685 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
685 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
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SMOKESTACK LIGHTNING
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Bob Black is a revolutionary, smirks David Ramsey Steele, "the way Gene
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Autry was a cowboy" ("The Abolition of Breathing," _Liberty_, March 1989).
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A Marxist turned libertarian, Steele is miffed that to me his forward
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progress is just walking in circles. Steele's is the longest harshest
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review _The_Abolition_of_Work_and_Other_Essays_ has ever received, and while
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no nit to my discredit is too small to pick [1], my critique of work is the
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major target. Steele tries, not merely to refute me, but to make me out to
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be a gesticulating clown, by turns infantile and wicked (htey are probably
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synonyms for Steele). "I'm joking _and_ serious," he quotes me in opening,
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but if I am a sometimes successful joker I am serious only "in the sense
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that a child wailing for more candy is serious." Steele wants to bomb me
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back into the Stone ge, just where my ideas (he warns) would land the
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handful of humans who might survive the abolition of work.
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[1] Since I took German in college, it so happens I _do_ know that
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"Nietzsche" doesn't rhyme with "peachy." I am sure that Ray
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Davies of the Kinks, Steele's fellow Briton, likewise was well
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aware that "the Regatta" doesn't rhyme with "to get at her,"
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not even in Cockney. We poets stretch the language, but not,
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like Steele, the truth.
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For a fact I am, as accused, joking and serious. Because he is neither,
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Steele is fated never to understand me. Metaphor, irony, and absurdity play
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-- and I do mean _play_ -- a part in my expression which is, for Steele, at
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best cause for confusion, at worst a pretext for defamation. I write in
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more than one way and I should be read in more than one way. My book is
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stereoscopic. Steele complains I failed to make "a coherent case for some
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kind of change in the way society is run." But I did not (as he implies)
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make an incoherent case for what _he_ wants -- new masters -- I made a
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coherent case for what _I_ want, a society which isn't "run" at all.
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When a libertarian who ordinarily extols the virtue of selfishness calls me
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"self-indulgent" he shows he is prepared to sacrifice secondary values if
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need be to meet a threat of foundational dimensions. Emotionally the review
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is equivalent to an air raid siren. Do _not_ (repeat do _not_ take this
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"half-educated" mountebank seriously!
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Steele careens crazily between accusing me of snobbery and, as when he calls
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me half-educated, exhibiting it himself. If with three academic degrees I
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am half-educated, how many does Steele have? Six? Who cares? Much of what
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I write I never learned in school, certainly not the Austrian School.
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Steele says I am "out of my depth" in economics, oblivious to my vantage
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point exterior and ( if all goes well) posterior to the dismal science of
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scarcity. I never dip into that malarial pool, not at _any_ depth -- I
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drain it. I am not playing Steele's capitalist game, I am proposing a new
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game. I am not a bad economist, for I am not an economist at all. Freedom
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ends where economics begins. Human life was originally pre-economic; I have
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tried to explore whether it could become post-economic, that is to say,
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free. The greatest obstacle, it seems to me -- and Steele never does
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overtly disagree -- is the institution of work. Especially, I think, in its
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industrial mode. Like most libertarians, Steele so far prefers industry to
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liberty that even to pose the problem of work _as_ a problem of liberty
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throws a scare into him.
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Much toll must have gone into Steele's only serious criticism which does not
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depend on a previous faith in _laissez-faire_ economics, the attempt to
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reveal my definitions of work and play as confused and contradictory. He
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quotes my book (pp. 18-19) thusly:
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Work is production enforced by economic or political means, by the
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carrot or the stick... Work is never done for its own sake, it's
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done on account of some product or output that the worker (or, more
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often, somebody else) gets out of it.
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Steele comments: "This seems to say at first that work is work if you do it
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because you have to or because you will be paid for it. Then it seems to
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say something different: that work is work if you do it for the sake of an
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anticipated goal." The first sentence is roughly accurate, the second is
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not. _All_ human action is purposive, as our Austrian Schoolmarm would be
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the first to agree, which is to say all human action is goal-directed.
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Work, play, everything. Play too has an "anticipated goal," but not the
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same one work has. The purpose of play is process, the purpose of work is
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product (in a broad sense).
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Work, unlike play, is done _not_ for the intrinsic satisfaction of the
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activity but for something separate which results from it, which might be a
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paycheck or maybe just no whipping tonight. The anticipated goal of play is
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the pleasure of the action. Steele, not me, is confused when he glosses my
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definitions to collapse the very distinctions I set out to draw with them.
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Elsewhere in the title essay I offer an abbreviated definition of work as
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"forced labor," as "compulsory production." Predictably a libertarian like
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Steele contends that the economic carrot is not coercive as is the political
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stick. I didn't argue against this unreasonable opinion there because only
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libertarians and economists hold it and there are not enough of them to
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justify cluttering up the majestic breadth and sweep of my argument with too
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many asides. Steele, I notice, doesn't argue about it either. All this
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proves is that I am not a libertarian, a superfluous labor since I make that
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abundantly clear in another essay in the book, "The Libertarian as
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Conservative." On this point Aristotle, a philosopher much admired by
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libertarians, is on my side. He argues that "the life of money-making" is
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"undertaken under compulsion" (_Nic._Eth._ 1096a5). Believe it, dude. But
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even if Ari and I are mistaken we are neither confused nor confusing. There
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is nothing inconsistent or incoherent about my definitions, nor do they
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contradict ordinary usage. A libertarian or anybody else who can't
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understand what I'm saying is either playing dumb or he really is. People
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who are maybe not even half-educated understand what I say about work. The
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first time my essay was published, in pamphlet form, the printer (the boss)
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reported "it got quiet" when he took the manuscript into the back room; he
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also thought the workers had run off some extra copies for themselves. Only
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miseducated intellectuals ever have any trouble puzzling out what's wrong
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with work.
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Work is by definition productive and by definition compulsory (in my sense,
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which embraces toil without which one is denied the means of survival, in
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our society most often but not always wage labor). Play is by definition
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intrinsically gratifying and by definition voluntary. Play is _not_ by
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definition either productive _or_ unproductive, although it has been wrongly
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defined by Huizinga and de Kovens among others as necessarily
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inconsequential. It does not have to be. Whether play has consequences
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(something that continues when the play is over) depends on what is at
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stake. Does poker cease to be play if you bet on the outcome? Maybe yes --
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but maybe no.
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My proposal is to combine the best part (in fact, the only good part) of
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work -- the production of use-values -- with the best of play, which I take
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to be every aspect of play, its freedom and its fun, its voluntariness and
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its intrinsic gratification, shorn of the Calvinist connotations of
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frivolity and "self-indulgence" which the masters of work, echoed by the
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likes of Johan Huizinga and David Ramsey Steele, have labored to attach to
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free play. Is this so hard to understand? _If_productive_play_is_
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possible,_so_too_is_the_abolition_of_work_.
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Fully educated as he must be, Steele thus flubs my discursive definitions of
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work. I am no define-your-terms Objectivist; I announce definitions only as
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opening gambits, as approximations to be enriched and refined by
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illustration and elaboration. Work is production elicited by extrinsic
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inducements like money or violence. Whether my several variant formulations
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have the same _sense_ (meaning) they have, in Frege's terminology, the same
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_reference_, they designate the same phenomenon. (Ah picked up a li'l
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book-larnin' after all.)
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According to Steele, what I call the abolition of work is just "avant-garde
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job enrichment." I display "no interest in this body of theory" because it
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has none for me (I am as familiar with it as I care to be). "Job
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enrichment" is a top-down conservative reform by which employers gimmick up
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jobs to make them seem more interesting without relinquishing their control
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over them, much less superseding them. A job, _any_ job -- an exclusive
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productive assignment -- is, as "Abolition" makes clear, an aggravated
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condition of work; almost always it stultifies the plurality of our
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potential powers. Even activities with some inherent satisfaction as freely
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chosen pastimes lose much of their ludic kick when reduced to jobs, to
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supervised, timed, exclusive occupations worked in return for enough money
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to live on. Jobs are the worst kind of work and the first which must be
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deranged. For me the job enrichment literature is significant in only one
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way: it proves that workers are sufficiently anti-work -- something Steele
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denies -- that management is concerned to muffle or misdirect their
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resentments. Steele, in misunderstanding all this, misunderstands
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everything.
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I have never denied the need for what the economists call production, I have
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calle dfor its ruthless auditing (how much of this production is worth
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suffering to produce?) and for the transformation of what seems needful into
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_productive_play_, two words to be tattoo'd on Steve's forehead as they
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explain everything about me he dislikes or misunderstands. _Productive_
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play_. Plenty of unproductive play, too, I hope -- in fact ideally an
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arrangement in which there is no point in keeping track of which is which --
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but play as paradigmatic. _Productive_play_. Activities which are, for the
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time and the circumstances and the individuals engaged in them,
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intrinsically gratifying play yet which, in their totality, produce the
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means of life for all. The most necessary functions such as those of the
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"primary sector" (food production) already have their ludic counterparts in
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hunting and gardening, in _hobbies_. Not only are my categories coherent,
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they are already operative in every society. Happily not so may people are
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so economically sophisticated they cannot understand me.
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If Steele really believes that there can be no bread without bakeries and no
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sex without brothels, I pity him.
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Whenever Steele strays into anthropology, he is out of his depth. In
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"Primitive Affluence" I drew attention to the buffoonery of his portrait of
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prehistoric political economy, a few cavemen on loan from "The Far Side"
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squatting round the campfire shooting the shit for lack of anything better
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to do and every so often carving a steak out of an increasingly putrid
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carcass till the meat runs out. Racism this ridiculous is sublime, as
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shockingly silly as if today we put on an old minstrel show, blackface and
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all. The hunters didn't do more work, he explains, because "they saw little
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profit in it because of their restricted options." For sure they saw no
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_profit_ because the concept would be meaningless to them, but their options
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weren't as restricted as ours are. If the San are any example, they
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normally enjoyed a choice we only get two weeks a year, the choice whether
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to sleep in or get up and go to work. More than half the time a San hunter
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stays home. What Steele considers "options" are not choices as to what to
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do but choices as to what to consume: "When such hunter-gatherer societies
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encounter more technically advanced societies with a greater range of
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products, the hunter-gatherers generally manifest a powerful desire to get
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some of these products, even if this puts them to some trouble."
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This generalization, like the others Steele ventures, only appears to be
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empirical. In fact it is a deduction from an economic model which assumed
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away from the start any possibility that anybody ever did or ever could act
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as anything else but a more or less well-informed rational maximizer.
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Historically it is insupportable. While the hunter-gatherers (and
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horticulturalists and pastoralists) often did take from the European
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tool-kit, they wanted no part of the work-subjugation system by which the
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tools were produced. The San like to turn barbed wire stolen from South
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African farmers into points more effective and more easily fashioned than
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those of stone, but they do not like to work in the diamond mines. "Most of
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humankind," Steele supposes, "has been practicing agriculture for several
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thousand years, having at some stage found this more productive than
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hunting." The "at some stage" betrays the contention for what it is, a
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deduction from the axioms, not historical reportage. Steele would have a
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cow if somebody said, "Most of humankind has been practicing
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authoritarianism for several thousand years, having at some stage found this
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more free/orderly/stable/satisfying than libertarianism."
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The parallelism is not fortuitous. Overwhelmingly, stateless societies are
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also classless, marketless, and substantially workless societies.
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Overwhelmingly, market societies are also statist, class-ridden, work ridden
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societies. Am I out of line in suggesting there just _might_ be a challenge
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for libertarians in all this which is not fully met by Steele's red-baiting
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me?
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Steele's pseudo-factual contention assumes the consequent, that what
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everybody everywhere wants is higher productivity. Although Steele
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characterizes my goal (a little less inaccurately than usual) as something
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like anarcho-communism or "higher-stage" communism (he remembers the jargon
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of his Marxist phase), it is Steele who sounds like the collectivist,
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reifying "humankind" as some kind of organism which "at some stage" _chose_
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to go for the gold, to take up the hoe. Just when and where was this
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referendum held? Supposing that agricultural societies are more productive
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(of what?) per capita, who says the surplus goes to the producers? Steele
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may no longer agree with what Engels said in _The_Origin_of_the_Family,_
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Private_Property,_and_the_State_ but he surely remembers the issues raised
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there and cynically suppresses what _he_ knows but his intellectually
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impoverished libertarian readership doesn't. Peasants produced more,
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working a lot harder to do it, but consumed less. The wealth they produced
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could be stored, sold and stolen, taxed and taken away by kings, nobles and
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priests. Since it could be, in time it was -- "at some stage" what was
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possible became actual, the state and agriculture, the parasite and its
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host. The rest is, literally, history.
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If agriculture and the industrial society which emerged from it mark stages
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in the progress of liberty we should expect that the oldest agricultural
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societies (now busily industrializing) are in the vanguard of freedom. One
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stretch of country enjoyed the blessings of civilization twice as long as
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the next contender. I speak of course of Sumer, more recently known as
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Iraq. Almost as libertarian is the next civilization, still civilized:
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Egypt. Next, China. Need I say more?
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And once one or more of these agricultural slave societies got going it
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expanded at the expense of its stateless workless neighbors whose small
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face-to-face societies, though psychologically gratifying and economically
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abundant, couldn't defeat the huge slave armies without turning into what
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they fought. Thus they lost if they won, like the nomadic armies of the
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Akkadians or Mongols or Turks, and they also lost, of course, if they lost.
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It had nothing to do with shopping around for the best deal.
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Steele fails (or pretends not) to understand why I ever brought up the
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primitives at all. It's not because I've ever advocated a general return to
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a foraging way of life. If only because the specialized stultification of
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the work we have to do unfits us for the variegated _skilled_play_ which
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produces the abundance the hunter-gatherers take for granted. Donald Trump
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worries a lot more about his economic future than a San mother worries about
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hers. A hunter-gatherer grows up in a habitat and learns to read it. I've
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quoted Adam Smith to the effect that the division of labor, even if it
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enhances productivity, diminishes the human personality. Now if there is
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anything in my entire book a libertarian ideologue ought to answer or
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explain away it is what the old Adam said about work, but Steele is careful
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to cover up this family scandal altogether. (How many libertarians, for
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that matter, know that Smith was a Presbyterian minister? Or that
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"benevolence" was crucial to his utilitarian ethics? Or that he advocated
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compulsory schooling precisely in order to counteract the debasing impact of
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work?)
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Hunter-gatherers inform our understanding and embarrass libertarians in at
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least two ways. They operate the only known viable stateless societies.
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And they don't, except in occasional emergencies, _work_ in any sense I've
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used the word. They, like we, must produce, but they don't have to work
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usually. They enjoy what they do on the relatively few occasions they are
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in the mood to do it; such is the ethnographic record. Some primitives have
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no words to distinguish work and play because there is no reason to draw the
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distinction. We're the ones who need it in order to understand what's
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befallen us. Remarkably, I agree with Steele that we moderns cannot
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"approximate that lifestyle very closely and still maintain advanced
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industry, though we could gradually approach it by reduced hours and more
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flexible work schedules, and a few individuals [this is a dig at me]
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approximate it fairly closely by a combination of occasional work and living
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off handouts." Very well then, let's not "maintain advanced industry." I
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want liberty; Steele, in _Liberty_, prefers industry. I think the rag
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should rename itself _Industry_ if that's where its deepest loyalty lies.
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In "Abolition" I was deliberately agnostic about technology because I meant
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to make the abolitionist case in the most universal terms. It is not
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necessary to agree with my actual opinions of industrial technology (very
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skeptical) to agree with my opposition to work, although it helps. Steele
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doesn't trouble to keep his accusations consistent, on one page charging me
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with "the ambitious mission of stamping out social cooperation and
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technology" thus effectuating "the elimination of more than 95 percent of
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the world's population, and the reduction of the remnant to a condition
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lower than the Stone Age" (even _lower_!) -- and on the next page saying I
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repeat "the usual communist claims" that "'automation' can do almost
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anything." What Steele quaintly calls the Stone Age is the one million
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years in which all humans lived as hunter-gatherers and we have already seen
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there is much to be said for a lifestyle most of us have been unfitted for.
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For Steele "the usual communist claims" serve the same diversionary function
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"the usual suspects" do when rounded up.
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At least two science fiction writers who likely know a lot more about high
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tech than Steele does, the cyberpunks Bruce Sterling and Lewis Shiner, have
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drawn on "The Abolition of Work" in sketching zero-work lifestyles which
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variously turn on technology. In _Islands_in_the_Net_, Sterling
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extrapolates from several anti-work stances: the "avant-garde job
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enrichment" (as Steele would say) of the laid-back Rhizome multinational;
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the selective post-punk high-tech of Singapore's Anti-Labour Party; and the
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post-agricultural _guerrilla_ nomadism of Tuareg insurgents in Africa. He
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incorporates a few of my phrases verbatim. Shiner in _Slam_ recounts an
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individual anti-work odyssey expressly indebted to several Loompanics books,
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including "a major inspiration for this novel, _The_Abolition_of_Work_ by
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Bob Black." If I am skeptical about liberation through high-tech it mainly
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because the techies aren't even exploring the possibility, and if they
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don't, who will? They are all worked up over nanotechnology, the
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as-yet-nonexistent technology of molecular mechanical manipulation -- that
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SF cliche', the matter transformer -- without showing any interest in what
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work, if any, would be left to be done in such a hypertech civilization. So
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I find low-tech decentralization the more credible alternative for now.
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It is false, but truer than most of what Steele attributes to me, that I
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think "the tertiary or services sector is useless." I view most of this
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sector -- now the largest -- the way a libertarian views most of the
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government bureaucracy. Its dynamic is principally its own reproduction
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over time. The services sector services the services sector as the state
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recreates the state. In _I_Was_Robot_ Ernest Mann carries forth a long
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utopian socialist tradition by recounting all the industries which exist
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only in order that they and others like them continue to exist and expand.
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According to the libertarian litany, if an industry or an institution is
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making a profit it is satisfying "wants" whose origins and content are
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deliberately disregarded. But what we want, what we are capable of wanting
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is relative to the forms of social organization. People "want" fast food
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because they have to hurry back to work, because processed supermarket food
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doesn't taste much better anyway, because the nuclear family (for the
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dwindling minority who have even that to go home to) is too small and too
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stressed to sustain much festivity in cooking and eating -- and so forth.
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It is only people who can't get what they want who resign themselves to want
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_more_ of what they can get. Since we cannot be friends and lovers, we wail
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for more candy.
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The libertarian is more upset than he admits when he drops his favored
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elitist imposture, the lip uncurls, the cigarette holder falls and the
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coolly rational anti-egalitarian Heinlein wannabe turns populist demagogue.
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In _Scarface_ Edgar G. Robinson snarls, "Work is for saps!" In _Liberty_,
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David Ramsey Steele yelps that the _saps_ are for _work_. When it says what
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he wants to hear, _Vox_Populi_ is _Vox_Dei_ after all; not, however, when
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the talk turns to Social Security, farm subsidies, anti-drug laws and all
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the other popular forms of state intervention. Steele assures us that
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workers prefer higher wages to job enrichment. This may well be true and it
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certainly makes sense since, as I have explained, job enrichment is not the
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abolition of work, it is only a rather ineffectual form of psychological
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warfare. But how does he know this is true? Because, he explains, there
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has been virtually no recent trend toward job enrichment in the American
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marketplace. This is blatant nonsense, since for the last fifteen years or
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more workers have not had the choice between higher wages and _anything_ for
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the simple reason that real wages have fallen relative to the standard of
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living. Payback is the kind of trouble the prudent worker does not take to
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the counsellors in the Employee Assistance Program.
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What I espouse is something that money cannot buy, a new way of life. The
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abolition of work is beyond bargaining since it implies the abolition of
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bosses to bargain with. By his delicate reference to the standard "job
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package" Steele betrays the reality that the ordinary job applicant has as
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much chance to dicker over the content of his work as the average shopper
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has to haggle over prices in the supermarket check-out line. Even the
|
|
mediated collective bargaining of the unions, never the norm, is now
|
|
unavailable to the vast majority of workers. Besides, unions don't foster
|
|
reforms like workers' control, since if workers controlled work they'd have
|
|
no use for brokers to sell their labor-power to a management whose functions
|
|
they have usurped. Since the revolt against work is not, could not be,
|
|
institutionalized, Steele is unable even to imagine there is one. Steele is
|
|
an industrial sociologist the way Gene Autry was a cowboy. He commits
|
|
malpractice in every field he dabbles in; he is a Bizarro Da Vinci, a
|
|
veritable Renaissance Klutz. Surely no other anthropologist thinks "The
|
|
Flintstones" was a documentary.
|
|
|
|
With truly Ptolemaic persistence Steele hangs epicycle upon epicycle in
|
|
order to reconcile reality with his market model. Take the health hazards
|
|
of work: "If an activity occupies a great deal of people's time, it will
|
|
probably occasion a great deal of death and injury." Thus there are many
|
|
deaths in the home: "Does this show that housing is inherently murderous?"
|
|
A short answer is that I propose the abolition of work, not the abolition of
|
|
housing, because housing (or rather shelter) is necessay, but work, I argue,
|
|
is not. I'd say about housing what Steele says about work: if it is
|
|
homicide it is justifiable homicide. (Not all of it, not when slumlords
|
|
rent out firetraps, but set that aside for now.) And the analogy is absurd
|
|
unless _all_ activities are equally dangerous, implying that you might just
|
|
as well chain-smoke or play Russian roulette as eat a salad or play
|
|
patty-cake. Some people die in their sleep, but not because they are
|
|
sleeping, whereas many people die because they are working. If work is more
|
|
dangerous than many activities unrelated to work which people choose to do,
|
|
the risk is part of the case against work. I have no desire to eliminate
|
|
all danger from life, only for risks to be freely chosen when they accompany
|
|
and perhaps enhance the pleasure of the play.
|
|
|
|
Steele asserts, typically without substantiation, that workplace safety
|
|
varies directly with income: "As incomes rise, jobs become safer -- workers
|
|
have more alternatives and can insist on greater compensation for high
|
|
risk." I know of no evidence for any such relationship. There should be a
|
|
tendency, if Steele is right, for better-paid jobs to be safer that
|
|
worse-paid jobs, but coal miners make much more money that janitors and
|
|
firemen make much less money than lawyers. Anything to Steele's
|
|
correlation, if there _is_ anything to it, is readily explained: elite jobs
|
|
are just better in every way than grunt jobs -- safer, better paid, more
|
|
prestigious. The less you have, the less you have: so much for
|
|
"trade-offs."
|
|
|
|
Amusingly the only evidence which is consistent with Steele's conjecture is
|
|
evidence he elsewhere contradicts. Occupational injuries and fatalities
|
|
have increased in recent years, even as real wages have fallen, but Steele
|
|
is ideologically committed to the fairy-tale of progress. He says "workers
|
|
have chosen to take most of the gains of increased output in the form of
|
|
more goods and services, and only a small part of these gains in the form of
|
|
less working time." It wasn't the _workers_ who took these gains, not in
|
|
higher wages, not in safer working conditions, and not in shorter hours --
|
|
hours of work have _increased_ slightly. It must be, then, that in the 80's
|
|
and after workers have "chosen" lower wages, longer hours _and_ greater
|
|
danger on the job. Yeah, sure.
|
|
|
|
Steele -- or Ramsey-Steele, as he used to sign off when he used to write of
|
|
the hippie paper _Oz_ in the 60's -- is, if often witless, sometimes witty,
|
|
as when he calls me "a rope stretched over the abyss between Raoul Vaneigem
|
|
and Sid Vicious." My leftist critics haven't done as well. After I called
|
|
_Open_Road_ "the _Rolling_Stone_ of anarchism," it took those
|
|
anarcho-leftists a few years to call me "the Bob Hope of anarchism,"
|
|
obviously a stupendous effort on their part. But Ramsey-Steele can't keep
|
|
it up as I can. "The Abolition of Breathing" (what a sense of humor this
|
|
guy has!) is, its hamhandedness aside, an especially maladroit move by a
|
|
libertarian. I am in favor of breathing; as Ed Lawrence has written of me,
|
|
"His favorite weapon is the penknife, and when he goes for the throat,
|
|
breathe easy, the usual result is a tracheotomy of inspiration."
|
|
|
|
As it happens there is light to be shed on the libertarian position on
|
|
breathing. Ayn Rand is always inspirational and often oracular for
|
|
libertarians. A strident atheist and vehement rationalist -- she felt in
|
|
fact that she and three or four of her disciples were the only really
|
|
rational people there were -- Rand remarked that she _worshipped_
|
|
smokestacks. For her, as for Lyndon LaRouche, they not only stood for, they
|
|
_were_ the epitome of human accomplishment. She must have meant it since
|
|
she was something of a human smokestack herself; she was a chain smoker, as
|
|
were the other rationals in her entourage. In the end she abolished her own
|
|
breathing: she died of lung cancer. Now if Sir David Ramsey-Steele is
|
|
concerned about breathing he should remonstrate, not with me but with the
|
|
owners of the smokestacks I'd like to shut down. Like Rand I'm an atheist
|
|
(albeit with pagan tendencies) but I worship nothing -- and I'd even rather
|
|
worship _God_ than _smokestacks_.
|
|
|
|
(1989, 1992)
|
|
|
|
Steele's pseudo-factual contention assumes the consequent, that what
|
|
everybody everywhere wants is higher productivity. Although Steele
|
|
characterizes my goal (a little less inaccurately than usual) as something
|
|
like anarcho-communism or "higher-stage" communism (he remembers the jargon
|
|
of his Marxist phase), it is Steele who sounds like the collectivist,
|
|
reifying "humankind" as some kind of organism which "at some stage" _chose_
|
|
to go for the gold, to take up the hoe. Just when and where was this
|
|
referendum held? Supposing that agricultural societies are more productive
|
|
(of what?) per capita, who says the surplus goes to the producers? Steele
|
|
may no longer agree with what Engels said in _The_Origin_of_the_Family,_
|
|
Private_Property,_and_the_State_ but he surely remembers the issues raised
|
|
there and cynically suppresses what _he_ knows but his intellectually
|
|
impoverished libertarian readership doesn't. Peasants produced more,
|
|
working a lot harder to do it, but consumed less. The wealth they produced
|
|
could be stored, sold and stolen, taxed and taken away by kings, nobles and
|
|
priests. Since it could be, in time it was -- "at some stage" what was
|
|
possible became actual, the state and agriculture, the parasite and its
|
|
host. The rest is, literally, history.
|
|
|
|
If agriculture and the industrial society which emerged from it mark stages
|
|
in the progress of liberty we should expect that the oldest agricultural
|
|
societies (now busily industrializing) are in the vanguard of freedom. One
|
|
stretch of country enjoyed the blessings of civilization twice as long as
|
|
the next contender. I speak of course of Sumer, more recently known as
|
|
Iraq. Almost as libertarian is the next civilization, still civilized:
|
|
Egypt. Next, China. Need I say more?
|
|
|
|
And once one or more of these agricultural slave societies got going it
|
|
expanded at the expense of its stateless workless neighbors whose small
|
|
face-to-face societies, though psychologically gratifying and economically
|
|
abundant, couldn't defeat the huge slave armies without turning into what
|
|
they fought. Thus they lost if they won, like the nomadic armies of the
|
|
Akkadians or Mongols or Turks, and they also lost, of course, if they lost.
|
|
It had nothing to do with shopping around for the best deal.
|
|
|
|
Steele fails (or pretends not) to understand why I ever brought up the
|
|
primitives at all. It's not because I've ever advocated a general return to
|
|
a foraging way of life. If only because the specialized stultification of
|
|
the work we have to do unfits us for the variegated _skilled_play_ which
|
|
produces the abundance the hunter-gatherers take for granted. Donald Trump
|
|
worries a lot more about his economic future than a San mother worries about
|
|
hers. A hunter-gatherer grows up in a habitat and learns to read it. I've
|
|
quoted Adam Smith to the effect that the division of labor, even if it
|
|
enhances productivity, diminishes the human personality. Now if there is
|
|
anything in my entire book a libertarian ideologue ought to answer or
|
|
explain away it is what the old Adam said about work, but Steele is careful
|
|
to cover up this family scandal altogether. (How many libertarians, for
|
|
that matter, know that Smith was a Presbyterian minister? Or that
|
|
"benevolence" was crucial to his utilitarian ethics? Or that he advocated
|
|
compulsory schooling precisely in order to counteract the debasing impact of
|
|
work?)
|
|
|
|
Hunter-gatherers inform our understanding and embarrass libertarians in at
|
|
least two ways. They operate the only known viable stateless societies.
|
|
And they don't, except in occasional emergencies, _work_ in any sense I've
|
|
used the word. They, like we, must produce, but they don't have to work
|
|
usually. They enjoy what they do on the relatively few occasions they are
|
|
in the mood to do it; such is the ethnographic record. Some primitives have
|
|
no words to distinguish work and play because there is no reason to draw the
|
|
distinction. We're the ones who need it in order to understand what's
|
|
befallen us. Remarkably, I agree with Steele that we moderns cannot
|
|
"approximate that lifestyle very closely and still maintain advanced
|
|
industry, though we could gradually approach it by reduced hours and more
|
|
flexible work schedules, and a few individuals [this is a dig at me]
|
|
approximate it fairly closely by a combination of occasional work and living
|
|
off handouts." Very well then, let's not "maintain advanced industry." I
|
|
want liberty; Steele, in _Liberty_, prefers industry. I think the rag
|
|
should rename itself _Industry_ if that's where its deepest loyalty lies.
|
|
|
|
In "Abolition" I was deliberately agnostic about technology because I meant
|
|
to make the abolitionist case in the most universal terms. It is not
|
|
necessary to agree with my actual opinions of industrial technology (very
|
|
skeptical) to agree with my opposition to work, although it helps. Steele
|
|
doesn't trouble to keep his accusations consistent, on one page charging me
|
|
with "the ambitious mission of stamping out social cooperation and
|
|
technology" thus effectuating "the elimination of more than 95 percent of
|
|
the world's population, and the reduction of the remnant to a condition
|
|
lower than the Stone Age" (even _lower_!) -- and on the next page saying I
|
|
repeat "the usual communist claims" that "'automation' can do almost
|
|
anything." What Steele quaintly calls the Stone Age is the one million
|
|
years in which all humans lived as hunter-gatherers and we have already seen
|
|
there is much to be said for a lifestyle most of us have been unfitted for.
|
|
For Steele "the usual communist claims" serve the same diversionary function
|
|
"the usual suspects" do when rounded up.
|
|
|
|
At least two science fiction writers who likely know a lot more about high
|
|
tech than Steele does, the cyberpunks Bruce Sterling and Lewis Shiner, have
|
|
drawn on "The Abolition of Work" in sketching zero-work lifestyles which
|
|
variously turn on technology. In _Islands_in_the_Net_, Sterling
|
|
extrapolates from several anti-work stances: the "avant-garde job
|
|
enrichment" (as Steele would say) of the laid-back Rhizome multinational;
|
|
the selective post-punk high-tech of Singapore's Anti-Labour Party; and the
|
|
post-agricultural _guerrilla_ nomadism of Tuareg insurgents in Africa. He
|
|
incorporates a few of my phrases verbatim. Shiner in _Slam_ recounts an
|
|
individual anti-work odyssey expressly indebted to several Loompanics books,
|
|
including "a major inspiration for this novel, _The_Abolition_of_Work_ by
|
|
Bob Black." If I am skeptical about liberation through high-tech it mainly
|
|
because the techies aren't even exploring the possibility, and if they
|
|
don't, who will? They are all worked up over nanotechnology, the
|
|
as-yet-nonexistent technology of molecular mechanical manipulation -- that
|
|
SF cliche', the matter transformer -- without showing any interest in what
|
|
work, if any, would be left to be done in such a hypertech civilization. So
|
|
I find low-tech decentralization the more credible alternative for now.
|
|
|
|
It is false, but truer than most of what Steele attributes to me, that I
|
|
think "the tertiary or services sector is useless." I view most of this
|
|
sector -- now the largest -- the way a libertarian views most of the
|
|
government bureaucracy. Its dynamic is principally its own reproduction
|
|
over time. The services sector services the services sector as the state
|
|
recreates the state. In _I_Was_Robot_ Ernest Mann carries forth a long
|
|
utopian socialist tradition by recounting all the industries which exist
|
|
only in order that they and others like them continue to exist and expand.
|
|
According to the libertarian litany, if an industry or an institution is
|
|
making a profit it is satisfying "wants" whose origins and content are
|
|
deliberately disregarded. But what we want, what we are capable of wanting
|
|
is relative to the forms of social organization. People "want" fast food
|
|
because they have to hurry back to work, because processed supermarket food
|
|
doesn't taste much better anyway, because the nuclear family (for the
|
|
dwindling minority who have even that to go home to) is too small and too
|
|
stressed to sustain much festivity in cooking and eating -- and so forth.
|
|
It is only people who can't get what they want who resign themselves to want
|
|
_more_ of what they can get. Since we cannot be friends and lovers, we wail
|
|
for more candy.
|
|
|
|
The libertarian is more upset than he admits when he drops his favored
|
|
elitist imposture, the lip uncurls, the cigarette holder falls and the
|
|
coolly rational anti-egalitarian Heinlein wannabe turns populist demagogue.
|
|
In _Scarface_ Edgar G. Robinson snarls, "Work is for saps!" In _Liberty_,
|
|
David Ramsey Steele yelps that the _saps_ are for _work_. When it says what
|
|
he wants to hear, _Vox_Populi_ is _Vox_Dei_ after all; not, however, when
|
|
the talk turns to Social Security, farm subsidies, anti-drug laws and all
|
|
the other popular forms of state intervention. Steele assures us that
|
|
workers prefer higher wages to job enrichment. This may well be true and it
|
|
certainly makes sense since, as I have explained, job enrichment is not the
|
|
abolition of work, it is only a rather ineffectual form of psychological
|
|
warfare. But how does he know this is true? Because, he explains, there
|
|
has been virtually no recent trend toward job enrichment in the American
|
|
marketplace. This is blatant nonsense, since for the last fifteen years or
|
|
more workers have not had the choice between higher wages and _anything_ for
|
|
the simple reason that real wages have fallen relative to the standard of
|
|
living. Payback is the kind of trouble the prudent worker does not take to
|
|
the counsellors in the Employee Assistance Program.
|
|
|
|
What I espouse is something that money cannot buy, a new way of life. The
|
|
abolition of work is beyond bargaining since it implies the abolition of
|
|
bosses to bargain with. By his delicate reference to the standard "job
|
|
package" Steele betrays the reality that the ordinary job applicant has as
|
|
much chance to dicker over the content of his work as the average shopper
|
|
has to haggle over prices in the supermarket check-out line. Even the
|
|
mediated collective bargaining of the unions, never the norm, is now
|
|
unavailable to the vast majority of workers. Besides, unions don't foster
|
|
reforms like workers' control, since if workers controlled work they'd have
|
|
no use for brokers to sell their labor-power to a management whose functions
|
|
they have usurped. Since the revolt against work is not, could not be,
|
|
institutionalized, Steele is unable even to imagine there is one. Steele is
|
|
an industrial sociologist the way Gene Autry was a cowboy. He commits
|
|
malpractice in every field he dabbles in; he is a Bizarro Da Vinci, a
|
|
veritable Renaissance Klutz. Surely no other anthropologist thinks "The
|
|
Flintstones" was a documentary.
|
|
|
|
With truly Ptolemaic persistence Steele hangs epicycle upon epicycle in
|
|
order to reconcile reality with his market model. Take the health hazards
|
|
of work: "If an activity occupies a great deal of people's time, it will
|
|
probably occasion a great deal of death and injury." Thus there are many
|
|
deaths in the home: "Does this show that housing is inherently murderous?"
|
|
A short answer is that I propose the abolition of work, not the abolition of
|
|
housing, because housing (or rather shelter) is necessay, but work, I argue,
|
|
is not. I'd say about housing what Steele says about work: if it is
|
|
homicide it is justifiable homicide. (Not all of it, not when slumlords
|
|
rent out firetraps, but set that aside for now.) And the analogy is absurd
|
|
unless _all_ activities are equally dangerous, implying that you might just
|
|
as well chain-smoke or play Russian roulette as eat a salad or play
|
|
patty-cake. Some people die in their sleep, but not because they are
|
|
sleeping, whereas many people die because they are working. If work is more
|
|
dangerous than many activities unrelated to work which people choose to do,
|
|
the risk is part of the case against work. I have no desire to eliminate
|
|
all danger from life, only for risks to be freely chosen when they accompany
|
|
and perhaps enhance the pleasure of the play.
|
|
|
|
Steele asserts, typically without substantiation, that workplace safety
|
|
varies directly with income: "As incomes rise, jobs become safer -- workers
|
|
have more alternatives and can insist on greater compensation for high
|
|
risk." I know of no evidence for any such relationship. There should be a
|
|
tendency, if Steele is right, for better-paid jobs to be safer that
|
|
worse-paid jobs, but coal miners make much more money that janitors and
|
|
firemen make much less money than lawyers. Anything to Steele's
|
|
correlation, if there _is_ anything to it, is readily explained: elite jobs
|
|
are just better in every way than grunt jobs -- safer, better paid, more
|
|
prestigious. The less you have, the less you have: so much for
|
|
"trade-offs."
|
|
|
|
Amusingly the only evidence which is consistent with Steele's conjecture is
|
|
evidence he elsewhere contradicts. Occupational injuries and fatalities
|
|
have increased in recent years, even as real wages have fallen, but Steele
|
|
is ideologically committed to the fairy-tale of progress. He says "workers
|
|
have chosen to take most of the gains of increased output in the form of
|
|
more goods and services, and only a small part of these gains in the form of
|
|
less working time." It wasn't the _workers_ who took these gains, not in
|
|
higher wages, not in safer working conditions, and not in shorter hours --
|
|
hours of work have _increased_ slightly. It must be, then, that in the 80's
|
|
and after workers have "chosen" lower wages, longer hours _and_ greater
|
|
danger on the job. Yeah, sure.
|
|
|
|
Steele -- or Ramsey-Steele, as he used to sign off when he used to write of
|
|
the hippie paper _Oz_ in the 60's -- is, if often witless, sometimes witty,
|
|
as when he calls me "a rope stretched over the abyss between Raoul Vaneigem
|
|
and Sid Vicious." My leftist critics haven't done as well. After I called
|
|
_Open_Road_ "the _Rolling_Stone_ of anarchism," it took those
|
|
anarcho-leftists a few years to call me "the Bob Hope of anarchism,"
|
|
obviously a stupendous effort on their part. But Ramsey-Steele can't keep
|
|
it up as I can. "The Abolition of Breathing" (what a sense of humor this
|
|
guy has!) is, its hamhandedness aside, an especially maladroit move by a
|
|
libertarian. I am in favor of breathing; as Ed Lawrence has written of me,
|
|
"His favorite weapon is the penknife, and when he goes for the throat,
|
|
breathe easy, the usual result is a tracheotomy of inspiration."
|
|
|
|
As it happens there is light to be shed on the libertarian position on
|
|
breathing. Ayn Rand is always inspirational and often oracular for
|
|
libertarians. A strident atheist and vehement rationalist -- she felt in
|
|
fact that she and three or four of her disciples were the only really
|
|
rational people there were -- Rand remarked that she _worshipped_
|
|
smokestacks. For her, as for Lyndon LaRouche, they not only stood for, they
|
|
_were_ the epitome of human accomplishment. She must have meant it since
|
|
she was something of a human smokestack herself; she was a chain smoker, as
|
|
were the other rationals in her entourage. In the end she abolished her own
|
|
breathing: she died of lung cancer. Now if Sir David Ramsey-Steele is
|
|
concerned about breathing he should remonstrate, not with me but with the
|
|
owners of the smokestacks I'd like to shut down. Like Rand I'm an atheist
|
|
(albeit with pagan tendencies) but I worship nothing -- and I'd even rather
|
|
worship _God_ than _smokestacks_.
|
|
|
|
(1989, 1992)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|