Ideas
and the Culpability for Violence
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Recently
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.: Extortion,
Private and Public: The Case of Chiquita Banana
The violence
perpetuated by Anders Behring Breivik in Norway unleashed the usual
torrent of blaming anyone who might have influenced the murderer’s
thought. He was first described as a right-wing Christian – a description
designed to put a certain community on notice. As more evidence
rolled in, he has been more accurately described as an anti-Islamic,
pro-Israel nationalist, but the tendency to pin this violence on
any non-leftist is still there.
There were
footnotes in his 1,500-page manifesto to many dozens of books and
articles – including a few published by the Mises Institute. Looking
at the balance of his citations, however, it’s clear that his main
influence had nothing to do with libertarianism. His inspiration
was a point of view reminiscent of American neoconservatism. He
cited articles in this tradition – particularly on the fear and
hate of Islam – far more often than any other.
So, does this
violence discredit neoconservatism, as when then-President Clinton
tried to blame libertarians and the "militia" movement
for the Oklahoma bombing in 1995? The point of this game is to silence
the opposition, shut down debate, and fundamentally discredit the
body of ideas on which the violence can be blamed.
It’s pretty
much been this way since the ancient world. Governments can perpetuate
violence in war and against the civilian population every day, but
when a private person does the same for political reasons, a struggle
ensues to see which line of thinking will pay what price.
The truth is
that every political point of view can be twisted into a rationale
for violence. If you think that the rich should be expropriated,
there are generally two ways to bring this about: you and your friends
can steal from the rich directly – maybe killing some fat cats in
the process – or you can lobby Congress to do it for you.
The second
method is preferred in a democratic society. When violence against
person and property operates under the cover of the law, it is rarely
called out for what it truly is. It is only when the legal cover
is removed that the violence shocks and alarms us. But what about
the morality of it all, whether we are speaking about private violence,
the redistributionist state, or the war-making imperial state? In
moral substance, they amount to the same thing.
One of the
least reported biographical details of Timothy McVeigh, executed
for the Oklahoma bombing that killed so many innocent people, is
that his own disregard for life was cultivated during his time as
an American soldier from 1988 to 1992. He was awarded the bronze
star for service in the first war on Iraq, where he killed civilians
and teenage conscripts under the cover of law. It was here that
he learned how to suppress the whisperings of his conscience, and
to harden his heart. As he said, "If there is a hell, then
I'll be in good company with a lot of fighter pilots who also had
to bomb innocents to win the war."
Let’s
try a thought experiment that is not entirely implausible. Let’s
say that in the future, some psycho kills innocent people and blows
up buildings. But this time, he is directly influenced by libertarianism,
and was driven to desperate measures in the interest of overthrowing
the state.
This could
happen. It hasn’t happened, but it could. The question is whether
this person’s intellectual influences would discredit the libertarian
tradition. That would certainly be the attempt of the mainstream
media. Even after 9/11/01, the pundits were screaming that this
event alone was enough to discredit libertarianism, that the destruction
and the aftermath offered positive proof that we need a gigantic
state. So, yes, I think we can be confident that if some violent
person had libertarian influences, libertarianism would catch the
blame.
In the event
of such a thing, what should be the response of libertarians? It
wouldn’t be that hard. Libertarianism is the one political theory
extant that consistently preaches non-violence in every way, condemning
all aggression against person and property whether it is done by
a private party or under the cover of law.
Libertarianism
posits a belief that is not widely held today, but is nonetheless
true: namely, that society can organize itself without violence
(no theft, no murder), but only using that blessed institution of
mutual cooperation among individuals. The use of violence in any
form is not only contradictory to libertarian theory, libertarianism
stands alone as the only political outlook that makes non-violence
its core tenet.
Of course,
this implies an anti-government stance because government is the
organized, consistent, relentless, large-scale center of violence
on earth. It enacts this violence for a huge range of reasons: to
bolster economic growth, to protect us from invasion, to prevent
the population from being exploited by business, to keep the culture
pure from alien influences, to protect us from our own bad decisions,
to grant us health and income security from birth to death, and
much more.
But in doing
all these things, it has only one lever to pull: aggression against
our lives and property. This is because government cannot do anything
on its own; it exists entirely in a parasitical relationship to
society.
What if a person
who sees this point is driven to desperation and acts in a way that
is contrary to the fundamental ethics of libertarianism? In other
words, what happens if a person influenced by an anti-government
theory undertakes actions that are more of the character of what
governments do every day? That would not and could not damage the
credibility or integrity of the libertarian idea.
Keep in mind
that we are alive in an unprecedented moment. The state in all countries
in the developed world is working its mischief as never before in
world history. It taxes more, regulates more, manipulates more than
ever. The state has never been more pompous, arrogant, and ambitious
than it is today.
The police
state has visited the developed world in a manner none of us have
seen in our lifetimes. The local police reflect that ethos. They
disregard their heritage of wearing a civil mask and now bully people
openly in a way contrary to freedom. The U.S. in particular has
erected a giant prison state that exists outside the observable
sphere of social life. The state has cut off employment opportunities
for an entire generation, looted the savings of older people, and
even made it nearly impossible for people to provide for their own
savings.
Public opinion
is increasingly aware of the problem and the source of the problem,
and so the public anger at the political and bureaucratic elite
is intensifying, especially as the economic depression deepens.
The nation state is growing ever more fierce even as it becomes
more decrepit in the digital age. It would hardly be a surprise
to see this anger turn violent in the coming years.
There
is a very easy answer to the problems that afflict us today. The
nation state needs to civilize itself and bow to the realities of
our times. It needs to dismantle its apparatus of control, call
off the dogs of war, rein in its police and armed bureaucrats, and
permit society to develop and flourish on its own. It’s not complicated.
Why won’t the state take this path? Because it thrives off violence,
domestic and international.
These are fundamental
truths, and they are becoming more obvious by the day. No amount
of propaganda can wish them away. The only real means of achieving
peace is to reject violence as a means of social control or political
activism. We must withdraw our consent to violence, the consent
that is the basis of all government. What the great theorist Etienne
de la Boetie wrote
in the 16th century remains true today:
Resolve to
serve no more, and you are at once freed. I do not ask that you
place hands upon the tyrant to topple him over, but simply that
you support him no longer; then you will behold him, like a great
Colossus whose pedestal has been pulled away, fall of his own
weight and break in pieces.
| If
there were such an attack, what would you say? Write
me, and I will blog the responses I like best. |
July
27, 2011
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, executor for the estate of Murray N. Rothbard, and
editor of LewRockwell.com.
See his
books.
Copyright
© 2011 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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