The Anarchist’s Diet
by William Green
It came to
me like a revelation on my morning commute: Bread is a tool
of the state. It sounds crazy, I know, but it is clear, and
in the weeks since then, the "staff of life," the very
symbol of food itself, has become to me a symbol of the domestication
of humankind. It has also suggested one more way I can work
to strengthen the individual and weaken the state.
I had recently
read The
Primal Blueprint by Mark Sisson and was eliminating
grain from my diet. According to Sisson, grains are a recent addition
to the human diet that we are not well adapted to and cause many
health problems, including obesity and diabetes. He claims that
by adjusting our diets
and lifestyles to fit our biological make-up, we can regain some
of the health and vitality that our primal ancestors had. I had
begun to adjust my diet to consist of mostly meats, nuts, eggs,
fruits, and vegetables, and I lost weight, gained muscle tone and
strength, and felt better than I had in a long time (for example,
my previous IBS symptoms had all but disappeared).
So I suppose
I was primed for an anti-bread revelation as I was listening to
Jared Diamond’s book, Guns,
Germs, and Steel. Diamond was following the history of human
societies across the globe through time, in an effort to explain
the reasons for Eurasian technological superiority. His thesis was
that geographical differences in domesticability of local plants
and animals can explain the pattern of technological developments,
at least in prehistory. Agriculture was the key: Those societies
that developed agriculture were able to produce surplus food, free
up time to experiment with new technologies, develop a class of
people that could live off food produced by others, and sustain
standing armies of professional soldiers. In short, agricultural
societies could develop states.
As I was listening
to Diamond’s book, the phrase that sprung into my mind was actually
bread and circuses: that infamous trick of ancient Roman
pols whereby they kept the populus fat dumb and happy by providing
tax-funded feasts and circuses for their enjoyment. In general,
grain provides copious amounts of cheap (and empty) calories, perfect
for raising slaves (or cattle), and perfect for keeping the
sheep happy, though it comes at their own expense.
Diamond’s model
fits well with that of sociologist Franz Oppenheimer who, in one
powerful chapter, demonstrated how states have arisen time after
time through a single mechanism: conquest. First, one group
of people, usually nomads/herdsmen, raids, murders, pillages, conquers,
rapes, and/or enslaves another, usually sedentary and agricultural.
Later, the conqueror realizes that "a murdered peasant can
no longer plow," and lets his victims live so he can periodically
return to take what they have produced. This gradually evolves
into a full-fledged state, where a political class lives off taxes
appropriated from the productive class.
Both Oppenheimer
and Diamond would predict a strong connection between state power
and grain production. Oppenheimer’s model required first herdsman,
people with a mobile and reliable food source, and then farmers,
sedentary people who could produce an even greater food surplus
to produce the state, and according to Diamond all of these things
are correlated historically and geographically. Both models agree
with a disturbing idea: just as agriculture is the domestication
of animals and plants, the state is the domestication of humankind.
The only difference is the "cattle" are not eaten directly...
yet.
So now that
the system of human farming called the state is here, with more
grain-fed power than ever, can we ever be free and wild again? Barring
a solar flare, catastrophic meteor impact, global thermonuclear
holocaust, or supervolcano, we obviously can’t turn back the clock
50,000 years and return to hunting and gathering, even if we wanted
to. And even if we could, the state has arisen many times in many
different places, so most likely it would rise again.
No. We have
to go forward, through the state, to a new kind of anarchy, if at
all, and maybe Sisson’s kind of thinking can help with that. If
we are built for anarchy the way we are built for primal living,
as I believe we are, then maybe anarchists can demonstrate the efficacy
of living according to the non-aggression principle so that people
will take notice, and it will grow in popularity just as the Primal/Paleo
diet is doing. Maybe droves of people will soon start to cast
off statism just as they are casting off grains and sugar. And maybe
we can help cast off the state by casting off grains. After all,
if grains are a tool of the state, just as public education, central
banking, war, and corporatism are tools of the state, then wouldn’t
it help to get rid of grain? Isn’t it true that whatever strengthens
the individual weakens the state? Could the Primal/Paleo diet be
the anarchist and
libertarian diet?
October
3, 2012
Bill Green
[send him mail] teaches chemistry
and biology at a government
school and operates a private
tutoring service. He writes as the Hartford
Libertarian Examiner and at williampgreen.com.
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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