Deligitimizing Gangster Political Predators (GPPs)
by Frederick Mann (2010)
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Gangster Political Predators (GPPs)
We Now Have A Total Gangster Government
By 7/26/10, the above video had been watched over 2 million times.
Michael Savage - Gangster Government, Liberal Lies, and Censorship - September 15, 2009
Ron Paul: What If The Lies Of Government Were Exposed?
"Gangster government" has resulted in the needless slaughter of hundreds of millions of people. Today, the political slaughter continues in places like Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, and other parts of the world. According to R.J. Rummel, DEMOCIDE = MURDER BY GOVERNMENT: "Just to give perspective on this incredible murder by government [262,000,000 from 1900 to 1999], if all these bodies were laid head to toe, with the average height being 5', then they would circle the earth ten times. Also, this democide murdered 6 times more people than died in combat in all the foreign and internal wars of the century."
If you add Rummel's number for the people who died in combat to his 262 million number, you get over 300 million!
Friedrich Nietzsche: -- extracted from Thus Spoke Zarathustra -- Of the New Idol:
"The state? What is that?
The state is the coldest of all cold monsters. Coldly it lies, too; and this lie creeps from its mouth; 'I, the state, am the people.'
Where a people still exists, there the people do not understand the state and hate it as the evil eye and sin against custom and law.
It would like to range heroes and honorable men about it, this new idol! It likes to sun itself in the sunshine of good consciences -- this cold monster!
It will give you everything if you worship it, this new idol: thus it buys for itself the luster of your virtues and the glance of your proud eyes.
Yes, a death for many has here been devised that glorifies itself as life: truly a heart-felt service to all preachers of death!
Friedrich Nietzsche: -- (Ecce Homo):
"All questions of politics, the ordering of society, education have been falsified down to their foundations because the most injurious men have been taken for great men... I do not count these "pre-eminent men" as belonging to mankind at all -- to me, they are the refuse of mankind, abortive offspring of sickness and revengeful instincts: They are nothing but pernicious, fundamentally incurable monsters who take revenge on life..."
The Government Hoax
Written by Marc Stevens
Tuesday, 21 November 2006
The government hoax is probably the oldest, most pervasive and stubborn of hoaxes. It's the belief in non-existent “states” and “nations” and that “government” is both legitimate and necessary. In the geographic area of the North American continent commonly referred to as the “United States,” it's claimed only “government” can provide the service of protecting “Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.” This is nonsense if only for the reason “government” has no duty to protect anyone or their property.
Another reason is: no service or product should be provided at the barrel of a gun. It's that simple. There are no exceptions unless one believes people have no rights. If one believes people have no rights then “government” is not “necessary” to “protect” what doesn't exist. If you believe people have rights, then you don't “protect” them without their freely given consent. Also, protection is not submission to the violent unaccountable control of another nor is violent domination a legitimate method of doing business. Would you hire people who dont acknowledge you have property, to protect your property? I wouldn’t:
“The ultimate ownership of all property is in the State; individual so-called “ownership” is only by virtue of Government, i.e., law, amounting to mere user; and that use must be in accordance with law and subordinate to the necessities of the State.” Senate Resolution #62, April 1933.
What exactly is “government?” Have you ever seen a “government?” While there are varying degrees, “government” is one man violently controlling the life and property of another man. In some places this violent control is “decreed” to be for the latter's “own good” and “protection” and hailed as the “best system in the world.” Because it's based on violence, there are no “states” or “nations,” “states” being “voluntary associations.” You may recognize that violent control over a man's life and property is what we like to call... slavery. Slavery is a form of “government,” and in most cases, if not all, synonymous with “government.” Govern means control, not protect. Have you ever noticed the word “protect” is mysteriously not included in any definitions of govern?
“Govern. To direct and control; to regulate; to influence; to restrain; to manage. State v Ream, 16 Neb 681, 683.” Ballentine's Law Dictionary, page 530.
In “democracies” and so-called “democratic republics,” slaves are given the false choice of choosing new masters. The old plantations can be seen as “political subdivisions” such as “cities,” only smaller: “nations” have “presidents,” “states” have “governors,” “counties” have “commissioners,” “cities” have “mayors” and plantations have masters.
“Government” is a group of men and women providing the service of protecting “Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness” at the barrel of a gun. We have no choice in accepting and paying for their wonderful services. Their services are so valuable we're compelled to accept and pay for them. And non-political libertarians and voluntaryists are the extremists?
To keep this short, I'll use statements from politicians themselves, i.e., their sacred “law” that's worshipped, revered and most important, feared. Compare the following:
“Tax. A forced burden, charge, exaction, imposition or contribution assessed in accordance with some reasonable rule of apportionment by authority of a sovereign state upon the persons or property within its jurisdiction to provide for public revenue for the support of the government, the administration of the law, or the payment of public expenses. 51 AmJ1st Tax § 3.” Ballentine's Law Dictionary, page 1255.
“The organized use of threats, coercion, intimidation, and violence to compel the payment for actual or alleged services of arbitrary or excessive charges under the guise of membership dues, protection fees, royalties, or service rates. United States v McGlone (DC Pa) 19 F Supp 285, 286.” Ballentine's Law Dictionary, page 1051.
The first is a “kinder, gentler” way of describing the second. Both are accurate descriptions of how men and women pretending to be “government” operate. I like the second one because it's actually the definition of “racketeer.”
The government hoax is that “government,” a racket, is legitimate and necessary. That's absurd. Maybe if you believe a service should be provided at the barrel of a gun then yes, you'd think “government” is legitimate and necessary.
The government hoax is exposed with nothing more than no service or product should have to be provided at the barrel of a gun. If the service men and women doing business as a pretended “state” is so valuable, then people will voluntarily accept and pay for it.
Some attack this saying, “What's the alternative?!” That's easy:
Anything done under the guise of consent can be done by consent.
Men and women pretending to be “government” only have to do one thing different (here's the “radical” “extremist” part): provide their services on a voluntary basis like everybody else.
Stafan Molyneux: Does the government really exist?
"...[T]wo men have no more natural right to exercise any kind of authority over one, than one has to exercise the same authority over two. A man's natural rights are his own, against the whole world; and any infringement of them is equally a crime, whether committed by one man, or by millions; whether committed by one man, calling himself a robber, (or by any other name indicating his true character), or by millions, calling themselves a government... Clearly all this is the work of force, or fraud, or both... The Constitution has no inherent authority or obligation. It has no authority or obligation at all, unless as a contract between man and man. And it does not so much as even purport to be a contract between persons now existing... Those persons, if any, who did give their consent formally, are all dead now. Most of them have been dead forty, fifty, sixty, or seventy years. And the constitution, so far as it was their contract, died with them... The proceedings of those robbers and murderers, who call themselves "the government"... The "nations," as they are called, with whom our pretended ambassadors, secretaries, presidents, and senators profess to make treaties, are as much myths as our own... Certainly, too, there is in existence no such firm, corporation, or association as "the United States," or "the people of the United States," formed by any open, written, or other authentic and voluntary contract... The lesson taught by all these facts is this: As long as mankind continue to pay "National Debts," so-called --- that is, so long as they are such dupes and cowards as to pay for being cheated, plundered, enslaved, and murdered --- so long there will be enough to lend the money for those purposes; and with that money a plenty of tools, called soldiers, can be hired to keep them in subjection. But when they refuse any longer to pay for being thus cheated, plundered, enslaved, and murdered, they will cease to have cheats, and usurpers, and robbers, and murderers and blood-money loan-mongers for masters. ...Inasmuch as the Constitution was never signed, nor agreed to, by anybody, as a contract, and therefore never bound anybody, and is now binding upon nobody; and is, moreover, such an one as no people can ever hereafter be expected to consent to, except as they may be forced to do so at the point of the bayonet, it is perhaps of no importance what its true legal meaning, as a contract, is. Nevertheless, the writer thinks it proper to say that, in his opinion, the Constitution is no such instrument as it has generally been assumed to be; but that by false interpretations, and naked usurpations, the government has been made in practice a very widely, and almost wholly, different thing from what the Constitution itself purports to authorize. He has heretofore written much, and could write much more, to prove that such is the truth. But whether the Constitution really be one thing, or another, this much is certain --- that it has either authorized such a government as we have had, or has been powerless to prevent it. In either case, it is unfit to exist."
Potential Action Based on Lysander Spooner Surveys
Lysander Spooner (January 19, 1808 - May 14, 1887) "[W]as an American individualist anarchist, entrepreneur, political philosopher, abolitionist, and legal theorist of the 19th century." A Lysander Spooner website is maintained by Randy E. Barnett, Carmack Waterhouse Professor of Legal Theory, Georgetown University Law Center. On 9/19/07 there was a poll on the home page with the following results:
Do you agree with Spooner that the U.S. Constitution is without Authority?
"...[P]retended ambassadors, secretaries, presidents, and senators, ...robbers and murderers, who call themselves "the government."
"...[C]heats, and usurpers, and robbers, and murderers and blood-money loan-mongers for masters."
"...[S]uch dupes and cowards... [who] pay for being cheated, plundered, enslaved, and murdered."
Assuming that Spooner's "Constitution of No Authority" is correct, would it be reasonable to conclude that the entire "US political system" is a fake, a fraud, a scam, and a hoax?
Would it also be reasonable conclude that if Spooner is correct, then it would be absurd to believe that the political "usurpers, robbers, and murderers" can make so-called "laws?"
I wonder how many people, after reading Spooner's No Treason No. VI: The Constitution of No Authority, still believe that the political "usurpers, robbers, and murderers" can make so-called "laws?" -- and how many realize it's just a silly superstition?
I also wonder if, when Professor Barnett teaches "constitutional law" he does so with an inward smile or with his fingers crossed behind his back? Does he agree with Spooner and therefore think that in reality there's no such thing as "constitutional law?" -- just another part of the hoax? Or does he think Spooner got it all wrong? I find it very interesting that in the above polls, 21,000+ people (61.8% of respondents) thought Spooner got it right!
Barnett is a Senior Fellow of the Cato Institute -- a libertarian-leaning think tank. Spooner is well known among libertarians. In January 2004, Laissez Faire Books (a libertarian publisher) established the Lysander Spooner Award for advancing the literature of liberty.
According to the above polls, 21,000+ people (61.8% of respondents) had "agreed with Spooner that the U.S. Constitution is without Authority," i.e., a fake, a fraud, a scam, and a hoax. Now, how many of these 21,000+ people would go further and agree that, "If the U.S. Constitution is without authority," then the entire "US political system" must be a hoax, and the idea that political "usurpers, robbers, and murderers make laws" must be absurd?
It may depend on how many, and to what extent, the 21,247 are still intellectually trapped Citizens of Civilization -- for how many of them their logic continues to be trumped (overridden) by "subjective social agreement."
If a thousand of the 21,000+ (less than 5%) were to make a special attempt to expose the political hoax -- for example, by posting videos to that effect on YouTube, Google, Yahoo, etc. -- would they have any success? Is it worth creating a political equivalent of "The Blasphemy Challenge?"
To most Americans of the classes which consider
themselves significant the war [World War I] brought a
sense of the sanctity of the State which, if they had had
time to think about it, would have seemed a sudden and
surprising alteration in their habits of thought. In times
of peace, we usually ignore the State in favour of partisan
political controversies, or personal struggles for office,
or the pursuit of party policies. It is the Government
rather than the State with which the politically minded are
concerned. The State is reduced to a shadowy emblem which
comes to consciousness only on occasions of patriotic
holiday.
Government is obviously composed of common and
unsanctified men, and is thus a legitimate object of
criticism and even contempt. If your own party is in power,
things may be assumed to be moving safely enough; but if
the opposition is in, then clearly all safety and honor
have fled the State. Yet you do not put it to yourself in
quite that way. What you think is only that there are
rascals to be turned out of a very practical machinery of
offices and functions which you take for granted. When we
say that Americans are lawless, we usually mean that they
are less conscious than other peoples of the august majesty
of the institution of the State as it stands behind the
objective government of men and laws which we see. In a
republic the men who hold office are indistinguishable from
the mass. Very few of them possess the slightest personal
dignity with which they could endow their political role;
even if they ever thought of such a thing. And they have no
class distinction to give them glamour. In a republic the
Government is obeyed grumblingly, because it has no
bedazzlements or sanctities to gild it. If you are a good
old-fashioned democrat, you rejoice at this fact, you glory
in the plainness of a system where every citizen has become
a king. If you are more sophisticated you bemoan the
passing of dignity and honor from affairs of State. But in
practice, the democrat does not in the least treat his
elected citizen with the respect due to a king, nor does
the sophisticated citizen pay tribute to the dignity even
when he finds it. The republican State has almost no
trappings to appeal to the common man's emotions. What it
has are of military origin, and in an unmilitary era such
as we have passed through since the Civil War, even
military trappings have been scarcely seen. In such an era
the sense of the State almost fades out of the
consciousness of men.
With the shock of war, however, the State comes into its
own again. The Government, with no mandate from the people,
without consultation of the people, conducts all the
negotiations, the backing and filling, the menaces and
explanations, which slowly bring it into collision with
some other Government, and gently and irresistibly slides
the country into war. For the benefit of proud and haughty
citizens, it is fortified with a list of the intolerable
insults which have been hurled toward us by the other
nations; for the benefit of the liberal and beneficent, it
has a convincing set of moral purposes which our going to
war will achieve; for the ambitious and aggressive classes,
it can gently whisper of a bigger role in the destiny of
the world. The result is that, even in those countries
where the business of declaring war is theoretically in the
hands of representatives of the people, no legislature has
ever been known to decline the request of an Executive,
which has conducted all foreign affairs in utter privacy
and irresponsibility, that it order the nation into battle.
Good democrats are wont to feel the crucial difference
between a State in which the popular Parliament or Congress
declares war, and the State in which an absolute monarch or
ruling class declares war. But, put to the stern pragmatic
test, the difference is not striking. In the freest of
republics as well as in the most tyrannical of empires, all
foreign policy, the diplomatic negotiations which produce
or forestall war, are equally the private property of the
Executive part of the Government, and are equally exposed
to no check whatever from popular bodies, or the people
voting as a mass themselves.
The moment war is declared, however, the mass of the
people, through some spiritual alchemy, become convinced
that they have willed and executed the deed themselves.
They then, with the exception of a few malcontents, proceed
to allow themselves to be regimented, coerced, deranged in
all the environments of their lives, and turned into a
solid manufactory of destruction toward whatever other
people may have, in the appointed scheme of things, come
within the range of the Government's disapprobation. The
citizen throws off his contempt and indifference to
Government, identifies himself with its purposes, revives
all his military memories and symbols, and the State once
more walks, an august presence, through the imaginations of
men. Patriotism becomes the dominant feeling, and produces
immediately that intense and hopeless confusion between the
relations which the individual bears and should bear toward
the society of which he is a part.
The patriot loses all sense of the distinction between
State, nation, and government. In our quieter moments, the
Nation or Country forms the basic idea of society. We think
vaguely of a loose population spreading over a certain
geographical portion of the earth's surface, speaking a
common language, and living in a homogeneous civilization.
Our idea of Country concerns itself with the non-political
aspects of a people, its ways of living, its personal
traits, its literature and art, its characteristic
attitudes toward life. We are Americans because we live in
a certain bounded territory, because our ancestors have
carried on a great enterprise of pioneering and
colonization, because we live in certain kinds of
communities which have a certain look and express their
aspirations in certain ways. We can see that our
civilization is different from contiguous civilizations
like the Indian and Mexican. The institutions of our
country form a certain network which affects us vitally and
intrigues our thoughts in a way that these other
civilizations do not. We are a part of Country, for better
or for worse. We have arrived in it through the operation
of physiological laws, and not in any way through our own
choice. By the time we have reached what are called years
of discretion, its influences have molded our habits, our
values, our ways of thinking, so that however aware we may
become, we never really lose the stamp of our civilization,
or could be mistaken for the child of any other country.
Our feeling for our fellow countrymen is one of similarity
or of mere acquaintance. We may be intensely proud of and
congenial to our particular network of civilization, or we
may detest most of its qualities and rage at its defects.
This does not alter the fact that we are inextricably bound
up in it. The Country, as an inescapable group into which
we are born, and which makes us its particular kind of a
citizen of the world, seems to be a fundamental fact of our
consciousness, an irreducible minimum of social
feeling.
Now this feeling for country is essentially
noncompetitive; we think of our own people merely as living
on the earth's surface along with other groups, pleasant or
objectionable as they may be, but fundamentally as sharing
the earth with them. In our simple conception of country
there is no more feeling of rivalry with other peoples than
there is in our feeling for our family. Our interest turns
within rather than without, is intensive and not
belligerent. We grow up and our imaginations gradually
stake out the world we live in, they need no greater
conscious satisfaction for their gregarious impulses than
this sense of a great mass of people to whom we are more or
less attuned, and in whose institutions we are functioning.
The feeling for country would be an uninflatable maximum
were it not for the ideas of State and Government which are
associated with it. Country is a concept of peace, of
tolerance, of living and letting live. But State is
essentially a concept of power, of competition: it
signifies a group in its aggressive aspects. And we have
the misfortune of being born not only into a country but
into a State, and as we grow up we learn to mingle the two
feelings into a hopeless confusion.
The State is the country acting as a political unit, it
is the group acting as a repository of force, determiner of
law, arbiter of justice. International politics is a "power
politics" because it is a relation of States and that is
what States infallibly and calamitously are, huge
aggregations of human and industrial force that may be
hurled against each other in war. When a country acts as a
whole in relation to another country, or in imposing laws
on its own inhabitants, or in coercing or punishing
individuals or minorities, it is acting as a State. The
history of America as a country is quite different from
that of America as a State. In one case it is the drama of
the pioneering conquest of the land, of the growth of
wealth and the ways in which it was used, of the enterprise
of education, and the carrying out of spiritual ideals, of
the struggle of economic classes. But as a State, its
history is that of playing a part in the world, making war,
obstructing international trade, preventing itself from
being split to pieces, punishing those citizens whom
society agrees are offensive, and collecting money to pay
for all. Government on the other hand is synonymous with
neither State nor Nation. It is the machinery by which the
nation, organized as a State, carries out its State
functions. Government is a framework of the administration
of laws, and the carrying out of the public force.
Government is the idea of the State put into practical
operation in the hands of definite, concrete, fallible men.
It is the visible sign of the invisible grace. It is the
word made flesh. And it has necessarily the limitations
inherent in all practicality. Government is the only form
in which we can envisage the State, but it is by no means
identical with it. That the State is a mystical conception
is something that must never be forgotten. Its glamour and
its significance linger behind the framework of Government
and direct its activities. Wartime brings the ideal of the
State out into very clear relief, and reveals attitudes and
tendencies that were hidden. In times of peace the sense of
the State flags in a republic that is not militarized. For
war is essentially the health of the State. The ideal of
the State is that within its territory its power and
influence should be universal. As the Church is the medium
for the spiritual salvation of man, so the State is thought
of as the medium for his political salvation. Its idealism
is a rich blood flowing to all the members of the body
politic. And it is precisely in war that the urgency for
union seems greatest, and the necessity for universality
seems most unquestioned. The State is the organization of
the herd to act offensively or defensively against another
herd similarly organized. The more terrifying the occasion
for defense, the closer will become the organization and
the more coercive the influence upon each member of the
herd. War sends the current of purpose and activity flowing
down to the lowest level of the herd, and to its most
remote branches. All the activities of society are linked
together as fast as possible to this central purpose of
making a military offensive or a military defense, and the
State becomes what in peacetimes it has vainly struggled to
become the inexorable arbiter and determinant of men's
business and attitudes and opinions. The slack is taken up,
the cross-currents fade out, and the nation moves
lumberingly and slowly, but with ever accelerated speed and
integration, toward the great end, toward the "peacefulness
of being at war," of which L.P. Jacks [Lawrence Pearsall
Jacks, Oxford philosopher and Unitarian clergyman] has so
unforgettably spoken.
The classes which are able to play an active and not
merely a passive role in the organization for war get a
tremendous liberation of activity and energy. Individuals
are jolted out of their old routine, many of them are given
new positions of responsibility, new techniques must be
learned. Wearing home ties are broken and women who would
have remained attached with infantile bonds are liberated
for service overseas. A vast sense of rejuvenescence
pervades the significant classes, a sense of new importance
in the world. Old national ideals are taken out, re-adapted
to the purpose and used as universal touchstones, or molds
into which all thought is poured. Every individual citizen
who in peacetimes had no function to perform by which he
could imagine himself an expression or living fragment of
the State becomes an active amateur agent of the Government
in reporting spies and disloyalists, in raising Government
funds, or in propagating such measures as are considered
necessary by officialdom. Minority opinion, which in times
of peace, was only irritating and could not be dealt with
by law unless it was conjoined with actual crime, becomes,
with the outbreak of war, a case for outlawry. Criticism of
the State, objections to war, lukewarm opinions concerning
the necessity or the beauty of conscription, are made
subject to ferocious penalties, far exceeding in severity
those affixed to actual pragmatic crimes. Public opinion,
as expressed in the newspapers, and the pulpits and the
schools, becomes one solid block. "Loyalty," or rather war
orthodoxy, becomes the sole test for all professions,
techniques, occupations. Particularly is this true in the
sphere of the intellectual life. There the smallest taint
is held to spread over the whole soul, so that a professor
of physics is ipso facto disqualified to teach physics or
to hold honorable place in a university the republic of
learning if he is at all unsound on the war. Even mere
association with persons thus tainted is considered to
disqualify a teacher. Anything pertaining to the enemy
becomes taboo. His books are suppressed wherever possible,
his language is forbidden. His artistic products are
considered to convey in the subtlest spiritual way taints
of vast poison to the soul that permits itself to enjoy
them. So enemy music is suppressed, and energetic measures
of opprobrium taken against those whose artistic
consciences are not ready to perform such an act of
self-sacrifice. The rage for loyal conformity works
impartially, and often in diametric opposition to other
orthodoxies and traditional conformities, or even ideals.
The triumphant orthodoxy of the State is shown at its apex
perhaps when Christian preachers lose their pulpits for
taking in more or less literal terms the Sermon on the
Mount, and Christian zealots are sent to prison for twenty
years for distributing tracts which argue that war is
unscriptural.
War is the health of the State. It automatically sets in
motion throughout society those irresistible forces for
uniformity, for passionate cooperation with the Government
in coercing into obedience the minority groups and
individuals which lack the larger herd sense. The machinery
of government sets and enforces the drastic penalties; the
minorities are either intimidated into silence, or brought
slowly around by a subtle process of persuasion which may
seem to them really to be converting them. Of course, the
ideal of perfect loyalty, perfect uniformity is never
really attained. The classes upon whom the amateur work of
coercion falls are unwearied in their zeal, but often their
agitation instead of converting, merely serves to stiffen
their resistance. Minorities are rendered sullen, and some
intellectual opinion bitter and satirical. But in general,
the nation in wartime attains a uniformity of feeling, a
hierarchy of values culminating at the undisputed apex of
the State ideal, which could not possibly be produced
through any other agency than war. Loyalty or mystic
devotion to the State becomes the major imagined human
value. Other values, such as artistic creation, knowledge,
reason, beauty, the enhancement of life, are instantly and
almost unanimously sacrificed, and the significant classes
who have constituted themselves the amateur agents of the
State are engaged not only in sacrificing these values for
themselves but in coercing all other persons into
sacrificing them.
War or at least modern war waged by a democratic
republic against a powerful enemy seems to achieve for a
nation almost all that the most inflamed political idealist
could desire. Citizens are no longer indifferent to their
Government, but each cell of the body politic is brimming
with life and activity. We are at last on the way to full
realization of that collective community in which each
individual somehow contains the virtue of the whole. In a
nation at war, every citizen identifies himself with the
whole, and feels immensely strengthened in that
identification. The purpose and desire of the collective
community live in each person who throws himself
wholeheartedly into the cause of war. The impeding
distinction between society and the individual is almost
blotted out. At war, the individual becomes almost
identical with his society. He achieves a superb
self-assurance, an intuition of the rightness of all his
ideas and emotions, so that in the suppression of opponents
or heretics he is invincibly strong; he feels behind him
all the power of the collective community. The individual
as social being in war seems to have achieved almost his
apotheosis. Not for any religious impulse could the
American nation have been expected to show such devotion en
masse, such sacrifice and labor. Certainly not for any
secular good, such as universal education or the
subjugation of nature, would it have poured forth its
treasure and its life, or would it have permitted such
stern coercive measures to be taken against it, such as
conscripting its money and its men. But for the sake of a
war of offensive self-defense, undertaken to support a
difficult cause to the slogan of "democracy," it would
reach the highest level ever known of collective
effort.
For these secular goods, connected with the enhancement
of life, the education of man and the use of the
intelligence to realize reason and beauty in the nation's
communal living, are alien to our traditional ideal of the
State. The State is intimately connected with war, for it
is the organization of the collective community when it
acts in a political manner, and to act in a political
manner towards a rival group has meant, throughout all
history war. There is nothing invidious in the use of
the term "herd" in connection with the State. It is merely
an attempt to reduce closer to first principles the nature
of this institution in the shadow of which we all live,
move, and have our being. Ethnologists are generally agreed
that human society made its first appearance as the human
pack and not as a collection of individuals or of couples.
The herd is in fact the original unit, and only as it was
differentiated did personal individuality develop. All the
most primitive surviving tribes of men are shown to live in
a very complex but very rigid social organization where
opportunity for individuation is scarcely given. These
tribes remain strictly organized herds, and the difference
between them and the modern State is one of degree of
sophistication and variety of organization, and not of
kind.
Psychologists recognize the gregarious impulse as one of
the strongest primitive pulls which keeps together the
herds of the different species of higher animals. Mankind
is no exception. Our pugnacious evolutionary history has
prevented the impulse from ever dying out. This gregarious
impulse is the tendency to imitate, to conform, to coalesce
together, and is most powerful when the herd believes
itself threatened with attack. Animals crowd together for
protection, and men become most conscious of their
collectivity at the threat of war.
Consciousness of collectivity brings confidence and a
feeling of massed strength, which in turn arouses pugnacity
and the battle is on. In civilized man, the gregarious
impulse acts not only to produce concerted action for
defense, but also to produce identity of opinion. Since
thought is a form of behavior, the gregarious impulse
floods up into its realms and demands that sense of uniform
thought which wartime produces so successfully. And it is
in this flooding of the conscious life of society that
gregariousness works its havoc.
For just as in modern societies the sex instinct is
enormously oversupplied for the requirements of human
propagation, so the gregarious impulse is enormously
oversupplied for the work of protection which it is called
upon to perform. It would be quite enough if we were
gregarious enough to enjoy the companionship of others, to
be able to cooperate with them, and to feel a slight
malaise at solitude. Unfortunately, however, this impulse
is not content with these reasonable and healthful demands,
but insists that like-mindedness shall prevail everywhere,
in all departments of life. So that all human progress, all
novelty, and nonconformity, must be carried against the
resistance of this tyrannical herd instinct which drives
the individual into obedience and conformity with the
majority. Even in the most modern and enlightened societies
this impulse shows little sign of abating. As it is driven
by inexorable economic demand out of the sphere of utility,
it seems to fasten itself ever more fiercely in the realm
of feeling and opinion, so that conformity comes to be a
thing aggressively desired and demanded.
The gregarious impulse keeps its hold all the more
virulently because when the group is in motion or is taking
any positive action, this feeling of being with and
supported by the collective herd very greatly feeds that
will to power, the nourishment of which the individual
organism so constantly demands. You feel powerful by
conforming, and you feel forlorn and helpless if you are
out of the crowd. While even if you do not get any access
of power by thinking and feeling just as everybody else in
your group does, you get at least the warm feeling of
obedience, the soothing irresponsibility of protection.
Joining as it does to these very vigorous tendencies of
the individual the pleasure in power and the pleasure in
obedience this gregarious impulse becomes irresistible
in society. War stimulates it to the highest possible
degree, sending the influences of its mysterious
herd-current with its inflations of power and obedience to
the farthest reaches of the society, to every individual
and little group that can possibly be affected. And it is
these impulses which the State the organization of the
entire herd, the entire collectivity is founded on and
makes use of.
There is, of course, in the feeling toward the State a
large element of pure filial mysticism. The sense of
insecurity, the desire for protection, sends one's desire
back to the father and mother, with whom is associated the
earliest feelings of protection. It is not for nothing that
one's State is still thought of as Father or Motherland,
that one's relation toward it is conceived in terms of
family affection. The war has shown that nowhere under the
shock of danger have these primitive childlike attitudes
failed to assert themselves again, as much in this country
as anywhere. If we have not the intense Father-sense of the
German who worships his Vaterland, at least in Uncle Sam we
have a symbol of protecting, kindly authority, and in the
many Mother-posters of the Red Cross, we see how easily in
the more tender functions of war service, the ruling
organization is conceived in family terms. A people at war
have become in the most literal sense obedient, respectful,
trustful children again, full of that naïve faith in
the all-wisdom and all-power of the adult who takes care of
them, imposes his mild but necessary rule upon them and in
whom they lose their responsibility and anxieties. In this
recrudescence of the child, there is great comfort, and a
certain influx of power. On most people the strain of being
an independent adult weighs heavily, and upon none more
than those members of the significant classes who have had
bequeathed to them or have assumed the responsibilities of
governing. The State provides the convenientest of symbols
under which these classes can retain all the actual
pragmatic satisfaction of governing, but can rid themselves
of the psychic burden of adulthood. They continue to direct
industry and government and all the institutions of society
pretty much as before, but in their own conscious eyes and
in the eyes of the general public, they are turned from
their selfish and predatory ways, and have become loyal
servants of society, or something greater than they the
State. The man who moves from the direction of a large
business in New York to a post in the war management
industrial service in Washington does not apparently alter
very much his power or his administrative technique. But
psychically, what a transfiguration has occurred! His is
now not only the power but the glory! And his sense of
satisfaction is directly proportional not to the genuine
amount of personal sacrifice that may be involved in the
change but to the extent to which he retains his industrial
prerogatives and sense of command.
From members of this class a certain insuperable
indignation arises if the change from private enterprise to
State service involves any real loss of power and personal
privilege. If there is to be pragmatic sacrifice, let it
be, they feel, on the field of honor, in the traditionally
acclaimed deaths by battle, in that detour to suicide, as
Nietzsche calls war. The State in wartime supplies
satisfaction for this very real craving, but its chief
value is the opportunity it gives for this regression to
infantile attitudes. In your reaction to an imagined attack
on your country or an insult to its government, you draw
closer to the herd for protection, you conform in word and
deed, and you insist vehemently that everybody else shall
think, speak, and act together. And you fix your adoring
gaze upon the State, with a truly filial look, as upon the
Father of the flock, the quasi-personal symbol of the
strength of the herd, and the leader and determinant of
your definite action and ideas.
The members of the working classes, that portion at
least which does not identify itself with the significant
classes and seek to imitate it and rise to it, are
notoriously less affected by the symbolism of the State,
or, in other words, are less patriotic than the significant
classes. For theirs is neither the power nor the glory. The
State in wartime does not offer them the opportunity to
regress, for, never having acquired social adulthood, they
cannot lose it. If they have been drilled and regimented,
as by the industrial regime of the last century, they go
out docilely enough to do battle for their State, but they
are almost entirely without that filial sense and even
without that herd-intellect sense which operates so
powerfully among their "betters." They live habitually in
an industrial serfdom, by which, though nominally free,
they are in practice as a class bound to a system of
machine-production the implements of which they do not own,
and in the distribution of whose product they have not the
slightest voice, except what they can occasionally exert by
a veiled intimidation which draws slightly more of the
product in their direction. From such serfdom, military
conscription is not so great a change. But into the
military enterprise they go, not with those hurrahs of the
significant classes whose instincts war so powerfully
feeds, but with the same apathy with which they enter and
continue in the industrial enterprise.
From this point of view, war can be called almost an
upper-class sport. The novel interests and excitements it
provides, the inflations of power, the satisfaction it
gives to those very tenacious human impulses
gregariousness and parent-regression endow it with all
the qualities of a luxurious collective game which is felt
intensely just in proportion to the sense of significant
rule the person has in the class division of his society. A
country at war particularly our own country at war
does not act as a purely homogeneous herd. The significant
classes have all the herd-feeling in all its primitive
intensity, but there are barriers, or at least
differentials of intensity, so that this feeling does not
flow freely without impediment throughout the entire
nation. A modern country represents a long historical and
social process of disaggregation of the herd. The nation at
peace is not a group, it is a network of myriads of groups
representing the cooperation and similar feeling of men on
all sorts of planes and in all sorts of human interests and
enterprises. In every modern industrial country, there are
parallel planes of economic classes with divergent
attitudes and institutions and interests bourgeois and
proletariat, with their many subdivisions according to
power and function, and even their interweaving, such as
those more highly skilled workers who habitually identify
themselves with the owning and the significant classes and
strive to raise themselves to the bourgeois level,
imitating their cultural standards and manners. Then there
are religious groups with a certain definite, though
weakening sense of kinship, and there are the powerful
ethnic groups which behave almost as cultural colonies in
the New World, clinging tenaciously to language and
historical tradition, though their herdishness is usually
founded on cultural rather than State symbols. There are
even certain vague sectional groupings. All these small
sects, political parties, classes, levels, interests, may
act as foci for herd-feelings. They intersect and
interweave, and the same person may be a member of several
different groups lying at different planes. Different
occasions will set off his herd-feeling in one direction or
another. In a religious crisis he will be intensely
conscious of the necessity that his sect (or sub-herd) may
prevail, in a political campaign, that his party shall
triumph.
To the spread of herd-feeling, therefore, all these
smaller herds offer resistance. To the spread of that
herd-feeling which arises from the threat of war, and which
would normally involve the entire nation, the only groups
which make serious resistance are those, of course, which
continue to identify themselves with the other nation from
which they or their parents have come. In times of peace
they are for all practical purposes citizens of their new
country. They keep alive their ethnic traditions more as a
luxury than anything. Indeed these traditions tend rapidly
to die out except where they connect with some still
unresolved nationalistic cause abroad, with some struggle
for freedom, or some irredentism. If they are consciously
opposed by a too invidious policy of Americanism, they tend
to be strengthened. And in time of war, these ethnic
elements which have any traditional connection with the
enemy, even though most of the individuals may have little
real sympathy with the enemy's cause, are naturally
lukewarm to the herd-feeling of the nation which goes back
to State traditions in which they have no share. But to the
natives imbued with State-feeling, any such resistance or
apathy is intolerable. This herd-feeling, this newly
awakened consciousness of the State, demands universality.
The leaders of the significant classes, who feel most
intensely this State compulsion, demand a 100 percent
Americanism, among 100 percent of the population. The State
is a jealous God and will brook no rivals. Its sovereignty
must pervade every one, and all feeling must be run into
the stereotyped forms of romantic patriotic militarism
which is the traditional expression of the State
herd-feeling.
Thus arises conflict within the State. War becomes
almost a sport between the hunters and the hunted. The
pursuit of enemies within outweighs in psychic
attractiveness the assault on the enemy without. The whole
terrific force of the State is brought to bear against the
heretics. The nation boils with a slow insistent fever. A
white terrorism is carried on by the Government against
pacifists, socialists, enemy aliens, and a milder
unofficial persecution against all persons or movements
that can be imagined as connected with the enemy. War,
which should be the health of the State, unifies all the
bourgeois elements and the common people, and outlaws the
rest. The revolutionary proletariat shows more resistance
to this unification, is, as we have seen, psychically out
of the current. Its vanguard, as the I.W.W., is
remorselessly pursued, in spite of the proof that it is a
symptom, not a cause, and its persecution increases the
disaffection of labor and intensifies the friction instead
of lessening it.
But the emotions that play around the defense of the
State do not take into consideration the pragmatic results.
A nation at war, led by its significant classes, is engaged
in liberating certain of its impulses which have had all
too little exercise in the past. It is getting certain
satisfactions, and the actual conduct of the war or the
condition of the country are really incidental to the
enjoyment of new forms of virtue and power and
aggressiveness. If it could be shown conclusively that the
persecution of slightly disaffected elements actually
increased enormously the difficulties of production and the
organization of the war technique, it would be found that
public policy would scarcely change. The significant
classes must have their pleasure in hunting down and
chastising everything that they feel instinctively to be
not imbued with the current State enthusiasm, though the
State itself be actually impeded in its efforts to carry
out those objects for which they are passionately
contending. The best proof of this is that with a pursuit
of plotters that has continued with ceaseless vigilance
ever since the beginning of the war in Europe, the concrete
crimes unearthed and punished have been fewer than those
prosecutions for the mere crime of opinion or the
expression of sentiments critical of the State or the
national policy. The punishment for opinion has been far
more ferocious and unintermittent than the punishment of
pragmatic crime. Unimpeachable Anglo-Saxon Americans who
were freer of pacifist or socialist utterance than the
State-obsessed ruling public opinion, received heavier
penalties and even greater opprobrium, in many instances,
than the definitely hostile German plotter. A public
opinion which, almost without protest, accepts as just,
adequate, beautiful, deserved, and in fitting harmony with
ideals of liberty and freedom of speech, a sentence of
twenty years in prison for mere utterances, no matter what
they may be, shows itself to be suffering from a kind of
social derangement of values, a sort of social neurosis,
that deserves analysis and comprehension.
On our entrance into the war, there were many persons
who predicted exactly this derangement of values, who
feared lest democracy suffer more at home from an America
at war than could be gained for democracy abroad. That fear
has been amply justified. The question whether the American
nation would act like an enlightened democracy going to war
for the sake of high ideals, or like a State-obsessed herd,
has been decisively answered. The record is written and
cannot be erased. History will decide whether the
terrorization of opinion and the regimentation of life were
justified under the most idealistic of democratic
administrations. It will see that when the American nation
had ostensibly a chance to conduct a gallant war, with
scrupulous regard to the safety of democratic values at
home, it chose rather to adopt all the most obnoxious and
coercive techniques of the enemy and of the other countries
at war, and to rival in intimidation and ferocity of
punishment the worst governmental systems of the age. For
its former unconsciousness and disrespect of the State
ideal, the nation apparently paid the penalty in a violent
swing to the other extreme. It acted so exactly like a herd
in its irrational coercion of minorities that there is no
artificiality in interpreting the progress of the war in
terms of the herd psychology. It unwittingly brought out
into the strongest relief the true characteristics of the
State and its intimate alliance with war. It provided for
the enemies of war and the critics of the State the most
telling arguments possible. The new passion for the State
ideal unwittingly set in motion and encouraged forces that
threaten very materially to reform the State. It has shown
those who are really determined to end war that the problem
is not the mere simple one of finishing a war that will end
war.
For war is a complicated way in which a nation acts, and
it acts so out of a spiritual compulsion which pushes it
on, perhaps against all its interests, all its real
desires, and all its real sense of values. It is States
that make wars and not nations, and the very thought and
almost necessity of war is bound up with the ideal of the
State. Not for centuries have nations made war; in fact the
only historical example of nations making war is the great
barbarian invasions into southern Europe, the invasions of
Russia from the East, and perhaps the sweep of Islam
through northern Africa into Europe after Mohammed's death.
And the motivations for such wars were either the restless
expansion of migratory tribes or the flame of religious
fanaticism. Perhaps these great movements could scarcely be
called wars at all, for war implies an organized people
drilled and led: in fact, it necessitates the State. Ever
since Europe has had any such organization, such huge
conflicts between nations nations, that is, as cultural
groups have been unthinkable. It is preposterous to
assume that for centuries in Europe there would have been
any possibility of a people en masse (with their own
leaders, and not with the leaders of their duly constituted
State) rising up and overflowing their borders in a war
raid upon a neighboring people. The wars of the
Revolutionary armies of France were clearly in defense of
an imperiled freedom, and, moreover, they were clearly
directed not against other peoples, but against the
autocratic governments that were combining to crush the
Revolution. There is no instance in history of a genuinely
national war. There are instances of national defenses,
among primitive civilizations such as the Balkan peoples,
against intolerable invasion by neighboring despots or
oppression. But war, as such, cannot occur except in a
system of competing States, which have relations with each
other through the channels of diplomacy.
War is a function of this system of States, and could
not occur except in such a system. Nations organized for
internal administration, nations organized as a federation
of free communities, nations organized in any way except
that of a political centralization of a dynasty, or the
reformed descendant of a dynasty, could not possibly make
war upon each other. They would not only have no motive for
conflict, but they would be unable to muster the
concentrated force to make war effective. There might be
all sorts of amateur marauding, there might be guerrilla
expeditions of group against group, but there could not be
that terrible war en masse of the national State, that
exploitation of the nation in the interests of the State,
that abuse of the national life and resource in the
frenzied mutual suicide, which is modern war.
It cannot be too firmly realized that war is a function
of States and not of nations, indeed that it is the chief
function of States. War is a very artificial thing. It is
not the naïve spontaneous outburst of herd pugnacity;
it is no more primary than is formal religion. War cannot
exist without a military establishment, and a military
establishment cannot exist without a State organization.
War has an immemorial tradition and heredity only because
the State has a long tradition and heredity. But they are
inseparably and functionally joined. We cannot crusade
against war without crusading implicitly against the State.
And we cannot expect, or take measures to ensure, that this
war is a war to end war, unless at the same time we take
measures to end the State in its traditional form. The
State is not the nation, and the State can be modified and
even abolished in its present form, without harming the
nation. On the contrary, with the passing of the dominance
of the State, the genuine life-enhancing forces of the
nation will be liberated. If the State's chief function is
war, then the State must suck out of the nation a large
part of its energy for its purely sterile purposes of
defense and aggression. It devotes to waste or to actual
destruction as much as it can of the vitality of the
nation. No one will deny that war is a vast complex of
life-destroying and life-crippling forces. If the State's
chief function is war, then it is chiefly concerned with
coordinating and developing the powers and techniques which
make for destruction. And this means not only the actual
and potential destruction of the enemy, but of the nation
at home as well. For the very existence of a State in a
system of States means that the nation lies always under a
risk of war and invasion, and the calling away of energy
into military pursuits means a crippling of the productive
and life-enhancing processes of the national life.
All this organization of death-dealing energy and
technique is not a natural but a very sophisticated
process. Particularly in modern nations, but also all
through the course of modern European history, it could
never exist without the State. For it meets the demands of
no other institution, it follows the desires of no
religious, industrial, political group. If the demand for
military organization and a military establishment seems to
come not from the officers of the State but from the
public, it is only that it comes from the State-obsessed
portion of the public, those groups which feel most keenly
the State ideal. And in this country we have had evidence
all too indubitable how powerless the pacifically minded
officers of State may be in the face of a State obsession
of the significant classes. If a powerful section of the
significant classes feels more intensely the attitudes of
the State, then they will most infallibly mold the
Government in time to their wishes, bring it back to act as
the embodiment of the State which it pretends to be. In
every country we have seen groups that were more loyal than
the king more patriotic than the Government the
Ulsterites in Great Britain, the Junkers in Prussia,
l'Action Française in France, our patrioteers in
America. These groups exist to keep the steering wheel of
the State straight, and they prevent the nation from ever
veering very far from the State ideal.
Militarism expresses the desires and satisfies the major
impulse only of this class. The other classes, left to
themselves, have too many necessities and interests and
ambitions, to concern themselves with so expensive and
destructive a game. But the State-obsessed group is either
able to get control of the machinery of the State or to
intimidate those in control, so that it is able through use
of the collective force to regiment the other grudging and
reluctant classes into a military program. State idealism
percolates down through the strata of society; capturing
groups and individuals just in proportion to the prestige
of this dominant class. So that we have the herd actually
strung along between two extremes, the militaristic
patriots at one end, who are scarcely distinguishable in
attitude and animus from the most reactionary Bourbons of
an Empire, and unskilled labor groups, which entirely lack
the State sense. But the State acts as a whole, and the
class that controls governmental machinery can swing the
effective action of the herd as a whole. The herd is not
actually a whole, emotionally. But by an ingenious mixture
of cajolery, agitation, intimidation, the herd is licked
into shape, into an effective mechanical unity, if not into
a spiritual whole. Men are told simultaneously that they
will enter the military establishment of their own
volition, as their splendid sacrifice for their country's
welfare, and that if they do not enter they will be hunted
down and punished with the most horrid penalties; and under
a most indescribable confusion of democratic pride and
personal fear they submit to the destruction of their
livelihood if not their lives, in a way that would formerly
have seemed to them so obnoxious as to be incredible.
In this great herd machinery, dissent is like sand in
the bearings. The State ideal is primarily a sort of blind
animal push toward military unity. Any difference with that
unity turns the whole vast impulse toward crushing it.
Dissent is speedily outlawed, and the Government, backed by
the significant classes and those who in every locality,
however small, identify themselves with them, proceeds
against the outlaws, regardless of their value to the other
institutions of the nation, or to the effect their
persecution may have on public opinion. The herd becomes
divided into the hunters and the hunted, and war enterprise
becomes not only a technical game but a sport as well. It
must never be forgotten that nations do not declare war on
each other, nor in the strictest sense is it nations that
fight each other. Much has been said to the effect that
modern wars are wars of whole peoples and not of dynasties.
Because the entire nation is regimented and the whole
resources of the country are levied on for war, this does
not mean that it is the country qua country which is
fighting. It is the country organized as a State that is
fighting, and only as a State would it possibly fight. So
literally it is States which make war on each other and not
peoples. Governments are the agents of States, and it is
Governments which declare war on each other, acting truest
to form in the interests of the great State ideal they
represent. There is no case known in modern times of the
people being consulted in the initiation of a war. The
present demand for "democratic control" of foreign policy
indicates how completely, even in the most democratic of
modern nations, foreign policy has been the secret private
possession of the executive branch of the Government.
However representative of the people Parliaments and
Congresses may be in all that concerns the internal
administration of a country's political affairs, in
international relations it has never been possible to
maintain that the popular body acted except as a wholly
mechanical ratifier of the Executive's will. The formality
by which Parliaments and Congresses declare war is the
merest technicality. Before such a declaration can take
place, the country will have been brought to the very brink
of war by the foreign policy of the Executive. A long
series of steps on the downward path, each one more fatally
committing the unsuspecting country to a warlike course of
action, will have been taken without either the people or
its representatives being consulted or expressing its
feeling. When the declaration of war is finally demanded by
the Executive, the Parliament or Congress could not refuse
it without reversing the course of history, without
repudiating what has been representing itself in the eyes
of the other States as the symbol and interpreter of the
nation's will and animus. To repudiate an Executive at that
time would be to publish to the entire world the evidence
that the country had been grossly deceived by its own
Government, that the country with an almost criminal
carelessness had allowed its Government to commit it to
gigantic national enterprises in which it had no heart. In
such a crisis, even a Parliament which in the most
democratic States represents the common man and not the
significant classes who most strongly cherish the State
ideal, will cheerfully sustain the foreign policy which it
understands even less than it would care for if it
understood, and will vote almost unanimously for an
incalculable war, in which the nation may be brought well
nigh to ruin. That is why the referendum which was
advocated by some people as a test of American sentiment in
entering the war was considered even by thoughtful
democrats to be something subtly improper. The die had been
cast. Popular whim could only derange and bungle
monstrously the majestic march of State policy in its new
crusade for the peace of the world. The irresistible State
ideal got hold of the bowels of men. Whereas up to this
time, it had been irreproachable to be neutral in word and
deed, for the foreign policy of the State had so decided
it, henceforth it became the most arrant crime to remain
neutral. The Middle West, which had been soddenly
pacifistic in our days of neutrality, became in a few
months just as soddenly bellicose, and in its zeal for
witch-burnings and its scent for enemies within gave
precedence to no section of the country. The herd-mind
followed faithfully the State-mind and, the agitation for a
referendum being soon forgotten, the country fell into the
universal conclusion that, since its Congress had formally
declared the war, the nation itself had in the most solemn
and universal way devised and brought on the entire
affair.
Oppression of minorities became justified on the plea
that the latter were perversely resisting the rationally
constructed and solemnly declared will of a majority of the
nation. The herd coalescence of opinion which became
inevitable the moment the State had set flowing the war
attitudes became interpreted as a prewar popular decision,
and disinclination to bow to the herd was treated as a
monstrously antisocial act. So that the State, which had
vigorously resisted the idea of a referendum and clung
tenaciously and, of course, with entire success to its
autocratic and absolute control of foreign policy, had the
pleasure of seeing the country, within a few months, given
over to the retrospective impression that a genuine
referendum had taken place. When once a country has lapped
up these State attitudes, its memory fades; it conceives
itself not as merely accepting, but of having itself
willed, the whole policy and technique of war. The
significant classes, with their trailing satellites,
identify themselves with the State, so that what the State,
through the agency of the Government, has willed, this
majority conceives itself to have willed.
All of which goes to show that the State represents all
the autocratic, arbitrary, coercive, belligerent forces
within a social group, it is a sort of complexus of
everything most distasteful to the modern free creative
spirit, the feeling for life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness. War is the health of the State. Only when the
State is at war does the modern society function with that
unity of sentiment, simple uncritical patriotic devotion,
cooperation of services, which have always been the ideal
of the State lover. With the ravages of democratic ideas,
however, the modern republic cannot go to war under the old
conceptions of autocracy and death-dealing belligerency. If
a successful animus for war requires a renaissance of State
ideals, they can only come back under democratic forms,
under this retrospective conviction of democratic control
of foreign policy, democratic desire for war, and
particularly of this identification of the democracy with
the State. How unregenerate the ancient State may be,
however, is indicated by the laws against sedition, and by
the Government's unreformed attitude on foreign policy. One
of the first demands of the more farseeing democrats in the
democracies of the Alliance was that secret diplomacy must
go. The war was seen to have been made possible by a web of
secret agreements between States, alliances that were made
by Governments without the shadow of popular support or
even popular knowledge, and vague, half-understood
commitments that scarcely reached the stage of a treaty or
agreement, but which proved binding in the event.
Certainly, said these democratic thinkers, war can scarcely
be avoided unless this poisonous underground system of
secret diplomacy is destroyed, this system by which a
nation's power, wealth, and manhood may be signed away like
a blank check to an allied nation to be cashed in at some
future crisis. Agreements which are to affect the lives of
whole peoples must be made between peoples and not by
Governments, or at least by their representatives in the
full glare of publicity and criticism.
Such a demand for "democratic control of foreign policy"
seemed axiomatic. Even if the country had been swung into
war by steps taken secretly and announced to the public
only after they had been consummated, it was felt that the
attitude of the American State toward foreign policy was
only a relic of the bad old days and must be superseded in
the new order. The American President himself, the liberal
hope of the world, had demanded, in the eyes of the world,
open diplomacy, agreements freely and openly arrived at.
Did this mean a genuine transference of power in this most
crucial of State functions from Government to people? Not
at all. When the question recently came to a challenge in
Congress, and the implications of open discussion were
somewhat specifically discussed, and the desirabilities
frankly commended, the President let his disapproval be
known in no uncertain way. No one ever accused Mr. Wilson
of not being a State idealist, and whenever democratic
aspirations swung ideals too far out of the State orbit, he
could be counted on to react vigorously. Here was a clear
case of conflict between democratic idealism and the very
crux of the concept of the State. However unthinkingly he
might have been led on to encourage open diplomacy in his
liberalizing program, when its implication was made vivid
to him, he betrayed how mere a tool the idea had been in
his mind to accentuate America's redeeming role. Not in any
sense as a serious pragmatic technique had he thought of a
genuinely open diplomacy. And how could he? For the last
stronghold of State power is foreign policy. It is in
foreign policy that the State acts most concentratedly as
the organized herd, acts with fullest sense of
aggressive-power, acts with freest arbitrariness. In
foreign policy, the State is most itself. States, with
reference to each other, may be said to be in a continual
state of latent war. The "armed truce," a phrase so
familiar before 1914, was an accurate description of the
normal relation of States when they are not at war. Indeed,
it is not too much to say that the normal relation of
States is war. Diplomacy is a disguised war, in which
States seek to gain by barter and intrigue, by the
cleverness of wits, the objectives which they would have to
gain more clumsily by means of war. Diplomacy is used while
the States are recuperating from conflicts in which they
have exhausted themselves. It is the wheedling and the
bargaining of the worn-out bullies as they rise from the
ground and slowly restore their strength to begin fighting
again. If diplomacy had been a moral equivalent for war, a
higher stage in human progress, an inestimable means of
making words prevail instead of blows, militarism would
have broken down and given place to it. But since it is a
mere temporary substitute, a mere appearance of war's
energy under another form, a surrogate effect is almost
exactly proportioned to the armed force behind it. When it
fails, the recourse is immediate to the military technique
whose thinly veiled arm it has been. A diplomacy that was
the agency of popular democratic forces in their non-State
manifestations would be no diplomacy at all. It would be no
better than the Railway or Education commissions that are
sent from one country to another with rational constructive
purpose. The State, acting as a diplomatic-military ideal,
is eternally at war. Just as it must act arbitrarily and
autocratically in time of war, it must act in time of peace
in this particular role where it acts as a unit. Unified
control is necessarily autocratic control.
Democratic control of foreign policy is therefore a
contradiction in terms. Open discussion destroys swiftness
and certainty of action. The giant State is paralyzed. Mr.
Wilson retains his full ideal of the State at the same time
that he desires to eliminate war. He wishes to make the
world safe for democracy as well as safe for diplomacy.
When the two are in conflict, his clear political insight,
his idealism of the State, tells him that it is the
naïver democratic values that must be sacrificed. The
world must primarily be made safe for diplomacy. The State
must not be diminished.
What is the State essentially? The more closely we
examine it, the more mystical and personal it becomes. On
the Nation we can put our hand as a definite social group,
with attitudes and qualities exact enough to mean
something. On the Government we can put our hand as a
certain organization of ruling functions, the machinery of
lawmaking and law-enforcing. The Administration is a
recognizable group of political functionaries, temporarily
in charge of the government. But the State stands as an
idea behind them all, eternal, sanctified, and from it
Government and Administration conceive themselves to have
the breath of life. Even the nation, especially in times of
war or at least, its significant classes considers
that it derives its authority and its purpose from the idea
of the State. Nation and State are scarcely differentiated,
and the concrete, practical, apparent facts are sunk in the
symbol. We reverence not our country but the flag. We may
criticize ever so severely our country, but we are
disrespectful to the flag at our peril. It is the flag and
the uniform that make men's heart beat high and fill them
with noble emotions, not the thought of and pious hopes for
America as a free and enlightened nation.
It cannot be said that the object of emotion is the
same, because the flag is the symbol of the nation, so that
in reverencing the American flag we are reverencing the
nation. For the flag is not a symbol of the country as a
cultural group, following certain ideals of life, but
solely a symbol of the political State, inseparable from
its prestige and expansion. The flag is most intimately
connected with military achievement, military memory. It
represents the country not in its intensive life, but in
its far-flung challenge to the world. The flag is primarily
the banner of war; it is allied with patriotic anthem and
holiday. It recalls old martial memories. A nation's
patriotic history is solely the history of its wars, that
is, of the State in its health and glorious functioning. So
in responding to the appeal of the flag, we are responding
to the appeal of the State, to the symbol of the herd
organized as an offensive and defensive body, conscious of
its prowess and its mystical herd strength.
Even those authorities in the present Administration, to
whom has been granted autocratic control over opinion,
feel, though they are scarcely able to philosophize over,
this distinction. It has been authoritatively declared that
the horrid penalties against seditious opinion must not be
construed as inhibiting legitimate, that is, partisan
criticism of the Administration. A distinction is made
between the Administration and the Government. It is quite
accurately suggested by this attitude that the
Administration is a temporary band of partisan politicians
in charge of the machinery of Government, carrying out the
mystical policies of State. The manner in which they
operate this machinery may be freely discussed and objected
to by their political opponents. The Governmental machinery
may also be legitimately altered, in case of necessity.
What may not be discussed or criticized is the mystical
policy itself or the motives of the State in inaugurating
such a policy. The President, it is true, has made certain
partisan distinctions between candidates for office on the
ground of support or nonsupport of the Administration, but
what he means was really support or nonsupport of the State
policy as faithfully carried out by the Administration.
Certain of the Administration measures were devised
directly to increase the health of the State, such as the
Conscription and the Espionage laws. Others were concerned
merely with the machinery. To oppose the first was to
oppose the State and was therefore not tolerable. To oppose
the second was to oppose fallible human judgment, and was
therefore, though to be depreciated, not to be wholly
interpreted as political suicide.
The distinction between Government and State, however,
has not been so carefully observed. In time of war it is
natural that Government as the seat of authority should be
confused with the State or the mystic source of authority.
You cannot very well injure a mystical idea which is the
State, but you can very well interfere with the processes
of Government. So that the two become identified in the
public mind, and any contempt for or opposition to the
workings of the machinery of Government is considered
equivalent to contempt for the sacred State. The State, it
is felt, is being injured in its faithful surrogate, and
public emotion rallies passionately to defend it. It even
makes any criticism of the form of Government a crime.
The inextricable union of militarism and the State is
beautifully shown by those laws which emphasize
interference with the Army and Navy as the most culpable of
seditious crimes. Pragmatically, a case of capitalistic
sabotage, or a strike in war industry would seem to be far
more dangerous to the successful prosecution of the war
than the isolated and ineffectual efforts of an individual
to prevent recruiting. But in the tradition of the State
ideal, such industrial interference with national policy is
not identified as a crime against the State. It may be
grumbled against; it may be seen quite rationally as an
impediment of the utmost gravity. But it is not felt in
those obscure seats of the herd mind which dictate the
identity of crime and fix their proportional punishments.
Army and Navy, however, are the very arms of the State; in
them flows its most precious lifeblood. To paralyze them is
to touch the very State itself. And the majesty of the
State is so sacred that even to attempt such a paralysis is
a crime equal to a successful strike. The will is deemed
sufficient. Even though the individual in his effort to
impede recruiting should utterly and lamentably fail, he
shall be in no wise spared. Let the wrath of the State
descend upon him for his impiety! Even if he does not try
any overt action, but merely utters sentiments that may
incidentally in the most indirect way cause someone to
refrain from enlisting, he is guilty. The guardians of the
State do not ask whether any pragmatic effect flowed out of
this evil will or desire. It is enough that the will is
present. Fifteen or twenty years in prison is not deemed
too much for such sacrilege.
Such attitudes and such laws, which affront every
principle of human reason, are no accident, nor are they
the result of hysteria caused by the war. They are
considered just, proper, beautiful by all the classes which
have the State ideal, and they express only an extreme of
health and vigor in the reaction of the State to its
nonfriends. Such attitudes are inevitable as arising from
the devotees of the State. For the State is a personal as
well as a mystical symbol, and it can only be understood by
tracing its historical origin. The modern State is not the
rational and intelligent product of modern men desiring to
live harmoniously together with security of life, property,
and opinion. It is not an organization which has been
devised as pragmatic means to a desired social end. All the
idealism with which we have been instructed to endow the
State is the fruit of our retrospective imaginations. What
it does for us in the way of security and benefit of life,
it does incidentally as a by-product and development of its
original functions, and not because at any time men or
classes in the full possession of their insight and
intelligence have desired that it be so. It is very
important that we should occasionally lift the incorrigible
veil of that ex post facto idealism by which we throw a
glamour of rationalization over what is, and pretend in the
ecstasies of social conceit that we have personally
invented and set up for the glory of God and man the hoary
institutions which we see around us. Things are what they
are, and come down to us with all their thick encrustations
of error and malevolence. Political philosophy can delight
us with fantasy and convince us who need illusion to live
that the actual is a fair and approximate copy full of
failings, of course, but approximately sound and sincere
of that ideal society which we can imagine ourselves as
creating. From this it is a step to the tacit assumption
that we have somehow had a hand in its creation and are
responsible for its maintenance and sanctity.
Nothing is more obvious, however, than that every one of
us comes into society as into something in whose creation
we had not the slightest hand. We have not even the
advantage, like those little unborn souls in The Blue Bird,
of consciousness before we take up our careers on earth. By
the time we find ourselves here we are caught in a network
of customs and attitudes, the major directions of our
desires and interests have been stamped on our minds, and
by the time we have emerged from tutelage and reached the
years of discretion when we might conceivably throw our
influence to the reshaping of social institutions, most of
us have been so molded into the society and class we live
in that we are scarcely aware of any distinction between
ourselves as judging, desiring individuals and our social
environment. We have been kneaded so successfully that we
approve of what our society approves, desire what our
society desires, and add to the group our own passionate
inertia against change, against the effort of reason, and
the adventure of beauty.
Every one of us, without exception, is born into a
society that is given, just as the fauna and flora of our
environment are given. Society and its institutions are, to
the individual who enters it, as much naturalistic
phenomena as is the weather itself. There is, therefore, no
natural sanctity in the State any more than there is in the
weather. We may bow down before it, just as our ancestors
bowed before the sun and moon, but it is only because
something in us unregenerate finds satisfaction in such an
attitude, not because there is anything inherently
reverential in the institution worshiped. Once the State
has begun to function, and a large class finds its interest
and its expression of power in maintaining the State, this
ruling class may compel obedience from any uninterested
minority. The State thus becomes an instrument by which the
power of the whole herd is wielded for the benefit of a
class. The rulers soon learn to capitalize the reverence
which the State produces in the majority, and turn it into
a general resistance toward a lessening of their
privileges. The sanctity of the State becomes identified
with the sanctity of the ruling class, and the latter are
permitted to remain in power under the impression that in
obeying and serving them, we are obeying and serving
society, the nation, the great collectivity of all of us...
From the first draft of an essay, "The State," which was left unfinished by Bourne at the time of his
death. It is now in the Bourne MSS, Columbia University Libraries.
Have you watched the Bachmann video? Does she look like a gangster to you? Do you think she walks around with a gun, sticks it in people's faces, and tells them to give her money for her "salary?"
Her "salary" comes from "taxes." Children are forced into concentration campuses euphemistically called "schools" where they're brainwashed into believing that they have to "pay their taxes" -- their "fair share." If as adults they don't pay these "taxes," cops with guns will be sent to "take care" of those who don't pay up. If they resist, they risk getting shot. So does Bachmann effectively have "enforcer cops" working for her to collect her "salary" -- at the barrel of a gun if necessary? Does this make her a gangster?
John Gotti - The Great Man
(By 7/26/10, the above video had been watched over 400,000 times!)
Did Gotti look like a gangster? Do you think he walked around with a gun, stuck it in people's faces, and told them to give him money for his "salary?" Or did he employ emforcers with guns who collected the money for him? How was Gotti different from Bachmann?
Bachmann does it "legally" and Gotti did it "illegally." GPPs (gangster political predators) have rigged the game so most of their crimes are "legal." So is Bachmann less of a gangster than Gotti was?
An often-used argument by libertarians is that if one person robs another, it's a crime. If 20 people form a gang and they rob others, they commit crimes of robbery. If several thousand people form a gang and call it "government," and they rob others, they also commit crimes of robbery.
GPPs rig the game by forcing children into concentration campuses euphemistically called "schools" where they're brainwashed into believing that they have to "pay their taxes" -- their "fair share." GPPs also rig the game by effectively controlling the lapdog media to tell the world about their "public service" and conceal the basic nature of their "business."
Does Cameron look like a gangster? Does he essentially operate the same way Gotti did? Except as part of a much bigger gang with much more extortion and many more people getting murdered?
The following videos may provide some understanding of why people in general accept the likes of Bachmann and Cameron as their "masters."
A "unicorn" might be an example of a pretended entity or pretendity.
Below is a picture of a "unicorn skeleton." Is this sufficient evidence to convince you that unicorns really exist, or that they once existed but became extinct?
You might be skeptical. You might realize that someone can find a skeleton of a horse, attach a fake "horn" to it, take a photograph, and claim that unicorns either exist or existed in the past. You might also realize that someone can take a photograph of a horse skeleton, and then "doctor" the photograph by adding a fake horn.
Never having seen an actual unicorn, nor having come across any physical evidence that unicorns now exist or existed in the past, we proceed on the basis that "unicorn" refers to a "mythical animal" and can be regarded as a pretendity.
A "Santa Claus" might be another example of a pretended entity or pretendity.
Would you regard the above picture as proof that Santa Claus exists? If you were to go to a mall during December and you saw a man dressed in a way similar to the above picture, would that convince you that Santa Claus really exists? If not, why not?
Would you regard someone dressed in the same way as in the picture above as the real Santa Claus? If you saw several people dressed in the same way, would you believe that each one of them is a real Santa Claus? If not, why not?
What would it take for you to believe that Santa Claus really exists?
Have you ever seen Santa Claus and his reindeer flying through the sky on TV? If so, did this convince you that Santa Claus really exists?
If a man were to dress up as "santa," get into a real sleigh, pulled by real reindeer, would this prove that "santa" actually exists?
I hope at this point you think that "Santa Claus" is a pretendity -- no actual physical existence that any real santa exists -- just an "imaginary entity!" If this is what you think, why do you think so?
Above is a picture of a woman dressed as a so-called "queen." As far as I know, her name is Elizabeth Windsor. How is this different from a man dressed as a "santa?"
Could "queen" be a pretendity in a similar way as "santa?" If yes, why? If no, why not?
Can the fancy clothes, the hat with trinkets, and the shiny stick magically transmogrify the woman (Elizabeth Windsor) into a "queen?"
When a man puts on santa clothes, does this magically transmogrify him into a "santa?" If not, why not? If yes, how?
Now imagine a naked man. Imagine that he puts on a "santa costume." Does he remain the same man? Or do his clothes magically transmogrify him into something else?
Now imagine a naked woman. Imagine that she puts on a "queen costume." Does she remain the same woman? Or do her clothes magically transmogrify her into something else -- a "queen" with "blue blood" and the "divine right of kings")?
Now imagine that this same woman gets into a real carriage, pulled by real horses. Does this magically transmogrify her into something else?
If any other woman were to put on a fancy costume, travel around in a horse-drawn carriage, and claimed that she was "the queen," would you regard her as crazy? If yes, why? If no, why not?
Now imagine that a woman lives in a fancy mansion and calls it a "palace." Does this magically transmogrify her into something else?
Did Jonathan Swift understand the issue 300 years ago, when he had Gulliver "piss on the queen's palace?"
Maybe Lewis Carroll understood the issue 150 years ago, when he wrote in Alice in Wonderland:
"'Off with her head!' the Queen shouted at the top of her voice. Nobody moved.
'Who cares for you?' said Alice, (she had grown to her full size by this time.) 'You're nothing but a pack of cards!'"
And later in Through the Looking-Glass:
"She looked at the Queen, who seemed to have suddenly wrapped herself up in wool. Alice rubbed her eyes, and looked again. She couldn't make out what had happened at all. Was she in a shop? And was that really -- was it really a sheep that was sitting on the other side of the counter?"
Obviously, there's a fundamental difference between a man dressing up as a "general santa" and a woman dressing up as a "specific queen." Does this affect my contention that in both cases pretendity is involved? If yes, why? If no, why not?
Below is a picture of a man with the name Joseph Ratzinger. Do his fancy clothes, hat, and stick magically transmogrify him into a "pope" ("representative of god" with "papal infallibility")?
Can you see that the notions of "santa," "queen," and "pope" are all pretendities? An ordinary man puts on a costume and calls himself "santa." An ordinary woman puts on a fancy costume, wears a hat with trinkets, carries a shiny stick, and calls herself "queen." An ordinary man puts on a fancy costume, wears a yellow hat, carries a silly stick, and calls himself "pope."
I'm not kidding when I tell you that there are some people who receive bread and wine from this "pretend-pope" (or one of his pretend-appointees), and believe that the bread and wine are magically transubstantiated into the physical flesh and blood of a long-dead dude supposedly named "Jesus Christ." The recipients then eat the "pretend-flesh of Jesus" and drink the "pretend-blood of Jesus." Does this make them "pretend-cannibals?" Is it a stretch to regard these superstitious people as gullible civilized savages?
"People who believe [religious & political] absurdities will commit atrocites." -- Voltaire
On 12/16/08, there was an article in The Arizona Republic by Thomas L. Friedman, titled "3 woes for Obama: Cars, Kabul, banks." Friedman started with, "If there is anything I've learned as a reporter, it's that when you get away from "the thing itself," the core truth about a situation, you get into trouble." [emphasis added]
Consider the possibility that the core truth about Elizabeth Windsor is that she's an ordinary woman (with red blood), and that all the "queen stuff" commonly associated with her is quite absurd. The same may apply to the "pope stuff" commonly associated with Joseph Ratzinger.
I speculate that one of the reasons why civilons (civilized humans) believe the "queen nonsense" and the "pope nonsense" is because they have deep-seated, unconscious pecking-order bully system (POBS) programs in their brains... just like primitive baboons in the wilds of Africa. If someone dresses up as "queen" or "pope" -- particularly if accompanied by supporting rituals -- then gullible, civilons (civilized humans) swallow the pretense hook, line, and sinker and regard it as real -- so real that they obediently kill and get killed "for god, queen, and country!"
A related phenomenon may be that when civilons (civilized humans) are dressed in uniforms and given rifles, they may become "dehumanized wanton civilized killers." Philip Zimbardo calls this the "Lucifer Effect." (See Collateral Murder.)
Philip Zimbardo: Why ordinary people do evil... or do good
What I've written so far about pretendities and what Zimbardo says about the "Lucifer Effect" may be core truths.
Ferdinand Mount wrote an interesting book called The Theatre of Politics. Consider the possibility that all coercive political systems are basically fictional plays in theaters, and have been such from the outset -- or, simply, hoaxes to subjugate, dominate, control, and live like parasites off the production of gullible suckers.
Consider the possibility that "governments" are pretendities. See:
What about so-called "laws?" If "governments" are pretendities, can their "laws" be anything other than pretendities -- as real as "santa claus?"
Baboons in the wild -- with their pecking order bully system (POBS) programs -- can be thought of as regarding the bark of the dominant troop leader as "law" -- if you don't obey the bark, you may get hurt.
Are "government laws" in principle different from the barks of the top-bully baboon? Of course, GPPs employ "cop enforcers" with guns to take care of "troublemakers" who don't "obey their barks." And, of course, children are forced into concentration campuses where they get brainwashed about "government," "country," "nation," "the law," etc.
Is "Obama as president" any different from "santa claus," "queen," "pope," or "top-bully baboon?" Or is he really just an oridinary man (perhaps more intelligent than most) who pretends to be "president." Do gullible suckers believe in "the presidency" mainly because of their deep-seated and unconscious pecking order bully system (POBS) programs?
Similarities between Gotti and Obama:
Both Gotti and Obama: major organized-crime kingpins;
Both involved with protection-extortion rackets;
Both complicit in multiple murders.
Differences between Gotti and Obama:
Gotti: relatively small-time New York City gangster with maybe of the order of 100 "enforcers"; Obama: big-time worldwide gangster with millions of "enforcers";
Gotti: complicit in maybe about 100 murders; Obama: complicit in at least tens of thousands of murders;
Gotti: prosecuted, convicted and jailed; Obama: awarded Nobel Peace Prize!
Note: I use the term "murder" more broadly than is the general custom. In my book, when an Obama "enforcer-soldier" goes to Afghanistan or Iraq and kills someone, or gets killed, it's almost always "murder." When 60 "American soldiers" die in a month in Afghanistan, in my book Obama is complicit in 60 murders. (When Michael Vick organizes dog fights he's complicit in the resulting deaths of any of the dogs involved. When Obama organizes human fights he's complicit in the resulting deaths of any of the human dupes involved.)
Malignant Pretendities
Consider the possibility that "country," "nation," "state," "king," "queen," "president," "prime minister," "governor," "secretary," "general," "constitution," "law," "judge," etc. are all malignant pretendities, and that regarding them as real involves "get[ting] away from "the thing itself," the core truth" and leads to trouble. See The Anatomy of Slavespeak.
Pretendities can be analyzed in terms of what value they add to your life, and/or what value they take away from you or how they harm you. You can also look at a pretendity in terms of how it might be used to separate you from your mind, your knowledge, your wealth, your health, your happiness, your freedom... and your life itself.
For example, although "compulsory government schooling" (one of the 10 planks of The Communist Manifesto and a most malignant pretendity) may provide some minor learning benefits, typical victims suffer a profound separation from their minds and from knowledge -- see Dumbed Down by "Education!. Receiving even minor learning benefits is debatable, because in the absence of the "compulsory government schooling" pretendity, most children would most likely learn much more and much faster.
Consider the possibility that civilized primitives (civilons) who argue that, "Government, law, etc. are necessary otherwise there would be chaos, crime, etc.," are really like dumb baboons with deep-seated pecking-order bully system programs who believe that there must be a bully to keep people in line. You could just as well argue, "If there's government, law, etc., then chaos, crime, mass murder, etc. are highly likely, if not inevitable!"
Typically, when civilized primitives (civilons) "explain" what they think would happen in the absence of malignant pretendities like "government, law, etc.," they provide a list of things that happen in spite or because of malignant pretendities! -- like Over 300 million people murdered in a century!
Whatever good is seemingly done by pretendities is actually done by individual humans. They can do the same good -- most likely much better -- in the absence of malignant pretendities.
Benevolent Pretendities
FreeWeavers may be able to utilize benevolent pretendities such as "Emperor Norton" to great effect. (People who "return from the dead" to serve as FreeWeavers, or to assist FreeWeavers, are also called "revenants.")
The Matrix (Movie)
MORPHEUS: "Let me tell you why you're here. You're here because you know something. What you know you can't explain, but you feel it. You've felt it your entire life, that there's something wrong with the world. You don't know what it is, but it's there, like a splinter in your mind, driving you mad. It is this feeling that has brought you to me. Do you know what I'm talking about?"
NEO: "The matrix..."
Alphonse Bertillon: "One can only see what one observes, and one observes only things which are already in the mind."
MIKUS: "Our experiences of reality include societal hierarchies and those hierarchies exert influence through the enforcement of rules (laws, morals, standards, ethics, etc)."
"Since the rules only exist in our minds as self-imposed limitations, and most of us have been indoctrinated from birth, there can come a point when
we experience internal conflict. We want to satisfy some impulse or need but believe we shouldn't because it would involve breaking a rule."
"In a metaphorical sense the matrix seemed to represent the external and artificial, self-imposed, limitations that structure our experience of reality. Until we learn to question the way we think about reality, false ideas can distract us from achieving our purposes."
MORPHEUS: "The Matrix is everywhere. It is all around us, even now in this very room. You can see it when you look out your window or turn on your
television. You can feel it when you go to work, when you go to church, when you pay your taxes."
"It is the world that has been pulled over your eyes to blind you from the truth... You are a slave, Neo. Like everyone else you were born into bondage, born into a prison you can not smell or taste or touch. A prison for your mind... What is the Matrix? Control. The Matrix is a computer-generated dream world. Built, to keep us under control, in order to change a human being into this [a battery]."
Who Authorizes the Authorities?
by Butler D. Shaffer (January 30, 2010)
I began my class one day with an apparently simple question: Does the U.S. Constitution have legitimacy? As a follow-up question, I asked: By what right does one group of men get together and impose upon others a particular system of government?
These questions, of course, do not apply only to the American political system, but can be asked, with equal force, of every government that has ever existed. By what right did the Bolsheviks, or the Catholic Church, or William the Conqueror, or Genghis Khan, or any other group or individual, assume the authority to make and enforce laws upon other men and women?
Having been educated in traditional schools, most of my students answered with the kind of conditioned responses that it has been the purpose of traditional education to provide: "We all got together and agreed to this form of government," they declared.
Even though the fallacy of such explanations of governmental origins were quickly dispelled by asking the students to tell me the place and date at which they attended this "meeting" with "everybody else" to establish a government, I have no doubt that all of them truly believed that the American government was formed out of the common consent of all Americans.
I forged ahead with my questions: "If we all have inalienable rights, how can some men vote to take away the rights of others?" "How does the fact that ten men may choose to join together for their common protection impose upon the eleventh man any obligation to go along with them?"
True to their public school upbringings, my students tried to take comfort in the process of voting: "If the majority are in favor of something, that makes it right," a number of them agreed.
"But what makes the will of the majority sacrosanct?" I asked.
I went on. "Suppose three muggers confront you on the street and say, 'We want your money. But don't worry -- we're going to let you vote on whether or not you should give it to us.' If this group votes three-to-one in favor of taking your money, does this legitimize its actions?"
A few of my students saw the obvious analogy to government, but for others the characterization of government as nothing more than sanctified theft and violence was too unsettling. One student tried to rehabilitate the democratic process with the weak plea that "It has to involve more than just a few people," while another felt obliged to defend democracy and voting at all costs, as something in the nature of an ultimate principle.
"Majority rule is just the way our government is set up," he argued, not seeing that he had succeeded in arguing himself into one big circle.
"But that's what I'm asking you to explain." I went on: "How does this -- or any other -- system of government acquire the legitimacy to impose such processes upon those who do not choose to be bound by it?"
The discussion ended with a number of my students resorting to the traditional method of all totalitarian systems and ideas: "If you don't like it, you should leave the country," they shouted.
When the discussion was over, one of my students stated that this had been a very "unsettling" and "uncomfortable" experience. "It was my purpose to make you uncomfortable," I replied, "for only in facing hard, uncomfortable questions will we be able to overcome the dependencies on authority that we have accepted for our lives."
I remarked upon how institutions not only cause most of the social conflict in the world today, but absolutely require conflict in order to maintain their power over our lives. Government, in particular, generates and manages conflict and, in the process, solidifies its base of power over us.
"But what is the answer to this?" a number of them asked. "What alternatives are there for us?" I told them that since the problem of government involves our self-induced dependencies on authority figures, for me to give you my answer is simply to substitute me as your new authority.
The social problems of our world are occasioned by our consciousness. They are the problem of how we think -- about ourselves, others, and our responsibilities for our own behavior and our own conclusions. "The answer," I concluded, "is that you must figure out your own answers."
That has always been the source of the human dilemma. Because we have come to enjoy the luxury of having other people make judgments and decisions for us, we are terribly uncomfortable when someone comes along and challenges our complacency.
We enjoy triviality -- a fact that has spawned mindless television programming, gossip magazines, and a general banality in what used to be the art of serious conversation -- and eschew fundamental inquires. But if life is to have any meaning, if we are ever to overcome the viciousness and vulgarity that are destroying the quality of human life, we must get ourselves in the habit of asking the sorts of questions we have been trained not to ask.
Butler Shaffer teaches at Southwest University School of Law. He is the author of Calculated Chaos: Institutional Threats to Peace and Human Survival.
CIA Terrorist Crimes
Hans Hoppe, in his article The Property And Freedom Society -- Reflections After Five Years, writes about "unmask[ing] the State and showcase it for what it really is: an institution run by gangs of murderers, plunderers and thieves, surrounded by willing executioners, propagandists, sycophants, crooks, liars, clowns, charlatans, dupes and useful idiots -- an institution that dirties and taints everything it touches."
Lysander Spooner used phrases like: "...[T]hose robbers and murderers, who call themselves "the government"...," "...[S]o long as they are such dupes and cowards as to pay for being cheated, plundered, enslaved, and murdered...," and "[C]heats, and usurpers, and robbers, and murderers and blood-money loan-mongers for masters."
On 7/28/10, I did some Google searches for the topics (search arguments) below. "88,000 / 1,030" denotes 88,000 web results and 1,030 video results.
+cia +9/11: 6,910,000 / 11,300
mkultra: 240,000 / 4,830
"cia mind control": 88,000 / 1,030
+cia +jonestown: 454,000 / 400
"cia crime": 23,100 / 332
"cia blowback": 13,400 / 109
"cia atrocities": 13,700 / 5
War Making and State Making as Organized Crime
by Charles Tilly
A Chapter from Bringing the State Back In, edited by Peter Evans, Dietrich Rueschemeyer, and Theda Skocpol (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985).
(Charles Tilly taught at the University of Delaware, Harvard University, the University of Toronto, the University of Michigan, the New School for Social Research, and Columbia University. He was a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, and the Sociological Research Association. See also: Charles Tilly in Wikipedia.)
If protection rackets represent organized crime at its smoothest, then war making and state making -- quintessential protection rackets with the advantage of legitimacy -- qualify as our largest examples of organized crime. Without branding all generals and statesmen as murderers or thieves, I want to urge the value of that analogy. At least for the European experience of the past few centuries, a portrait of war makers and state makers as coercive and self-seeking entrepreneurs bears a far greater resemblance to the facts than do its chief alternatives: the idea of a social contract, the idea of an open market in which operators of armies and states offer services to willing consumers, the idea of a society whose shared norms and expectations call forth a certain kind of government.
The reflections that follow merely illustrate the analogy of war making and state making with organized crime from a few hundred years of European experience and offer tentative arguments concerning principles of change and variation underlying the experience. My reflections grow from contemporary concerns: worries about the increasing destructiveness of war, the expanding role of great powers as suppliers of arms and military organization to poor countries, and the growing importance of military rule in those same countries. They spring from the hope that the European experience, properly understood, will help us to grasp what is happening today, perhaps even to do something about it.
The Third World of the twentieth century does not greatly resemble Europe of the sixteenth or seventeenth century. In no simple sense can we read the future of Third World countries from the pasts of European countries. Yet a thoughtful exploration of European experience will serve us well. It will show us that coercive exploitation played a large part in the creation of the European states. It will show us that popular resistance to coercive exploitation forced would-be power holders to concede protection and constraints on their own action. It will therefore help us to eliminate faulty implicit comparisons between today's Third World and yesterday's Europe. That clarification will make it easier to understand exactly how today's world is different and what we therefore have to explain. It may even help us to explain the current looming presence of military organization and action throughout the world. Although that result would delight me, I do not promise anything so grand.
This essay, then, concerns the place of organized means of violence in the growth and change of those peculiar forms of government we call national states: relatively centralized, differentiated organizations the officials of which more or less successfully claim control over the chief concentrated means of violence within a population inhabiting a large, contiguous territory. The argument grows from historical work on the formation of national states in Western Europe, especially on the growth of the French state from 1600 onward. But it takes several deliberate steps away from that work, wheels, and stares hard at it from theoretical ground. The argument brings with it few illustrations and no evidence worthy of the name.
Just as one repacks a hastily filled rucksack after a few days on the trail -- throwing out the waste, putting things in order of importance, and balancing the load -- I have repacked my theoretical baggage for the climb to come; the real test of the new packing arrives only with the next stretch of the trail. The trimmed-down argument stresses the interdependence of war making and state making and the analogy between both of those processes and what, when less successful and smaller in scale, we call organized crime. War makes states, I shall claim. Banditry, piracy, gangland rivalry, policing, and war making all belong on the same continuum -- that I shall claim as well. For the historically limited period in which national states were becoming the dominant organizations in Western countries, I shall also claim that mercantile capitalism and state making reinforced each other.
Double-Edged Protection
In contemporary American parlance, the word "protection" sounds two contrasting tones. One is comforting, the other ominous. With one tone, "protection" calls up images of the shelter against danger provided by a powerful friend, a large insurance policy, or a sturdy roof. With the other, it evokes the racket in which a local strong man forces merchants to pay tribute in order to avoid damage -- damage the strong man himself threatens to deliver. The difference, to be sure, is a matter of degree: A hell-and-damnation priest is likely to collect contributions from his parishioners only to the extent that they believe his predictions of brimstone for infidels; our neighborhood mobster may actually be, as he claims to be, a brothel's best guarantee of operation free of police interference.
Which image the word "protection" brings to mind depends mainly on our assessment of the reality and eternality of the threat. Someone who produces both the danger and, at a price, the shield against it is a racketeer. Someone who provides a needed shield but has little control over the danger's appearance qualifies as a legitimate protector, especially if his price is no higher than his competitors.' Someone who supplies reliable, low-priced shielding both from local racketeers and from outside marauders makes the best offer of all.
Apologists for particular governments and for government in general commonly argue, precisely, that they offer protection from local and external violence. They claim that the prices they charge barely cover the costs of protection. They call people who complain about the price of protection "anarchists," "subversives," or both at once. But consider the definition of a racketeer as someone who creates a threat and then charges for its reduction. Governments' provision of protection, by this standard, often qualifies as racketeering. To the extent that the threats against which a given government protects its citizens are imaginary or are consequences of its own activities, the government has organized a protection racket. Since governments themselves commonly simulate, stimulate, or even fabricate threats of external war and since the repressive and extractive activities of governments often constitute the largest current threats to the livelihoods of their own citizens, many governments operate in essentially the same ways as racketeers. There is, of course, a difference: Racketeers, by the conventional definition, operate without the sanctity of governments.
How do racketeer governments themselves acquire authority? As a question of fact and of ethics, that is one of the oldest conundrums of political analysis. Back to Machiavelli and Hobbes, nevertheless, political observers have recognized that, whatever else they do, governments organize and, wherever possible, monopolize violence. It matters little whether we take violence in a narrow sense, such as damage to persons and objects, or in a broad sense, such as violation of people's desires and interests; by either criterion, governments stand out from other organizations by their tendency to monopolize the concentrated means of violence. The distinction between "legitimate" and "illegitimate" force, furthermore, makes no difference to the fact. If we take legitimacy to depend on conformity to an abstract principle or on the assent of the governed (or both at once), these conditions may serve to justify, perhaps even to explain, the tendency to monopolize force; they do not contradict the fact.
In any case, Arthur Stinchcombe's agreeably cynical treatment of legitimacy serves the purposes of political analysis much more efficiently. Legitimacy, according to Stinchcombe, depends rather little on abstract principle or assent of the governed: "The person over whom power is exercised is not usually as important as other power-holders."1 Legitimacy is the probability that other authorities will act to confirm the decisions of a given authority. Other authorities, I would add, are much more likely to confirm the decisions of a challenged authority that controls substantial force; not only fear of retaliation, but also desire to maintain a stable environment recommend that general rule. The rule underscores the importance of the authority's monopoly of force. A tendency to monopolize the means of violence makes a government's claim to provide protection, in either the comforting or the ominous sense of the word, more credible and more difficult to resist.
Frank recognition of the central place of force in governmental activity does not require us to believe that governmental authority rests "only" or "ultimately" on the threat of violence. Nor does it entail the assumption that a government's only service is protection. Even when a government's use of force imposes a large cost, some people may well decide that the government's other services outbalance the costs of acceding to its monopoly of violence. Recognition of the centrality of force opens the way to an understanding of the growth and change of governmental forms.
Here is a preview of the most general argument: Power holders' pursuit of war involved them willy-nilly in the extraction of resources for war making from the populations over which they had control and in the promotion of capital accumulation by those who could help them borrow and buy. War making, extraction, and capital accumulation interacted to shape European state making. Power holders did not undertake those three momentous activities with the intention of creating national states -- centralized, differentiated, autonomous, extensive political organizations. Nor did they ordinarily foresee that national states would emerge from war making, extraction, and capital accumulation.
Instead, the people who controlled European states and states in the making warred in order to check or overcome their competitors and thus to enjoy the advantages of power within a secure or expanding territory. To make more effective war, they attempted to locate more capital. In the short run, they might acquire that capital by conquest, by selling off their assets, or by coercing or dispossessing accumulators of capital. In the long run, the quest inevitably involved them in establishing regular access to capitalists who could supply and arrange credit and in imposing one form of regular taxation or another on the people and activities within their spheres of control.
As the process continued, state makers developed a durable interest in promoting the accumulation of capital, sometimes in the guise of direct return to their own enterprises. Variations in the difficulty of collecting taxes, in the expense of the particular kind of armed force adopted, in the amount of war making required to hold off competitors, and so on resulted in the principal variations in the forms of European states. It all began with the effort to monopolize the means of violence within a delimited territory adjacent to a power holder's base.
Violence and Government
What distinguished the violence produced by states from the violence delivered by anyone else? In the long; run, enough to make the division between "legitimate" and "illegitimate" force credible. Eventually, the personnel of states purveyed violence on a larger scale, more effectively, more efficiently, with wider assent from their subject populations, and with readier collaboration from neighboring authorities than did the personnel of other organizations. But it took a long time for that series of distinctions to become established. Early in the state-making process, many parties shared the right to use violence, the practice of using it routinely to accomplish their ends, or both at once. The continuum ran from bandits and pirates to kings via tax collectors, regional power holders, and professional soldiers.
The uncertain, elastic line between "legitimate" and "illegitimate" violence appeared in the upper reaches of power. Early in the state-making process, many parties shared the right to use violence, its actual employment, or both at once. The long love-hate affair between aspiring state makers and pirates or bandits illustrates the division. "Behind piracy or the seas acted cities and city-states," writes Fernand Braudel of the sixteenth century. "Behind banditry, that terrestrial piracy, appeared the continual aid of lords."2 In times of war, indeed, the managers of full-fledged states often commissioned privateers, hired sometime bandits to raid their enemies, and encouraged their regular troops to take booty. In royal service, soldiers and sailors were often expected to provide for themselves by preying on the civilian population: commandeering, raping, looting, taking prizes. When demobilized, they commonly continued the same practices, but without the same royal protection; demobilized ships became pirate vessels, demobilized troops bandits.
It also worked the other way: A king's best source of armed supporters was sometimes the world of outlaws. Robin Hood's conversion to royal archer may be a myth, but the myth records a practice. The distinctions between "legitimate" and "illegitimate" users of violence came clear only very slowly, in the process during which the states armed forces became relatively unified and permanent.
Up to that point, as Braudel says, maritime cities and terrestrial lords commonly offered protection, or even sponsorship, to freebooters. Many lords who did not pretend to be kings, furthermore, successfully claimed the right to levy troops and maintain their own armed retainers. Without calling on some of those lords to bring their armies with them, no king could fight a war; yet the same armed lords constituted the king's rivals and opponents, his enemies' potential allies. For that reason, before the seventeenth century, regencies for child sovereigns reliably produced civil wars. For the same reason, disarming the great stood high on the agenda of every would-be state maker.
The Tudors, for example, accomplished that agenda through most England. "The greatest triumph of the Tudors," writes Lawrence Stone, was the ultimately successful assertion of a royal monopoly of violence both public and private, an achievement which profoundly altered not only the nature of politics but also the quality of daily life. There occurred a change in English habits that can only be compared with the further step taken in the nineteenth century, when the growth of a police force finally consolidated the monopoly and made it effective in the greatest cities and the smallest villages.3
Tudor demilitarization of the great lords entailed four complementary campaigns: eliminating their great personal bands of armed retainers, razing their fortresses, taming their habitual resort to violence for the settlement of disputes, and discouraging the cooperation of their dependents and tenants. In the Marches of England and Scotland, the task was more delicate, for the Percys and Dacres, who kept armies and castles along the border, threatened the Crown but also provided a buffer against Scottish invaders. Yet they, too, eventually fell into line.
In France, Richelieu began the great disarmament in the 1620s. With Richelieu's advice, Louis XIII systematically destroyed the castles of the great rebel lords, Protestant and Catholic, against whom his forces battled incessantly. He began to condemn dueling, the carrying of lethal weapons, and the maintenance of private armies. By the later 1620s, Richelieu was declaring the royal monopoly of force as doctrine. The doctrine took another half-century to become effective.
Once more the conflicts of the Fronde had witnessed armies assembled by the "grands." Only the last of the regencies, the one after the death of Louis XIV, did not lead to armed uprisings. By that time Richelieu's principle had become a reality. Likewise in the Empire after the Thirty Years' War only the territorial princes had the right of levying troops and of maintaining fortresses... Everywhere the razing of castles, the high cost of artillery, the attraction of court life, and the ensuing domestication of the nobility had its share in this development.4
By the later eighteenth century, through most of Europe, monarchs controlled permanent, professional military forces that rivaled those of their neighbors and far exceeded any other organized armed force within their own territories. The state's monopoly of large-scale violence was turning from theory to reality.
The elimination of local rivals, however, posed a serious problem. Beyond the scale of a small city-state, no monarch could govern a population with his armed force alone, nor could any monarch afford to create a professional staff large and strong enough to reach from him to the ordinary citizen. Before quite recently, no European government approached the completeness of articulation from top to bottom achieved by imperial China. Even the Roman Empire did not come close. In one way or another, every European government before the French Revolution relied on indirect rule via local magnates. The magnates collaborated with the government without becoming officials in any strong sense of the term, had some access to government-backed force, and exercised wide discretion within their own territories: junkers, justices of the peace, lords. Yet the same magnates were potential rivals, possible allies of a rebellious people.
Eventually, European governments reduced their reliance on indirect rule by means of two expensive but effective strategies: (a) extending their officialdom to the local community and (b) encouraging the creation of police forces that were subordinate to the government rather than to individual patrons, distinct from war-making forces, and therefore less useful as the tools of dissident magnates. In between, however, the builders of national power all played a mixed strategy: eliminating, subjugating, dividing, conquering, cajoling, buying as the occasions presented themselves. The buying manifested itself in exemptions from taxation, creations of honorific offices, the establishment of claims on the national treasury, and a variety of other devices that made a magnate's welfare dependent on the maintenance of the existing structure of power. In the long run, it all came down to massive pacification and monopolization of the means of coercion.
Protection as Business
In retrospect, the pacification, cooptation, or elimination of fractious rivals to the sovereign seems an awesome, noble, prescient enterprise, destined to bring peace to a people; yet it followed almost ineluctably from the logic of expanding power. If a power holder was to gain from the provision of protection, his competitors had to yield. As economic historian Frederic Lane put it twenty-five years ago, governments are in the business of selling protection... whether people want it or not. Lane argued that the very activity of producing and controlling violence favored monopoly, because competition within that realm generally raised costs, instead of lowering them. The production of violence, he suggested, enjoyed large economies of scale.
Working from there, Lane distinguished between (a) the monopoly profit, or tribute, coming to owners of the means of producing violence as a result of the difference between production costs and the price exacted from "customers" and (b) the protection rent accruing to those customers -- for example, merchants -- who drew effective protection against outside competitors. Lane, a superbly attentive historian of Venice, allowed specifically for the case of a government that generates protection rents for its merchants by deliberately attacking their competitors. In their adaptation of Lane's scheme, furthermore, Edward Ames and Richard Rapp substitute the apt word "extortion" for Lane's "tribute." In this model, predation, coercion, piracy, banditry, and racketeering share a home with their upright cousins in responsible government.
This is how Lane's model worked: If a prince could create a sufficient armed force to hold off his and his subjects' external enemies and to keep the subjects in line for 50 megapounds but was able to extract 75 megapounds in taxes from those subjects for that purpose, he gained a tribute of (75-50=) 25 megapounds. If the 10-pound share of those taxes paid by one of the prince's merchant-subjects gave hire assured access to world markets at less than the 15-pound shares paid by the merchant's foreign competitors to their princes, the merchant also gained a protection rent of (15 -10 =) 5 pounds by virtue of his prince's greater efficiency. That reasoning differs only in degree and in scale from the reasoning of violence-wielding criminals and their clients. Labor racketeering (in which, for example, a ship owner holds off trouble from longshoremen by means of a timely payment to the local union boss) works on exactly the same principle: The union boss receives tribute for his no-strike pressure on the longshoremen, while the ship owner avoids the strikes and slowdowns longshoremen impose on his competitors.
Lane pointed out the different behavior we might expect of the managers of a protection-providing government owned by
Citizens in general
A single self-interested monarch
The managers themselves
If citizens in general exercised effective ownership of the government -- a distant ideal! -- we might expect the managers to minimize protection costs and tribute, thus maximizing protection rent. A single self-interested monarch, in contrast, would maximize tribute, set costs so as to accomplish that maximization of tribute, and be indifferent to the level of protection rent. If the managers owned the government, they would tend to keep costs high by maximizing their own wages, to maximize tribute over and above those costs by exacting a high price from their subjects, and likewise to be indifferent to the level of protection rent. The first model approximates a Jeffersonian democracy, the second a petty despotism, and the third a military junta.
Lane did not discuss the obvious fourth category of owner: a dominant class. If he had, his scheme would have yielded interesting empirical criteria for evaluating claims that a given government was "relatively autonomous" or strictly subordinate to the interests of a dominant class. Presumably, a subordinate government would tend to maximize monopoly profits -- returns to the dominant class resulting from the difference between the costs of protection and the price received for it -- as well as tuning protection rents nicely to the economic interests of the dominant class. An autonomous government, in contrast, would tend to maximize managers' wages and its own size as well and would be indifferent to protection rents. Lane's analysis immediately suggests fresh propositions and ways of testing them.
Lane also speculated that the logic of the situation produced four successive stages in the general history of capitalism:
A period of anarchy and plunder
A stage in which tribute takers attracted customers and established their monopolies by struggling to create exclusive, substantial states
A stage in which merchants and landlords began to gain more from protection rents than governors did from tribute
A period (fairly recent) in which technological changes surpassed protection rents as sources of profit for entrepreneurs
In their new economic history of the Western world, Douglass North and Robert Paul Thomas make stages 2 and 3 -- those in which state makers created their monopolies of force and established property rights that permitted individuals to capture much of the return from their own growth-generating innovations -- the pivotal moment for sustained economic growth. Protection, at this point, overwhelms tribute. If we recognize that the protected property rights were mainly those of capital and that the development of capitalism also facilitated the accumulation of the wherewithal to operate massive states, that extension of Lane's analysis provides a good deal of insight into the coincidence of war making, state making, and capital accumulation.
Unfortunately, Lane did not take full advantage of his own insight. Wanting to contain his analysis neatly within the neoclassical theory of industrial organization, Lane cramped his treatment of protection: treating all taxpayers as "customers" for the "service" provided by protection-manufacturing governments, brushing aside the objections to the idea of a forced sale by insisting that the "customer" always had the choice of not paying and taking the consequences of nonpayment, minimizing the problems of divisibility created by the public-goods character of protection, and deliberately neglecting the distinction between the costs of producing the means of violence in general and the costs of giving "customers" protection by means of that violence. Lane's ideas suffocate inside the neoclassical box .end breathe easily outside it. Nevertheless, inside or outside, they properly draw the economic analysis of government back to the chief activities that real governments have carried on historically: war, repression, protection, adjudication.
More recently, Richard Bean has applied a similar logic to the rise of European national states between 1400 and 1600. He appeals to economies of scale in the production of effective force, counteracted by diseconomies of scale in command and control. He then claims that the improvement of artillery in the fifteenth century (cannon made small medieval forts much more vulnerable to an organized force) shifted the curve of economies and diseconomies to make larger armies, standing armies, and centralized governments advantageous to their masters. Hence, according to Bean, military innovation promoted the creation of large, expensive, well-armed national states.
History Talks
Bean's summary does not stand up to historical scrutiny. As a matter of practice, the shift to infantry-backed artillery sieges of fortified cities occurred only during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Artillery did improve during the fifteenth century, but the invention of new fortifications, especially the trace italienne, rapidly countered the advantage of artillery. The arrival of effective artillery came too late to have caused the increase in the viable size of states. (However, the increased cost of fortifications to defend against artillery did give an advantage to states enjoying larger fiscal bases.)
Nor is it obvious that changes in land war had the sweeping influence Bean attributes to them. The increasing decisiveness of naval warfare, which occurred simultaneously, could well have shifted the military advantage to small maritime powers such as the Dutch Republic. Furthermore, although many city-states and other microscopic entities disappeared into larger political units before 1600, such events as the fractionation of the Habsburg Empire and such facts as the persistence of large but loosely knit Poland and Russia render ambiguous the claim of a significant increase in geographic scale. In short, both Bean's proposed explanation and his statement of what must be explained raise historical doubts.
Stripped of its technological determinism, nevertheless, Bean's logic provides a useful complement to Lane's, for different military formats do cost substantially different amounts to produce and do provide substantially different ranges of control over opponents, domestic and foreign. After 1400 the European pursuit of larger, more permanent, and more costly varieties of military organization did, in fact, drive spectacular increases in princely budgets, taxes, and staffs. After 1500 or so, princes who managed to create the costly varieties of military organization were, indeed, able to conquer new chunks of territory.
The word "territory" should not mislead us. Until the eighteenth century, the greatest powers were maritime states, and naval warfare remained crucial to international position. Consider Fernand Braudel's roll call of successive hegemonic powers within the capitalist world: Venice and its empire, Genoa and its empire, Antwerp-Spain, Amsterdam-Holland, LondonEngland, New York-the United States. Although Brandenburg-Prussia offers a partial exception, only in our own time have such essentially land-bound states as Russia and China achieved preponderant positions in the world's system of states. Naval warfare was by no means the only reason for that bias toward the sea. Before the later nineteenth century, land transportation was so expensive everywhere in Europe that no country could afford to supply a large army or a big city with grain and other heavy goods without having efficient water transport. Rulers fed major inland centers such as Berlin and Madrid only at great effort and at considerable cost to their hinterlands. The exceptional efficiency of waterways in the Netherlands undoubtedly gave the Dutch great advantages at peace and at war.
Access to water mattered in another important way. Those metropolises on Braudel's list were all major ports, great centers of commerce, and outstanding mobilizers of capital. Both the trade and the capital served the purposes of ambitious rulers. By a circuitous route, that observation brings us back to the arguments of Lane and Bean. Considering that both of them wrote as economic historians, the greatest weakness in their analyses comes as a surprise: Both of them understate the importance of capital accumulation to military expansion. As Jan de Vries says of the period after 1600.
Looking back, one cannot help but be struck by the seemingly symbiotic relationship existing between the state, military power, and the private economy's efficiency in the age of absolutism. Behind every successful dynasty stood an array of opulent banking families. Access to such bourgeois resources proved crucial to the princes' state-building and centralizing policies. Princes also needed direct access to agricultural resources, which could be mobilized only when agricultural productivity grew and an effective administrative and military power existed to enforce the princes' claims. But the lines of causation also ran in the opposite direction. Successful statebuilding and empire-building activities plus the associated tendency toward concentration of urban population and government expenditure, offered the private economy unique and invaluable opportunities to capture economies of scale. These economies of scale occasionally affected industrial production but were most significant in the development of trade and finance. In addition, the sheer pressure of central government taxation did as much as any other economic force to channel peasant production into the market and thereby augment the opportunities for trade creation and economic specialization.5
Nor does the "symbiotic relationship" hold only for the period after 1600. For the precocious case of France, we need only consider the increase in royal expenditures and revenues from 1515 to 1785. Although the rates of growth in both regards accelerated appropriately after 1600, they also rose substantially during the sixteenth century. After 1550, the internal Wars of Religion checked the work of international expansion that France had begun earlier in the century, but from the 1620 onward Louis XIII and Louis XIV (aided and abetted, to be sure, by Richelieu, Mazarin, Colbert, and other state-making wizards) resumed the task with a vengeance. "As always," comments V. G. Kiernan, "war had every political recommendation and every financial drawback."6
Borrowing and then paying interest on the debt accounts for much of the discrepancy between the two curves. Great capitalists played crucial parts on both sides of the transaction: as the principal sources of royal credit, especially in the short term, and as the most important contractors in the risky but lucrative business of collecting royal taxes. For this reason, it is worth noticing that for practical purposes the national debt began in the reign of Francis 1. Following the loss of Milan, the key to northern Italy, on September 15, 1522, Francis I borrowed 200,000 francs... at 12.5 percent from the merchants of Paris, to intensify the war against Charles V. Administered by the city government, this loan inaugurated the famous series of bonds based on 7 revenues from the capital and known as rentes sur l'Hotel de Ville.7
(The government's failure to pay those rentes, incidentally, helped align the Parisian bourgeoisie against the Crown during the Fronde, some twelve decades later.) By 1595, the national debt had risen to 300 million francs; despite governmental bankruptcies, currency manipulations, and the monumental rise in taxes, by Louis XIV's death in 1715 war-induced borrowing had inflated the total to about 3 billion francs, the equivalent of about eighteen years in royal revenues.8 War, state apparatus, taxation, and borrowing advanced in tight cadence.
Although France was precocious, it was by no means alone. "Even more than in the case of France," reports the ever-useful Earl J. Hamilton, the national debt of England originated and has grown during major wars. Except for an insignificant carry-over from the Stuarts, the debt began in 1689 with the reign of William and Mary. In the words of Adam Smith, "it was in the war which began in 1688, and was concluded by the treaty of Ryswick in 1697, that the foundation of the present enormous debt of Great Britain was first laid."9
Hamilton, it is true, goes on to quote the mercantilist Charles Davenant, who complained in 1698 that the high interest rates promoted by government borrowing were cramping English trade. Davenant's complaint suggests, however, that England was already entering Frederic Lane's third stage of state-capital relations, when merchants and landowners receive more of the surplus than do the suppliers of protection.
Until the sixteenth century, the English expected their kings to live on revenues from their own property and to levy taxes only for war. G. R. Elton marks the great innovation at Thomas Cromwell's drafting of Henry VIII's subsidy bills for 1534 and 1540: "1540 was very careful to continue the real innovation of 1534, namely that extraordinary contributions could be levied for reasons other than war."10 After that point as before, however, war making provided the main stimulus to increases in the level of taxation as well as of debt. Rarely did debt and taxes recede. What A. T. Peacock and J. Wiseman call a "displacement effect" (and others sometimes call a "ratchet effect") occurred: When public revenues and expenditures rose abruptly during war, they set a new, higher floor beneath which peacetime revenues and expenditures did not sink. During the Napoleonic Wars, British taxes rose from 15 to 24 percent of national income and to almost three times the French level of taxation.11
True, Britain had the double advantage of relying less on expensive land forces than its Continental rivals and of drawing more of its tax revenues from customs and excise -- taxes that were, despite evasion, significantly cheaper to collect than land taxes, property taxes, and poll taxes. Nevertheless, in England as well as elsewhere, both debt and taxes rose enormously from the seventeenth century onward. They rose mainly as a function of the increasing cost of war making.
What Do States Do?
As should now be clear, Lane's analysis of protection fails to distinguish among several different uses of state-controlled violence. Under the general heading of organized violence, the agents of states characteristically carry on four different activities:
War making: Eliminating or neutralizing their own rivals outside the territories in which they have clear and continuous priority as wielders of force
State making: Eliminating or neutralizing their rivals inside those territories
Protection: Eliminating or neutralizing the enemies of their clients
Extraction: Acquiring the means of carrying out the first three activities -- war making, state making, and protection
The third item corresponds to protection as analyzed by Lane, but the other three also involve the application of force. They overlap incompletely and to various degrees; for example, war making against the commercial rivals of the local bourgeoisie delivers protection to that bourgeoisie. To the extent that a population is divided into enemy classes and the state extends its favors partially to one class or another, state making actually reduces the protection given some classes.
War making, state making, protection, and extraction each take a number of forms. Extraction, for instance, ranges from outright plunder to regular tribute to bureaucratized taxation. Yet all four depend on the state's tendency to monopolize the concentrated means of coercion. From the perspectives of those who dominate the state, each of them -- if carried on effectively -- generally reinforces the others. Thus, a state that successfully eradicates its internal rivals strengthens its ability to extract resources, to wage war, and to protect its chief supporters. In the earlier European experience, broadly speaking, those supporters were typically landlords, armed retainers of the monarch, and churchmen.
Each of the major uses of violence produced characteristic forms of organization. War making yielded armies, navies, and supporting services. State making produced durable instruments of surveillance and control within the territory. Protection relied on the organization of war making and state making but added to it an apparatus by which the protected called forth the protection that was their due, notably through courts and representative assemblies. Extraction brought fiscal and accounting structures into being. The organization and deployment of violence themselves account for much of the characteristic structure of European states.
The general rule seems to have operated like this: The more costly the activity, all other things being equal, the greater was the organizational residue. To the extent, for example, that a given government invested in large standing armies -- a very costly, if effective, means of war making -- the bureaucracy created to service the army was likely to become bulky. Furthermore, a government building a standing army while controlling a small population was likely to incur greater costs, and therefore to build a bulkier structure, than a government within a populous country. Brandenburg-Prussia was the classic case of high cost for available resources. The Prussian effort to build an army matching those of its larger Continental neighbors created an immense structure; it militarized and bureaucratized much of German social life.
In the case of extraction, the smaller the pool of resources and the less commercialized the economy, other things being equal, the more difficult was the work of extracting resources to sustain war and other governmental activities; hence, the more extensive was the fiscal apparatus. England illustrated the corollary of that proposition, with a relatively large and commercialized pool of resources drawn on by a relatively small fiscal apparatus. As Gabriel Ardant has argued, the choice of fiscal strategy probably made an additional difference. On the whole, taxes on land were expensive to collect as compared with taxes on trade, especially large flows of trade past easily controlled checkpoints. Its position astride the entrance to the Baltic gave Denmark an extraordinary opportunity to profit from customs revenues.
With respect to state making (in the narrow sense of eliminating or neutralizing the local rivals of the people who controlled the state), a territory populated by great landlords or by distinct religious groups generally imposed larger costs on a conqueror than one of fragmented power or homogeneous culture. This time, fragmented and homogeneous Sweden, with its relatively small but effective apparatus of control, illustrates the corollary.
Finally, the cost of protection (in the sense of eliminating or neutralizing the enemies of the state makers' clients) mounted with the range over which that protection extended. Portugal's effort to bar the Mediterranean to its merchants' competitors in the spice trade provides a textbook case of an unsuccessful protection effort that nonetheless built up a massive structure.
Thus, the sheer size of the government varied directly with the effort devoted to extraction, state making, protection, and, especially, war making but inversely with the commercialization of the economy and the extent of the resource base. What is more, the relative bulk of different features of the government varied with the cost/resource ratios of extraction, state making, protection, and war making. In Spain we see hypertrophy of Court and courts as the outcome of centuries of effort at subduing internal enemies, whereas in Holland we are amazed to see how small a fiscal apparatus grows up with high taxes within a rich, commercialized economy.
Clearly, war making, extraction, state making, and protection were interdependent. Speaking very, very generally, the classic European statemaking experience followed this causal pattern:
in an idealized sequence, a great lord made war so effectively as to become dominant in a substantial territory, but that war making led to increased extraction of the means of war -- men, arms, food, lodging, transportation, supplies, and/or the money to buy them -- from the population within that territory. The building up of war-making capacity likewise increased the capacity to extract. The very activity of extraction, if successful, entailed the elimination, neutralization, or cooptation of the great lord's local rivals; thus, it led to state making. As a by-product, it created organization in the form of tax-collection agencies, police forces, courts, exchequers, account keepers; thus it again led to state making. To a lesser extent, war making likewise led to state making through the expansion of military organization itself, as a standing army, war industries, supporting bureaucracies, and (rather later) schools grew up within the state apparatus. All of these structures checked potential rivals and opponents. In the course of making war, extracting resources, and building up the state apparatus, the managers of states formed alliances with specific social classes. The members of those classes loaned resources, provided technical services, or helped ensure the compliance of the rest of the population, all in return for a measure of protection against their own rivals and enemies. As a result of these multiple strategic choices, a distinctive state apparatus grew up within each major section of Europe.
How States Formed
This analysis, if correct, has two strong implications for the development of national states. First, popular resistance to war making and state making made a difference. When ordinary people resisted vigorously, authorities made concessions: guarantees of rights, representative institutions, courts of appeal. Those concessions, in their turn, constrained the later paths of war making and state making. To be sure, alliances with fragments of the ruling class greatly increased the effects of popular action; the broad mobilization of gentry against Charles I helped give the English Revolution of 1640 a far greater impact on political institutions than did any of the multiple rebellions during the Tudor era.
Second, the relative balance among war making, protection, extraction, and state making significantly affected the organization of the states that emerged from the four activities. To the extent that war making went on with relatively little extraction, protection, and state making, for example, military forces ended up playing a larger and more autonomous part in national politics. Spain is perhaps the best European example. To the extent that protection, as in Venice or Holland, prevailed over war making, extraction, and state making, oligarchies of the protected classes tended to dominate subsequent national politics. From the relative predominance of state making sprang the disproportionate elaboration of policing and surveillance; the Papal States illustrate that extreme. Before the twentieth century, the range of viable imbalances was fairly small. Any state that failed to put considerable effort into war making was likely to disappear. As the twentieth century wore on, however, it became increasingly common for one state to lend, give, or sell war-making means to another; in those cases, the recipient state could put a disproportionate effort into extraction, protection, and/or state making and yet survive. In our own time, clients of the United States and the Soviet Union provide numerous examples.
This simplified model, however, neglects the external relations that shaped every national state. Early in the process, the distinction between "internal" and "external" remained as unclear as the distinction between state power and the power accruing to lords allied with the state. Later, three interlocking influences connected any given national state to the European network of states. First, there were the flows of resources in the form of loans and supplies, especially loans and supplies devoted to war making. Second, there was the competition among states for hegemony in disputed territories, which stimulated war making and temporarily erased the distinctions among war making, state making, and extraction. Third, there was the intermittent creation of coalitions of states that temporarily combined their efforts to force a given state into a certain form and position within the international network. The war-making coalition is one example, but the peace-making coalition played an even more crucial part: From 1648, if not before, at the ends of wars all effective European states coalesced temporarily to bargain over the boundaries and rulers of the recent belligerents. From that point on, periods of major reorganization of the European state system came in spurts, at the settlement of widespread wars. From each large war, in general, emerged fewer national states than had entered it.
War as International Relations
In these circumstances, war became the normal condition of the international system of states and the normal means of defending or enhancing a position within the system. Why war? No simple answer will do; war as a potent means served more than one end. But surely part of the answer goes back to the central mechanisms of state making: The very logic by which a local lord extended or defended the perimeter within which he monopolized the means of violence, and thereby increased his return from tribute, continued on a larger scale into the logic of war. Early in the process, external and internal rivals overlapped to a large degree. Only the establishment of large perimeters of control within which great lords had checked their rivals sharpened the line between internal and external. George Modelski sums up the competitive logic cogently:
Global power... strengthened those states that attained it relatively to all other political and other organizations. What is more, other states competing in the global power game developed similar organizational forms and similar hardiness: they too became nation-states -- in a defensive reaction, because forced to take issue with or to confront a global power, as France confronted Spain and later Britain, or in imitation of its obvious success and effectiveness, as Germany followed the example of Britain in Weltmacht, or as earlier Peter the Great had rebuilt Russia on Dutch precepts and examples. Thus not only Portugal, the Netherlands, Britain and the United States became nation-states, but also Spain, France, Germany, Russia and Japan. The short, and the most parsimonious, answer to the question of why these succeeded where "most of the European efforts to build states failed" is that they were either global powers or successfully fought with or against them.12
This logic of international state making acts out on a large scale the logic of local aggrandizement. The external complements the internal. If we allow that fragile distinction between "internal" and "external" state-making processes, then we might schematize the history of European state making as three stages: (a) The differential success of some power holders in "external" struggles establishes the difference between an "internal" and an "external" arena for the deployment of force; (b) "external" competition generates "internal" state making; (c) "external" compacts among states influence the form and locus of particular states ever more powerfully. In this perspective, state-certifying organizations such as the League of Nations and the United Nations simply extended the European-based process to the world as a whole. Whether forced or voluntary, bloody or peaceful, decolonization simply completed that process by which existing states leagued to create new ones.
The extension of the Europe-based state-making process to the rest of the world, however, did not result in the creation of states in the strict European image. Broadly speaking, internal struggles such as the checking of great regional lords and the imposition of taxation on peasant villages produced important organizational features of European states: the relative subordination of military power to civilian control, the extensive bureaucracy of fiscal surveillance, the representation of wronged interests via petition and parliament. On the whole, states elsewhere developed differently. The most telling feature of that difference appears in military organization. European states built up their military apparatuses through sustained struggles with their subject populations and by means of selective extension of protection to different classes within those populations. The agreements on protection constrained the rulers themselves, making them vulnerable to courts, to assemblies, to withdrawals of credit, services, and expertise.
To a larger degree, states that have come into being recently through decolonization or through reallocations of territory by dominant states have acquired their military organization from outside, without the same internal forging of mutual constraints between rulers and ruled. To the extent that outside states continue to supply military goods and expertise in return for commodities, military alliance or both, the new states harbor powerful, unconstrained organisations that easily overshadow all other organizations within their territories. To the extent that outside states guarantee their boundaries, the managers of those military organisations exercise extraordinary power within them. The advantages of military power become enormous, the incentives to seize power over the state as a whole by means of that advantage very strong. Despite the great place that war making occupied in the making of European states, the old national states of Europe almost never experienced the great disproportion between military organization and all other forms of organization that seems the fate of client states throughout the contemporary world. A century ago, Europeans might have congratulated themselves on the spread of civil government throughout the world. In our own time, the analogy between war making and state making, on the one hand, and organized crime, on the other, is becoming tragically apt.
1. Arthur L. Stinchcombe, Constructing Social Theories (New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1968), p. 150; italics in the original.
2. Fernand Braudel, La Mèditerranèe et le monde mèditerranèen á l'èpoque de Philippe II (Paris: Armand Colin, 1966), vol. 2, pp. 88-89.
3. Lawrence Stone, The Crisis of the Aristocracy (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1965), p. 200.
4. Dietrich Gerhard, Old Europe: A Study of Continuity, 1000-1800 (New York: Academic Press, 1981), pp. 124-25.
5. Jan de Vries, The Economy of Europe in an Age of Crisis, 1600-1750 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1976).
6. V. G. Kiernan, State and Society in Europe, 1550-1650 (Oxford: Blackwell, 1980), p. 104. For French finances, see Alain Guery, "Les Finances de la Monarchie Française sous l'Ancien Regime," Annales Economies, Societes, Civilisations 33 (1978), p. 227.
7. Earl J. Hamilton, "Origin and Growth of the National Debt in France and England," in Studi in onore di Gino Luzzato (Milan: Giuffre, 1950), vol. 2, p. 254.
8. Ibid., pp. 247, 249.
9. Ibid., p. 254.
10. G. R. Elton, "Taxation for War and Peace in Early-Tudor England," in War and Economic Development: Essays in Memory of David Joslin, ed. J. M. Winter (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1975), p. 42.
11. Peter Mathias, The Transformation of England: Essays in the Economic and Social History of England in the Eighteenth Century (New York: Oxford University Press, 1979), p. 122.
12. George Modelski, "The Long Cycle of Global Politics and the Nation State," Comparative Studies in Society and History 20 (1978): 231.
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