4093 lines
173 KiB
Plaintext
4093 lines
173 KiB
Plaintext
- 1 -
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A CRITIQUE OF ANARCHIST COMMUNISM
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by Ken Knudson
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A NOTE TO READERS
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I address myself in these pages primarily to those
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readers of "Anarchy" who call themselves "communist-
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anarchists." It is my purpose in this article to show that
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this label is a contradiction in terms and that anyone
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accepting it must do so by a lack of clear understanding of
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what the words "anarchist" and "communist" really mean. It
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is my hope that in driving a wedge between these two words,
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the communist side will suffer at the expense of the
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anarchist.
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I make no claims to originality in these pages. Most of
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what I have to say has been said before and much better. The
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economics is taken primarily from the writings of Pierre-
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Joseph Proudhon, William B. Greene, and Benjamin R. Tucker.
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The philosophy from Max Stirner, Tucker again, and, to a
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lesser extent, James L. Walker.
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I hope you won't be put off by my clumsy prose. I'm a
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scientist by trade, not a professional writer. I implore
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you, therefore, not to mistake style for content. If you
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want both the content and good style may I suggest Tucker's
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"Instead of a Book". Unfortunately, this volume has been out
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of print since 1897, but the better libraries - especially
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those in the United States - should have it. If you can
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read French, I recommend the economic writings of Proudhon.
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"General Idea of the Revolution in the Nineteenth Century"
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is particularly good and has been translated into English by
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the American individualist, John Beverley Robinson. (Freedom
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Press, 1923). Also in English is Tucker's translation of one
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of Proudhon's earliest works, the well-known "What is
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Property?". This book is not as good as the "General Idea"
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book, but it has the advantage of being currently available
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in paperback in both languages. A word of warning: unless
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you are thoroughly familiar with Proudhon, I would not
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recommend the popular Macmillan "Papermac" edition of
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"Selected Writings of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon"; they seem to
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have been selected with irrelevance as their only criterion.
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Like so many other great writers, Proudhon suffers
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tremendously when quoted out of context and this particular
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edition gives, on average, less than a page per selection.
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Better to read his worst book completely than to be misled
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by disconnected excerpts like these. Finally the
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individualist philosophy, egoism, is best found in Max
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Stirner's "The Ego and His Own". This book suffers somewhat
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from a very difficult style (which wasn't aided by Stirner's
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wariness of the Prussian censor), but if you can get through
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his obscure references and biblical quotes, I think you will
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find the task worth the effort.
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1
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- 2 -
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H. L. Mencken once observed that just because a rose
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smells better than a cabbage doesn't mean to say it makes a
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better soup. I feel the same way about individualist
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anarchism. At first whiff, the altruist rose may smell
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better than the individualist cabbage, but the former sure
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makes a lousy soup. In the following pages I hope to show
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that the latter makes a better one.
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Ken Knudson
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Geneva, Switzerland
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March, 1971
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1
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- 3 -
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COMMUNISM: FOR THE COMMON GOOD
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"Communism is a 9 letter word used by inferior magicians
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with the wrong alchemical formula for transforming earth
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into gold."
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- Allen Ginsberg
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"Wichita Vortex Sutra"
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By way of prelude to the individualist critique of
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communism, I should like to look briefly at the communist-
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anarchists' critique of their Marxist brothers. Anarchists
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and Marxists have traditionally been at odds with one
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another: Bakunin and Marx split the First International over
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their differences a century ago; Emma Goldman virtually made
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her living in the 1920's from writing books and magazine
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articles about her "disillusionment in Russia"; in May,
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1937, the communists and anarchists took time off from their
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war against Franco to butcher each other in the streets of
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Barcelona; and the May days of '68 saw French anarchists
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directing more abuse against the communist CGT than against
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the Gaullist government.
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What is the nature of these differences? Perhaps the
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most concise answer to this question came in 1906 from a
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veritable expert on the subject: Joseph Stalin. He wrote in
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"Anarchism or Socialism?" that there were essentially three
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main accusations which (communist) anarchists leveled
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against Marxism:
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1) that the Marxists aren't really communists because
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they would "preserve the two institutions which constitute
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the foundation of [the capitalist] system: representative
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government and wage labour"; [1]
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2) that the Marxists "are not revolutionaries",
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"repudiate violent revolution", and "want to establish
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Socialism only by means of ballot papers"; [2]
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3) that the Marxists "actually want to establish not
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the dictatorship of the proletariat, but their own
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dictatorship over the proletariat." [3]
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Stalin goes on to quote Marx and Engels to "prove" that
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"everything the anarchists say on this subject is either the
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result of stupidity, or despicable slander." [4] Today the
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anarchists have the advantage of history on their side to
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show just who was slandering whom. I won't insult the
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reader's intelligence by pointing out how all three
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objections to Marxism were sustained by Uncle Joe himself a
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few decades later.
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But let us look at these three accusations from another
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point of view. Aren't the communist-anarchists simply saying
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in their holier-than-thou attitude, "I'm more communist than
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you, I'm more revolutionary than you, I'm more consistent
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1
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- 4 -
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than you?" What's wrong with Marxism, they say, is NOT that
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it is for communism, violent revolution and dictatorship,
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but that it goes about attaining its goals by half-measures,
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compromises, and pussyfooting around. Individualist-
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anarchists have a different criticism. We reject communism
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per se, violent revolution per se, and dictatorship per se.
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My purpose here is to try to explain why.
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* * * * *
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Before one can get into an intelligent criticism of
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anything, one must begin by defining one's terms.
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"Anarchism", according to the Encyclopaedia Britannica
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dictionary, is "the theory that all forms of government are
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incompatible with individual and social liberty and should
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be abolished." It further says that it comes from the Greek
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roots "an" (without) and "archos" (leader).* As for
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"communism", it is "any social theory that calls for the
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abolition of private property and control by the community
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over economic affairs." To elaborate on that definition,
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communists of all varieties hold that all wealth should be
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produced and distributed according to the formula "from each
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according to his** ability, to each according to his needs"
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and that the administrative mechanism to control such
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production and distribution should be democratically
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organised by the workers themselves (i.e. "workers'
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control"). They further insist that there should be no
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private ownership of the means of production and no trading
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of goods except through the official channels agreed upon by
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the majority. With rare exceptions, communists of all
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varieties propose to realise this ideal through violent
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revolution and the expropriation of all private property.
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That no one should accuse me of building up straw men
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in order to knock them down, allow me to quote Kropotkin***
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* Historically, it was Proudhon who first used the word
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to mean something other than disorder and chaos: "Although a
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firm friend of order, I am (in the full force of the term)
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an anarchist." [5]
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** Here Marx uses the masculine pronoun to denote the
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generic "one". In deference to easy flowing English grammar,
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I'll stick to his precedent and hope that Women's Lib people
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will forgive me when I, too, write "his" instead of "one's".
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*** I have chosen Kropotkin as a "typical" communist-
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anarchist here and elsewhere in this article for a number of
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reasons. First, he was a particularly prolific writer, doing
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much of his original work in English. Secondly, he is
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generally regarded as "probably the greatest anarchist
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thinker and writer" by many communist- anarchists, including
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at least one editor of "Freedom". [6] Finally, he was the
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founder of Freedom Press, the publisher of the magazine you
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are now reading.
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1
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- 5 -
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to show that communist-anarchism fits in well with the above
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definition of communism:
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"We have to put an end to the iniquities, the vices, the
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crimes which result from the idle existence of some and the
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economic, intellectual, and moral servitude of others.... We
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are no longer obliged to grope in the dark for the
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solution.... It is Expropriation.... If all accumulated
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treasure...does not immediately go back to the collectivity
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- since ALL have contributed to produce it; if the insurgent
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people do not take possession of all the goods and
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provisions amassed in the great cities and do not organise
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to put them within the reach of all who need them...the
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insurrection will not be a revolution, and everything will
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have to be begun over again....Expropriation, - that then,
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is the watchword which is imposed upon the next revolution,
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under penalty of failing in its historic mission. The
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complete expropriation of all who have the means of
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exploiting human beings. The return to common ownership by
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the nation of all that can serve in the hands of any one for
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the exploitation of others." [7]
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Now let us take our definitions of communism and
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anarchism and see where they lead us. The first part of the
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definition of communism calls for the abolition of private
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property. "Abolition" is itself a rather authoritarian
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concept - unless, of course, you're talking about abolishing
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something which is inherently authoritarian and invasive
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itself (like slavery or government, for example). So the
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question boils down to "Is private property authoritarian
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and invasive?" The communists answer "yes"; the
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individualists disagree. Who is right? Which is the more
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"anarchistic" answer? The communists argue that "private
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property has become a hindrance to the evolution of mankind
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towards happiness" [8], that "private property offends
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against justice" [9] and that it "has developed
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parasitically amidst the free institutions of our earliest
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ancestors." [10] The individualists, far from denying these
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assertions, reaffirm them. After all wasn't it Proudhon who
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first declared property "theft"?* But when the communist
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*By property Proudhon means property as it exists under
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government privilege, i.e. property gained not through
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labour or the exchange of the products of labour (which he
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favours), but through the legal privileges bestowed by
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government on idle capital.
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1
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- 6 -
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says, "Be done, then, with this vile institution; abolish
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private property once and for all; expropriate and
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collectivise all property for the common good," the
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individualist must part company with him. What's wrong with
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private property today is that it rests primarily in the
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hands of a legally privileged elite. The resolution of this
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injustice is not to perpetrate an even greater one, but
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rather to devise a social and economic system which will
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distribute property in such a manner that everyone is
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guaranteed the product of his labour by natural economic
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laws. I propose to demonstrate just such a system at the end
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of this article. If this can be done, it will have been
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shown that private property is not intrinsically invasive
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after all, and that the communists in expropriating it would
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be committing a most UNanarchistic act. It is, therefore,
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incumbent upon all communists who call themselves anarchists
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to read carefully that section and either find a flaw in its
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reasoning or admit that they are not anarchists after all.
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The second part of the definition of communism says
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that economic affairs should be controlled by the community.
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Individualists say they should be controlled by the market
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place and that the only law should be the natural law of
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supply and demand. Which of these two propositions is the
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more consistent with anarchism? Herbert Spencer wrote in
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1884, "The great political superstition of the past was the
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divine right of kings. The great political superstition of
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the present is the divine right of parliaments." [11] The
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communists seem to have carried Spencer's observation one
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step further: the great political superstition of the future
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shall be the divine right of workers' majorities. "Workers'
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control" is their ideology; "Power to the People" their
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battle cry. What communist-anarchists apparently forget is
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that workers' control means CONTROL. Marxists, let it be
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said to their credit, at least are honest about this point.
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They openly and unashamedly demand the dictatorship of the
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proletariat. Communist-anarchists seem to be afraid of that
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phrase, perhaps subconsciously realising the inherent
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contradiction in their position. But communism, by its very
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nature, IS dictatorial. The communist-anarchists may
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christen their governing bodies "workers' councils" or
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"soviets", but they remain GOVERNMENTS just the same.
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Abraham Lincoln was supposed to have asked, "If you
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call a tail a leg, how many legs has a dog? Five? No!
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Calling a tail a leg don't MAKE it a leg." The same is true
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about governments and laws. Calling a law a "social habit"
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[12] or an "unwritten custom" [13] as Kropotkin does,
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doesn't change its nature. To paraphrase Shakespeare, that
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which we call a law by any other name would smell as foul.
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1
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- 7 -
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Let us take a closer look at the type of society the
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communists would have us live under and see if we can get at
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the essence of these laws. Kropotkin says that "nine-tenths
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of those called lazy...are people gone astray." [14] He then
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suggests that given a job which "answers" their
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"temperament" and "capacities" (today we would hear words
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like "relate", "alienation" and "relevancy"), these people
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would be productive workers for the community. What about
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that other ten percent which couldn't adjust? Kropotkin
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doesn't elaborate, but he does say, "if not one, of the
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thousands of groups of our federation, will receive you,
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whatever be their motive; if you are absolutely incapable of
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producing anything useful, or if you refuse to do it, then
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live like an isolated man....That is what could be done in a
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communal society in order to turn away sluggards if they
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become too numerous." [15] This is a pretty harsh sentence
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considering that ALL the means of production have been
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confiscated in the name of the revolution. So we see that
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communism's law, put bluntly, becomes "work or starve."*
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This happens to be an individualist law too. But there is a
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difference between the two: the communist law is a man-made
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law, subject to man's emotions, rationalisations, and
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inconsistencies; the individualist law is nature's law - the
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law of gastric juices, if you will - a law which, like it or
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not, is beyond repeal. Although both laws use the same
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language, the difference in meaning is the difference
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between a commandment and a scientific observation.
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Individualist-anarchists don't care when, where, or how a
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man earns a living, as long as he is not invasive about it.
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He may work 18 hours a day and buy a mansion to live in the
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other six hours if he so chooses. Or he may feel like
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Thoreau did that "that man is richest whose pleasures are
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the cheapest" [16] and work but a few hours a week to ensure
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his livelihood. I wonder what would happen to Thoreau under
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communism? Kropotkin would undoubtedly look upon him as "a
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ghost of bourgeois society." [17] And what would Thoreau say
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to Kropotkin's proposed "contract"?: "We undertake to give
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you the use of our houses, stores, streets, means of
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transport, schools, museums, etc., on condition that, from
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twenty to forty-five or fifty years of age, you consecrate
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four or five hours a day to some work recognised [by whom?]
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as necessary to existence....Twelve or fifteen hundred hours
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*Article 12 of the 1936 constitution of the USSR reads:
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"In the USSR work is the duty of every able-bodied citizen
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according to the principle: 'He who does not work, neither
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shall he eat.' In the USSR the principle of socialism is
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realised: 'From each according to his ability, to each
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according to his work.'"
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- 8 -
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of work a year...is all we ask of you." [18] I don't think
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it would be pulling the nose of reason to argue that Thoreau
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would object to these terms.
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But some communist-anarchists would reject Kropotkin's
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idea of not giving to the unproductive worker according to
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his needs, even if he doesn't contribute according to his
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abilities. They might simply say that Kropotkin wasn't being
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a good communist when he wrote those lines (just as he
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wasn't being a good anarchist when he supported the Allies
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during World War I). But this idea, it seems to me would be
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patently unjust to the poor workers who would have to
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support such parasites. How do these communists reconcile
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such an injustice? As best I can gather from the writings of
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the classical communist-anarchists, they meet this problem
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in one of two ways: (1) they ignore it, or (2) they deny it.
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Malatesta takes the first approach. When asked, "How will
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production and distribution be organised?" he replies that
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anarchists are not prophets and that they have no blueprints
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for the future. Indeed, he likens this important question to
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asking when a man "should go to bed and on what days he
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should cut his nails." [19] Alexander Berkman takes the
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other approach (a notion apparently borrowed from the
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Marxists*): he denies that unproductive men will exist after
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the revolution. "In an anarchist society it will be the most
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useful and difficult toil that one will seek rather than the
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lighter job." [20] Berkman's view of labour makes the
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protestant work ethic sound positively mild by comparison.
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For example: "Can you doubt that even the hardest toil would
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become a pleasure...in an atmosphere of brotherhood and
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respect for labour?" [21] Yes, I can doubt it. Or again: "We
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can visualise the time when labour will have become a
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pleasant exercise, a joyous application of physical effort
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to the needs of the world." [22] And again, in apparent
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anticipation of Goebbles' famous dictum about the powers of
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repetition, "Work will become a pleasure... laziness will be
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unknown." [23] It is hard to argue with such "reasoning". It
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would be like a debate between Bertrand Russell and Billy
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Graham about the existence of heaven. How can you argue with
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faith? I won't even try. I'll just ask the reader, next time
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he is at work, to look around - at himself and at his mates
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- and ask himself this question: "After the revolution will
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* At least Berkman is consistent in this matter. Marx,
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paradoxically, wanted to both "abolish labour itself" ("The
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German Ideology"), AND make it "life's prime want"
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("Critique of the Gotha Programme").
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- 9 -
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we really prefer this place to staying at home in bed or
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|
going off to the seashore?" If there are enough people who
|
|
can answer "yes" to this question perhaps communism will
|
|
work after all. But in the meantime, before building the
|
|
barricades and shooting people for a cause of dubious
|
|
certainty, I would suggest pondering these two items from
|
|
the bourgeois and communist press respectively:
|
|
|
|
"In Detroit's auto plants, weekend absenteeism has reached
|
|
such proportions that a current bit of folk wisdom advises
|
|
car buyers to steer clear of vehicles made on a Monday or
|
|
Friday. Inexperienced substitute workers, so the caution
|
|
goes, have a way of building bugs into a car. But in Italy
|
|
lately the warning might well include Tuesday, Wednesday,
|
|
and Thursday. At Fiat, the country's largest maker,
|
|
absenteeism has jumped this year from the normal 4 or 5
|
|
percent to 12.5 percent, with as many as 18,000 workers
|
|
failing to clock in for daily shifts at the company's Turin
|
|
works. Alfa Romeo's rate has hit 15 percent as hundreds of
|
|
workers call in each day with 'malattia di comodo' - a
|
|
convenient illness.... Italian auto workers seem to be doing
|
|
no more than taking advantage of a very good deal. A new
|
|
labour contract guarantees workers in state-controlled
|
|
industries 180 days of sick leave a year, at full pay, while
|
|
workers in private firms (such as Fiat) get the same number
|
|
of days at 75 percent of full pay." [24]
|
|
|
|
When doctors, employed by the state, made an inspection
|
|
visit in Turin we are told that they found "that only 20
|
|
percent of the 'indisposed' workers they had visited were
|
|
even mildly sick." For those who think that this is just a
|
|
bourgeois aberration, let us see what revolutionary Cuba,
|
|
after 12 years of communism, has to say about such
|
|
"parasites". I translate from the official organ of the
|
|
Central Committee of the Cuban Communist Party:
|
|
|
|
"Worker's discussion groups are being set up in all work
|
|
centres to discuss the proposed law against laziness. These
|
|
groups have already proven to be a valuable forum for the
|
|
working class. During these assemblies, which for the
|
|
moment are limited to pilot projects in the Havana area,
|
|
workers have made original suggestions and posed timely
|
|
questions which lead one to believe that massive discussion
|
|
of this type would make a notable contribution to the
|
|
solution of this serious problem. An assembly of boiler
|
|
repairmen in the Luyano district was representative of the
|
|
general feeling of the workers. They demanded that action be
|
|
taken against those parasitic students who have stopped
|
|
going to classes regularly or who, although attending
|
|
classes, do just enough to get by. The workers were equally
|
|
adamant about co-workers who, after a sickness or accident,
|
|
refuse to go back to their jobs but go on receiving their
|
|
|
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|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 10 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
salaries for months without working. Questions were often
|
|
accompanied by concrete proposals. For example, should
|
|
criminals receive the same salaries on coming back to work
|
|
from prison as when they left their jobs? The workers
|
|
thought not, but they did think it all right that the
|
|
revolutionary state accord a pension to the prisoner's
|
|
family during his stay in the re-education [sic] centre. At
|
|
the Papelera Cubana factory the workers made a suggestion
|
|
which proved their contempt of these loafers; habitual
|
|
offenders should be punished in geometric proportion to the
|
|
number of their crimes. They also proposed that workers who
|
|
quit their jobs or were absent too often be condemned to a
|
|
minimum, not of 6 months, but of one year's imprisonment and
|
|
that the worker who refuses three times work proposed by the
|
|
Ministry of Labour be considered automatically as a criminal
|
|
and subject to punishment as such. The workers also
|
|
expressed doubts about the scholastic 'deserters', ages 15
|
|
and 16, who aren't yet considered physically and mentally
|
|
able to work but who don't study either. They also cited the
|
|
case of the self employed man who works only for his own
|
|
selfish interests. The dockworkers of Havana port, zone 1,
|
|
also had their meeting. They envisioned the possibility of
|
|
making this law retroactive for those who have a bad work
|
|
attitude, stating forcefully that it wasn't a question of
|
|
precedents, because otherwise the law could only be applied
|
|
in those cases which occurred after its enactment. The
|
|
harbour workers also proposed imprisonment for the
|
|
'sanctioned' workers and that, in their opinion, the
|
|
punishment of these parasites shouldn't be lifted until they
|
|
could demonstrate a change of attitude. The steadfastness of
|
|
the workers was clearly demonstrated when they demanded that
|
|
punishments not be decided by the workers themselves in
|
|
order to avoid possible leniency due to reasons of sympathy,
|
|
sentimentality, etc. The workers also indicated that these
|
|
parasites should not have the right to the social benefits
|
|
accorded to other workers. Some workers considered
|
|
imprisonment as a measure much too kind. As you can see, the
|
|
workers have made many good proposals, which leads us to
|
|
believe that with massive discussion, this new law will be
|
|
considerably enriched. This is perhaps the path to social
|
|
legislation by the masses."* [25]
|
|
|
|
These two extracts clearly demonstrate that human nature
|
|
remains pretty constant, independent of the social system
|
|
the individual workman is subjected to. So it seems to me
|
|
that unless human nature can somehow be miraculously
|
|
transformed by the revolution - and that WOULD be a
|
|
revolution - some form of compulsion would be necessary in
|
|
order to obtain "from each according to his abilities."
|
|
|
|
While on this point, I would like to ask my communist-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
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|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 11 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
anarchist comrades just who is supposed to determine another
|
|
person's abilities? We've seen from the above article that
|
|
in Cuba the Ministry of Labour makes this decision. How
|
|
would it differ in an anarchist commune? If these anarchists
|
|
are at all consistent with their professed desire for
|
|
individual freedom, the only answer to this question is that
|
|
the individual himself would be the sole judge of his
|
|
abilities and, hence, his profession. But this is
|
|
ridiculous. Who, I wonder, is going to decide of his own
|
|
free will that his real ability lies in collecting other
|
|
people's garbage? And what about the man who thinks that he
|
|
is the greatest artist since Leonardo da Vinci and decides
|
|
to devote his life to painting mediocre landscapes while the
|
|
community literally feeds his delusions with food from the
|
|
communal warehouse? Few people, I dare say, would opt to do
|
|
the necessary "dirty work" if they could choose with
|
|
impunity ANY job, knowing that whatever they did - good or
|
|
bad, hard or easy - they would still receive according to
|
|
their needs.** The individualist's answer to this perennial
|
|
question of "who will do the dirty work" is very simple: "I
|
|
|
|
--------------------
|
|
|
|
*The Associated Press has since reported the passage of
|
|
this law: "Cuba's Communist regime announced yesterday a
|
|
tough new labour law that Premier Fidel Castro said is aimed
|
|
at 400,000 loafers, bums and 'parasites' who have upset the
|
|
country's new social order. The law, which goes into effect
|
|
April 1, provides for penalties ranging from six months to
|
|
two years of forced labour in 'rehabilitation centres' for
|
|
those convicted of vagrancy, malingering or habitual
|
|
absenteeism from work or school. The law decrees that all
|
|
males between 17 and 60 have a 'social duty' to work on a
|
|
daily systematic basis unless they are attending an approved
|
|
school. Those who do not are considered 'parasites of the
|
|
revolution' and subject to prosecution by the courts or
|
|
special labourers' councils. The anti-loafing law - seen as
|
|
a tough new weapon to be used mainly against dissatisfied
|
|
young people - was prompted by Mr. Castro's disclosure last
|
|
September that as many as 400,000 workers were creating
|
|
serious economic problems by shirking their duties." [26]
|
|
|
|
** Anyone who has ever gone to an anarchist summer camp
|
|
knows what I mean. Here we have "la creme de la creme", so
|
|
to speak, just dying to get on with the revolution; yet who
|
|
cleans out the latrines? More often than not, no one. Or,
|
|
when it really gets bad, some poor sap will sacrifice
|
|
himself for the cause. You don't have solidarity; you have
|
|
martyrdom. And no one feels good about it: you have
|
|
resentment on the part of the guy who does it and guilt from
|
|
those who don't.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 12 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
will if I'm paid well enough." I suspect even Mr. Heath
|
|
would go down into the London sewers if he were paid 5
|
|
million pounds per hour for doing it. Somewhere between this
|
|
sum and what a sewer worker now gets is a just wage, which,
|
|
given a truly free society, would be readily determined by
|
|
competition.
|
|
This brings us to the second half of the communist
|
|
ideal: the distribution of goods according to need. The
|
|
obvious question again arises, "Who is to decide what
|
|
another man needs?" Anarchists once more must leave that
|
|
decision up to the individual involved. To do otherwise
|
|
would be to invite tyranny, for who can better determine a
|
|
person's needs than the person himself?* But if the
|
|
individual is to decide for himself what he needs, what is
|
|
to prevent him from "needing" a yacht and his own private
|
|
airplane? If you think we've got a consumer society now,
|
|
what would it be like if everything was free for the
|
|
needing? You may object that luxuries aren't needs. But that
|
|
is just begging the question: what is a luxury, after all?
|
|
To millions of people in the world today food is a luxury.
|
|
To the English central heating is a luxury, while to the
|
|
Americans it's a necessity. The Nazi concentration camps
|
|
painfully demonstrated just how little man actually NEEDS.
|
|
But is that the criterion communists would use for
|
|
determining need? I should hope (and think) not. So it seems
|
|
to me that this posses a definite dilemma for the communist-
|
|
anarchist: what do you do about unreasonable, irrational, or
|
|
extravagant "needs"? What about the man who "needs" a new
|
|
pair of shoes every month? "Nonsense," you may say, "no one
|
|
needs new shoes that often." Well, how often then? Once a
|
|
year? Every five years perhaps? And who will decide? Then
|
|
what about me? I live in Switzerland and I'm crazy about
|
|
grape jam - but unfortunately the Swiss aren't. I feel that
|
|
a jam sandwich isn't a jam sandwich unless it's made with
|
|
GRAPE jam. But tell that to the Swiss! If Switzerland were a
|
|
communist federation, there wouldn't be a single communal
|
|
warehouse which would stock grape jam. If I were to go up to
|
|
the commissar-in-charge-of-jams and ask him to put in a
|
|
|
|
--------------------
|
|
|
|
* I'm reminded here of the tale of the man who decided
|
|
his mule didn't NEED any food. He set out to demonstrate his
|
|
theory and almost proved his point when, unfortunately, the
|
|
beast died. Authoritarian communism runs a similar risk
|
|
when it attempts to determine the needs of others.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 13 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
requisition for a few cases, he would think I was nuts.
|
|
"Grapes are for wine," he'd tell me with infallible logic,
|
|
"and more people drink wine than eat grape jam." "But I'm a
|
|
vegetarian," I plead, "and just think of all the money (?)
|
|
I'm saving the commune by not eating any of that expensive
|
|
meat." After which he would lecture me on the economics of
|
|
jam making, tell me that a grape is more valuable in its
|
|
liquid form, and chastise me for being a throwback to
|
|
bourgeois decadence.
|
|
|
|
And what about you, dear reader? Have you no
|
|
individual idiosyncrasies? Perhaps you've got a thing about
|
|
marshmallows. What if the workers in the marshmallow
|
|
factories decide (under workers' control, of course) that
|
|
marshmallows are bad for your health, too difficult to make,
|
|
or just simply a capitalist plot? Are you to be denied the
|
|
culinary delights that only marshmallows can offer, simply
|
|
because some distant workers get it into their heads that a
|
|
marshmallowless world would be a better world?
|
|
|
|
But, not only would distribution according to need hurt
|
|
the consumer, it would be grossly unfair to the productive
|
|
worker who actually makes the goods or performs the
|
|
necessary services. Suppose, for example, that hardworking
|
|
farmer Brown goes to the communal warehouse with a load of
|
|
freshly dug potatoes. While there Brown decides he needs a
|
|
new pair of boots. Unfortunately there are only a few pairs
|
|
in stock since Jones the shoemaker quit his job - preferring
|
|
to spend his days living off Brown's potatoes and writing
|
|
sonnets about the good life. So boots are rationed. The boot
|
|
commissar agrees that Brown's boots are pretty shabby but,
|
|
he points out, Smith the astrologer is in even greater need.
|
|
Could Brown come back in a month or so when BOTH soles have
|
|
worn through? Brown walks away in disgust, resolved never
|
|
again to sweat over his potato patch.
|
|
|
|
Even today people are beginning to complain about the
|
|
injustices of the (relatively mild) welfare state. Theodore
|
|
Roszak writes that in British schools there has been a
|
|
"strong trend away from the sciences over the past four
|
|
years" and that people are showing "annoyed concern" and
|
|
"loudly observing that the country is not spending its money
|
|
to produce poets and Egyptologists - and then demanding a
|
|
sharp cut in university grants and stipends."[27] If people
|
|
are upset NOW at the number of poets and Egyptologists that
|
|
they are supporting, what would it be like if EVERYONE could
|
|
simply take up his favourite hobby as his chosen profession?
|
|
I suspect it wouldn't be long before our professional
|
|
chess players and mountain climbers found the warehouse
|
|
stocks dwindling to nothing. Social unrest would surely
|
|
increase in direct proportion to the height of the trash
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 14 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
piling up on the doorsteps and the subsequent yearning for
|
|
the "good old days" would bring about the inevitable
|
|
counter-revolution. Such would be the fate of the
|
|
anarchist-communist utopia.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Peter Kropotkin opens his chapter on "Consumption and
|
|
Production" in "The Conquest of Bread" with the following
|
|
words:
|
|
|
|
"If you open the works of any economist you will find that
|
|
he begins with PRODUCTION, the analysis of means employed
|
|
nowadays for the creation of wealth; division of labour,
|
|
manufacture, machinery, accumulation of capital. From Adam
|
|
Smith to Marx, all have proceeded along these lines. Only
|
|
in the latter parts of their books do they treat of
|
|
CONSUMPTION, that is to say, of the means necessary to
|
|
satisfy the needs of individuals....Perhaps you will say
|
|
this is logical. Before satisfying needs you must create the
|
|
wherewithal to satisfy them. But before producing anything,
|
|
must you not feel the need of it? Is it not necessity that
|
|
first drove man to hunt, to raise cattle, to cultivate land,
|
|
to make implements, and later on to invent machinery? Is it
|
|
not the study of needs that should govern production?"[28]
|
|
When I first came upon these words, I must admit I was
|
|
rather surprised. "What have we here," I thought, "is the
|
|
prince of anarchist-communism actually going to come out in
|
|
favour of the consumer?" It didn't take long to find out
|
|
that he wasn't. Most communists try very hard to ignore the
|
|
fact that the sole purpose of production is consumption. But
|
|
not Kropotkin; he first recognises the fact - and THEN he
|
|
ignores it. It's only a matter of three pages before he gets
|
|
his head back into the sand and talks of "how to reorganise
|
|
PRODUCTION so as to really satisfy all needs." [My emphasis]
|
|
|
|
Under communism it is not the consumer that counts; it
|
|
is the producer. The consumer is looked upon with scorn - a
|
|
loathsome, if necessary, evil. The worker, on the other
|
|
hand, is depicted as all that is good and heroic. It is not
|
|
by accident that the hammer and sickle find themselves as
|
|
the symbols of the Russian "workers' paradise." Can you
|
|
honestly imagine a communist society raising the banner of
|
|
bread and butter and declaring the advent of the "consumers'
|
|
paradise"? If you can, your imagination is much more vivid
|
|
than mine.
|
|
|
|
But that's exactly what individualist-anarchists would
|
|
do. Instead of the communist's "workers' control" (i.e. a
|
|
producers' democracy), we advocate a consumers' democracy.
|
|
Both democracies - like all democracies - would in fact be
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 15 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
dictatorships. The question for anarchists is which
|
|
dictatorship is the least oppressive? The answer should be
|
|
obvious. But, judging from the ratio of communists to
|
|
individualists in the anarchist movement, apparently it's
|
|
not. So perhaps I'd better explain.
|
|
|
|
The workers in some given industry decide that item A
|
|
should no longer be produced and decide instead to
|
|
manufacture item B. Now consumer X, who never liked item A
|
|
anyway, couldn't care less; but poor Y feels his life will
|
|
never be the same without A. What can Y do? He's just a lone
|
|
consumer and consumers have no rights in this society. But
|
|
maybe other Y's agree with him. A survey is taken and it is
|
|
shown that only 3% of all consumers regret the passing of A.
|
|
But can't some compromise be arrived at? How about letting
|
|
just one tiny factory make A's? Perhaps the workers agree to
|
|
this accommodation. Perhaps not. In any case the workers'
|
|
decision is final. There is no appeal. The Y's are totally
|
|
at the mercy of the workers and if the decision is adverse,
|
|
they'll just have to swallow hard and hope that next week
|
|
item C isn't taken away as well. So much for the producers'
|
|
dictatorship.
|
|
|
|
Let's now take a look at the consumers' dictatorship.
|
|
Consumers are finicky people - they want the best possible
|
|
product at the lowest possible price. To achieve this end
|
|
they will use ruthless means. The fact that producer X asks
|
|
more for his product than Y asks for his similar product is
|
|
all that the consumer needs to know. He will mercilessly buy
|
|
Y's over X's. The extenuating circumstances matter little to
|
|
him. X may have ten children and a mother-in-law to feed.
|
|
The consumer still buys from Y. Such is the nature of the
|
|
consumers' dictatorship over the producer.
|
|
|
|
Now there is a fundamental difference between these two
|
|
dictatorships. In the one the worker says to the consumer,
|
|
"I will produce what I want and if you don't like it you can
|
|
lump it." In the other the consumer says to the worker, "You
|
|
will produce what I want and if you don't I will take my
|
|
business elsewhere." It doesn't take the sensitive antennae
|
|
of an anarchist to see which of these two statements is the
|
|
more authoritarian. The first leaves no room for argument;
|
|
there are no exceptions, no loopholes for the dissident
|
|
consumer to crawl through. The second, on the other hand,
|
|
leaves a loophole so big that it is limited only by the
|
|
worker's imagination and abilities. If a producer is not
|
|
doing as well as his competitor, there's a reason for it. He
|
|
may not be suited for that particular work, in which case he
|
|
will change jobs. He may be charging too much for his goods
|
|
or services, in which case he will have to lower his costs,
|
|
profits, and/or overhead to meet the competition. But one
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 16 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
thing should be made clear: each worker is also a consumer
|
|
and what the individual looses in his role as producer by
|
|
having to cut his costs down to the competitive market
|
|
level, he makes up in his role as consumer by being able to
|
|
buy at the lowest possible prices.*
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Let us turn our attention now to the various
|
|
philosophies used by communists to justify their social
|
|
system. The exponents of any social change invariably claim
|
|
that people will be "happier" under their system than they
|
|
now are under the status quo. The big metaphysical question
|
|
then becomes, "What is happiness?" Up until recently the
|
|
communists - materialists par excellence - used to say it
|
|
was material well-being. The main gripe they had against
|
|
capitalism was that the workers were NECESSARILY in a state
|
|
of increasing poverty. Bakunin, echoing Marx, said that "the
|
|
situation of the proletariat...by virtue of inevitable
|
|
economic law, must and will become worse every year." [29]
|
|
But since World War II this pillar of communist thought has
|
|
become increasingly shaky - particularly in the United
|
|
States where "hard hats" are now pulling in salaries upwards
|
|
of four quid an hour. This fact has created such acute
|
|
embarrassment among the faithful that many communists are
|
|
now seeking a new definition of happiness which has nothing
|
|
to do with material comfort.
|
|
|
|
Very often what they do in discarding the Marxist
|
|
happiness albatross is to saddle themselves with a Freudian
|
|
one.** The new definition of happiness our neo-Freudian
|
|
communists arrive at is usually derived from what Otto
|
|
Fenichel called the "Nirvana
|
|
|
|
--------------------
|
|
|
|
* The usual objection raised to a "consumers'
|
|
democracy" is that capitalists have used similar catch
|
|
phrases in order to justify capitalism and keep the workers
|
|
in a subjugated position. Individualists sustain this
|
|
objection but point out that capitalists are being
|
|
inconsistent by not practicing what they preach. If they
|
|
did, they would no longer be in a position of privilege,
|
|
living off the labour of others. This point is made clear in
|
|
the section on capitalism later in this article.
|
|
** Wilhelm Reich and R. D. Laing are among the latest
|
|
gurus of the libertarian left. And it's not uncommon in
|
|
anarchist circles to hear a few sympathetic words about
|
|
Herbert Marcuse's "Eros and Civilisation," despite the
|
|
author's totalitarian tendencies.
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1
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- 17 -
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|
principle." The essence of this theory is that both life-
|
|
enhancing behaviour (e.g. sexual intercourse, eating) and
|
|
life-inhibiting behaviour (e.g. war, suicide) are
|
|
alternative ways of escaping from tension. Thus Freud's life
|
|
instinct and death instinct find their common ground in
|
|
Nirvana where happiness means a secure and carefree
|
|
existence. This sounds to me very much like the Christian
|
|
conception of heaven. But with communism, unlike heaven, you
|
|
don't have to give up your life to get in - just your
|
|
humanity.
|
|
|
|
Homer Lane used to have a little anecdote which
|
|
illustrates the point I'm trying to make about the communist
|
|
idea of happiness:
|
|
|
|
"A dog and a rabbit are running down a field. Both
|
|
apparently are doing the same thing, running and using their
|
|
capacity to the full. Really there is a great difference
|
|
between them. Their motives are different. One is happy, the
|
|
other unhappy. The dog is happy because he is trying to do
|
|
something with the hope of achieving it. The rabbit is
|
|
unhappy because he is afraid. A few minutes later the
|
|
position is reversed; the rabbit has reached his burrow and
|
|
is inside panting, whilst the dog is sitting outside
|
|
panting. The rabbit is now happy because it is safe, and
|
|
therefore no longer afraid. The dog is unhappy because his
|
|
hope has not been realised. Here we have the two kinds of
|
|
happiness of which each one of us is capable - happiness
|
|
based on the escape from danger, and happiness based on the
|
|
fulfillment of a hope, which is the only true happiness."
|
|
[30]
|
|
|
|
I leave it to the reader as an exercise in triviality
|
|
to decide which of these two types of happiness is
|
|
emphasised by communism. While on the subject of analogies,
|
|
I'd like to indulge in one of my own. Generally speaking
|
|
there are two kinds of cats: the "lap cat" and the "mouser."
|
|
The former leads a peaceful existence, leaving granny's lap
|
|
only long enough to make a discreet trip to its sandbox and
|
|
to lap up a saucer of milk. The latter lives by catching
|
|
mice in the farmer's barn and never goes near the inside of
|
|
the farm house. The former is normally fat and lazy; the
|
|
latter skinny and alert. Despite the lap cat's easier life,
|
|
the mouser wouldn't exchange places with him if he could,
|
|
while the lap cat COULDN'T exchange places if he would. Here
|
|
we have two cats - perhaps even from the same litter - with
|
|
two completely different attitudes toward life. The one
|
|
expects a clean sandbox and food twice a day - and he is
|
|
rarely disappointed. The other has to work for a living, but
|
|
generally finds the reward worth while. "Now what has this
|
|
got to do with the subject at hand?" I hear you cry. Just
|
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1
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- 18 -
|
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this: the communists would make "lap cats" of us all. "But
|
|
what's so bad about that?" you may ask. To which I would
|
|
have to reply (passing over the stinky problem of WHO will
|
|
change the sandbox), "Have you ever tried to 'domesticate' a
|
|
mouser?"
|
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|
|
Communism, in its quest for a tranquil, tensionless
|
|
world, inevitably harks back to the Middle Ages. Scratch a
|
|
communist and chances are pretty good you'll find a
|
|
mediaevalist underneath. Paul Goodman, for example, derives
|
|
his ideal "community of scholars" from Bologna and Paris
|
|
models based in the eleventh and twelfth centuries. [31]
|
|
Erich Fromm writes longingly of "the sense of security which
|
|
was characteristic of man in the Middle Ages....In having a
|
|
distinct, unchangeable, and unquestionable place in the
|
|
social world from the moment of birth, man was rooted in a
|
|
structuralised whole, and thus life had a meaning which left
|
|
no place, and no need, for doubt. A person was identical
|
|
with his role in society; he was a peasant, an artisan, a
|
|
knight, and not AN INDIVIDUAL who HAPPENED to have this or
|
|
that occupation. The social order was conceived as a natural
|
|
order, and being a definite part of it gave man a feeling of
|
|
security and of belonging. There was comparatively little
|
|
competition. One was born into a certain economic position
|
|
which guaranteed a livelihood determined by tradition. [32]
|
|
Kropotkin goes even further than Fromm. I'd like to examine
|
|
his position in some detail because I think it is very
|
|
instructive of how the communist mentality works. In perhaps
|
|
his best-known book, "Mutual Aid," Kropotkin devotes two of
|
|
its eight chapters to glorifying the Middle Ages, which he
|
|
boldly claim were one of "the two greatest periods of
|
|
[mankind's] history." [33] (The other one being ancient
|
|
Greece. He doesn't say how he reconciles this with the fact
|
|
that Greece was based firmly on a foundation of slavery).
|
|
"No period of history could better illustrate the
|
|
constructive powers of the popular masses than the tenth and
|
|
eleventh centuries...but, unhappily, this is a period about
|
|
which historical information is especially scarce." [34] I
|
|
wonder why? Could it be that everyone was having such a good
|
|
time that no one found time to record it? Kropotkin writes
|
|
of the mediaeval cities as "centres of liberty and
|
|
enlightenment." [35] The mediaeval guilds, he says, answered
|
|
"a deeply inrooted want of human nature," [36] calling them
|
|
"organisations for maintaining justice." [37] Let's see what
|
|
Kropotkin means here by "justice":
|
|
|
|
"If a brother's house is burned, or he has lost his ship, or
|
|
has suffered on a pilgrim's voyage, all the brethren MUST
|
|
come to his aid. If a brother falls dangerously ill, two
|
|
brethren MUST keep watch by his bed till he is out of
|
|
danger, and if he dies, the brethren must bury him - a great
|
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1
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|
- 19 -
|
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|
|
affair in those times of pestilences [Kropotkin must have
|
|
been dozing to admit this in his Utopia] - and follow him to
|
|
the church and the grave. After his death they MUST provide
|
|
for his children....If a brother was involved in a quarrel
|
|
with a stranger to the guild, they agreed to support him for
|
|
bad and for good; that is, whether he was unjustly accused
|
|
of aggression, OR REALLY WAS THE AGGRESSOR, they HAD to
|
|
support him....They went to court to support by oath the
|
|
truthfulness of his statements, and if he was found guilty
|
|
they did not let him go to full ruin and become a slave
|
|
through not paying the due compensation; they all paid
|
|
it....Such were the leading ideas of those brotherhoods
|
|
which gradually covered the whole of mediaeval life." [38]
|
|
(My emphasis)
|
|
|
|
And such is Kropotkin's conception of "justice," which could
|
|
better be described as a warped sense of solidarity. He goes
|
|
on to say, "It is evident that an institution so well suited
|
|
to serve the need of union, without depriving the individual
|
|
of his initiative, could but spread, grow, and fortify."
|
|
[39] "We see not only merchants, craftsmen, hunters, and
|
|
peasants united in guilds; we also see guilds of priests,
|
|
painters, teachers of primary schools and universities,
|
|
guilds for performing the passion play, for building a
|
|
church, for developing the 'mystery' of a given school of
|
|
art or craft, or for a special recreation - even guilds
|
|
among beggars, executioners, and lost women, all organised
|
|
on the same double principle of self-jurisdiction and mutual
|
|
support." [40] It was such "unity of thought" which
|
|
Kropotkin thinks "can but excite our admiration." [41]
|
|
|
|
But where did the common labourer fit into all this?
|
|
Kropotkin makes the remarkable generalisation that "at no
|
|
time has labour enjoyed such conditions of prosperity and
|
|
such respect." [42] As proof he cites the "glorious
|
|
donations" [43] the workers gave to the cathedrals. These,
|
|
he says, "bear testimony of their relative well-being." [44]
|
|
(Just as the Taj Mahal bears testimony of the relative
|
|
well-being of the people of India, no doubt). "Many
|
|
aspirations of our modern radicals were already realised in
|
|
the Middle Ages [and] much of what is described now as
|
|
Utopian was accepted then as a matter of fact." [45]
|
|
|
|
As for the material achievements of the Middle Ages,
|
|
Kropotkin can't find a superlative super enough to describe
|
|
them - but he tries:
|
|
|
|
"The very face of Europe had been changed. The land was
|
|
dotted with rich cities, surrounded by immense thick walls
|
|
[I wonder why?] which were embellished by towers and gates,
|
|
each of them a work of art in itself. The cathedrals,
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 20 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
conceived in a grand style and profusely decorated, lifted
|
|
their bell-towers to the skies, displaying a purity of form
|
|
and a boldness of imagination which we now vainly strive to
|
|
attain....[He displays a bit of 'boldness of imagination'
|
|
himself (to be quite charitable) when he goes on to say:]
|
|
Over large tracts of land well-being had taken the place of
|
|
misery; learning had grown and spread. The methods of
|
|
science had been elaborated; the basis of natural philosophy
|
|
had been laid down; and the way had been paved for all the
|
|
mechanical inventions of which our own times are so proud.
|
|
Such were the magic [sic] changes accomplished in Europe in
|
|
less than four hundred years." [46]
|
|
|
|
Just what were these "magic changes" of which Kropotkin
|
|
is so proud? He lists about a dozen. [47] Among them are:
|
|
printing (neglecting to inform us that the Gutenberg press
|
|
was invented in the middle of the 15th century, sometime
|
|
after the mediaeval cities "degenerated into centralised
|
|
states"); steelmaking (neglecting to inform us that
|
|
steelmaking had been mentioned in the works of Homer and was
|
|
used continuously since that time); glassmaking (neglecting
|
|
to inform us that the Encyclopaedia Britannica - to which he
|
|
contributed numerous articles - devotes to the Middle Ages
|
|
all of two sentences of a 27 page article on the history of
|
|
glassmaking); the telescope (neglecting to inform us that it
|
|
wasn't even invented until 1608); gunpowder and the compass
|
|
(neglecting to inform us that the Chinese lay earlier claims
|
|
to both of these inventions); algebra (neglecting to inform
|
|
us that algebra was in common use in ancient Babylonia and
|
|
that, although being introduced to mediaeval Europe by the
|
|
Arabs, no important contributions were made by Europeans
|
|
until the Renaissance); the decimal system (neglecting to
|
|
inform us that the Hindus invented the system about a
|
|
thousand years before it gained any ground in Europe in the
|
|
17th century); calendar reform (neglecting to inform us that
|
|
although Roger Bacon suggested such reform to the Pope in
|
|
the 13th century, no action was taken until 300 years later
|
|
under the reign of Pope Gregory XIII in 1582); chemistry
|
|
(neglecting to inform us of an earlier work of his where he
|
|
said chemistry was "entirely a product of our [19th]
|
|
century." [48]) Indeed the only things he mentions as
|
|
products of the Middle Ages which stand up under scrutiny
|
|
are counterpoint and, paradoxically, the mechanical clock.
|
|
To top it all off, he then has the gall to cite Galileo and
|
|
Copernicus as being "direct descendents" of mediaeval
|
|
science [49] - somehow managing to ignore the fact that
|
|
Galileo spent the last eight years of his life under house
|
|
arrest for supporting the Copernican theory, thanks to that
|
|
grand mediaeval institution, the Inquisition.
|
|
|
|
You may be wondering why the people of the Middle Ages
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 21 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
let such a Utopia slip through their fingers. Kropotkin
|
|
cites foreign invasions - notably those of the Mongols,
|
|
Turks, and Moors [50] - but makes it quite clear that the
|
|
"greatest and most fatal error of most cities was to bass
|
|
their wealth upon commerce and industry." [51] So here we
|
|
have it laid bare for all to see: Kropotkin's ideal
|
|
community would not only return us to the dark ages, but
|
|
would take away the one thing that could bring us back -
|
|
commerce and industry.
|
|
|
|
Rudolf Rocker, the darling of the anarcho-syndicalists,
|
|
similarly eulogises the Middle Ages. He, too, felt that
|
|
mediaeval man led a "rich life" [52] which gave "wings to
|
|
his spirit and prevent[ed] his mental stagnation." [53] But
|
|
unlike Kropotkin - who chalked up mediaeval solidarity to
|
|
man's innate "nature" - Rocker (correctly) explains these
|
|
"fraternal associations" by means of a most unanarchistic
|
|
concept - Christianity:
|
|
|
|
"Mediaeval man felt himself to be bound up with a single,
|
|
uniform culture, a member of a great community extending
|
|
over all countries, in whose bosom all people found their
|
|
place. It was the community of Christendom which included
|
|
all the scattered units of the Christian world and
|
|
spiritually unified them....The deeper the concept of
|
|
Christianity took root in men, the easier they overcame all
|
|
barriers between themselves and others, and the stronger
|
|
lived in them the consciousness that all belonged to one
|
|
great community and strove toward a common goal." [54]
|
|
|
|
So we see that the glue that held these idyllic
|
|
mediaeval communities together was not Kropotkin's "mutual
|
|
aid," but rather Christian mysticism. Rocker was perceptive
|
|
enough to see this; Kropotkin apparently was not. But what
|
|
both of these men failed to see was that mysticism is the
|
|
necessary glue of ANY communist society. The mystical
|
|
Garden of Eden is the ultimate goal of every church of the
|
|
communist religion. Unfortunately, as every good Christian
|
|
will tell you, the only way you can stay in the Garden of
|
|
Eden is to abstain from the "tree of knowledge." Communists
|
|
are apparently willing to pay this price. Individualists are
|
|
not. It is communism's intention to carry religion to its
|
|
ultimate absurdity: it would sacrifice man on the cross of
|
|
altruism for the sake of - Man.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
I'd like to end my diatribe against communism by
|
|
quoting another one. This is what one prophetic Frenchman,
|
|
Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, had to say about communism eight
|
|
years before the "Communist Manifesto" appeared like a
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 22 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
spectre to haunt Europe - and like a good French wine, his
|
|
words seem to have improved with age:
|
|
|
|
"Communism - or association in a simple form - is the
|
|
necessary object and original aspiration of the social
|
|
nature, the spontaneous movement by which it manifests and
|
|
establishes itself. It is the first phase of human
|
|
civilisation. In this state of society, - which the jurists
|
|
have called 'negative communism', - man draws near to man,
|
|
and shares with him the fruits of the field and the milk and
|
|
flesh of animals. Little by little this communism - negative
|
|
as long as man does not produce - tends to become positive
|
|
and organic through the development of labour and industry.
|
|
But it is then that the sovereignty of thought, and the
|
|
terrible faculty of reasoning logically or illogically,
|
|
teach man that, if equality is the sine qua non of society,
|
|
communism is the first species of slavery....The
|
|
disadvantages of communism are so obvious that its critics
|
|
never have needed to employ much eloquence to thoroughly
|
|
disgust men with it. The irreparability of the injustice
|
|
which it causes, the violence which it does to attractions
|
|
and repulsions, the yoke of iron which it fastens upon the
|
|
will, the moral torture to which it subjects the conscience,
|
|
the debilitating effect which it has upon society; and, to
|
|
sum it all up, the pious and stupid uniformity which it
|
|
enforces upon the free, active, reasoning, unsubmissive
|
|
personality of man, have shocked common sense, and condemned
|
|
communism by an irrevocable decree. The authorities and
|
|
examples cited in its favour disprove it. The communistic
|
|
republic of Plato involved slavery; that of Lycurgus
|
|
employed Helots, whose duty it was to produce for their
|
|
masters, thus enabling the latter to devote themselves
|
|
exclusively to athletic sports and to war, Even J. J.
|
|
Rousseau - confounding communism and equality - has said
|
|
somewhere that, without slavery, he did not think equality
|
|
of conditions possible. The communities of the early Church
|
|
did not last the first century out, and soon degenerated
|
|
into monasteries....The greatest danger to which society is
|
|
exposed today is that of another shipwreck on this rock.
|
|
Singularly enough, systematic communism - the deliberate
|
|
negation of property - is conceived under the direct
|
|
influence of the proprietary prejudice; and property is the
|
|
basis of all communistic theories. The members of a
|
|
community, it is true, have no private property; but the
|
|
community is proprietor, and proprietor not only of the
|
|
goods, but of the persons and wills. In consequence of this
|
|
principle of absolute property, labour, which should be only
|
|
a condition imposed upon man by Nature, becomes in all
|
|
communities a human commandment, and therefore odious.
|
|
Passive obedience, irreconcilable with a reflecting will, is
|
|
strictly enforced. Fidelity to regulations, which are always
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 23 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
defective, however wise they may be thought, allows of no
|
|
complaint. Life, talent, and all the human faculties are the
|
|
property of the State, which has the right to use them as it
|
|
pleases for the common good. Private associations are
|
|
sternly prohibited, in spite of the likes and dislikes of
|
|
different natures, because to tolerate them would be to
|
|
introduce small communities within the large one, and
|
|
consequently private property; the strong work for the weak,
|
|
although this ought to be left to benevolence, and not
|
|
enforced, advised, or enjoined; the industrious work for the
|
|
lazy though this is unjust; the clever work for the foolish,
|
|
although this is absurd; and, finally, man - casting aside
|
|
his personality, his spontaneity, his genius, and his
|
|
affections - humbly annihilates himself at the feet of the
|
|
majestic and inflexible Commune! Communism is inequality,
|
|
but not as property is. Property is the exploitation of the
|
|
weak by the strong.* Communism is the exploitation of the
|
|
strong by the weak. In property, inequality of conditions is
|
|
the result of force, under whatever name it be disguised:
|
|
physical and mental force; force of events, chance, FORTUNE;
|
|
force of accumulated property, etc. In communism, inequality
|
|
springs from placing mediocrity on a level with excellence.
|
|
This damaging equation is repellent to the conscience, and
|
|
causes merit to complain; for although it may be the duty of
|
|
the strong to aid the weak, they prefer to do it out of
|
|
generosity, - they never will endure a comparison. Give them
|
|
equal opportunities of labour, and equal wages, but never
|
|
allow their jealousy to be awakened by mutual suspicion of
|
|
unfaithfulness in the performance of the common task.
|
|
Communism is oppression and slavery. Man is very willing to
|
|
obey the law of duty, serve his country, and oblige his
|
|
friends; but he wishes to labour when he pleases, where he
|
|
pleases, and as much as he pleases. He wishes to dispose of
|
|
his own time, to be governed only by necessity, to choose
|
|
his friendships, his recreation, and his discipline; to act
|
|
from judgement, not by command; to sacrifice himself through
|
|
selfishness, not through servile obligation. Communism is
|
|
essentially opposed to the free exercise of our faculties,
|
|
to our noblest desires, to our deepest feelings. Any plan
|
|
which could be devised for reconciling it with the demands
|
|
of the individual reason and will would end only in changing
|
|
the thing while preserving the name. Now, if we are honest
|
|
truth-seekers, we shall avoid disputes about words. Thus,
|
|
communism violates the sovereignty of the conscience and
|
|
equality: the first, by restricting spontaneity of mind and
|
|
heart, and freedom of thought and action; the second, by
|
|
placing labour and laziness, skill and stupidity, and even
|
|
vice and virtue on an equality in point of comfort." [55]
|
|
|
|
--------------------
|
|
|
|
* See footnote on page 5.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 24 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
REVOLUTION: THE ROAD TO FREEDOM?
|
|
|
|
"It's true that non-violence has been a dismal failure.
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The only bigger failure has been violence."
|
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- Joan Baez
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There's an old story about a motorist who stopped a
|
|
policeman in downtown Manhattan and asked him how he could
|
|
get to the Brooklyn Bridge. The officer looked around,
|
|
thought a minute, scratched his head and finally replied,
|
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"I'm sorry, but you can't get there from here. Some
|
|
anarchists are now wondering if you can get to the free
|
|
society from where we stand today. I must confess that I,
|
|
too, harbour some doubts. But if there is a way, it is
|
|
incumbent upon all who wish to find that way to carefully
|
|
examine the important end-means problem.
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"The end justifies the means." Few people would argue
|
|
with this trite statement. Certainly all apologists of
|
|
government must ultimately fall back on such reasoning to
|
|
justify their large police forces and standing armies.
|
|
Revolutionary anarchists must also rely on this argument to
|
|
justify their authoritarian methods "just one more time",
|
|
the revolution being for them "the unfreedom to end
|
|
unfreedom." It seems that the only people who reject
|
|
outright this article of faith are a handful of (mostly
|
|
religious) pacifists. The question I'd like to consider
|
|
here is not whether the end JUSTIFIES the means (because I,
|
|
too, tend to feel that it does), but rather whether the end
|
|
is AFFECTED by the means and, if so, to what extent.
|
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That the end is affected by the means should be
|
|
obvious. Whether I obtain your watch by swindling you,
|
|
buying it from you, stealing it from you, or soliciting it
|
|
as a gift from you makes the same watch "graft", "my
|
|
property", "booty", or "a donation." The same can be said
|
|
for social change. Even so strong an advocate of violent
|
|
revolution as Herbert Marcuse, in one of his rare lapses
|
|
into sanity, realised this fact:
|
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|
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"Unless the revolution itself progresses through freedom,
|
|
the need for domination and repression would be carried over
|
|
into the new society and the fateful separation between the
|
|
'immediate' and the 'true' interest of the individuals would
|
|
be almost inevitable; the individuals would become the
|
|
objects of their own liberation, and freedom would be a
|
|
matter of administration and decree. Progress would be
|
|
progressive repression, and the 'delay' in freedom would
|
|
threaten to become self-propelling and self-perpetuating."
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[56]
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1
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- 25 -
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But despite the truth of Marcuse's observation, we still
|
|
find many anarchists looking for a shortcut to freedom by
|
|
means of violent revolution. The idea that anarchism can be
|
|
inaugurated by violence is as fallacious as the idea that it
|
|
can be sustained by violence. The best that can be said for
|
|
violence is that it may, in rare circumstances, be used as
|
|
an expedient to save us from extinction. But the
|
|
individualist's rejection of violence (except in cases of
|
|
self-defence) is not due to any lofty pacifist principles;
|
|
it's a matter of pure pragmatism: we realise that violence
|
|
just simply does not work.
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|
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The task of anarchism, as the individualist sees it, is
|
|
not to destroy the state, but rather to destroy the MYTH of
|
|
the state. Once people realise that they no longer need the
|
|
state, it will - in the words of Frederick Engels -
|
|
inevitably "wither away" ("Anti-Duehring", 1877) and be
|
|
consigned to the "Museum of Antiquities, by the side of the
|
|
spinning wheel and the bronze axe" ("Origin of the Family,
|
|
Private Property and the State", 1884). But unless
|
|
anarchists can create a general and well-grounded disbelief
|
|
in the state as an INSTITUTION, the existing state might be
|
|
destroyed by violent revolution or it might fall through its
|
|
own rottenness, but another would inevitably rise in its
|
|
place. And why shouldn't it? As long as people believe the
|
|
state to be necessary (even a "necessary evil", as Thomas
|
|
Paine said), the state will always exist.
|
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|
|
We have already seen how Kropotkin would usher in the
|
|
millennium by the complete expropriation of all property.
|
|
"We must see clearly in private property what it really is,
|
|
a conscious or unconscious robbery of the substance of all,
|
|
and seize it joyfully for the common benefit." [57] He
|
|
cheerfully goes on to say, "The instinct of destruction, so
|
|
natural and so just...will find ample room for
|
|
satisfaction." [58] Kropotkin's modern-day heirs are no
|
|
different. Noam Chomsky, writing in the "New York Review of
|
|
Books" and reprinted in a recent issue of "Anarchy",
|
|
applauds the heroism of the Paris Commune of 1871,
|
|
mentioning only in passing that "the Commune, of course [!],
|
|
was drowned in blood." [59] Later in the same article he
|
|
writes, "What is far more important is that these ideas
|
|
[direct workers' control] have been realised in spontaneous
|
|
revolutionary action, for example in Germany and Italy after
|
|
World War I and in Spain (specifically, industrial
|
|
Barcelona) in 1936." [60] What Chomsky apparently finds
|
|
relatively UNimportant are the million-odd corpses which
|
|
were the direct result of these "spontaneous revolutionary
|
|
actions." He also somehow manages to ignore the fact that
|
|
the three countries he mentions - Germany, Italy and Spain -
|
|
were without exception victims of fascism within a few years
|
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1
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- 26 -
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of these glorious revolutions. One doesn't need a great deal
|
|
of insight to be able to draw a parallel between these
|
|
"spontaneous" actions with their reactionary aftermaths and
|
|
the spontaneous "trashings" which are currently in fashion
|
|
in the United States. But it seems the Weathermen really DO
|
|
"need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows." [61]
|
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|
|
The question of how to attain the anarchist society has
|
|
divided anarchists nearly as much as the question of what
|
|
the anarchist society actually is. While Bakunin insisted on
|
|
the necessity of "bloody revolutions" [62], Proudhon
|
|
believed that violence was unnecessary - saying instead that
|
|
"reason will serve us better." [63] The same discord was
|
|
echoed on the other side of the Atlantic some decades later
|
|
when, in the wake of the infamous Haymarket bombing, the
|
|
issue of violence came to a head. Benjamin Tucker, writing
|
|
in the columns of "Liberty", had this to say about
|
|
accusations leveled against him by Johann Most, the
|
|
communist-anarchist editor of "Freiheit":
|
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|
|
"It makes very little difference to Herr Most what a man
|
|
believes in economics. The test of fellowship with him lies
|
|
in acceptance of dynamite as a cure-all. Though I should
|
|
prove that my economic views, if realised, would turn our
|
|
social system inside out, he would not therefore regard me
|
|
as a revolutionist. He declares outright that I am no
|
|
revolutionist, because the thought of the coming revolution
|
|
(by dynamite, he means) makes my flesh creep. Well, I
|
|
frankly confess that I take no pleasure in the thought of
|
|
bloodshed and mutilation and death. At these things my
|
|
feelings revolt. And if delight in them is a requisite of a
|
|
revolutionist, then indeed I am no revolutionist. When
|
|
revolutionist and cannibal become synonyms, count me out, if
|
|
you please. But, though my feelings revolt, I am not
|
|
mastered by them or made a coward by them. More than from
|
|
dynamite and blood do I shrink from the thought of a
|
|
permanent system of society involving the slow starvation of
|
|
the most industrious and deserving of its members. If I
|
|
should ever become convinced that the policy of bloodshed is
|
|
necessary to end our social system, the loudest of today's
|
|
shriekers for blood would not surpass me in the stoicism
|
|
with which I would face the inevitable. Indeed, a plumb-
|
|
liner to the last, I am confident that under such
|
|
circumstances many who now think me chicken-hearted would
|
|
condemn the stony-heartedness with which I should favour the
|
|
utter sacrifice of every feeling of pity to the necessities
|
|
of the terroristic policy. Neither fear nor sentimentalism,
|
|
then, dictates my opposition to forcible methods. Such being
|
|
the case, how stupid, how unfair, in Herr Most, to picture
|
|
me as crossing myself at the mention of the word revolution
|
|
simply because I steadfastly act on my well-known belief
|
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1
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|
- 27 -
|
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|
|
|
|
|
that force cannot substitute truth for a lie in political
|
|
economy!" [64]
|
|
|
|
It is this issue of economics which generally sorts
|
|
anarchists into the violent and non-violent wings of
|
|
anarchism. Individualists, by and large, are pacifists in
|
|
practice (if not in theory), whereas the communists tend
|
|
toward violent revolution.* Why is this so? One reason I
|
|
think is that individualists are more concerned with
|
|
changing the conditions which directly affect their lives
|
|
than they are with reforming the whole world "for the good
|
|
of all." The communists, on the other hand, have a more
|
|
evangelical spirit. Like all good missionaries, they are out
|
|
to convert the unbeliever - whether he likes it or not. And
|
|
inevitably this leads to violence. Another reason communists
|
|
are more prone to violence than individualists can be found,
|
|
I think, in looking at the nature of the force each is
|
|
willing to use to secure and sustain his respective system.
|
|
Individualists believe that the only justifiable force is
|
|
force used in preventing invasion (i.e. defensive force).
|
|
Communists, however, would compel the worker to pool his
|
|
products with the products of others and forbid him to sell
|
|
his labour or the products of his labour. To "compel" and
|
|
"forbid" requires the use of offensive force. It is no
|
|
wonder, then, that most communists advocate violence to
|
|
achieve their objectives.
|
|
|
|
If freedom is really what we anarchists crack it up to
|
|
be, it shouldn't be necessary to force it down the throat of
|
|
anyone. What an absurdity! Even so superficial a writer as
|
|
Agatha Christie recognised that "if it is not possible to go
|
|
back [from freedom], or to choose to go back, then it is not
|
|
freedom." [66] A. J. Muste used to say that "there is no way
|
|
to peace - peace IS the way." The same thing is true about
|
|
freedom: the only way to freedom is BY freedom. This
|
|
statement is so nearly tautological that it should not need
|
|
saying. The only way to realise anarchy is for a sufficient
|
|
number of people to be convinced that their own interests
|
|
demand it. Human society does not run on idealism - it runs
|
|
on pragmatism. And unless people can be made to realise that
|
|
anarchy actually works for THEIR benefit, it will remain
|
|
|
|
--------------------
|
|
|
|
* There are exceptions of course. It is hard to imagine
|
|
a more dedicated pacifist than Tolstoy, for example. On the
|
|
other side of the coin is Stirner, who quotes with near
|
|
relish the French Revolutionary slogan "the world will have
|
|
no rest till the last king is hanged with the guts of the
|
|
last priest." [65]
|
|
|
|
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|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 28 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
what it is today: an idle pipe dream; "a nice theory, but
|
|
unrealistic." It is the anarchist's job to convince people
|
|
otherwise.
|
|
|
|
Herbert Spencer - the great evolutionist of whom Darwin
|
|
said, "He is about a dozen times my superior" - observed the
|
|
following fact of nature:
|
|
|
|
"Metamorphosis is the universal law, exemplified throughout
|
|
the Heavens and on the Earth: especially throughout the
|
|
organic world; and above all in the animal division of it.
|
|
No creature, save the simplest and most minute, commences
|
|
its existence in a form like that which it eventually
|
|
assumes; and in most cases the unlikeness is great - so
|
|
great that kinship between the first and the last forms
|
|
would be incredible were it not daily demonstrated in every
|
|
poultry-yard and every garden. More than this is true. The
|
|
changes of form are often several: each of them being an
|
|
apparently complete transformation - egg, larva, pupa,
|
|
imago, for example ... No one of them ends as it begins; and
|
|
the difference between its original structure and its
|
|
ultimate structure is such that, at the outset change of the
|
|
one into the other would have seemed incredible." [67]
|
|
|
|
This universal law of metamorphosis holds not only for
|
|
biology, but for society as well. Modern-day Christianity
|
|
resembles the early Christian church about as much as a
|
|
butterfly resembles a caterpillar. Thomas Jefferson would
|
|
have been horrified if he could have foreseen the
|
|
"government by the consent of the governed" which today is
|
|
the hereditary heir of his Declaration of Independence.
|
|
French revolutionaries took turns beheading one another
|
|
until that great believer in "les droits de l'homme",
|
|
Napoleon Bonaparte, came upon the scene to secure "liberte,
|
|
egalite, fraternite" for all. And wasn't it comrade Stalin
|
|
who in 1906 so confidently forecast the nature of the coming
|
|
revolution?: "The dictatorship of the proletariat will be a
|
|
dictatorship of the entire proletariat as a class over the
|
|
bourgeoisie and not the domination of a few individuals over
|
|
the proletariat." [68] The examples of these ugly duckling
|
|
stories in reverse are endless. For as Robert Burns wrote
|
|
nearly two centuries ago:
|
|
|
|
"The best laid schemes o' mice and men
|
|
Gang aft a-gley;
|
|
An' lea'e us nought but grief and pain
|
|
For promis'd joy." [69]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 29 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Why is it that Utopian dreams have a habit of turning
|
|
into nightmares in practice? Very simply because people
|
|
don't act the way the would-be architects of society would
|
|
have them act. The mythical man never measures up to the
|
|
real man. This point was brought home forcefully in a recent
|
|
letter to "Freedom" by S. E. Parker who observed that our
|
|
modern visionaries are bound for disappointment because they
|
|
are "trying to deduce an 'is' from an 'ought'." [70] Paper
|
|
constitutions might work all right in a society of paper
|
|
dolls, but they can only bring smiles to those who have
|
|
observed their results in the real world. The same is true
|
|
of paper revolutions which invariably have to go back to the
|
|
drawing board once the reign of terror sets in. And if
|
|
communist-anarchists think that their paper social systems
|
|
are exempt from this, how do they explain the presence of
|
|
anarchist "leaders" in high government positions during the
|
|
Spanish Civil War?
|
|
|
|
Hasn't everyone been surprised at sometime or other
|
|
with the behaviour of people they thought they knew well?
|
|
Perhaps a relative or a good friend does something "totally
|
|
out of character." We can never completely know even those
|
|
people closest to us, let alone total strangers. How are we,
|
|
then, to comprehend and predict the behaviour of complex
|
|
groups of people? To make assumptions about how people must
|
|
and will act under a hypothetical social system is idle
|
|
conjecture. We know from daily experience that men don't act
|
|
as they "ought" to act or think as they "ought" to think.
|
|
Why should things be any different after the revolution? Yet
|
|
we still find an abundance of revolutionaries willing to
|
|
kill and be killed for a cause which more likely than not,
|
|
if realised, would bear no recognizable resemblance to what
|
|
they were fighting for. This reason alone should be
|
|
sufficient to give these people second thoughts about their
|
|
methods. But apparently they are too carried away by the
|
|
violence of their own rhetoric to be bothered with where it
|
|
will lead them.*
|
|
|
|
There is but one effective way to rid ourselves of the
|
|
oppressive power of the state. It is not to shoot it to
|
|
death; it is not to vote it to death; it is not even to
|
|
persuade it to death. It is rather to starve it to death.
|
|
|
|
--------------------
|
|
|
|
* I am reminded here of a Herblock cartoon which came
|
|
out during the Johnson-Goldwater presidential campaign of
|
|
1964. It pictures Goldwater standing in the rubble of a
|
|
nuclear war and proclaiming, "But that's not what I meant!"
|
|
I wonder if the Utopia which our idealists intend to usher
|
|
in by violent revolution will be what they really "meant"?
|
|
|
|
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|
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|
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|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 30 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Power feeds on its spoils, and dies when its victims refuse
|
|
to be despoiled. There is much truth in the well- known
|
|
pacifist slogan, "Wars will cease when people refuse to
|
|
fight." This slogan can be generalised to say that
|
|
"government will cease when people refuse to be governed."
|
|
As Tucker put it, "There is not a tyrant in the civilised
|
|
world today who would not do anything in his power to
|
|
precipitate a bloody revolution rather than see himself
|
|
confronted by any large fraction of his subjects determined
|
|
not to obey. An insurrection is easily quelled; but no army
|
|
is willing or able to train its guns on inoffensive people
|
|
who do not even gather in the streets but stay at home and
|
|
stand back on their rights." [71]
|
|
|
|
A particularly effective weapon could be massive tax
|
|
refusal. If (say) one-fifth of the population of the United
|
|
States refused to pay their taxes, the government would be
|
|
impaled on the horns of a dilemma. Should they ignore the
|
|
problem, it would only get worse - for who is going to
|
|
willingly contribute to the government's coffers when his
|
|
neighbours are getting away scotfree? Or should they opt to
|
|
prosecute, the burden just to feed and guard so many
|
|
"parasites" - not to mention the lose of revenue - would be
|
|
so great that the other four-fifths of the population would
|
|
soon rebel. But in order to succeed, this type of action
|
|
would require massive numbers. Isolated tax refusal - like
|
|
isolated draft refusal - is a useless waste of resources. It
|
|
is like trying to purify the salty ocean by dumping a cup of
|
|
distilled water into it. The individualist-anarchist would
|
|
no more advocate such sacrificial offerings than the violent
|
|
revolutionary would advocate walking into his neighbourhood
|
|
police station and "offing the pig." As he would tell you,
|
|
"It is not wise warfare to throw your ammunition to the
|
|
enemy unless you throw it from the cannon's mouth." Tucker
|
|
agrees. Replying to a critic who felt otherwise he said,
|
|
"Placed in a situation where, from the choice of one or the
|
|
other horn of a dilemma, it must follow either that fools
|
|
will think a man a coward or that wise men will think him a
|
|
fool, I can conceive of no possible ground for hesitancy in
|
|
the selection." [72]
|
|
|
|
There is a tendency among anarchists these days -
|
|
particularly in the United States - to talk about
|
|
"alternatives" and "parallel institutions". This is a
|
|
healthy sign which individualists very much encourage. The
|
|
best argument one can possibly present against "the system"
|
|
is to DEMONSTRATE a better one. Some communist-anarchists
|
|
(let it be said to their credit) are now trying to do just
|
|
that. Communal farms, schools, etc. have been sprouting up
|
|
all over the States. Individualists, of course, welcome
|
|
these experiments - especially where they fulfill the needs
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 31 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
of those involved and contribute to their happiness. But we
|
|
can't help questioning the over-all futility of such social
|
|
landscape gardening. The vast majority of these experiments
|
|
collapse in dismal failure within the first year or two,
|
|
proving nothing but the difficulty of communal living. And
|
|
should an isolated community manage to survive, their
|
|
success could not be judged as conclusive since it would be
|
|
said that their principles were applicable only to people
|
|
well-nigh perfect. They might well be considered as the
|
|
exceptions which proved the rule. If anarchy is to succeed
|
|
to any appreciable extent, it has to be brought within the
|
|
reach of everyone. I'm afraid that tepees in New Mexico
|
|
don't satisfy that criterion.
|
|
|
|
The parallel institution I would like to see tried
|
|
would be something called a "mutual bank."* The beauty of
|
|
this proposal is that it can be carried out under the very
|
|
nose of the man-in-the-street. I would hope that in this
|
|
way people could see for themselves the practical advantages
|
|
it has to offer them, and ultimately accept the plan as
|
|
their own. I'm well aware that this scheme, like any other,
|
|
is subject to the law of metamorphosis referred to earlier.
|
|
But should this plan fail, unlike those plans which require
|
|
bloody revolutions for their implementation, the only thing
|
|
hurt would be the pride of a few hair-brained
|
|
individualists.
|
|
|
|
--------------------
|
|
|
|
* The reader can judge for himself the merits of this
|
|
plan when I examine it in some detail later on in this
|
|
article.
|
|
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- 32 -
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EGOISM: THE PHILOSOPHY OF FREEDOM
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"Many a year I've used my nose
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To smell the onion and the rose;
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Is there any proof which shows
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That I've a right to that same nose?"
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- Johann Christoph Friedrich Schiller
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The philosophy of individualist-anarchism is "egoism."
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It is not my purpose here to give a detailed account of this
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philosophy, but I would like to explode a few of the more
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common myths about egoism and present to the reader enough
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of its essence so that he may understand more clearly the
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section on individualist economics. I am tempted here to
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quote long extracts from "The Ego and His Own," for it was
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this book which first presented the egoist philosophy in a
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systematic way. Unfortunately, I find that Stirner's
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"unique" style does not readily lend itself to quotation.
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So what I have done in the following pages is to dress up
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Stirner's ideas in a language largely my own.
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Voltaire once said, "If God did not exist, it would be
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necessary to invent him." Bakunin wisely retorted, "If God
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DID exist, it would be necessary to abolish him."
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Unfortunately, Bakunin would only abolish God. It is the
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egoist's intention to abolish GODS. It is clear from
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Bakunin's writings that what he meant by God was what
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Voltaire meant - namely the religious God. The egoist sees
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many more gods than that - in fact, as many as there are
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fixed ideas. Bakunin's gods, for example, include the god
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of humanity, the god of brotherhood, the god of mankind -
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all variants on the god of altruism. The egoist, in
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striking down ALL gods, looks only to his WILL. He
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recognises no legitimate power over himself.* The world is
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there for him to consume - if he CAN. And he can if he has
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the power. For the egoist, the only right is the right of
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might. He accepts no "inalienable rights," for such rights -
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by virtue of the fact that they're inalienable - must come
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from a higher power, some god. The American Declaration of
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--------------------
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* He does not, of course, claim to be omnipotent. There
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ARE external powers over him. The difference between the
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egoist and non-egoist in this regard is therefore one mainly
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of attitude: the egoist recognises external power as an
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enemy and consciously fights against it, while the non-
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egoist humbles himself before it and often accepts it as a
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friend.
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1
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- 33 -
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Independence, for example, in proclaiming these rights found
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it necessary to invoke the "Laws of Nature and of Nature's
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God." The same was true of the French Revolutionary
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"Declaration des droits de l'homme et du citoyen."
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The egoist recognises no right - or what amounts to the
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same thing - claims ALL rights for himself. What he can get
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by force he has a right to; and what he can't, he has no
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right. He demands no rights, nor does he recognise them in
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others. "Right - is a wheel in the head, put there by a
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spook," [73] says Stirner. Right is also the spook which has
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kept men servile throughout the ages. The believer in rights
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has always been his own jailer. What sovereign could last
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the day out without a general belief in the "divine right of
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kings"? And where would Messrs. Nixon, Heath, et. al. be
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today without the "right" of the majority?
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Men make their tyrants as they make their gods. The
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tyrant is a man like any other. His power comes from the
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abdicated power of his subjects. If people believe a man to
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have superhuman powers, they automatically GIVE him those
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powers by default. Had Hitler's pants fallen down during one
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of his ranting speeches, the whole course of history might
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have been different. For who can respect a naked Fuehrer?
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And who knows? The beginning of the end of Lyndon Johnson's
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political career might well have been when he showed his
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operation scar on coast-to-coast television for the whole
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wide world to see that he really was a man after all. This
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sentiment was expressed by Stirner when he said, "Idols
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exist through me; I need only refrain from creating them
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anew, then they exist no longer: 'higher powers' exist only
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through my exalting them and abasing myself. Consequently
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my relation to the world is this: I no longer do anything
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for it 'for God's sake,' I do nothing 'for man's sake,' but
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what I do I do 'for my sake'." [74] The one thing that makes
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a man different from any other living creature is his power
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to reason. It is by this power that man can (and does)
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dominate over the world. Without reason man would be a
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pathetic non-entity - evolution having taken care of him
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long before the dinosaur. Now some people say that man is
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by nature a social animal, something like an ant or a bee.
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Egoists don't deny the sociability of man, but what we do
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say is that man is sociable to the extent that it serves his
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own self-interest. Basically man is (by nature, if you will)
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1
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- 34 -
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a selfish being. The evidence for this is overwhelming.* Let
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us look at a hive of bees to see what would happen if
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"reason" were suddenly introduced into their lives:
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"In the first place, the bees would not fail to try
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some new industrial process; for instance, that of making
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their cells round or square. All sorts of systems and
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inventions would be tried, until long experience, aided by
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geometry, should show them that the hexagonal shape is the
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best. Then insurrections would occur. The drones would be
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told to provide for themselves, and the queens to labour;
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jealousy would spread among the labourers; discords would
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burst forth; soon each one would want to produce on his own
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account; and finally the hive would be abandoned, and the
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bees would perish. Evil would be introduced into the honey-
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producing republic by the power of reflection, - the very
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faculty which ought to constitute its glory." [75]
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So it would appear to me that reason would militate
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against blind, selfless cooperation. But by the same token,
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reason leads to cooperation which is mutually beneficial to
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all parties concerned. Such cooperation is what Stirner
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called a "union of egoists." [76] This binding together is
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not done through any innate social instinct, but rather as a
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matter of individual convenience. These unions would
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probably take the form of contracting individuals. The
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object of these contracts not being to enable all to benefit
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equally from their union (although this isn't ruled out, the
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egoist thinks it highly unlikely), but rather to protect one
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another from invasion and to secure to each contracting
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individual what is mutually agreed upon to be "his."
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By referring to a man's selfishness, you know where you
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stand. Nothing is done "for free." Equity demands
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reciprocity. Goods and services are exchanged for goods and
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services or (what is equivalent) bought. This may sound
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"heartless" - but what is the alternative? If one depends on
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kindness, pity or love the services and goods one gets
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become "charity." The receiver is put in the position of a
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beggar, offering nothing in return for each "present." If
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you've ever been on the dole, or know anyone who has, you
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will know that the receiver of such gifts is anything but
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gracious. He is stripped of his manhood and he resents it.
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Now the egoist isn't (usually) so cold and cruel as this
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--------------------
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* Many people cite trade unions as a "proof" of man's
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solidarity and sociability. Just the opposite is true. Why
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else do people strike if not for their own "selfish" ends,
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e.g. higher wages, better working conditions, shorter hours?
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1
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- 35 -
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description makes him out to be. As often as not he is as
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charitable and kind as his altruist neighbour. But he
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CHOOSES the objects of his kindness; he objects to
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COMPULSORY "love." What an absurdity! If love were
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universal, it would have no meaning. If I should tell my
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wife that I love her because I love humanity, I would be
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insulting her. I love her not because she happens to be a
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member of the human race, but rather for what she is to me.
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For me she is something special: she possesses certain
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qualities which I admire and which make me happy. If she is
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unhappy, I suffer, and therefore I try to comfort her and
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cheer her up - for MY sake. Such love is a selfish love. But
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it is the only REAL love. Anything else is an infatuation
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with an image, a ghost. As Stirner said of his loved ones,
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"I love them with the consciousness of egoism; I love them
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because love makes ME happy, I love because loving is
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natural to me, because it pleases me. I know no 'commandment
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of love'." [77]
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The lover of "humanity" is bewitched by a superstition.
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He has dethroned God, only to accept the reign of the holy
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trinity: Morality, Conscience and Duty. He becomes a "true
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believer" - a religious man. No longer believing in himself,
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he becomes a slave to Man. Then, like all religious men, he
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is overcome with feelings of "right" and "virtue." He
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becomes a soldier in the service of humanity whose
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intolerance of heretics rivals that of the most righteous
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religious fanatic. Most of the misery in the world today (as
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in the past) is directly attributable to men acting "for the
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common good." The individual is nothing; the mass all.
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The egoist would reverse this situation. Instead of
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everyone looking after the welfare of everyone else, each
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would look after his own welfare. This would, in one fell
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swoop, do away with the incredibly complicated, wasteful and
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tyrannical machinery (alluded to previously) necessary to
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see to it that not only everyone got his fair share of the
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communal pie, but that everyone contributed fairly to its
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production. In its stead we egoists raise the banner of free
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competition: "the war of all against all" as the communists
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put it. But wouldn't that lead to (dare I say it) ANARCHY?
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Of course it would. What anarchist would deny the logical
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consequences of the principles he advocates? But let's see
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what this "anarchy" would be like.
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The egoist believes that the relationships between men
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who are alive to their own individual interests would be far
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more just and equitable than they are now. Take the
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property question for example. Today there is a great
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disparity of income. Americans make up about 7% of the
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world's population, but they control over half of its
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1
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- 36 -
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wealth. And among the Americans, nearly one quarter of the
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wealth is owned by 5% of the people.* [78] Such unequal
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distribution of wealth is due primarily to the LEGAL
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institution of property. Without the state to back up legal
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privilege and without the people's acquiescence to the
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privileged minority's legal right to that property, these
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disparities would soon disappear. For what makes the rich
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man rich and the poor man poor if not the latter GIVING the
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former the product of his labour?
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Stirner is commonly thought to have concerned himself
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little with the economic consequences of his philosophy. It
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is true that he avoided elaborating on the exact nature of
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his "union of egoists," saying that the only way of knowing
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what a slave will do when he breaks his chains is to wait
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and see. But to say that Stirner was oblivious to economics
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is just not so. On the contrary. It was he, after all, who
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translated into German both Adam Smith's classic "An Inquiry
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into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations" and
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Jean Baptiste Say's pioneering work on the free market
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economy, "Traite d'Economie Politique." The few pages he
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devotes to economics in "The Ego and His Own" are among his
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best:
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"If we assume that, as ORDER belongs to the essence of the
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State, so SUBORDINATION too is founded in its nature, then
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we see that the subordinates, or those who have received
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preferment, disproportionately OVERCHARGE and OVERREACH
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those who are put in the lower ranks....By what then is your
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property secure, you creatures of preferment?...By our
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refraining from interference! And so by OUR protection! And
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what do you give us for it? Kicks and disdain you give to
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the 'common people'; police supervision, and a catechism
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with the chief sentence 'Respect what is NOT YOURS, what
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belongs to OTHERS! respect others, and especially your
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superiors!' But we reply, 'If you want our respect, BUY it
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for a price agreeable to us. We will leave you your
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property, if you give a due equivalent for this
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leaving.'...What equivalent do you give for our chewing
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potatoes and looking calmly on while you swallow oysters?
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Only buy the oysters of us as dear as we have to buy the
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potatoes of you, then you may go on eating them. Or do you
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suppose the oysters do not belong to us as much as to
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you?...Let us consider our nearer property, labour...We
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distress ourselves twelve hours in the sweat of our face,
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* Contrary to popular belief, this gulf is getting
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larger. Since 1966, despite a constantly mushrooming GNP,
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the American factory workers' REAL wages (as opposed to his
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apparent, inflationary wages) have actually declined. [79]
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1
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- 37 -
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and you offer us a few pennies for it. Then take the like
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for your labour too. Are you not willing? You fancy that our
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labour is richly repaid with that wage, while yours on the
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other hand is worth a wage of many thousands. But, if you
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did not rate yours so high, and gave us a better chance to
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realise value from ours, then we might well, if the case
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demanded it, bring to pass still more important things than
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you do for the many thousand pounds; and, if you got only
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such wages as we, you would soon grow more industrious in
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order to receive more. But, if you render any service that
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seems to us worth ten and a hundred times more than our own
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labour, why, then you shall get a hundred times more for it
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too; we, on the other hand, think also to produce for you
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things for which you will requite us more highly than with
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the ordinary day's wages. We shall be willing to get along
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with each other all right, if only we have first agreed on
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this - that neither any longer needs to - PRESENT anything
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to the other....We want nothing presented by you, but
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neither will we present you with anything. For centuries we
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have handed alms to you from good-hearted - stupidity, have
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doled out the mite of the poor and given to the masters the
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things that are - not the masters'; now just open your
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wallet, for henceforth our ware rises in price quite
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enormously. We do not want to take from you anything,
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anything at all, only you are to pay better for what you
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want to have. What then have you? 'I have an estate of a
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thousand acres.' And I am your plowman, and will henceforth
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attend to your fields only for a full day's wages. 'Then
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I'll take another.' You won't find any, for we plowmen are
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no longer doing otherwise, and, if one puts in an appearance
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who takes less, then let him beware of us. There is the
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housemaid, she too is now demanding as much, and you will no
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longer find one below this price. 'Why, then it is all over
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with me.' Not so fast! You will doubtless take in as much as
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we; and, if it should not be so, we will take off so much
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that you shall have wherewith to live like us. 'But I am
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accustomed to live better.' We have nothing against that,
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but it is not our lookout; if you can clear more, go ahead.
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Are we to hire out under rates, that you may have a good
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living? The rich man always puts off the poor with the
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words, 'What does your want concern me? See to it how you
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make your way through the world; that is YOUR AFFAIR, not
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mine.' Well, let us let it be our affair, then, and let us
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not let the means that we have to realise value from
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ourselves be pilfered from us by the rich. 'But you
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uncultured people really do not need so much.' Well, we are
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taking somewhat more in order that for it we may procure the
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culture that we perhaps need....'O ill-starred equality!'
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No, my good old sir, nothing of equality. We only want to
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1
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- 38 -
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count for what we are worth, and, if you are worth more, you
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shall count for more right along. We only want to be WORTH
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OUR PRICE, and think to show ourselves worth the price that
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you will pay." [80]
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Fifty years later Benjamin Tucker took over where
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Stirner left off:
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"The minute you remove privilege, the class that now enjoy
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it will be forced to sell their labour, and then, when there
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will be nothing but labour with which to buy labour, the
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distinction between wage-payers and wage-receivers will be
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wiped out, and every man will be a labourer exchanging with
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fellow-labourers. Not to abolish wages, but to make EVERY
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man dependent upon wages and secure to every man his WHOLE
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wages is the aim of Anarchistic Socialism. What Anarchistic
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Socialism aims to abolish is usury. It does not want to
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deprive labour of its reward; it wants to deprive capital of
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its reward. It does not hold that labour should not be sold;
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it holds that capital should not be hired at usury." [81]
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Franklin D. Roosevelt said in his second inaugural
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address that "We have always known that heedless self-
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interest was bad morals; we know now that it is bad
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economics." I've tried to show in this section that self-
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interest is "good morals." I now intend to show that it is
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also good economics.
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1
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- 39 -
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CAPITALISM: FREEDOM PERVERTED
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"Permit me to issue and control the money of a
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nation and I care not who makes its laws."
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- Meyer A. Rothchild
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Roosevelt, in blaming the depression of the 'thirties
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on "heedless self-interest," played a cheap political trick
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for which the world has been suffering ever since. The great
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crash of 1929, far from being created by "free enterprise,"
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was created by government interference in the free market.
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The Federal Reserve Board had been artificially controlling
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interest rates since 1913. The tax structure of the country
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was set up in such a way as to encourage ridiculously risky
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speculation in the stock market. "Protective tariffs"
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destroyed anything that vaguely resembled a free market.
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Immigration barriers prevented the free flow of the labour
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market. Anti-trust laws threatened prosecution for charging
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less than the competition ("intent to monopolise") and for
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charging the same as the competition ("price fixing"), but
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graciously permitted charging more than the competition
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(commonly called "going out of business.") With all these
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legislative restraints and controls, Roosevelt still had the
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gall to blame the depression on the "free" market economy.
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But what was his answer to the "ruthlessness" of freedom?
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This is what he had to say on taking office in 1933:
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"If we are to go forward, we must move as a trained and
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loyal army willing to sacrifice to the good of a common
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discipline, because without such discipline no progress is
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made, no leadership becomes effective. We are, I know, ready
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and willing to submit our lives and property to such
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discipline because it makes possible a leadership which aims
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at a larger good." [82]
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We've been on that Keynesian road ever since. The
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"larger good" has become larger and larger until today the
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only cure the politicians come up with for the economy's
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ills is more of the same poison which made it sick in the
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first place. The rationale for such a policy was expressed
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by G. D. H. Cole in 1933:
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"If once a departure is made from the classical method of
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letting all the factors [of the economy] alone - and we have
|
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seen enough of that method [have we?] to be thoroughly
|
|
dissatisfied with it - it becomes necessary to control ALL
|
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the factors...for interference with one, while the others
|
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are left unregulated, is certain to result in a fatal lack
|
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of balance in the working of the economic system.." [83] (My
|
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emphasis)
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1
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- 40 -
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Many people, on hearing the individualist critique of
|
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governmental control of the economy, jump to the erroneous
|
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conclusion that we believe in capitalism. I'm sorry to say
|
|
that some anarchists - who should know better - share this
|
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common fallacy. In a letter to "Freedom" a few months ago I
|
|
tried to clear up this myth. Replying to an article by one
|
|
of its editors, I had this to say:
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"First let me look at the term 'anarcho-capitalist.' This,
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it seems to me, is just an attempt to slander the
|
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individualist-anarchists by using a supercharged word like
|
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'capitalist' in much the same way as the word 'anarchy' is
|
|
popularly used to mean chaos and disorder. No one to my
|
|
knowledge accepts the anarcho-capitalist label*, just as no
|
|
one up to the time of Proudhon's memoir on property in 1840
|
|
accepted the anarchist label. But, unlike Proudhon who could
|
|
call himself an anarchist by stripping the word of its
|
|
derogatory connotation and looking at its real MEANING, no
|
|
one can logically call himself an anarcho-capitalist for the
|
|
simple reason that it's a contradiction in terms: anarchists
|
|
seek the abolition of the state while capitalism is
|
|
inherently dependent upon the state. Without the state,
|
|
capitalism would inevitably fall, for capitalism rests on
|
|
the pillars of government privilege. Because of government a
|
|
privileged minority can monopolise land, limit credit,
|
|
restrict exchange, give idle capital the power to increase,
|
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and, through interest, rent, profit, and taxes, rob
|
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industrious labour of its products." [84]
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|
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Now most anarchists when they attack capitalism strike
|
|
it where it is strongest: in its advocacy of freedom. And
|
|
how paradoxical that is. Here we have the anarchists,
|
|
champions of freedom PAR EXCELLENCE, complaining about
|
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freedom! How ridiculous, it seems to me, to find anarchists
|
|
attacking Mr. Heath for withdrawing government subsidies
|
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from museums and children's milk programmes. When anarchists
|
|
start screaming for free museums, free milk, free subways,
|
|
free medical care, free education, etc., etc., they only
|
|
show their ignorance of what freedom really is. All these
|
|
"free" goodies which governments so graciously shower upon
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|
--------------------
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* I have since been informed that "the term 'anarcho-
|
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capitalist' is now in use in the USA - particularly amongst
|
|
those who contribute to the Los Angeles publication
|
|
'Libertarian Connection'." It seems to me that people
|
|
accepting such a label must do so primarily for its shock
|
|
value. Very few people like capitalists these days, and
|
|
those who do certainly don't like anarchists. What better
|
|
term could you find to offend everyone?
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1
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- 41 -
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their subjects ultimately come from the recipients
|
|
themselves - in the form of taxes. Governments are very
|
|
clever at concealing just how large this sum actually is.
|
|
They speak of a billion pounds here and a few hundred
|
|
million dollars there. But what does a figure like
|
|
$229,232,000,000.00 (Nixon's proposed budget) actually mean
|
|
to the taxpayer? Virtually nothing. It's just a long string
|
|
of numbers preceded by a dollar sign. People have no
|
|
conception of numbers that size. But let me try to shed some
|
|
light on this figure by breaking it down into a number the
|
|
individual taxpayer can't help but understand: the average
|
|
annual cost per family. This is a number governments NEVER
|
|
talk about - for if they did, there would be a revolt which
|
|
would make the storming of the Bastille look like a Sunday
|
|
school picnic. Here's how to calculate it: you take the
|
|
government's annual budget and divide it by the population
|
|
of the country; then you multiply the result by the average
|
|
size of family (4.5 seems a reasonable number). Doing this
|
|
for the American case cited, we come to $4,800 (i.e. 2000
|
|
pounds per family per year!*). And that is just the FEDERAL
|
|
tax bite. State and local taxes (which primarily pay for
|
|
America's "free" education and "free" public highways) have
|
|
yet to be considered. I leave it as an exercise to the
|
|
British reader to see why their "welfare state" also prefers
|
|
to mask budgetary figures by using astronomical numbers.
|
|
|
|
One thing should be clear from this example: nothing is
|
|
for nothing. But the Santa Claus myth dies hard, even - or
|
|
should I say especially? - among anarchists. The only
|
|
encouraging sign to the contrary I have found in the
|
|
anarchist press of late was when Ian Sutherland complained
|
|
in the columns of "Freedom": "I object, strongly, to having
|
|
a large section of my 'product', my contribution to society,
|
|
forcibly removed from me by a paternalistic state to
|
|
dispense to a fool with 10 kids." [85] Unfortunately, I
|
|
suspect that Mr Sutherland would only replace the
|
|
"paternalistic state" by the "paternalistic commune" - and
|
|
in so doing would still end up supporting those 10 kids. My
|
|
suspicions were nourished by what he said in the very next
|
|
paragraph about "laissez faire" anarchists: "perhaps they
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|
|
--------------------
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|
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|
* I am usually quite conservative in my use of
|
|
exclamation marks. When I used this example in a recent
|
|
letter to "Freedom", the editors saw fit to insert one where
|
|
I had not. In keeping with their precedent, I will do
|
|
likewise.
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1
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- 42 -
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should join the Powellites." Perhaps Mr Sutherland should
|
|
learn what laissez faire means.
|
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|
|
Laissez faire is a term coined by the French
|
|
physiocrats during the eighteenth century. John Stuart Mill
|
|
brought it into popular English usage with the publication
|
|
in 1848 of his "Principles of Political Economy," where he
|
|
examined the arguments for and against government
|
|
intervention in the economy. The "con" side of the argument
|
|
he called laissez faire. "The principle of 'laissez faire'
|
|
in economics calls for perfect freedom in production;
|
|
distribution of the returns (or profit) to the factors of
|
|
production according to the productivity of each; and
|
|
finally, markets in which prices are determined by the free
|
|
interplay of forces that satisfy buyers and sellers." [86] I
|
|
find it difficult to see how any advocate of freedom could
|
|
possibly object to a doctrine like this one. Unfortunately,
|
|
what happened in the 19th century was that a handful of
|
|
capitalists, who were anything but believers if freedom,
|
|
picked up this nice sounding catch phrase and decided to
|
|
"improve" upon it. These "improvements" left them with the
|
|
freedom to exploit labour but took away labour's freedom to
|
|
exploit capital. These capitalists, in perverting the
|
|
original meaning of laissez faire, struck a blow against
|
|
freedom from which it still suffers to this day. The
|
|
capitalist who advocates laissez faire is a hypocrite. If he
|
|
really believed in freedom, he could not possibly condone
|
|
the greatest invader of freedom known to man: government.
|
|
The capitalist necessarily relies on government to protect
|
|
his privileged RIGHTS. Let us look at the foremost advocate
|
|
of capitalism today, Ayn Rand. Her book "Capitalism: The
|
|
Unknown Ideal" has two appendices. The first is on "Man's
|
|
Rights" where she say, "INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS ARE THE MEANS OF
|
|
SUBORDINATING SOCIETY TO MORAL LAW." [87] (Her emphasis)
|
|
Once again we are back to "rights" and "morals" which
|
|
Stirner so strongly warned us about. And where does this
|
|
lead us? Directly to Appendix Two, "The Nature of
|
|
Government," where she says that government is "necessary"
|
|
because "men need an institution charged with the task of
|
|
protecting [you guessed it] their rights." [88] Let's see
|
|
what some of these precious rights are:
|
|
|
|
I. Chapter 11 of Miss Rand's book is devoted to a
|
|
defence of patent and copyright laws. In it she calls upon
|
|
government to "certify the origination of an idea and
|
|
protect its owner's exclusive right to use and disposal."
|
|
[89] Realising the absurdity of PERPETUAL property in ideas
|
|
("consider what would happen if, in producing an automobile,
|
|
we had to pay royalties to the descendants of all the
|
|
inventors involved, starting with the inventor of the wheel
|
|
|
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1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 43 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
and on up." [90]), she goes into considerable mental
|
|
acrobatics to justify intellectual property for a LIMITED
|
|
time. But by so doing, she only succeeds in arousing our
|
|
suspicion of her motives, for it seems strange that a mere
|
|
lapse of time should negate something so precious as a man's
|
|
"right" to his property. Admitting that "a patented
|
|
invention often tends to hamper or restrict further research
|
|
and development in a given area of science [91], our
|
|
champion of the unhampered economy nevertheless manages to
|
|
justify governmental "protection" to secure the inventor's
|
|
"rights." As for copyrights, our millionaire author thinks
|
|
"the most rational" length of time for this governmental
|
|
protection would be "for the lifetime of the author and
|
|
fifty years thereafter." [92] How does she justify all this?
|
|
The way she justifies most of her inane arguments - by
|
|
quoting herself: "Why should Rearden be the only one
|
|
permitted to manufacture Rearden Metal?" [93] Why indeed?
|
|
|
|
II. Capitalists are fond of proclaiming the "rights" of
|
|
private property. One of their favourite property rights is
|
|
the right to own land without actually occupying it. The
|
|
only way this can possibly be done is, once again, by
|
|
government protection of legal pieces of paper called
|
|
"titles" and "deeds." Without these scraps of paper, vast
|
|
stretches of vacant land would be open to those who could
|
|
use them and exorbitant rent could no longer be extracted
|
|
from the non-owning user as tribute to the non-using owner.
|
|
|
|
There is much talk these days of a "population
|
|
explosion." It is claimed that land is becoming more and
|
|
more scarce and that by the year such and such there will be
|
|
38.2 people per square inch of land. But just how scarce is
|
|
land? If all the world's land were divided up equally, every
|
|
individual would have more than ten acres apiece. Even
|
|
"crowded" islands like Britain and Japan have more than an
|
|
acre per person on average. [94] When you consider how few
|
|
people actually own any of this land, these figures seem
|
|
incredible. It's no wonder then that the absentee landlord
|
|
is a strong believer in property rights. Without them his
|
|
vulnerable land might actually be used to the advantage of
|
|
the user.
|
|
|
|
III. Capitalists have always been great believers in
|
|
the sovereign "rights" of nations. Ayn Rand, for example,
|
|
thinks it perfectly consistent with her brand of freedom
|
|
that the United States government should tax the people
|
|
within its borders to support an army which costs tens of
|
|
billions of dollars each year. It is true that Miss Rand
|
|
opposes the war in Vietnam. But why? Because "IT DOES NOT
|
|
SERVE ANY NATIONAL INTEREST OF THE UNITED STATES." [95] (Her
|
|
emphasis) So we see that our advocate of "limited
|
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|
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|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 44 -
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
government" wouldn't go so far as to limit its strongest
|
|
arm: the military. Eighty billion dollars a year for
|
|
national "defence" doesn't seem to phase her in the least -
|
|
in fact, she would like to add on a few billion more to make
|
|
"an army career comparable to the standards of the civilian
|
|
labour market." [96]
|
|
|
|
As every anarchist knows, a frontier is nothing more
|
|
than an imaginary line drawn by a group of men with vested
|
|
interests on their side of the line. That "nations" should
|
|
exist is an absurdity. That a highwayman (in the uniform of
|
|
a customs official) should rob people as they cross these
|
|
imaginary lines and turn back others who haven't the proper
|
|
pieces of paper is an obscenity too indecent to relate here
|
|
- there may be children reading. But if there are children
|
|
reading, perhaps they can enlighten their elders about the
|
|
obvious - as they did when the emperor went out in his "new"
|
|
clothes. The nationalists of the world are strutting about
|
|
without a stitch of reason on. Can only a child see this?
|
|
|
|
IV. The cruelest "right" - and the one least understood
|
|
today - is the exclusive right of governments to issue
|
|
money. There was a time about a hundred years ago when
|
|
nearly everyone was aware of the currency question. For
|
|
several decades in the United States it was THE political
|
|
issue. Whole political parties formed around it (e.g. the
|
|
Greenback and Populist parties). William Jennings Bryan, the
|
|
three-time Democratic candidate for the presidency, rose to
|
|
fame with his "easy money" speeches; next to Lincoln's
|
|
Gettysburg address, his "cross of gold" speech is probably
|
|
the best-known public oration of 19th century America. Yet
|
|
today virtually everyone accepts the currency question as
|
|
settled. Governments issue the money people use and they
|
|
never give it a second thought - it's just there, like the
|
|
sun and the moon.
|
|
|
|
The capitalist is vitally interested in the
|
|
government's exclusive right to issue money. The capitalist
|
|
is, by definition, the holder of capital; and the
|
|
government, by making only a certain type of capital (namely
|
|
gold) the legal basis of all money, gives to the capitalist
|
|
a monopoly power to compel all holders of property other
|
|
than the kind thus privileged, as well as all non-
|
|
proprietors, to pay tribute to the capitalist for the use of
|
|
a circulating medium and instrument of credit which is
|
|
absolutely necessary to carry out commerce and reap the
|
|
benefits of the division of labour. A crude example of how
|
|
this system works is given by the Angolan "native tax." The
|
|
Portuguese whites in Angola found it difficult to get black
|
|
labour for their coffee plantations, so they struck upon a
|
|
rather ingenious scheme: tax the natives and the natives,
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 45 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
having to pay their tax in MONEY, would be forced to sell
|
|
their labour to the only people who could give it to them -
|
|
the whiteman. [97]
|
|
|
|
The same thing goes on today on a more sophisticated
|
|
level in our more "civilised" societies. The worker needs
|
|
money to carry out the business of everyday life. He needs
|
|
food, he needs housing, he needs clothing. To get these
|
|
things he needs MONEY. And to get money he has to sell the
|
|
only thing he's got: his labour. Since he MUST sell his
|
|
labour, he is put into a very bad bargaining position with
|
|
the buyers of labour: the capitalists. This is how the
|
|
capitalist grows rich. He buys labour in a cheap market and
|
|
sells his products back to the worker in a dear one. This is
|
|
what Marx called the "surplus value theory" of labour. His
|
|
analysis (at least here) was right; his solution to the
|
|
problem was wrong.
|
|
|
|
The way Marx saw out of this trap was to abolish money.
|
|
The worker would then get the equivalent of his labour by
|
|
pooling his products with other workers and taking out what
|
|
he needed. I've already exposed the weak points of this
|
|
theory. What is the individualist alternative?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
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|
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
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1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 46 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MUTUALISM: THE ECONOMICS OF FREEDOM
|
|
|
|
"There is perhaps no business which yields a profit so
|
|
certain and liberal as the business of banking and
|
|
exchange, and it is proper that it should be open
|
|
as far as practicable to the most free competition
|
|
and its advantages shared by all classes of people."
|
|
|
|
- Chief Justice Roger B. Taney, 1837
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
When it comes to economics, most anarchists reveal an
|
|
ignorance verging on the indecent. For example, in the first
|
|
piece of the first issue of the new "Anarchy" the California
|
|
Libertarian Alliance talks in all seriousness of "Marx's
|
|
'labour theory of value,' which causes communist governments
|
|
to repress homosexuals." [98] Now, passing over the fact
|
|
that Adam Smith developed the principles of this theory long
|
|
before Marx was even born, I can't for the life of me see
|
|
what the labour theory of value has to do with the
|
|
repression of homosexuals - be they communist, capitalist,
|
|
or mercantilist. Kropotkin was no better; in his "Conquest
|
|
of Bread" he shows a total lack of any economic sense, as he
|
|
amply demonstrates by his rejection of the very foundation
|
|
of any rational economic system: the division of labour. "A
|
|
society that will satisfy the needs of all, and which will
|
|
know how to organise production, will also have to make a
|
|
clean sweep of several prejudices concerning industry, and
|
|
first of all of the theory often preached by economists -
|
|
The Division of Labour Theory - which we are going to
|
|
discuss in the next chapter....It is this horrible
|
|
principle, so noxious to society, so brutalising to the
|
|
individual, source of so much harm, that we propose to
|
|
discuss in its divers manifestations." [99] He then fills
|
|
the next two pages of perhaps the shortest chapter in
|
|
history with a discussion of this theory "in its divers
|
|
manifestations." In these few paragraphs he fancies himself
|
|
as having overturned the economic thought of centuries and
|
|
to have struck "a crushing blow at the theory of the
|
|
division of labour which was supposed to be so sound." [100]
|
|
Let's see just how sound it is.
|
|
|
|
Primitive man discovered two great advantages to social
|
|
life. The first was man's ability to gain knowledge, not
|
|
only through personal experience, but also through the
|
|
experience of others. By learning from others, man was able
|
|
to acquire knowledge which he could never have gained alone.
|
|
|
|
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|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 47 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This knowledge was handed down from generation to generation
|
|
- growing with each passing year, until today every
|
|
individual has at his fingertips a wealth of information
|
|
which took thousands of years to acquire. The second great
|
|
advantage of social life was man's discovery of trade. By
|
|
being able to exchange goods, man discovered that he was
|
|
able to concentrate his efforts on a particular task at
|
|
which he was especially good and/or which he especially
|
|
liked. He could then trade the products of his labour for
|
|
the products of the labour of others who specialised in
|
|
other fields. This was found to be mutually beneficial to
|
|
all concerned.
|
|
|
|
That the division of labour is beneficial when A
|
|
produces one thing better than B and when B produces another
|
|
thing better than A was obvious even to the caveman. Each
|
|
produces that which he does best and trades with the other
|
|
to their mutual advantage. But what happens when A produces
|
|
BOTH things better than B? David Ricardo answered this
|
|
question when he expounded his law of association over 150
|
|
years ago. This law is best illustrated by a concrete
|
|
example. Let us say that Jones can produce one pair of shoes
|
|
in 3 hours compared to Smith's 5 hours. Also let us say
|
|
that Jones can produce one bushel of wheat in 2 hours
|
|
compared to Smith's 4 hours (cf. Table I). If each man is to
|
|
work 120 hours, what is the most advantageous way of
|
|
dividing up the work? Table II shows three cases: the two
|
|
extremes where one man does only one job while the other man
|
|
does the other, and the middle road where each man divides
|
|
his time equally between jobs. It is clear from Table III
|
|
that it is to the advantage of BOTH men that the most
|
|
productive man should devote ALL of his energies to the job
|
|
which he does best (relative to the other) while the least
|
|
productive man concentrates his energies on the other job
|
|
(case 3). It is interesting to note that in the reverse
|
|
situation (case 1) - which is also the least productive case
|
|
- the drop in productivity is only 6% for Jones (the best
|
|
worker), while for Smith it's a whopping 11%. So the
|
|
division of labour, while helping both men, tends to help
|
|
the least productive worker more than his more efficient
|
|
workmate - a fact which opponents of this idea should note
|
|
well.
|
|
|
|
These figures show something which is pretty obvious
|
|
intuitively. A skilled surgeon, after many years invested
|
|
in schooling, internship, practice, etc., may find his time
|
|
more productively spent in actually performing operations
|
|
than in washing his surgical instruments in preparation for
|
|
these operations. It would seem natural, then, for him to
|
|
hire a medical student (say for 1 pound per hour) to do the
|
|
washing up job while he does the operating (for say 3 pounds
|
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1
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- 48 -
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PRODUCTIVITY RATES
|
|
------------------
|
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|
Time Necessary to Produce Time Necessary to Produce
|
|
One Pair of Shoes (Hours) One Bushel of Wheat (Hours)
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Jones: 3 2
|
|
Smith: 5 4
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------
|
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|
|
TABLE I
|
|
|
|
* * * * * *
|
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|
|
PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DIVISION OF LABOUR
|
|
-------------------------------------
|
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|
|
Hours of Hours of Shoes Bushels
|
|
Shoemaking Farming Produced of Wheat
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Jones 120 0 40 0
|
|
Case 1 Smith 0 120 0 30
|
|
Total 120 120 40 30
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Jones 60 60 20 30
|
|
Case 2 Smith 60 60 12 15
|
|
Total 120 120 32 45
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Jones 0 120 0 60
|
|
Case 3 Smith 120 0 24 0
|
|
Total 120 120 24 60
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------
|
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|
|
TABLE II
|
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|
|
* * * * * *
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TIME NECESSARY TO PRODUCE THE SAME AMOUNT
|
|
OF GOODS WHILE WORKING ALONE (HOURS)
|
|
-----------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Jones Smith
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Case 1: 120 + 60 = 180 200 + 120 = 320
|
|
Case 2: 96 + 90 = 186 160 + 180 = 340
|
|
Case 3: 72 + 120 = 192 120 + 240 = 360
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------
|
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|
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TABLE III
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1
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- 49 -
|
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|
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|
|
per hour). Even if the surgeon could wash his own
|
|
instruments twice as fast as the student, this division of
|
|
labour would be profitable for all concerned.
|
|
|
|
If the earth were a homogeneous sphere, equally endowed
|
|
with natural resources at each and every point of its
|
|
surface, and if each man were equally capable of performing
|
|
every task as well as his neighbour, then the division of
|
|
labour would have no ECONOMIC meaning. There would be no
|
|
material advantage to letting someone else do for you what
|
|
you could do equally well yourself. But the division of
|
|
labour would have arisen just the same because of the
|
|
variety of human tastes. It is a fact of human nature that
|
|
not all people like doing the same things. Kropotkin may
|
|
think this unfortunate, but I'm afraid that's the way human
|
|
beings are built. And as long as this is the case, people
|
|
are going to WANT to specialise their labour and trade their
|
|
products with one another.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Given the advantages of the division of labour, what is
|
|
to be the method by which man exchanges his products?
|
|
Primitive man devised the barter system for this purpose.
|
|
But it wasn't long before the limitations of this system
|
|
became apparent:
|
|
|
|
"Let Peter own a horse; let James own a cow and a pig; let
|
|
James's cow and pig, taken together, be worth precisely as
|
|
much as Peter's horse; let Peter and James desire to make an
|
|
exchange; now, what shall prevent them from making the
|
|
exchange by direct barter? Again, let Peter own the horse;
|
|
let James own the cow; and let John own the pig. Peter
|
|
cannot exchange his horse for the cow, because he would lose
|
|
by the transaction; neither - and for the same reason - can
|
|
he exchange it for the pig. The division of the horse would
|
|
result in the destruction of its value. The hide, it is
|
|
true, possesses an intrinsic value; and a dead horse makes
|
|
excellent manure for a grapevine; nevertheless, the division
|
|
of a horse results in the destruction of its value as a
|
|
living animal. But if Peter barters his horse with Paul for
|
|
an equivalent in wheat, what shall prevent him from so
|
|
dividing his wheat as to qualify himself to offer to James
|
|
an equivalent for his cow and to John an equivalent for his
|
|
pig? If Peter trades thus with James and John the
|
|
transaction is still barter, though the wheat serves as
|
|
currency and obviates the difficulty in making change."
|
|
[101]
|
|
|
|
Thus currency (i.e, money) was born. Many things have
|
|
served as money throughout the ages: slaves, gunpowder, and
|
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1
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|
|
- 50 -
|
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|
|
|
|
even human skulls, to name but a few. The New Hebrides used
|
|
feathers for their money and in Ethiopia salt circulated as
|
|
the currency for centuries. But by far the most popular
|
|
medium of exchange became the precious metals, gold and
|
|
silver. There were several reasons for this: (1) Unlike
|
|
feathers or skulls, they have intrinsic value as metals.
|
|
(2) They are sufficiently rare as to impose difficulty in
|
|
producing them and sufficiently common as to make it not
|
|
impossible to do so. (3) Their value fluctuates relatively
|
|
little with the passing of time. Even large strikes - such
|
|
as those in California and Alaska - failed to devalue gold
|
|
to any appreciable extent. (4) They are particularly sturdy
|
|
commodities, loosing relatively little due to the wear and
|
|
tear of circulation. (5) They are easily divisible into
|
|
fractional parts to facilitate small purchases. For these
|
|
and other reasons, gold and silver became universally
|
|
recognised as standards of value. Certain quantities of
|
|
these metals became the units by which man measured the
|
|
worth of an object. For example, the pound sterling, lira,
|
|
and ruble were originally terms for metallic weight while
|
|
the drachma means literally a handful.
|
|
|
|
As long as these metals served purely as just another
|
|
commodity to be bartered - albeit a very useful commodity -
|
|
there was no inherent advantage in possessing these metals
|
|
as such. It was not until governments declared them the sole
|
|
LEGAL medium of exchange that gold and silver became
|
|
intrinsically oppressive. Governments, by monetising gold
|
|
and silver automatically demonetised every other item of
|
|
capital.* It is this monopoly which has been the chief
|
|
obstacle in preventing men from obtaining the product of
|
|
their labour and which permitted the few men who controlled
|
|
the money supply to roll up such large fortunes at the
|
|
expense of labour.
|
|
|
|
As long as the monetary structure was directly tied to
|
|
gold and silver, the volume of money was limited by the
|
|
amount of gold and silver available for coinage. It is for
|
|
this reason that paper money - backed by "hard money" - came
|
|
into being. The paper money was simply a promise "to pay the
|
|
bearer on demand" its equivalent in specie (i.e. gold or
|
|
|
|
--------------------
|
|
* A natural question arises here: "That may have been
|
|
true up until 40 years ago, but haven't governments since
|
|
abandoned the gold standard?" The answer is no. As long as
|
|
the United States government promises to buy and sell gold
|
|
at $35 an ounce and as long as the International Monetary
|
|
Fund (which stabilises the exchange rates) is based on gold
|
|
and U.S. dollars, the world remains on the gold standard.
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
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|
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|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 51 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
silver). Hence the words "note" and "bill," which imply
|
|
debt. Governments were at first reluctant to issue paper
|
|
money. But the scarcity of money in an increasingly
|
|
commercial world soon forced them to recant. The men of
|
|
wealth, well aware of the threat that "easy money" posed to
|
|
their "hard money," insisted that such money be based solely
|
|
on the wealth they already possessed. Governments readily
|
|
fell into line. In the United States, from 1866, anyone
|
|
issuing circulating notes was slapped with a tax of 10%
|
|
until it was completely outlawed in 1936. The British
|
|
government was even more severe; it gave the Bank of England
|
|
monopoly rights to issue "bank notes" as early as 1844.
|
|
[102]
|
|
|
|
When a man is forced to barter his products for money,
|
|
in order to have money to barter for such other products
|
|
that he might want, he is put at a disadvantage which the
|
|
capitalist is all too ready to exploit. William B. Greene
|
|
was one of the first to observe this fact:
|
|
|
|
"Society established gold and silver as a circulating
|
|
medium, in order that exchanges of commodities might be
|
|
FACILITATED; but society made a mistake in so doing; for by
|
|
this very act it gave to a certain class of men the power of
|
|
saying what exchanges shall, and what exchanges shall not,
|
|
be FACILITATED by means of this very circulating medium. The
|
|
monopolisers of the precious metals have an undue power over
|
|
the community; they can say whether money shall, or shall
|
|
not, be permitted to exercise its legitimate functions.
|
|
These men have a VETO on the action of money, and therefore
|
|
on exchanges of commodity; and they will not take off their
|
|
VETO until they have received usury, or, as it is more
|
|
politely termed, interest on their money. Here is the great
|
|
objection to the present currency. Behold the manner in
|
|
which the absurdity inherent in a specie currency - or, what
|
|
is still worse, in a currency of paper based upon specie -
|
|
manifests itself in actual operation! The mediating value
|
|
which society hoped would facilitate exchanges becomes an
|
|
absolute marketable commodity, itself transcending all reach
|
|
of mediation. The great natural difficulty which originally
|
|
stood in the way of exchanges is now the private property of
|
|
a class, and this class cultivates this difficulty, and make
|
|
money out of it, even as a farmer cultivates his farm and
|
|
makes money by his labour. But there is a difference between
|
|
the farmer and the usurer; for the farmer benefits the
|
|
community as well as himself, while every dollar made by the
|
|
usurer is a dollar taken from the pocket of some other
|
|
individual, since the usurer cultivates nothing but an
|
|
actual obstruction." [103]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 52 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The legitimate purpose of money is to facilitate
|
|
exchange. As Greene shows, specie - or money based on specie
|
|
- accomplishes this purpose, but only at a terrible price to
|
|
the user. The solution to the problem is to devise a money
|
|
which has no value as a COMMODITY, only as a circulating
|
|
medium. This money should also be available in such quantity
|
|
as not to hamper any exchanges which may be desired. The
|
|
organ for creating such a currency Greene called a "mutual
|
|
bank."*
|
|
|
|
Before considering the operations of a mutual bank, I'd
|
|
like to look at how an ordinary bank functions. Let us say
|
|
that Mr Brown, who owns a farm worth a few thousand pounds,
|
|
needs 500 pounds to buy seed and equipment for the coming
|
|
year. Not having that kind of money on hand, he goes to the
|
|
bank to borrow it. The bank readily agrees - on the
|
|
condition that at the end of the year Brown not only pays
|
|
back the 500 pounds borrowed, but also 50 pounds which they
|
|
call "interest." Farmer Brown has no choice; he needs MONEY
|
|
because that is all the seed dealer will accept as "legal
|
|
tender." So he agrees to the conditions set down by the
|
|
bank. After a year of hard work, and with a bit of luck from
|
|
the weather, he harvests his crops and exchanges (i.e.
|
|
"sells") his produce - for money. He takes 550 pounds to the
|
|
bank and cancels his debt. The net result of all this is
|
|
that some banker is 50 pounds richer for doing a minimal
|
|
amount of work (perhaps a few hours of bookkeeping) at no
|
|
risk to himself (the farm was collateral), while Mr Brown is
|
|
50 pounds out of pocket.
|
|
|
|
Now let's see where Greene's idea leads us. A group of
|
|
people get together and decide to set up a mutual bank. The
|
|
bank will issue notes which all members of the bank agree to
|
|
accept as "money." Taking the above example, Mr Brown could
|
|
get five hundred of these notes by mortgaging his farm and
|
|
discounting with the bank a mortgage note for that sum. With
|
|
the notes, he buys his seed from Smith and some tools from
|
|
Jones. Smith and Jones in turn exchange some of these newly
|
|
acquired notes for some things they need. And so on until
|
|
the end of the year when Brown exchanges his farm produce
|
|
and receives for them - mutual bank notes. Does all this
|
|
sound familiar? It should, for up until now, from all
|
|
outward appearances, there has been no difference between
|
|
our mutual bank and an ordinary specie bank. But it's here,
|
|
|
|
--------------------
|
|
* Proudhon's bank, "la banque du peuple," is
|
|
essentially the same. For a detailed account of the
|
|
workings of each bank see Greene's "Mutual Banking" and
|
|
Proudhon's "Solution of the Social Problem" and "Revolution
|
|
in the Nineteenth Century."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 53 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
however, that the change comes in. Mr Brown goes to the
|
|
mutual bank with his notes and gives the bank 500 of them
|
|
plus ONE OR TWO extra to help pay for the operating expenses
|
|
of the bank over the past year. The bank cancels his
|
|
mortgage and Mr Brown walks away thinking how nice it is to
|
|
be a member of such a wonderful bank.
|
|
|
|
Now notice that it was never mentioned that Smith and
|
|
Jones were members of the bank. They may have been, but it
|
|
wasn't necessary. Smith, the seed dealer, might not belong
|
|
to the bank and yet be willing to accept its notes. He's in
|
|
business, after all, and if the only money Brown has is
|
|
mutual money, that's all right with him - as long as he can
|
|
get rid of it when HE wants to buy something. And of course
|
|
he can because he knows there are other members of the bank
|
|
pledged to receiving these notes. Besides, Brown will need
|
|
at least 500 of them eventually to pay off his mortgage. So
|
|
Smith accepts the money, and he too profits from this novel
|
|
scheme. In fact, the only one who seems to be any the worse
|
|
is the poor usurous banker. But I'm afraid he will just have
|
|
to find himself an honest job and work for his living like
|
|
everyone else.
|
|
|
|
John Stuart Mill defined capital as "wealth
|
|
appropriated to reproductive employment." In our example
|
|
above, farmer Brown's 500 pounds is capital since he intends
|
|
to use it for creating new wealth. But Mr Brown can use his
|
|
capital in any number of ways: he may decide to use it to
|
|
buy seeds for planting corn; or he may decide that his
|
|
ground is better suited for growing wheat, or he may decide
|
|
to invest in a new tractor. This 500 pounds, then, is liquid
|
|
capital or, as Greene called it, disengaged capital. When Mr
|
|
Brown buys his seeds and tools, these things are still
|
|
designed for "reproductive employment," and are therefore
|
|
still capital. But what kind of capital? Evidently, frozen
|
|
or engaged capital. He then plants his seeds and harvests
|
|
his crops with the aid of his new tractor. The produce he
|
|
grows is no longer capital because it is no longer capable
|
|
of being "appropriated to reproductive employment." What is
|
|
it, then? Evidently, it is product. Mr Brown then takes his
|
|
goods to town and sells them at market value for somewhat
|
|
more than the 500 pounds he originally started out with.
|
|
This "profit" is entirely due to his labour as a farmer (and
|
|
perhaps to some extent his skill as a salesman). The money
|
|
he receives for his goods become, once again, liquid
|
|
capital. So we have came full circle: liquid capital
|
|
becomes frozen capital; frozen capital becomes product;
|
|
product becomes liquid capital. And the cycle starts all
|
|
over again.
|
|
|
|
A society is prosperous when money flows freely - that
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 54 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
is when each man is able to easily convert his product into
|
|
liquid capital. A society is unprosperous when money is
|
|
tight - that is, when exchange is difficult to effect.
|
|
Mutual banking makes as much money available as is
|
|
necessary. When a man needs money he simply goes to his
|
|
friendly mutual bank, mortgages some property, and receives
|
|
the notes of the bank in return. What this system does is to
|
|
allow a man to circulate his CREDIT. Whoever goes to a
|
|
mutual bank and mortgages some of his property will always
|
|
receive money, for a mutual bank can issue money to any
|
|
extent. This money will always be good because it is all
|
|
based on actual property which, if necessary, could be sold
|
|
to pay off bad debts. The mutual bank, of course, would
|
|
never give PERSONAL credit, for to do so would give the
|
|
notes an element of risk and render them unstable. But what
|
|
about the man with no property to pledge? Greene answered
|
|
this question as follows:
|
|
|
|
"If we knew of a plan whereby, through an act of the
|
|
legislature, every member of the community might be made
|
|
rich, we would destroy this petition and draw up another
|
|
embodying that plan. Meanwhile, we affirm that no system
|
|
was ever devised so beneficial to the poor as the system of
|
|
mutual banking; for if a man having nothing to offer in
|
|
pledge, has a friend who is a property holder and that
|
|
friend is willing to furnish security for him, he can borrow
|
|
money at the mutual bank at a rate of 1% interest a year;
|
|
whereas, if he should borrow at the existing banks, he would
|
|
be obliged to pay 6%. Again as mutual banking will make
|
|
money exceedingly plenty, it will cause a rise in the rate
|
|
of wages, thus benefiting the man who has no property but
|
|
his bodily strength; and it will not cause a proportionate
|
|
increase in the price of the necessaries of life: for the
|
|
price of provisions, etc., depends on supply and demand; and
|
|
mutual banking operates, not directly on supply and demand,
|
|
but to the diminution of the rate of interest on the medium
|
|
of exchange. But certain mechanics and farmers say, 'We
|
|
borrow no money, and therefore pay no interest. How, then
|
|
does this thing concern us?' Harken, my friends! let us
|
|
reason together. I have an impression on my mind that it is
|
|
precisely the class who have no dealings with the banks, and
|
|
derive no advantages from them, that ultimately pay all the
|
|
interest money that is paid. When a manufacturer borrows
|
|
money to carry on his business, he counts the interest he
|
|
pays as a part of his expenses, and therefore adds the
|
|
amount of interest to the price of his goods. The consumer
|
|
who buys the goods pays the interest when he pays for the
|
|
goods; and who is the consumer, if not the mechanic and the
|
|
farmer? If a manufacturer could borrow money at 1%, he could
|
|
afford to undersell all his competitors, to the manifest
|
|
advantage of the farmer and mechanic. The manufacturer would
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 55 -
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
neither gain nor lose; the farmer and mechanic, who have no
|
|
dealings with the bank, would gain the whole difference; and
|
|
the bank - which, were it not for the competition of the
|
|
mutual bank, would have loaned the money at 6% interest -
|
|
would lose the whole difference. It is the indirect relation
|
|
of the bank to the farmer and mechanic, and not its direct
|
|
relation to the manufacturer and merchant, that enables it
|
|
to make money." [104]
|
|
|
|
Mutual banking, by broadening the currency base, makes
|
|
money plentiful. The resulting stimulus to business would
|
|
create an unprecedented demand for labour - a demand which
|
|
would always be in excess of the supply. Then, as Benjamin
|
|
Tucker observed:
|
|
|
|
"When two labourers are after one employer, wages fall, but
|
|
when two employers are after one labourer, wages rise.
|
|
Labour will then be in a position to dictate its wages, and
|
|
will thus secure its natural wage, its entire product. Thus
|
|
the same blow that strikes interest down will send wages up.
|
|
But this is not all. Down will go profits also. For
|
|
merchants, instead of buying at high prices on credit, will
|
|
borrow money of the banks at less than one percent, buy at
|
|
low prices for cash, and correspondingly reduce the prices
|
|
of their goods to their customers. And with the rest will go
|
|
house-rent. For no one who can borrow capital at one percent
|
|
with which to build a house of his own will consent to pay
|
|
rent to a landlord at a higher rate than that." [105]
|
|
|
|
Unlike the "boom and bust" cycles we now experience
|
|
under the present system, mutualism would know nothing but
|
|
"boom." For the present "busts" come when the economy is
|
|
"overheated" and when there is so-called "overproduction."
|
|
As long as most of humanity lead lives of abject poverty, we
|
|
can never speak realistically of "over-production." And as
|
|
long as each hungry belly comes with a pair of hands,
|
|
mutualism will be there to give those hands work to fill
|
|
that belly.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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- 56 -
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AN AFTERWORD TO COMMUNIST-ANARCHIST READERS
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What generally distinguishes you from your communist
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brother in some authoritarian sect is your basic lack of
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dogmatism. The state socialist is always towing some party
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line. When it comes to creative thinking his brain is in a
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mental straitjacket, with no more give and take in his mind
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than you will find in the mind of a dog watching a rabbit
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hole. You, on the contrary, pride yourself on being "your
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own man." Having no leaders, prophets, Messiahs, or Popes to
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refer to for divine guidance, you can afford to use YOUR
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mind to analyse the facts as YOU see them and come up with
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YOUR conclusions. You are, in your fundamental metaphysics,
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an agnostic. You are broad minded to a fault...how else
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could you have read this far?
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But when it comes to economics, your mind suddenly
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becomes rigid. You forget your sound anarchist principles
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and surrender without a struggle the one thing that makes
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you an anarchist: your freedom. You suddenly develop an
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enormous capacity for believing and especially for believing
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what is palpably not true. By invoking a set of second hand
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dogmas (Marxist hand-me-downs) which condemn outright the
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free market economy, you smuggle in through the back door
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authoritarian ideas which you had barred from the main
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entrance. In commendably searching for remedies against
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poverty, inequality and injustice, you forsake the doctrine
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of freedom for the doctrine of authority and in so doing
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come step by step to endorse all the fallacies of Marxist
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economics. A few years ago S. E. Parker wrote an open
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letter to the editors of "Freedom" in which he said:
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"The trouble is that what you call 'anarchism' is at best
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merely a hodge-podge, halfway position precariously
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suspended between socialism and anarchism. You yearn for the
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ego-sovereignty, the liberating individualism, that is the
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essence of anarchism, but remain captives of the
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democratic-proletarian-collectivist myths of socialism.
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Until you can cut the umbilical cord that still connects you
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to the socialist womb you will never be able to come to your
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full power as self-owning individuals. You will still be
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lured along the path to the lemonade springs and cigarette
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trees of the Big Rock Candy Mountains." [106]
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This article was written for you in hopes of relieving
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you of your schizophrenic condition. The fact that you call
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yourself an anarchist shows that you have an instinctual
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"feeling" for freedom. I hope that this article will
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encourage you to seek to put that feeling on a sound
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foundation. I am confident that when you do, you will
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reject your communist half.
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1
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- 57 -
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REFERENCES
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1. Joseph Stalin, "Anarchism or Socialism" (Moscow; Foreign
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Languages Publishing House, 1950), p. 85. Written in 1906
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but never finished.
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2. Ibid., pp. 90-1.
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3. Ibid., p.95.
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4. Ibid., p. 87.
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5. Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, "What is Property: An Inquiry
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into the Principle of Right and of Government," trans.
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Benjamin R. Tucker (London: William Reeves), p. 260.
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Originally published in French in 1840.
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6. Bill Dwyer, "This World", "Freedom," March 27, 1971.
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7. Pierre Kropotkine, "Paroles d'un Revolte" (Paris: Ernest
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Flammarion, 1885), pp. 318-9.
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8. Paul Eltzbacher, "Anarchism: Exponents of the Anarchist
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Philosophy," trans. Steven T. Byington, ed. James J. Martin
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(London: Freedom Press, 1960), p. 108. "Der Anarchismus" was
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originally published in Berlin in 1900.
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9. Ibid., p. 109.
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10. Ibid., p. 110.
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11. Herbert Spencer, "The Man Versus The State," ed. Donald
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MacRae (London: Penguin Books, 1969), p. 151. Originally
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published in 1884.
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12. Prince Peter Kropotkin, "The Conquest of Bread" (London:
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Chapman & Hall, Ltd., 1906), p. 41.
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13. Eltzbacher, op. cit., p. 101.
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14. Kropotkin, op. cit., p. 209.
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15. Ibid., p. 206.
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16. Henry David Thoreau, "Journal," March 11, 1856.
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17. Kropotkin, op. cit., p. 206.
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18. Ibid., p. 205.
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1
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- 58 -
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19. Errico Malatesta, "Anarchy" (London: Freedom Press,
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1949), p. 33. Originally published in 1907.
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20. Alexander Berkman, "A.B.C. of Anarchism" (London:
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Freedom Press, 1964), p. 27. This is the abbreviated version
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of the Vanguard Press "ABC of Communist Anarchism" which
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appeared in 1929.
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21. Ibid., p. 28.
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22. Ibid., p. 29.
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23. Ibid., p. 25.
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24. "Italy: An Illness of Convenience," "Newsweek," January
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4, 1971, p. 44.
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25. "Un Forum Legislatif de la Classe Ouvriere?", "Granma"
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(French edition), January 31, 1971, p. 3.
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26. "Cuba Announces Labor Penalties For Loafers," "The
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International Herald Tribune," March 19, 1971, p. 4.
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27. Theodore Roszak, "The Making of a Counter Culture"
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(Garden City, New York: Anchor Books, 1969), p. 29.
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28. Kropotkin, op. cit., pp. 236-7.
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29. Mikhail Bakunin, "The Political Philosophy of Bakunin:
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Scientific Anarchism," ed. G. P. Maximoff (New York: The
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Free Press, 1953), p. 285.
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30. Homer Lane, "Talks to Parents and Teachers" (London:
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George Allen & Unwin, Ltd., 1928), p. 121.
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31. Paul Goodman, "Compulsory Mis-education" and "The
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Community of Scholars" (New York: Vintage Books, 1962,
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1964), p. 174.
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32. Erich Fromm, "Fear of Freedom" (London: Routledge &
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Kegan Paul, Ltd., 1960), p. 34. First published in the
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United States in 1942 under the title "Escape from Freedom."
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33. Petr Kropotkin, "Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution"
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(Boston: Extending Horizons Books, 1955), p. 297. This book
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first appeared in London in 1902.
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34. Ibid., p. 166.
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35. Ibid., p. 169.
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1
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- 59 -
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36. Ibid., p. 176.
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37. Ibid., p. 176.
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38. Ibid., pp. 172-3.
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39. Ibid., p. 176.
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40. Ibid., p. 174.
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41. Ibid., p. 177.
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42. Ibid., p. 194.
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43. Ibid., p. 194.
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44. Ibid,, p. 194.
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45. Ibid., pp. 194-5.
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46. Ibid., pp. 209-10.
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47. Ibid., p. 214.
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48. Kropotkine, "Paroles," p. 333.
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49. Kropotkin, "Mutual Aid," p. 215.
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50. Ibid., p. 217.
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51. Ibid., p. 219.
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52. Rudolf Rocker, "Nationalism and Culture," trans. Ray E.
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Chase (Los Angeles: Rocker Publications Committee, 1937), p.
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92.
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53. Ibid., p. 91.
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54. Ibid., p. 92.
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55. Proudhon, op. cit., pp. 248-51.
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56. Herbert Marcuse, "Reason and Revolution: Hegel and the
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Rise of Social Theory" (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul,
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Ltd., 1967), p. 435. This quotation was taken from the
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supplementary chapter written in 1954. The original book was
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first published by Oxford University Press in 1941.
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57. Kropotkine, Paroles, p. 341.
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58. Ibid., p. 342.
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1
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- 60 -
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59. Noam Chomsky, "Notes on Anarchism," "Anarchy 116,"
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October, 1970, p. 316.
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60. Ibid., p. 318.
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61. Bob Dylan, "Subterranean Homesick Blues," 1965.
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62. Eltzbacher, op. cit., p. 89.
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63. Ibid., p. 57.
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64. Benjamin R. Tucker, "Instead of a Book (By a Man Too
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Busy to Write One)" (New York: Benj. R. Tucker, 1897), p.
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401. Reprinted from "Liberty," May 12, 1888.
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65. Max Stirner (Johann Kaspar Schmidt), "The Ego and His
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Own: The Case of the Individual Against Authority," trans.
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Steven T. Byington (New York: Libertarian Book Club, 1963),
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p. 298. "Der Einzige und sein Eigentum" was written in 1844
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and translated into English in 1907, when it was published
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in New York by Benj. Tucker.
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66. Agatha Christie, "Destination Unknown" (London: Fontana
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Books), p. 98.
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67. Spencer, op, cit., pp. 323-4.
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68. Stalin, op. cit., p. 97.
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69. Robert Burns, "To a Mouse," 1785, stanza 7.
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70. S. E. Parker, "Letters", "Freedom," February 27, 1971.
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71. Tucker, "Instead of a Book," p. 413. Reprinted from
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"Liberty," October 4, 1884.
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72. Tucker, "Instead of a Book," p. 422. Reprinted from
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"Liberty," June 23, 1888.
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73. Stirner, op. cit., p. 210.
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74. Ibid., p. 319.
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75. Proudhon, op. cit., pp. 243-4.
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76. Stirner, op. cit., p. 179.
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77. Ibid., p. 291.
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78. "At the Summit of the Affluent U.S. Society," "The
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International Herald Tribune." March 19, 1971, p. 1.
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1
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- 61 -
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79. "Newsweek," February 1, 1971 , p. 44.
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80. Stirner, op. cit., pp. 270-2.
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81. Tucker, "Instead of a Book," p. 404. Reprinted from
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"Liberty," April 28, 1888.
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82. Quoted from Charles A. Reich's article in "The New
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Yorker" magazine, "The Greening of American," September 26,
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1970.
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83. G. D. H. Cole, "What Everybody Wants To Know About
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Money" (London: Victor Gollancz Ltd., 1933), pp. 526-7.
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84. Ken Knudson, "Letters", "Freedom," November 14, 1970.
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85. Ian S. Sutherland, "Doomsday & After," "Freedom,"
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February 27, 1971.
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86. "Laissez Faire," "Encyclopaedia Britannica," 1965, vol.
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XIII, p. 606.
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87. Ayn Rand, "Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal" (New York:
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Signet Books, 1967), p 320.
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88. Ibid., p. 331.
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89. Ibid., p. 131.
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90. Ibid., pp. 131-2.
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91. Ibid., pp. 132-3.
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92. Ibid., p, 132.
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93. Ibid., p. 134.
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94. "Geographical Summaries: Area and Population,"
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Encyclopaedia Britannica Atlas," 1965, p. 199.
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95. Rand, op. cit., p. 224.
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96. Ibid., p. 229.
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97. Douglas Marchant, "Angola," "Anarchy 112," June, 1970,
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p. 184.
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98. "Libertarian Message to Gay Liberation," "Anarchy,"
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February, 1971, p. 2.
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99. Kropotkin, "Conquest of Bread," pp. 245 & 248.
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1
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- 62 -
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100. Ibid., p. 250.
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101. William B. Greene, "Mutual Banking," from Proudhon's
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"Solution of the Social Problem," ed. Henry Cohen (New York:
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Vanguard Press, 1927), p. 177.
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102. "Money," "Encyclopaedia Britannica," 1965, vol. XV, p.
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703.
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103. Greene, op. cit., p. 180.
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104. Ibid., pp. 196-7.
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105. Tucker, "Instead of a Book" p. 12, Reprinted from
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"Liberty," March 10, 1888.
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106. S. E. Parker, "Enemies of Society: An Open Letter to
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the Editors of Freedom," "Minus One," October-December,
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1967, p. 4.
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