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View Full Version : "Men must be forced to be free." - Rousseau




Anti Federalist
04-30-2012, 08:16 PM
I do not chuckle, but see it as a self evident fact.


From this essay:

Should Peace Prevail? Of Course!

by Karen Kwiatkowski

http://lewrockwell.com/kwiatkowski/kwiatkowski285.html

When I contributed to the recently published Why Liberty, the assignment was easy. After all, liberty is a condition that men and women everywhere instinctively love and need, even if it isn’t always well-articulated. Liberty speaks to a way of self-government that is human-centered and fundamentally humane. Liberty defines human rights in a way that is supremely just, and liberty, by its very nature, is antithetical to force. Liberty is the natural condition of man, and most Americans share this ideal. Peace, on the other hand, for Americans born in the past 70 years, and for the millions of foreign subjects of the modern American empire, has not been part of their ideals, their ethics or their collective experience.

When we think of the Enlightenment philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau and his work on individualism, libertarians and logicians alike chuckle at his claim that "Men must be forced to be free." Rousseau likely meant that we tend to be voluntarily enslaved by our governments and kings, and by our cultures and traditions.

He was right on one aspect of human nature. We are often reluctant to give up our fantasies of the justness of our rulers, and the righteousness of our traditions.

Americans, in particular, embrace the language of liberty, even as the American state itself has become ominously and voraciously antithetical to liberty. The state pursues its wars in the name of liberty, and the government constantly reminds us that it maintains a large standing army, a massive military establishment, and a heavily integrated domestic police apparatus – all in the name of freedom. We cannot go far in the United States without being reminded that "if we like our freedom, thank a soldier."


To talk about peace in the 21st century, as fresh as we are from the deadly outcomes of the 20th, is a challenge. While it is natural to love liberty, it seems that peace is often argued to be unnatural, uncommon, and unlikely in the human condition. While the claim to liberty is granted by the Creator, claims to peace are not. But practiced liberty, with its prohibition on the use of force to take a man’s time, his children, his property and labor, his movement, is the fundamental precursor to peace. A truly free society is one that embraces a culture on the value of individual lives, a respect for their property, and aversion to the use of force. It is one that is comfortable in the art of trading and deal-making based on marketplace choices, not government edicts. A truly free society is a peaceful society.

In the United States, we once had a vocal combination of thinkers who advocated nonviolence, and opposed the use of force, by individuals and by states. For many decades in our history, the primary opinion in the country was that government was to be limited in size and scope. Statesmen referenced the Constitution as a guide for this limited government, and limiting government (and by extension, war) was considered both valuable and normal. In these previous eras, serious public debate on war and peace was tolerated, and one could read about both war and peace in the newspapers.

But gradually, the state as a source of both assistance to and identity for individuals (increasingly thought of as "citizens") emerged in part with the emigration of the German and other national populists after the failures of the various 1848 Revolutions in Europe. These immigrants, unlike previous waves of Europeans seeking freedom of religion and opportunity to farm and produce, embraced ideas of the importance of national unity, and the supremacy of democracy, political ideas that elevate the importance of the state. They were urban-oriented and industrial-minded immigrants, who valued the state as a legitimizer of individuals, and desired a powerful and egalitarian welfare state. They became important political blocs in the country, supporting a strong central rule, workers rights over property rights, majority rule over rule by the more staid and limited Constitution.

Meanwhile, the role of religionists and philosophers in the United States also increasingly saw the state as the mechanism of virtue. The era of Christian progressivism looked to the state to aid sinners in their fight to resist sin, and this very powerful and popular abdication of individual and community responsibility for diktats of state on the individual culminated in the 18th Amendment in 1919, banning sales and consumption of alcohol across the land. From political, economic, and religious perspectives, American as a great state was increasingly valued over America, land of liberty. These Europeans in general opposed Southern slavery, they generally did so as a means to higher paychecks and full employment rather than because they believed in equality of African Americans, or substantially embraced the fundamental concepts of human liberty. Slavery was enforced more effectively in the non-slave North than it had ever been in the South, in part due to racism, and in part due to the widely held view of slaves as economic units of competition.


The state centralized as a result of the Civil War, and militarized as a result of Reconstruction and the professionalization of civil servants. Dehumanization, destruction of property, unlimited post civil war takings but both the state, and its friends and allies, all challenged constitutional ideas of liberty. Without liberty, and the innate justice that comes from respecting property of others, peace is impossible. That many in the Christian churches condemned their more peaceful advocates in the abolition movement, and came to see the state as an ally in pursuit of common goals of social order, the hypocrisy of those who worshipped the Prince of Peace became more and more obvious. The rise of the Yankee Leviathan, as phrased by historian Richard Bensel, and the statist/church Battle Hymn of the Republic, written at about the same time illustrates the nature of the perversion.

Mark Twain’s famous "The War Prayer," published in 1923 but believed to be dictated in 1904 or 1905, and referring to the Christian calls to reconvert the failing Spanish Empire from Catholicism to Protestantism, even as the public school movement at home was attempting to do with the waves of impoverished Catholic Irish and Italian immigrants, indeed captures the hypocrisy of Christians who long for war, death and destruction, often overseas or in another’s backyard, and usually the name of the state. This lust for war, equating support for the state for love of country and government-led collective hate confused with patriotism, was not something the founders envisioned for the new and free Republic. They certainly understood both the nature of mob thinking as well as the nature of ruling elites, the latter of which were in a position to profit from war. To prevent the nation from adventuring into wars abroad without the full awareness and support of the people, and without a concluded public debate on the justness of the war or military adventure, they specified the Congress, at that time representing the people and the several states, as the branch of government that could declare and authorize such a war or military adventure.

This seemed to work with few exceptions until the late 1800s. Was it a desire for war, or a desire for global relevance, or just the evolving nature of the American state that caused this shift? Had Americans thrilled to the idea of peace, it seems we would have heard more in the public sphere about how we could achieve it. Instead, we got a 20th century of state wars on the indigenous, state wars on other states, cold war militarism and fearmongering, and the positioning of global alliances against global alliances. There were also wars on drugs, wars on cancer, wars on illiteracy, and wars for "humanitarianism" and human rights.

War is organized in vertical authoritarian structures, and entails force against one’s own people through regulation, drafts, and economic mandates from the state. War requires great collective fear of an enemy, as well as great personal fear of one’s own state. When Randolph Bourne wrote "War Is the Health of the State" he explained how the state is fully realized only in war:

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 has so unforgettably spoken.

And what is that "peacefulness of being at war?" Jacks observed that in the early years of the First World War.

…the individual is not more gloomy. He is brighter, more cheerful. He worries less about himself. He is a trifle more unselfish and correspondingly more agreeable as a companion or neighbor. … This feeling of being banded together, which comes over a great population in its hour of trial, is a wonderful thing. It produces a kind of exhilaration which goes far to offset the severity of the trial. The spirit of fellowship, with its attendant cheerfulness, is in the air. It is comparatively easy to love one's neighbor when we realize that he and we are common servants and common sufferers in the same cause. A deep breath of that spirit has passed into the life of England.

In a sense, there is no way to speak about peace to a 21st century American, except as the absence of war. There is no way to collectively think about the absence of war, because the language of modern America is filled to the gills with talk of war, and a reactionary embrace of the centralized state. War is what we do. War sustains a significant portion of our government, gives our presidents manliness and makes our men and women aggressive and longsuffering patriots. War and munitions makes up over half of our global exports and employs over three million people, not counting men and women in uniform. The US government is obsessed with war, and in war, both seeks and finds its political and economic identity. This war obsessed government employs today over 22 million Americans, twice the number of people employed in manufacturing.

Yet, for all of this, Americans themselves do value peace, and are increasingly tired of war, and the endless lies and prevarications about the wars that seem to constantly engage us. Happily, the latest flurry of news from the White House about the final end of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Ladin is not producing the presidential political "bump" in the polls that past similar announcements have done, and instead of loud celebrations, Americans seem newly interested in what bin Ladin’s death can tell us about our own country’s prospects for real peace, and a contraction of our global military empire.

Peace takes on a more concrete meaning when people are struggling to feed families, buy gas, get and keep a job, and make their mortgage payments. As the productive capacity and civil liberties of Americans are shrinking, as they have done radically since September 11, 2001, the idea of living in a constitutional republic rather than an empire or global military enforcer becomes more compelling to the average American. Increasingly Americans are expatriating, and if not fully disengaging from the American state, are seeking second homes in places that truly, seem to embody peaceful living.

We are reminded today, almost three generations later, of the emerging prosperity-oriented ideas of the late 1950s. Barry Goldwater called for smaller more accountable government, in the face of a growing and ever more confiscatory state. President Dwight Eisenhower questioned the burgeoning growth of the military-industrial complex, and warned all Americans that unless checked, we as a nation would sacrifice both peace and liberty. In 1957, Ayn Rand published Atlas Shrugged, posing a last ditch solution to the monster war-loving state, a "shrugging" off of individual productivity by simply disappearing from the purview of the state.

These ideas – all related to peace, all related to prosperity, founded on Renaissance revelations of the intrinsic value of the individual and resting on the Founders’ ideas of a Creator-granted organic right of liberty – have persisted, even as the government of the United States has morphed into a war-addicted, liberty-offending, debt-ridden global empire.

Why peace? And why now? We have become a country that cannot afford the luxury of killing human beings and destroying economies around the world. Americans are slowly waking to the ongoing destruction of our own economy, due largely to government spending abroad and government malinvestment in a military sector that dwarfs anything existing anywhere else on the planet. Americans are beginning to separate in their own minds their government’s unending interest in military force and intimidation around the world, and their own interest in living a profitable and peaceful life, and seeing their children prosper in their own great land, not die miserably or be damaged irreversibly in some barren mountaintop or miserable desert inhabited by people we simply do not care about. Americans are slowly recognizing that the rule of law in this country has been usurped by a new imperial model, where presidential assassinations of enemies of the state around the world are standard, and where American citizens in general are viewed as threats to the state, not as free and valuable individuals, for whom the state must necessarily be submissive and subordinate. Peace is the only way we can to resolve and reduce the state’s grip on the lives and economies of Americans, even as peace will resolve and reduce our government’s rip on much of the rest of the world.

Many Americans increasingly sense that economic hardship and limited freedom is the new 21st century reality for them and their children. They correctly associate hardship and a kind of citizen servitude with the United States global military empire, even as this empire has been slowly evolving, in some ways surreptitiously, for nearly 100 years. We require peace because we can no longer afford war. More importantly, Americans are beginning, thanks in part to vastly and immediately available access to a wide variety of information, both historical and real-time, to recognize and even laugh at our prevaricating and parasitic political masters in both parties. When major public polling entities begin to regularly pose questions for the "political class" as opposed to "the people" as Rasmussen did in 2010, it is a major sign of impending revolution – or, if we are fortunate, a peaceful evolution towards a value set that will publically and commonly criminalize war and war-mongering, and celebrate peace, liberty and prosperity at home, and everywhere.

In the dystopian future imagined by George Orwell in 1984, Winston is advised,

There will be no curiosity, no enjoyment of the process of life. All competing pleasures will be destroyed. But always – do not forget this, Winston – always there will be the intoxication of power, constantly increasing and constantly growing subtler. Always, at every moment, there will be the thrill of victory, the sensation of trampling on an enemy who is helpless. If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face – forever.

In this simple description, we see the answer to the question "Why Peace." War is intoxication, addiction, and destruction. It is sensation, compulsion, and sin – the enemy not of peace but of humanity itself. Randolph Bourne correctly observed, "War is the health of the state," and we can clearly see that the converse is also true. Peace is the health of the individual, the family, the community and the land.

We don’t have to accept the boot of the state and its wars stamping on a human face forever, even as it is served up daily by the ever-ravenous political class, sitting atop a sand-based pyramid of state paranoia. Peace trumps the zero sum game of war, and peace is additive, creative, infinitely inventive, and just. Only in peace can a true "spirit of fellowship" be experienced. To use the language of war with which Americans have become so comfortable, peace always wins, even as states inevitably collapse under the weight of their hubris and criminality.

TheTexan
04-30-2012, 08:35 PM
Most people don't have a desire to be free. They only have a desire to believe they are free. Most people currently believe they are free, and nothing can convince them otherwise.

"Men must be forced to be free."

Some context on this quote, courtesy of wikipedia

Rousseau's striking phrase that man must "be forced to be free"[7] should be understood this way: since the indivisible and inalienable popular sovereignty decides what is good for the whole, then if an individual lapses back into his ordinary egoism and disobeys the leadership, he will be forced to listen to what they decided as a member of the collectivity (i.e. as citizens). Thus, the law, inasmuch as it is created by the people acting as a body, is not a limitation of individual freedom, but its expression.

Basically, a government is only a representation of its people.

Anti Federalist
04-30-2012, 08:40 PM
The Banality of Tyranny

by Joel F. Wade
The Daily Bell

http://lewrockwell.com/orig13/wade-j1.1.1.html

German-Jewish (and eventually naturalized American) philosopher Hannah Arendt (1906-1975) outraged the Left with her definitive account of modern tyranny, The Origins of Totalitarianism.

Written in 1951 when Stalin was still ruling the Soviet Union and worshipped by the Left, it exposed with ruthless logic and evidence the essential sameness between Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia. Nazism and Communism were just two sides of the same tyrannical coin, said Arendt, not opposites of Right and Left.

The world's leftist intellectuals never forgave her, and so were scandalized again in 1963 by her book, On Revolution, an impeccably scholarly study of why the American Revolution was a success and the French Revolution an abysmal failure.

Yet it is her account of the 1962 trial of Nazi leader Adolf Eichmann, Eichmann in Jerusalem, for which she is most famous. Hitler had put Eichmann in charge of transporting Jews to his extermination camps such as at Auschwitz. At his trial in Jerusalem, Eichmann claimed that he was just doing his duty, conforming to the law, and that he was powerless to do otherwise.

Arendt saw that Eichmann really believed this. He wasn't a "radically evil" sociopath; he was an ordinary man just going along with what was happening. This was an evil that frightened Arendt more than that of a rare monster like Hitler, for it was an evil perpetrated by otherwise normal people.

She described this phenomenon in her memorable phrase: the banality of evil.

This tendency for people to do things just because it's accepted by others is a pervasive quality of human nature.

We get used to things. We adapt to circumstances. We habituate our daily routines. The most conscious of us do this; it's part of what allows us to function in our daily lives. It takes an energetic act of volition in order to counter these mundane forces.

If we had to think consciously every time we did anything we would be exhausted and unable to function before we even got going for the day. Instead, this executive function is largely reserved for novel circumstances or moments of decision.

Imagine driving a car and having to think about every action you take in driving anew, as though you were learning it for the first time. This is what life would be like without our ability to habituate.

On the other hand, this ability to adapt and get used to things is what allows bad policies, dysfunctional ideas, abuse of power and, yes, outright evil to grow and become an acceptable part of life.

Back in my college days, our professor of US history one day was talking about the New Deal. He spoke in glowing terms of how FDR had saved democracy, all the ways that he strengthened America and our freedom, etc. He was speaking as a demagogue, teaching nothing but his own opinion and I knew it. So I put down my pencil and stopped writing notes.

It was a little shocking and very eye opening for me to look around the room of more than a hundred fellow students, all dutifully scribbling down what he was saying – as though it were the truth. I was literally the only one who was, in that moment, not taking part in the charade.

These were not stupid people, nor were they necessarily true believers in the dogma being sold to them at that moment. They were just people in a certain circumstance, doing what they thought they should be doing.

These were the kids who read Newsweek and Time magazine and thought they were getting an in-depth and balanced take on world events, who voted for John Anderson for president because he saved them from having to defend Jimmy Carter, because he seemed to be more "enlightened and reasonable" than Ronald Reagan – and besides, that's who all the "smart" people were voting for.

These are the same people who have grown up to support and become the bureaucrats and representatives, professors and newscasters of today, who have created our modern culture of government dependence and power. They take the status quo as a given, and try to maintain everything that they are used to.

These are people like the present group of "moderates" in Congress who would like to compromise with each other to find a way to "solve our nation's problems" – in other words, to maintain the status quo for themselves and their government colleagues.

Of course, compromising between freedom and tyranny is like compromising about what height of a cliff you should have to jump off. Once you accept the premise that you'll jump, you're already doomed.

We focus our political energies on the thugs and demagogues of the Left because they are the noisy ones, the annoying ones, the ones who so blatantly seek to undermine our system of individual liberty and limited government in the pursuit of their socialist utopia.

But our greatest danger now is not such an obvious enemy; we are up against human nature itself. We are up against our own tendency to get used to things as they are.

If we want to re-establish America as that shining city on a hill, as the champion of individual liberty and personal responsibility; if we want to roll back the now ossified structures of the progressive movement and bring forth once again the strength and beauty of our founding principles – like tearing up a musty old carpet to find a beautiful hardwood floor – then we have to keep our consciousness alive in ways that are somewhat unnatural.

Self-regulation requires energy, it requires focus and it requires the same kind of eternal vigilance as does our liberty.

The natural tendency for us as citizens is to become complacent, letting our representatives take care of the government for us and refocusing on our regular life habits.

The natural tendency for our new Republican majority in Congress is to do exactly what the last Republican majority did: join the crowd in an effort to get more power, bend their integrity toward expediency and go along with the culture of dealmaking and compromise in order to "further progress."

This momentum of a culture is a powerful force. It is what addicts have to counter when they try to get sober – in most cases it's necessary to get completely away from the culture that supported or at least accepted the addiction and establish a new culture that supports a sober and healthy lifestyle.

Our representatives need to feel that the culture that had accepted the corrupt and fascist progressive status quo is no longer the comfortable way to go. They need to hear from us constantly that we expect them to champion our founding principles, that we support them in representing a culture of individual liberty and self-responsibility and that there are an overwhelming number of us that feel this way.

We especially need to encourage our new members who are full of fire and vision so that they can become the leaders of the congressional culture. There is tremendous leverage in standing up with integrity to oppose harmful authority.

You are probably familiar with Stanley Milgram's Obedience to Authority experiments. Subjects were asked to administer ascending quantities of electrical shock to people each time they answered a question incorrectly. Those receiving the shock were acting, not really being shocked, but the subjects didn't know that.

The intensity of shock began at 15 volts and rose in 15-volt increments up to 300 volts. The subjects heard screams, pleas to stop, complaints of heart pains and then silence – yet many of them continued to the end. How many?

Two-thirds of participants administered the full range of shock, simply because the person in authority – a man with a white coat – would say, "The experiment requires that you continue."

This is very scary, of course, but there's more to the story: In a little known but vitally important detail in these experiments, those who witnessed another person refuse to comply with the authority were dramatically more likely to refuse to comply themselves. In this case only 10% obeyed the orders of the authority.

The power of a positive example represents a huge potential for good.

One representative with that kind of integrity can make a world of difference. We have a lot of them now with the potential to defy the status quo of the progressive agenda. We have to stay on top of them and remind them what we expect of them: to demonstrate the courage, the integrity and the clarity of purpose that got them elected.

The elections of 2010 did one thing only: They undermined the momentum and presumptuousness of the progressive agenda. Now comes the hard work – the ongoing discipline of dismantling the Administrative State that has been built in defiance of our founding principles.

The momentum, the comfort and the accepted norms are with the progressive administrative state – not by ideology or activism, but simply through force of habit. It is this mundane unconscious acceptance that has to be stirred up and confronted.

Countering the banality of tyranny with the passion of liberty will be our greatest challenge. If we can do it, this will be a heroic period of history, re-affirming America's founding principles and the truly revolutionary principles of individual liberty.

Anti Federalist
04-30-2012, 08:49 PM
In a little known but vitally important detail in these experiments, those who witnessed another person refuse to comply with the authority were dramatically more likely to refuse to comply themselves. In this case only 10% obeyed the orders of the authority.

And this, THIS is why I post story after story of cops acting out of control.

Why I refuse naked body scans and PAST screening at airports.

Why I participate in political campaigns that have little chance of "success".

And why I cheer every time I watch some other brave soul take a stand against unjust and illegitimate authority.

Resistance is contagious.

heavenlyboy34
04-30-2012, 08:52 PM
5-star thread. Everyone read it!!!11!!! Slavery is easy-far easier than the animating contest of true freedom. Thus, few men seriously pursue liberty-preferring the magical escape from reality of elections and so forth.

TheTexan
04-30-2012, 08:53 PM
Resistance is contagious.

Not to burst your bubble, as it was a mighty inspirational bubble, but that experiment only showed that easy resistance is contagious.

The kind of resistance we need... is not easy

Anti Federalist
04-30-2012, 09:05 PM
Not to burst your bubble, as it was a mighty inspirational bubble, but that experiment only showed that easy resistance is contagious.

The kind of resistance we need... is not easy

Oh, fully understood.

But, even for the "heavy lifting" resistance, it takes one man to stand up first.

As brother Pete put it once:

"No man will dance until the first one boogies".

Simple
05-01-2012, 10:13 AM
Should Peace Prevail? Of Course!

by Karen Kwiatkowski

http://lewrockwell.com/kwiatkowski/kwiatkowski285.html


Karen 2012! King Bob Goodlatte has got to go!

kuckfeynes
05-01-2012, 11:10 AM
She is a great writer. Definitely my favorite of all the new generation candidates. She is straightforward on foreign policy and sees no need to bite her tongue to "fool" the neo-cons. And instead of distancing herself from the great lineage of libertarian thought, she embraces it and actively contributes to it. That's a real torchbearer if I've ever seen one. Go Karen.

Paul Or Nothing II
05-01-2012, 11:32 AM
I hope Kwiatkowski wins :)


Our representatives need to feel that the culture that had accepted the corrupt and fascist progressive status quo is no longer the comfortable way to go. They need to hear from us constantly that we expect them to champion our founding principles, that we support them in representing a culture of individual liberty and self-responsibility and that there are an overwhelming number of us that feel this way.

I feel it's somewhat too late to turn back, too many people in America now believe in big government, socialism & institutionalized freeloading so turning the whole country libertarian seems somewhat difficult unless libertarian-elites, like the Founders did, happen to take over during the impending turmoil & completely revamp the system & political & intellectual atmosphere but only realistic thing that I see happening, so far as return of libertarianism goes, is SECESSION, may be the Union will crash & then there's Liberated States of America & Socialist States of America or may be even more new nations will be born

Anti Federalist
02-03-2021, 04:31 PM
And this, THIS is why I post story after story of cops acting out of control.

Why I refuse naked body scans and PAST screening at airports.

Why I participate in political campaigns that have little chance of "success".

And why I cheer every time I watch some other brave soul take a stand against unjust and illegitimate authority.

Resistance is contagious.


In a little known but vitally important detail in these experiments, those who witnessed another person refuse to comply with the authority were dramatically more likely to refuse to comply themselves. In this case only 10% obeyed the orders of the authority.

And this, THIS is why I post story after story of cops acting out of control.

Why I refuse naked body scans and PAST screening at airports.

Why I participate in political campaigns that have little chance of "success".

And why I cheer every time I watch some other brave soul take a stand against unjust and illegitimate authority.

Resistance is contagious.

TheTexan
02-03-2021, 04:39 PM
Lets fuckin force some freedom already.

On who I do not care.

Maybe Canada.