Government is
always the
enemy of your liberty
Merriam-Webster reports that
"socialism" has become a "trending" word, i.e., "lookups" for it have "jump[ed]
over 1500 percent ... following the Democratic primary victory for a
congressional seat in New York City by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez." I
hope, though likely in vain, that Americans did not conduct most of those
"lookups." If they did, they prove yet again how dumbed-down they
are. Given that we've lived in a socialist country for over a century now,
asking the definition of "socialism" is only a little less
ludicrous than asking for that of "television." If you can't
recognize such horrors after suffering them all your life, well, you're as
devoted to scholasticism as any medieval monk.
Meanwhile,
we might assume from the brouhaha over Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's
triumph that she's the first socialist candidate in American
history. Au contraire, though she is among the few to admit
openly — heck, to outright brag of — such evil intent. Since the 1930s,
Americans have rarely elected anyone other than socialists and their twins,
communists — though the occasional fascist does sneak past them. (Indeed, the clown our hyphenated commie beat is as
socialist as she.) How else would voters protect their beloved
Social Security as well as socialism's other loot, Medicare and Medicaid,
public housing, "free" indoctrination — sorry, education, food
stamps, Obummercare, et cetera, ad nauseam?
As its
name implies,"socialism" imposes government's force on social and
interpersonal struggles. Which begs the question: How did a country devoted
to autonomy, individuality and freedom from that lethal enemy of both, the
State, degenerate to de facto socialism? Who convinced Americans, with
their healthy and overwhelming contempt for political government, that
Leviathan was instead their friend, their doctor, their sugar-daddy, their
ever-lovin' mama? Who persuaded them that politicians could and should fix
entirely social problems rather than sticking to those areas traditionally
considered governmental, such as dispensing justice (or, more accurately,
injustice), ruining trade via tariffs and murder, a.k.a. war?
Indeed,
that fascinating query applies universally, not merely to the United
States. Political government throughout history has ever been a lethal
enemy — and its subjects usually feared it as such. Which is the only
sensible reaction, given that the State rests entirely on physical force.
One analysis of it widely but erroneously attributed to George Washington
explains, "Government is not reason, it is not
eloquence — it is force! Like fire it is a dangerous servant and a
fearful master..."
True to
this nature, governments in all times and all places have bullied and
bossed, caged and conscripted. They were liable to torture and execute
anyone even mildly challenging their authority; they impoverished commoners
so the rulers could live sumptuously. Few victims deluded themselves that
the despots exploiting them also cared about their welfare.
Even so,
government pretty much stuck to several clearly defined roles: it battled
foreign enemies, suppressed revolts at home and plundered taxpayers to
finance those activities as well as the rulers' luxuries. But for kings and
other tyrants to meddle with such social ills as poverty, illiteracy,
racial hatred or a lack of medical insurance? The peasants those potentates
regularly abused would have scorned any such suggestion as utter lunacy.
Then
some crackpots in early 19th-century France suggested that government train
its guns not only on foreign aggressors and domestic "criminals"
(often mere dissidents) but on interpersonal problems. And they did so with
mumbo-jumbo as well as breathtaking insouciance toward rationality.
Their
ring-leader, Charles Fourier, "comes off as a confused thinker"
whose "ideas seem quite fantastical and without
ground in reality ... pure nonsense[, with the] characteristic
pretension of the visionary: contradictory, confused, repetitive, chaotic
and, of course, long-winded." (And this from a dispassionate "lecture" on "Modern European
Intellectual History"!)
To be
fair, Fourier professed an interest in ameliorating the misery he saw
around him, which he (and many others) wrongly blamed on the Industrial
Revolution. And his bizarre solutions — such as "Phalanxes, which are experimental[. They]
are places that combine families that are unequal in fortune ...
These buildings were designed to accommodate a person's passions and
talents. ... a friendly union would be formed between the people because of
the similiarites [sic] they all shared[,] ...
creating happiness and cheerfulness within the society" — seem to have
been voluntary at first.
But as
is typical of do-gooders, Fourier soon insisted that his "socialism would have to be enforced."
Only a "confused thinker" of this magnitude could have urged such
a ridiculous contradiction: that government, which relies on physical
compulsion, should repair society, which functions well only in the absence
of physical compulsion. What Fourier advocated was akin to claiming doctors
can heal a fractured leg by smacking it with a sledgehammer. Or as Frederic
Bastiat put it in his classic, The Law, "Socialism ... confuses the distinction
between government and society."
This
untenable combination of two diametric opposites, government and society,
philosophically invalidates Fourier — and all socialists, communists,
fascists and Progressives before and since. Worse, when your sole tool is a hammer,
everything looks like a nail. Statists reflexively believe that
only their god, Government, can mend whatever's broken. Ergo, they condemn
as irresponsible and impossible leaving private trouble to private citizens
for resolution. No wonder Bastiat also observed, "...every time we object to a thing being
done by government, the socialists conclude that we object to its being
done at all."
The more
things change, the more they stay the same. Even in 1850, when Bastiat
wrote The Law, socialists were guilty of the same logical
absurdities that characterize them today: "We disapprove of state education,"
Bastiat complained. "Then the socialists say that we are opposed to
any education. We object to a state religion. Then the socialists say that
we want no religion at all. We object to a state-enforced equality. Then
they say that we are against equality. And so on, and so on." Indeed.
We object to Obummercare, and the socialists say we want people to die in
the streets.
What is
socialism? Nothing more than mixing apples and oranges to cook up Paradise
— a recipe for disaster.
— Becky Akers
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