In Oakland,
California, where I live, the Occupiers have been struggling to
keep their ground on Ogawa Plaza, a piece of public property in
front of City Hall. On the night of Tuesday, October 25, I saw from
my apartment, miles northeast of the action, dozens of police cars
zoom in from a neighboring jurisdiction. I looked at an online police
scanner where the Oakland police department described the situation
as a riot and requested a multi-county tactical response. Hundreds
of police, donning intimidating riot gear, swept in to confront
the crowd on the streets. There was no riot, however, as almost
all the protesters were peaceful, the only ones acting out with
petty violence being loudly chastised by the crowd. The most belligerent
participants by far were law enforcers, who responded to thrown
bottles and civil disobedience with tear
gas and rubber bullets. One man, Scott Olsen, was hit with one
of the police’s projectiles, his skull fractured. Thankfully, he
is now reportedly in fair condition. You can tell from the videos
that the police were not exactly using restraint with these weapons.
They even threw percussion grenades at the protesters who came to
Olsen’s aid. What began as a typical overbearing government response
to protesters in the name of public health now offers a peak into
the full threat to liberty that we face in modern America.
When it comes
to the rights of the protesters vs. the police, we have to side
with the protesters. Some of the particulars were different in his
time, but we should remember that Murray
Rothbard argued that the occupiers of People’s Park in Berkeley
were in the right and the police who beat, gassed, arrested and
injured them entirely in the wrong.
Beyond this
human rights issue, how freedom lovers should regard the Occupy
movement, now alive in over a hundred towns and cities worldwide,
depends largely upon whether we see it as a radical rebellion against
the establishment or an uprising on behalf of more statism. But
there’s also another consideration: whether there exists an opportunity
to reach out to the disaffected and explain to them why only true
liberty will remedy the grave economic and social problems some
of them at least partly diagnose correctly.
Insofar as
this movement is an arm of the left-liberal establishment, there
are reasons to worry. There appears to be an Astroturf element in
play, and as the movement grows, the risk of it being co-opted by
the administration and the institutional center-left increases.
At the same time we must cautiously note that, as with most leftish
groups, the more radically opposed to the status quo someone is,
the more likely he is to oppose private property and to wish to
revolutionize society in many of the worst possible ways.
Yet there is
also a libertarian contingent in these protests that cannot be denied.
Like the Tea Parties, the Occupy movement comprises a hodgepodge
of voices, some of which are aimlessly calling for change, some
with good rhetoric but not so good an agenda, some who simply favor
one faction of the bipartisan American state, and some who would
replace current policy with something much worse. The folks in both
camps who rail against corruption but oppose key pillars of the
free society have no better a vision than Obama or Bush. Occupiers
who wish to expropriate the entrepreneurial class, nationalize the
economy, and abolish private property are flirting with totalitarian
ideals, just as Tea Partiers who reject civil liberties, demonize
Muslims, and cry for war with Iran are embracing the very worst
components of modern American governance, and are in fact calling
for a program even worse than the current president’s.
But many like
millions of other Americans are simply frustrated with the undeniable
corruption running through the state-corporate nexus. Seeing this
common ground, some conservatives have defended the Occupiers, just
as Noam Chomsky has humanized the Tea Partiers as "people with
real grievances." And surely there is a lot to be angry about.
Like some of the disenchanted Tea Party types, the Occupiers include
many who have played by the rules and work hard to scrape by in
a system that seems gratuitously rigged in favor of corporate fat
cats, which of course it is. A faction of the Occupiers have been
waving End the Fed signs, as they among the crowd understand that
the government’s money monopoly – anathema to Austro-libertarians,
Old Right conservatives, and Tuckerite anarchists alike – has created
a crooked system that gradually seizes money from the poor and middle
class and funnels it to the banking establishment, government contractors,
and the military-industrial complex. And beyond this, nearly the
whole economy is dominated by the corporate state.
Intellectual
property and licensure have turned much of the telecommunications
industry into a fascist arm of the government. The agricultural
sector is so distorted by the USDA and subsidies so as to present
a threat to the health and liberty of all Americans and many foreigners.
American health care is plagued by patents, the FDA, Medicare, and
other national programs that tip the scales in favor of Big Pharma,
the medical cartels, and the insurance companies. Clearly, the ubiquity
of corporate influence, if it could emerge in a free market setting,
did not do so in our world. Even the welfare state and federal education
programs often benefit the rich and connected as much as they help
the poor.
But how many
of the Occupiers see this? When establishment hacks like Paul Krugman
and Robert Reich cozy up to the protesters, many of whom take them
with open arms, we know something is wrong, because the very New
Deal-Great Society style of governance that has ruled America for
four generations is exactly what is responsible for the very disease
the Occupiers wish to cure.
The modal Occupier
appears to be some kind of social democrat who can easily be used
as a pawn for Obama’s left-corporatist schemes like job plans and
infrastructure Keynesianism. The Occupy Wall Street Demands Working
Group unanimously approved a horrible "Jobs for All" proposal,
reportedly angering anarchists and others who see it as an obvious
call for Obama-style liberal corporatism. As for the more radical
and yet more clueless camp, I previously wrote
about one list of socialistic demands and was criticized on
the Web for tarring all Occupiers with the same brush, although
I didn’t really intend to, but it really does seem that insofar
as the Occupiers are calling for anything, it is channeled into
a statist demand. I still stand by my concern that this movement,
at least on its current trajectory, will ultimately serve as pressure
from below to enhance the ruling class’s power.
The same day
the liberal Democratic Oakland government brutally cracked down
on the Occupiers, President Obama held a posh fundraising event
in nearby San Francisco. This speaks to an immutable political reality
the Occupiers need to understand: the president probably loves the
demonstrations to the extent that they serve as pressure for his
jobs, student loan, and stimulus programs, but in any altercation
between the protesters and the police state, the president of course
represents the side of power – not just represents it, but serves
as its chief executor and figurehead.
The Obama administration
and domestic liberal government are the police state. The
same police power involved in tear-gassing and critically injuring
dissidents is used to implement national health care. The same statist
force behind war and the corruption on Wall Street is behind taxation
and liberal social democracy. It is also this force that has extracted
the nation’s wealth for the benefit of a few, so that now the Washington,
DC, area is the richest in the country. Mao was right: All political
power flows from the barrel of a gun. To ask for the state to tax
anyone more or regiment society in any way is to give another tool
to the true power elite to punish enemies, give advantage to the
politically connected, and threaten those who don’t go along with
the central plan with imprisonment and state violence.
Entrepreneurs,
taxpayers, and everyday Americans should see one another as being
on the same side, with big government, the fascist financial system,
the empire, and corporate state being on the other, and as long
as the establishment divides us against each other, liberty will
be lost and Obama’s cronies will laugh all the way to the bank.
I’ve been nuanced
on the Occupiers and I’ve been asked to take sides. I think it’s
time for the Occupiers to take sides: Do you oppose police brutality?
Do you oppose state capitalism? If so, you must oppose the government
power that makes them both possible. Reject any and all calls for
more government for any reason, and instead only focus on reducing
and abolishing the state’s control.
Divorcing the
ruling class from state power, using political power to equalize
the economy, is the most fanciful aspiration humans have ever considered.
Lord Acton was right that no class is fit to govern. It is why when
the disenfranchised grab the reins of the state, they almost always
become as despotic as those they have supplanted. Instead, we must
all reject the state and all its works. Government is the iron fist,
and its promises of welfare and universal humanitarianism always
come with nightsticks, tear gas, and rubber bullets, at best. When
the state offers you a hand up or a handout, notice the blood dripping
from its fingers.