Obsessed by Megalomania
Interview
with Hans-Hermann Hoppe
Recently
by Hans-Hermann Hoppe: Entrepreneurship
With Fiat Property and Fiat Money
The following
interview with Hans-Hermann Hoppe first appeared in the German weekly
Junge Freiheit
on November 2, 2012, and was conducted by Moritz Schwarz. It has
been translated here into English by Robert Groezinger.
Are taxes
nothing but protection money? The state a kind of mafia? Democracy
a fraud? Philosopher Hans-Hermann Hoppe is not only considered
one of the most prominent pioneering intellectuals of the libertarian
movement, but also perhaps the sharpest critic of the Western political
system.
Professor
Hoppe: In your essay collection ‘Der Wettbewerb der Gauner’ (‘The
Competition of Crooks’) you write that ‘99 percent of
citizens, asked if the state was necessary, would answer yes.’ Me
too! Why am I wrong?
Hoppe:
All of us, from childhood, have been moulded by state or state licensed
institutions – preschools, schools, universities. So the result
you quoted is not surprising. However, if I asked you whether you
said yes to an institution having the last word in each conflict,
even in those it is itself involved in, you would certainly say
no – unless you hoped to be in charge of this institution yourself.
Er ... correct.
Hoppe:
Of course, because you know that such an institution cannot only
mediate in conflicts but also cause them, you can recognize that
it can then resolve them to its own advantage. In the face of this
I, for one, would live in fear of my life and property. However,
it is precisely this, the ultimate power of judicial decision-making,
that is the specific characteristic of the institution known
as the state.
Correct,
but on the other hand the state is based on a social contract, which
provides the individual with protection and space for personal fulfilment,
which without the state he would not have – in a struggle of all
against all.
Hoppe:
No, the state is anything but the result of a contract! No one with
even just an ounce of common sense would agree to such a contract.
I have a lot of contracts in my files, but nowhere is there one
like this. The state is the result of aggressive force and subjugation.
It has evolved without contractual foundation, just like a gang
of protection racketeers. And concerning the struggle of all against
all: that is a myth. Of course the racketeer protects his victims
on "his" territory from other racketeers, but only so
he can conduct his own racket more successfully. Moreover: It is
states that are responsible for the deaths of hundreds of millions
of people and immeasurable destruction in the 20th century alone.
Compared to that, the victims of private crimes are almost negligible.
And do you seriously believe that conflicts between the inhabitants
of the tri-border region [of France, Germany and Switzerland] near
Basle, who are living together in a condition of anarchy, are more
numerous than conflicts between the inhabitants of Dortmund and
Düsseldorf, who are citizens of one and the same state [Germany]?
Not that I know of.
Why in your
view is democracy just a "competition of crooks"?
Hoppe:
All highly-developed forms of religion forbid the coveting of someone
else’s property. This prohibition is the foundation of peaceful
cooperation. In a democracy, on the other hand, anyone can covet
anybody else’s property and act according to his desire – the only
precondition being that he can gain access to the corridors of power.
Thus, under democratic conditions, everybody becomes a potential
threat. And during mass elections what tends to happen is that the
members of society who attempt to access the corridors of power
and rise to the highest positions are those who have no moral inhibitions
about misappropriating other people’s property: habitual amoralists
who are particularly talented in forging majorities out of a multitude
of unbridled and mutually exclusive demands.
‘Politicians:
lazy and spongers!’ Aren’t you afraid you might be reproached for
complaining on the level of the ‘Bild’
tabloid newspaper?
Hoppe:
So what? Up until the 20th century there was hardly an important
political thinker who didn’t speak disparagingly about democracy.
The keyword was: mob rule. The populist criticism of democracy,
as can be found in Bild or at the water cooler, is all very
well. But it is not fundamental enough, nor does it go far enough
– to date Bild hasn’t asked me for an interview either. Of
course politicians are spongers: they live off money extorted from
other people with the threat of violence – which is called ‘taxation’.
But unfortunately, politicians are not lazy. It would be
nice if all they did was squander their booty. Instead they are
obsessive megalomaniacal do-gooders, who in addition make life difficult
for their victims with thousands of laws and regulations.
Democracy
is only one possible variety of statehood. Would a different form
of state be more acceptable to you?
Hoppe:
In a monarchist state everyone knows who the ruler is and who the
ruled are, and accordingly there is resistance against any attempt
to increase state power. In a democratic state this distinction
becomes blurred, and it becomes all the easier to expand state power.
Just a moment:
that’s what courts, laws and the constitution are for, to limit
and control the state – government as well as parliament.
Hoppe:
The mafia also has "executive", "legislative"
and "judicial" branches. Just go and watch the movie "The
Godfather" again!
Another
objection: What about the new internet-based detractors of the state,
such as ‘Occupy’ or the ‘Pirates,’ who demand transparency and participation,
without immediately condemning the state and democracy in their
entirety?
Hoppe:
The ‘Occupy’ movement consists of economic ignoramuses who fail
to understand that the banks’ dirty tricks, which they rightly deplore,
are possible only because there is a state-licensed central bank
that acts as a "lender of last resort," and that the current
financial crisis therefore is not a crisis of capitalism but a crisis
of statism. The ‘Pirates’, with their demand for an unconditional
basic income, are well on the way to becoming another ‘free beer
for all’ party. They have a single issue: criticism of ‘intellectual
property rights’ (IP rights), which could make them very popular
– and earn them the enmity in particular of the music, film and
pharmaceutical industries. But even there they are clueless wimps.
They just need to google Stephan Kinsella. Then they’d see that
IP has nothing to do with property, but rather with state privileges.
IP allows the inventor (I) or ‘first maker’ of a product – a text,
picture, song or whatever – to forbid all other people to replicate
this product, or to charge them license fees, even if the replicator
(R) thereby uses his own property only (and does not take away any
of I’s property). This way, I is elevated to the status of co-owner
of R’s property. This shows: IP rights are not property but, on
the contrary, are an attack on property and therefore completely
illegitimate.
In ‘The
Competition of Crooks’ you outline as an alternative the model of
a ‘private law society’. How does it work?
Hoppe:
The basic concept is simple. The idea of a monopolistic property
protector and law keeper is self-contradictory. This monopolist,
whether king or president, will always be an expropriating property
protector and a law breaking law keeper – who will characterize
his actions as being in ‘the public interest’. In order to guarantee
the protection of property and safeguard the law there has to be
free competition in the area of law as well. Other institutions
apart from the state must be allowed to provide property and law
protection services. The state then becomes a normal subject of
private law, on an equal footing with all other people. It can’t
raise taxes any more or unilaterally enact laws. Its employees will
have to finance themselves just the same as everybody else does:
by producing and offering something that freely engaging customers
consider value for money.
Wouldn’t
that quickly lead to a war between these ‘providers’?
Hoppe: War
and aggression are costly. States go to war because they can, via
taxes, pass on the cost to third parties who are not directly involved.
By contrast, for voluntarily financed companies war is economic
suicide. As a private law subject the state too will, like all other
security providers, have to offer its customers contracts that can
only be changed by mutual agreement, and which in particular regulate
what is to be done in the case of a conflict between itself and
its customers, or between itself and the customers of other, competing
security providers. And for that there is only one solution acceptable
to everyone: that in these sorts of conflicts not the state, but
an independent third party decides – arbitrators and judges who
in turn compete with each other, whose most important asset is their
reputation as keepers of the law, and whose actions and judgments
can be challenged and, if need be, revised, just as anyone else’s
can be.
Who should
be such a ‘third party’? And with what instruments of power should
it assert the interests of an individual citizen against his contractual
partner – the private state, which of course is much more powerful?
Hoppe:
In local conflicts, in a village or a small town, these will very
often be universally respected ‘natural aristocrats’. Or else arbitrating
organisations and courts of appeal, which insurers and insured have
contractually agreed on from the start. Whoever then does not abide
by the judgments will not only be defaulting, he will become a pariah
in the world of business. Nobody will want to have anything to do
with him, and he will immediately lose all his customers. This is
no utopian idea. This is already the usual practice in international
– anarchical – business transactions today. And another question
for you: How should the individual citizen assert his interests
in the face of a monopolistic tax-state? It is much more powerful
– and always has the last word!
Do you understand
the continuing scepticism with regard to your proposition?
Hoppe:
Of course, as most people have never heard of this idea, let alone
thought about it seriously. I am only unsympathetic towards those
who yell out at the top of their voices when they hear this idea
and demand the condemnation of its representatives, without having
the least knowledge of economics and political philosophy.
It
is hardly likely that a majority of citizens will ever support such
an unfamiliar model. But what parts of it at least could be adopted,
in order to achieve at least partial improvements of our current
system, without a complete abandonment of state and democracy?
Hoppe:
There is an interim solution. It’s called secession and political
decentralization. Small states must be libertarian, otherwise the
productive people will desert them. Desirable therefore is a world
made up of thousands of Liechtensteins, Singapores and Hong Kongs.
In contrast, a European central government – and even more so a
world government – with a ‘harmonized’ tax and regulation policy,
is the gravest threat to freedom.
For that
too you will probably not find a majority. Therefore how will state
and democracy develop in future? Where will we finally end up?
Hoppe:
The Western ‘welfare state model’, ‘socialism light,’ will collapse
just like ‘classical’ socialism – of course, I can’t say whether
in five, ten or 15 years. The key words are: state bankruptcy, hyperinflation,
currency reform and violent distribution battles. Then it will either
come to a call for a ‘strong man’ or – hopefully – a massive secession
movement.
December
29, 2012
Hans-Hermann
Hoppe [send him mail] is distinguished
fellow at the Ludwig von Mises Institute
and founder and president of the Property
and Freedom Society. His books include Democracy:
The God That Failed
and The
Myth of National Defense.
Visit his website.
Copyright
© 2012 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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