It is observed that the Statist is dissatisfied with the condition of his own existence. He condemns his fellow man, surroundings, and society itself for denying him the fulfillment, success, and adulation he believes he deserves. He is angry, resentful, petulant, and jealous. He is incapable of honest self-assessment and rejects the honest assessment by others of himself, thereby evading responsibility for his own miserable condition, The Statist searches for significance and even glory in a utopian fiction of his mind's making, the earthly attainment of which, he believes, is frustrated by those who do not share it. Therefore he must destroy the civil society, piece by piece.This is a concise statement of the several positions that I have taken on the utopianism of the consequentialist, Atheist Left. I am anxious to receive my own copy in a few days and spend the night reading it.
For the Statist, liberty is not a blessing but the enemy. It is not possible to achieve Utopia if individuals are free to go their own way. The individual must be dehumanized and his nature delegitimized. Through persuasion, deception, and coercion, the individual must be subordinated to the state. He must abandon his own ambitions for the ambitions of the state. He must become reliant on and fearful of the state. His first duty must be to the state -- not family, community, and faith, all of which have the potential of threatening the state. Once dispirited, the individual can be molded by the state.
The Statist's Utopia can take many forms, and has throughout human history, including monarchism, feudalism, militarism, fascism, communism, national socialism, and economic socialism. They are all of the same species -- tyranny. The primary principle around which the Statist organizes can be summed up in a single word -- equality.
Equality, as understood by the Founders, is the natural right of every individual to live freely under self-government, to acquire and retain the property he creates through his own labor, and to be treated impartially before a just law. Moreover, equality should not be confused with perfection, for man is also imperfect, making his application of equality, even in the most just society, imperfect. Otherwise, inequality is the natural state of man in the sense that each individual is born unique in all his human characteristics. Therefore, equality and inequality, properly comprehended, are both engines of liberty.
The Statist, however, misuses equality to pursue uniform economic and social outcomes. He must continuously enhance his power at the expense of self-government and violate the individual's property rights at the expense of individual liberty, for he believes that through persuasion, deception, and coercion he can tame man's natural state and man's perfection can, therefore, be achieved in Utopia. The Statist must claim the power to make that which is unequal equal and that which is imperfect perfect. This is the only hope the Statist offers, if only the individual surrenders himself to the all-powerful state. Only then can the impossible be made possible. ...
For the Statist, the international community and international organizations serve as useful sources for importing disaffection with the civil society. The Statist urges Americans to view themselves through the lenses of those who resent and even hate them. He needs Americans to become less confident, to doubt their institutions, and to accept the status assigned to them by outsiders -- as isolationists, invaders, occupiers, oppressors, and exploiters. The Statist wants Americans to see themselves as backward, foolishly holding to their quaint notions of individual liberty, private property, family, and faith, long diminished or jettisoned in other countries. They need to listen to the voices of condemnation from world capitals, and self-appointing global watchdogs hostile to America's superior standard of living. America is said to be out of step and regressive, justifying the surrendering of his sovereignty through treaties and other arrangements that benefit the greater "humanity." And it would not hurt if America admitted it's past transgressions, made reparations, and accepted its fate as just another aging nation -- one among many.
The Statist must also rely on legions of academics to serve as his missionaries. After a short period of training and observation, academics receive a sinecure -- a personal stake in the state via lifetime employment through a system of tenure. The classroom is to shape the beliefs and attitudes of successive generations of malcontents and incubate the quiet revolution against the civil society. Academics help identify the enemies of the state, whom their students learn to distrust or even detest through distortion and repetition -- corporations as polluters, the Founding Fathers as slave owners, the military as imperialists, etc.
I am currently engaged in some other books along the same vein, although they might not have the same impact. These include The Fatal Conceit: the Errors of Socialism, and The Road to Serfdom, both by F.A, Hayek; Liberal Fascism, by Jonah Goldberg; and the striking book, United in Hate, by Jamie Glazov.
There is also blog chatter about depression amongst the lovers of liberty. One comment stands out: the disaster has already occurred; our situation now is one of response to the disaster.
This is a time for action, not for depression. As another says, the cure for depression is action. The response will determine the future of our culture, whether socialist equal outcomes, or personal liberty to pursue one’s own path.
6 comments:
Explain something to me. Why is it that when I find myself opposing the Republicans, it's usually something to do with Big Government? Isn't that what the Right is supposed to be against?
It's generally the Republicans that support the expensive and pointless War on Drugs, and all I can think is that the government should stay out of the business of telling people what chemicals they can and can't put in their bodies in the privacy of their homes.
It's generally the Republicans that oppose gay marriage, when all I can wonder is why the government is legislating who can and can't get married.
Stay out of people's private lives, Big Government!
I think we both oppose Statism and Totalitarianism but for some reason we see it in the other party.
Actually I agree with you about the Republican party; it has absolutely abdicated its small government stance. The major parties are fellow travellers in the march to socialism; George W. Bush approved the bill to lend mortgage money to losers. And he abdicated the defense of our borders. And he initiated the needless NSA prying into our personal phone and emails. But the Democrats are far more egregious and aggressive in totalizing government control. They spend money that they don't have, until we are owned by China.
If you want big government out of your life, how do you feel about Obama's drive for "positive liberties?" How do you feel about his spiritual advisor being an avowed communist? For that matter, how do you feel about a non-American being in charge of the Armed Forces, including nukes? This list could go on for days, but I have to go.
I had to step out briefly.
One more point about the Left. They invariably orient themselves to the oppressive, violent, totalitarian du jour; Stalin, Mao, and now the Muslims, in front of whom Obama just went belly-up, submissive style, in his video and editorials.
So how do you feel about Sharia law? When implemented, there will be no homosexuals or other libertines left. There will be no abortion. There will be no women in the workforce or on the streets. There will, in fact, be no professing Atheists, either.
One amateur Atheist-elitist totalitarian kissing up to the professional religio-totalitarians: that is as dangerous as it gets.
Sharia law of course makes me shudder; which is why I'm so against the government legislating morality. But when I think of the Right I think of exactly that.
So, again, we both oppose totalitarianism, but you see the Left trying to instigate it, and I see the Right trying to instigate it.
How do we have the same viewpoint but mirror opinions where the problem lies?
Martin, thanks very much for comments.
The "mirror" issue is a very interesting question that I will take up in a bit. I suspect that it comes from a different view of the relationship between liberty and responsibility... but there might be more to it than that, such as the unshared viewpoint of absolutes vs relativism.
But now I have to go. I'll be back later today.
I got sick there for awhile which gave me some time to think about the "mirror" issue.
I don't think that there is a "mirror" issue. Here's why. I think that your perspective from the left is that you do approve of big government, except in certain areas which I feel are libertine.
Plus, I also think that Republicans approve of big government in terms of backdoor perqs for big business and social stability.
I doubt seriously that you support the second amendment, or the second half of the first amendment, or for that matter the ninth and tenth amendments to the Constitution.
I also doubt seriously that you are a libertarian, but if you are, your comments don't seem to reflect that. Rather, like most of the Left you seem to support anti-stasis, no matter what the stasis represents at the moment. The Left has been engaged in Hegelian antithesis for the past century, and has dragged the Republicans relentlessly from one synthesis to another, to the edge of the abyss. The Republicans are merely decade-behind Democrats, way left of the original center; because of that they have exactly nothing to offer other than slowing down socialism by maybe a decade.
I subscribe to neither party, but the statist, neototalitarian Democrats are the source of rabid, sensless antistasis [undefined "Change" for the "feel good" of it], while the Republicans are the party of the pusillanimous. (Nominating John McCain proved that).
Big Government? Are you really against it? Or are you merely for certain new liberties such as commercialized recreational drugs and homosexuals in the streets and free abortions for birth control and embryonic destruction for stem cells? Because these are the tools of antistasis, antithesis, antistability, cultural destruction, and the road to serfdom (as Hayek put it).
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