What
Should Freedom Lovers Do?
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
A version
of this article appeared the Free
Market, May 2004
How can one
combine professional life with the advancement of liberty? Of course
it is presumptuous to offer a definitive answer since all jobs and
careers in the market economy are subject to the forces of the division
of labor. Because a person focuses on one task doesn't mean that
he or she isn't great at many tasks; it means only that the highest
productive gains for everyone come from dividing tasks up among
many people of a wide range of talents.
So it is with
the freedom movement. The more of us there are, the more we do well
to specialize, to cooperate through exchange, to boost our impact
by dividing the labor. There is no way to know in advance what is
right for any person in particular. There are so many wonderful
paths from which to choose (and which I will discuss below). But
this much we can know. The usual answer go into government
is wrongheaded. Too many good minds have been corrupted and
lost by following this fateful course.
If often happens
that an ideological movement will make great strides through education
and organization and cultural influence, only to take the illogical
leap of believing that politics and political influence, which usually
means taking jobs within the bureaucracy, is the next rung on the
ladder to success. This is like trying to fight a fire with matches
and gasoline. This is what happened to the Christian right in the
1980s. They got involved in politics in order to throw off the yoke
of the state. Twenty years later, many of these people are working
in the Department of Education or for the White House, doing the
prep work to amend the Constitution or invade some foreign country.
This is a disastrous waste of intellectual capital.
It is particularly
important that believers in liberty not take this course. Government
work has been the chosen career path of socialists, social reformers,
and Keynesians for at least a century. It is the natural home to
them because their ambition is to control society through government.
It works for them but it does not work for us.
In the first
half of the 20th century, libertarians knew how to oppose statism.
They went into business and journalism. They wrote books. They agitated
within the cultural arena. They developed fortunes to help fund
newspapers, schools, foundations, and public-education organizations.
They expanded their commercial ventures to serve as a bulwark against
central planning. They became teachers and, when possible, professors.
They cultivated wonderful families and focused on the education
of their children.
It is a long
struggle but it is the way the struggle for liberty has always taken
place. But somewhere along the way, some people, enticed by the
prospect of a fast track to reform, rethought this idea. Perhaps
we should try the same technique that the left did. We should get
our people in power and displace their people, and then we can bring
about change toward liberty. In fact, isn't this the most important
goal of all? So long as the left controls the state, it will expand
in ways that are incompatible with freedom. We need to take back
the state.
So goes the
logic. What is wrong with it? The state's only function is as an
apparatus of coercion and compulsion. That is its distinguishing
mark. It is what makes the state the state. To the same extent that
the state responds well to arguments that it should be larger and
more powerful, it is institutionally hostile to anyone who says
that it should be less powerful and less coercive. That is not to
say that some work from the "inside" cannot do some good,
some of the time. But it is far more likely that the state will
convert the libertarian than for the libertarian to convert the
state.
We've all seen
this a thousand times. It rarely takes more than a few months for
a libertarian intellectual headed for the Beltway to "mature"
and realize that his or her old ideals were rather childish and
insufficiently real world. A politician promising to defang Washington
later becomes the leading expert in applying tooth enamel. Once
that fateful step is taken, there are no limits. I know a bureaucrat
who helped run martial law in Iraq who once swore fidelity to Rothbardian
political economy.
The reason
has to do with ambition, which is not normally a bad impulse. The
culture of Washington, however, requires that ambition work itself
out by paying maximum deference to the powers that be. At first,
this is easy to justify: how else can the state be converted except
by being friendly to it? The state is our enemy, but for now, we
must pretend to be its pal. In time, the dreams are displaced by
the daily need to curry favor. Eventually the person becomes precisely
the kind of person he or she once despised. (For Lord
of the Rings fans, it's like being asked to carry the ring
for a while; you don't want to give it up.)
I've known
people who have gone this route and one day took an honest look
in the mirror, and didn't like what they saw. They have said to
me that they were mistaken to think it could work. They didn't recognize
the subtle ways in which they themselves were being drawn in. They
recognize the futility of politely asking the state, day after day,
to permit a bit more liberty here and there. Ultimately you must
frame your arguments in terms of what is good for the state, and
the reality is that liberty is not usually good for the state. Hence,
the rhetoric and finally the goal begin to change.
The state is
open to persuasion, to be sure, but it usually acts out of fear,
not friendship. If the bureaucrats and politicians fear backlash,
they will not increase taxes or regulations. If they sense a high
enough degree of public outrage, they will even repeal controls
and programs. An example is the end of alcohol prohibition or the
repeal of the 55 mph speed limit. These were pulled back because
politicians and bureaucrats sensed too high a cost from continued
enforcement.
The problem
of strategy was something that fascinated Murray Rothbard, who wrote
several important articles on the need for never compromising the
long-run goal for short-term gain through the political process.
That doesn't mean we should not welcome a 1 percent tax cut or repeal
a section of some law. But we should never allow ourselves to be
sucked into the trade-off racket: e.g., repeal this bad tax to impose
this better tax. That would be using a means (a tax) that contradicts
the goal (elimination of taxation).
The Rothbardian
approach to a pro-freedom strategy comes down to the following four
affirmations:
- the victory
of liberty is the highest political end;
- the proper
groundwork for this goal is a moral passion for justice;
- the end
should be pursued by the speediest and most efficacious possible
means; and
- the means
taken must never contradict the goal "whether by advocating
gradualism, by employing or advocating any aggression against
liberty, by advocating planned programs, by failing to seize any
opportunities to reduce State power, or by ever increasing it
in any area."
Libertarians
are not the first people who have confronted the question of strategy
for social advance and cultural and political change. After the
Civil War, a large part of the population of the South, namely former
slaves, found themselves in a perilous situation. They had a crying
need to advance socially within society, but lacked education, skill,
and capital. They also bore the burden of pushing social change
that permitted them to be regarded as full citizens who made the
most of their new freedom. In many ways, they found themselves in
a position somewhat like new immigrants but with an additional burden
of throwing off an old social status for a new one.
The Reconstruction
period of Union-run martial law invited many blacks to participate
in politics as a primary goal. This proved to be a terrible temptation
for many, as the former Virginia slave Booker T. Washington said.
"During the whole of the Reconstruction period our people throughout
the South looked to the Federal Government for everything, very
much as a child looks to its mother." He rejected this political
model because "the general political agitation drew the attention
of our people away from the more fundamental matters of perfecting
themselves in the industries at their doors and in securing property."
Washington
wrote that "the temptations to enter political life were so
alluring that I came very near yielding to them at one time"
but he resisted this in favor of "the laying of the foundation
of the race through a generous education of the hand, head and heart."
Later when he visited DC, he knew that he had been right. "A
large proportion of these people had been drawn to Washington because
they felt that they could lead a life of ease there," he wrote.
"Others had secured minor government positions, and still another
large class was there in the hope of securing Federal positions."
As it was in
the 1870s it is today. The state chews up and either eats or spits
out those with a passion for liberty. The extent to which W.E.B.
DuBois's Marxian push for political agitation has prevailed over
Washington's push for commercial advance has been tragic for black
Americans and for the whole of American society. Many obtained political
power, but not liberty classically understood.
We
can learn from this. The thousands of young people who are discovering
the ideas of liberty for the first time ought to stay away from
the Beltway and all its allures. Instead, they should pursue their
love and passion through arts, commerce, education, and even the
ministry. These are fields that offer genuine promise with a high
return.
When a libertarian
tells me that he is doing some good as a procurement officer at
HUD, I don't doubt his word. But how much more would he do by quitting
his job and writing an expose on the entire bureaucratic racket?
One well-placed blast against such an agency can bring about more
reform, and do more good, than decades of attempted subversion from
within.
Are there politicians
who do some good? Certainly, and the name Ron Paul is the first
that comes to mind. But the good he does is not as a legislator
as such but as an educator with a prominent platform from which
to speak. Every no vote is a lesson to the multitudes. We need more
Ron Pauls.
But Ron is
the first to say that, more importantly, we need more professors,
business owners, fathers and mothers, religious leaders, and entrepreneurs.
The party of liberty loves commerce and culture, not the state.
Commerce and culture is our home and our launching ground for social
reform and revolution.
September
21, 2012
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail], former editorial assistant to Ludwig von Mises and congressional
chief of staff to Ron Paul, is founder and chairman of the Mises
Institute, literary executor for the estate of Murray N. Rothbard,
and editor of LewRockwell.com.
See his
books.
Copyright
© 2012 by the Ludwig von Mises Institute.
Permission to reprint in whole or in part is hereby granted, provided
full credit is given.
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