods prevailed,
the West might have coped with socialism better, I am not so sure. Ultimately socialism destroys: destroys
wealth, destroys community, destroys culture, destroys property, destroys
tradition. No society can survive this.
Karl Marx
[Marx] wrote a dissertation on
Epicurus, whose philosophy has a decidedly materialistic flavor, for the
University of Jena which gave him a Ph.D. In Berlin young Marx became strongly
influenced by Hegel and his school.
Epicureanism offers gods, but gods that do not in any way
concern themselves with the goings-on of this world. What good are irrelevant gods? Yes, I guess that is the point.
…one does not find any
preoccupation with ethics in Marx's thinking or writing.
If the gods don’t care, why would Marx? Better yet, if Marx can find gods who do not
care, all the better.
Morality, Feuerbach insisted, will
never be sustained by religion, but only by an
improvement in living conditions-in other words, by "social betterment."
This of course is a notion which not only became typically Marxist but which is
shared by the American moderate left, if not by American folklore.
Who is this Feuerbach?
Ludwig Andreas von Feuerbach (28
July 1804 – 13 September 1872) was a German philosopher and anthropologist best
known for his book The Essence of
Christianity, which provided a critique of Christianity which strongly
influenced generations of later thinkers, including Karl Marx, Friedrich
Engels, Richard Wagner, and Friedrich Nietzsche.
An associate of Left Hegelian
circles, Feuerbach advocated liberalism, atheism, and materialism. Many of his
philosophical writings offered a critical analysis of religion. His thought was
influential in the development of historical materialism, where he is often
recognized as a bridge between Hegel and Marx.
Advocating “liberalism, atheism, and materialism.” Sounds like a full-on anthem of many
left-libertarians. Returning to EvKL:
After all, the great consolation to
so many in this valley of tears is the childlike belief in the automatic
character of progress. Here we find the fulfillment of Dostoyevski's prophecy
(through the mouth of his "Grand Inquisitor" in The Brothers Karamazov) that the time shall come in which science
and the sages will proclaim the nonexistence of criminals and sinners – there
are only hungry people.
Progress without God leads to hell.
His financial support came mainly
from Engels, whose Calvinist-Pietist family had "paid him out," and
from the New York Tribune. Without
the dollars and the marks of capitalism, there probably would have been no
Socialist and Communist movements.
EvKL doesn’t offer a further clue about this connection to
the New York Tribune, but it seems clear that this was during the time when Horace Greeley was
publisher:
Greeley sponsored a host of
reforms, including pacifism and feminism and especially the ideal of the
hard-working free laborer. Greeley demanded reforms to make all citizens free
and equal. He envisioned virtuous citizens who would eradicate corruption. He
talked endlessly about progress, improvement, and freedom, while calling for
harmony between labor and capital. Greeley's
editorials promoted social democratic reforms, and were widely reprinted. …In
1852-62, the paper retained Karl Marx as its London-based European
correspondent. Friedrich Engels also submitted articles under Marx's by-line.
I could add emphasis to each line in the above, but you get
the idea. As God has been fully stamped
out of the west by this time, any and all philosophies hold equal weight. Returning to EvKL:
Marx also extolled the bourgeoisie
for its anti-feudal, anti-aristocratic trend toward centralization by promotion
of "one nation, one government, one law, one national class interest, one
customs area." He raves about all these achievements.
Maybe Marx was working for the universalist libertarian law? No, I don’t think so. But when someone shouts “Universalists of the
world unite!” which side do you think will win control of government? I know where I will place my money.
Finally, Marxist salvation:
…there is in Marxism a curious
eschatological vision, consciously-subconsciously copied from Christianity, an
ecstatic waiting for the Second Coming of the Pan-Proletarian Christ…
The Fabians
George Bernard Shaw, Sidney and
Beatrice Webb (later Lord and Lady Passfield), and William Morris belonged to
it. By 1887 the "Fabian Society" ("Society of the Fabians")
had a definite profile. …the society adopted a manner of investigating and
promoting Socialist ideas entirely at variance with Continental dogmatism and
very much in keeping with the trend toward understatement, compromise, and
halfway measures so characteristic of the English
One of the fruits of the most liberal age in Britain. While rejecting orthodox Marxism, they were enthusiastic
about the nationalization of the means of production. A distinction without much difference, I
know.
Fabians…supplied socialism in
Eastern Europe with ample intellectual ammunition. One of the Fabians, J. A.
Hobson, together with G. D. H. Cole, an initiator of "Guild
Socialism," was the author of Imperialism,
published in 1902. This book inspired Lenin to write his pamphlet Imperialism as the Last Stage of Capitalism
which came out in I9I5.
Conclusion
Lenin? Do all leftist
roads lead to the same place?
BM: "Do all leftist roads lead to the same place?"
ReplyDeletePerhaps your question isn't broad enough. Shouldn't it be "Do all totalitarian (or to be redundant, collectivist) roads lead to the same place?" The answer is yes. They all lead to the enrichment of the few by the many, sometimes voluntarily, usually by force.
The only difference is whether or not the dictator is benevolent or malignant. If malignant, then the people suffer. If benevolent, then the people prosper.
Benevolent: people are allowed to keep what they possess / earn. People are permitted to speak and believe as they wish so long as the peace is kept.
Malignant: people are resources to be plundered. People are ignorant, unwashed masses that must be "guided".
It really is as simple as that. Anyone who says differently is selling something.
The only difference between Fabians and Leninists was the means to employ. The goal was the same. The Fabian Society was named after Fabianus a Roman consul/general that favored a slow war of attrition over sieges and aggressive attacks. The Fabians are content to slowly march toward Communism without the chaos of a revolution.
ReplyDeleteOne of the most regrettable things about the Enlightenment was the move toward atheism. The more I learn about the prominent scholars the less I like in terms of religion. They all rejected it while keeping some kind of faith in a benevolent movement of history towards good. It was taken from Christianity but hollowed out. For some reason this happened with many of the Pietist branches. Once the Pietist groups became secular they didn't lose their fervor to change people or "improve" the world. They just didn't believe in the Biblical god but the Epicurean gods, who are irrelevant.
"One of the most regrettable things about the Enlightenment was the move toward atheism."
DeleteA rational analysis should be enough to convince reasonable athiests that this loss of Christianity also cost them their liberty - liberty here on earth. But most believe otherwise.
"Lenin? Do all leftist roads lead to the same place? "
ReplyDeleteIt's called the 'Botfly Effect,' which I've just sardonically invented, and it describes the recognition that no matter how many different forms leftism takes in the beginning (Fabian Socialism, compassionate capitalism, voluntary socialism, democratic socialism, etc.), it always ends in brutal dictatorship, poverty, starvation, and masses of untimely deaths.
It's called the 'Botfly Effect' because a botfly's larva can get under your skin by the means of many different parasites. It's also kind of the reverse of the Butterfly Effect, which basically states that small changes can create uncertainty.