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Thread: The Unasked Questions

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    The Unasked Questions



    The Unasked Questions

    By Butler Shaffer

    July 16, 2016

    "If they can get you asking the wrong questions, they don’t have to worry about answers."
    – Thomas Pynchon

    Human understanding is premised upon a continuing refinement in the quality of questions we bring to any subject matter. If our distant ancestors knew little more about their physical world than the proposition that “some things fall and hurt us,” their ability to safely function in the world might have been insufficient to sustain their lives. After centuries of trying to explain such occurrences by reciting such maxims as that things fall to their natural level in the world, our ancestors became better informed by Newton’s understanding of gravity and principles of motion. His views – like the more sophisticated opinions that followed from other scientists – emerged not from the recitation of other men’s answers, but from the formulation of more complex questions.

    We humans have long struggled with the abstract question of how society can be rendered more peaceful, productive, and spiritually fulfilling. Many answers have been offered by philosophers, religionists, lawyers, politicians, essayists, and other thoughtful speculators. At a time when seemingly constant wars – facilitated by ever-more advanced technologies of death; genocides; economic and emotional depressions; and other destructive dislocations preoccupy the content of what passes for “news” in our world, causal explanations are sought in simple-minded “answers” that place no burden on deeper levels of inquiry. The specters of guns, drugs, greed, hate, racism, inequality, and other hobgoblins are offered with a constancy and passion that gives a superficial appearance of sound analyses of our social problems.

    Destructive events in recent months have brought to the surface the turbulence that has long underlain our relationships with one another in our world. What are reflexively referred to as “terror-motivated” bombings and other mass killings of innocent men, women, and children, are convenient explanations for the conflicts, contradictions, and other institutionalized forms of violence that we prefer not to question. Better to tell ourselves that a mass murderer was driven by racial or religious bigotry, easy access to guns or drugs, or some twisted sense of “justice,” than to confront the myths, philosophic premises, and long-revered organizational systems, to which we have been conditioned to subordinate our lives.

    The folklore of our corporate-state establishment has long been grounded in such thinking that the coercive nature of the political machinery that dominates every facet of our being is under our “democratic” control; that it exists to “protect” our lives and property interests; that its mandates are applicable to all in ways that do not “discriminate”; and that “we” are able to change the policies and practices of this system should we choose to do so. These assumptions wallow in so much buncombe that it becomes difficult to fathom how there can be such an inverse relationship between the strength with which such thinking is embraced, and the amount of formal education to which the faithful have been subjected.

    I don’t know when I have heard so much unfocused babbling in the media as I did in the days following Dallas. Presidents and other politicians with well-meaning but empty thoughts held together by clichés and bromides, all recited in their proper meter and rewarded with applause from an audience thankful that the speakers did not stray beyond the boundaries of permissible thought. (BTW, in the all-too-many funerals I have attended in my life, I do not remember a single instance in which praise for the deceased was followed by applause or cheering, or a speaker dancing to the “Battle Hymn of the Republic.”)

    Were the eulogies at Dallas offered up in praise of the five police officers slain in this latest act of madness, or to try reinstalling faith in the institutional order which has increasingly failed to satisfy even the most meager of public expectations?

    Like high school students reciting their articles of faith in the religion of politics, speakers took turns affirming the statist creed. One after another spoke of the need to “end violence,” a statement which, taken to its logical conclusion, would bring about the end of all political systems. The central feature of the state that distinguishes it from all non-political institutions is its enjoyment of a legally enforceable monopoly on the exercise of violence within a given geographic territory. The difference between marketplace systems and political agencies is that, in the former cases, relationships between and among individuals are peaceful, voluntary, and grounded in respect for the inviolability of property interests, while political systems are just the opposite.

    Who, other than the state, could regularly engage in such activities as war, capital punishment, eminent domain, maintaining prisons, conscription, asset forfeiture, genocide, taxation, fines, slavery, injunctions, contempt of court punishment, police brutality, torture, and other permanent powers each of which depends upon the well-organized machinery of violence that helps to define the state? The perpetual existence of the state also requires the protection of its legal monopoly to employ violence in a given area. The urban street gangs that function as mini-political systems compete with the formal police agencies whose violent powers provide the essence of what is meant by “law-and-order.” The crazed man who machine-guns harmless men, women, and children at schools, dance clubs, or other public gatherings, must be distinguished from the soldier in a helicopter who opens fire upon, and kills, numerous innocent victims in foreign lands. The “sniper” who murdered five policemen in Dallas is to be reviled for his actions, while Chris Kyle – the Navy SEAL veteran – was honored in the much-acclaimed film American Sniper for his state-serving talents. Policemen and soldiers are the human agents of legal violence – who we are expected to recognize as “heroes” and thank for their “services” – while those who coerce and kill others for their own purposes are to be regarded as “hardened criminals.”

    How easily we digest the lies, contradictions, and platitudes that we are daily fed by the voices of authority, we being unaware of their addictive poison. I was torn between laughter and purchasing one-way airline tickets to a land of lesser collective insanity, when I heard President Obama declare, just two days after the Attorney General gave a free pass to Hillary Clinton, that in America “no one is above the law.” Was the man testing our sense of humor or our gullibility? If the Establishment was eager to find out if there are any boundaries to our collective dull-wittedness, the absence of any significant response to his twaddle should relieve their concerns.

    Another vacuous phrase that has been uttered in recent days is that we need “to come together.” In the political context in which such words are offered, they amount to little more than a reaffirmation of the collectivist mindset upon which established political interests feed. Civilizations are destroyed by the mobilization of the dark side forces that doze in our unconscious minds ‘til weakened by institutional interests bent on provoking self-serving social conflicts. A recent book, presuming to introduce children to philosophy, emphasizes that “communities matter, not individuals.” The offspring of e pluribus unum, the installation of such beliefs is necessary for human beings to subordinate their sense of being to the purposes of external agencies. Those who doubt the destructive nature of collectivism should bear in mind that the sniper who killed police officers in Dallas was the product of, among other collective influences, the U.S. Army and his participation in the war in Afghanistan.

    As I finish the writing of this article, I am informed that another mass atrocity has taken place this Bastille Day in Nice, France. The thoughtless people who expose their intellectual bankruptcies from perches of political power or the mainstream media will have nothing to offer as either a cause of or solution to the collective insanity that continues to escalate. President Obama tells us that today’s slaughter “appears to be a horrific terrorist attack.” Tremendous insight! I will be better able to sleep tonight knowing that our leader is on top of the problem! I do wonder if the one-barreled minds that see “gun control” as the solution to all social violence will now include trucks as tools to be removed from the hands of ordinary people!

    The reality of the matter seems to be that those determined to inflict massive doses of pain and death upon innocent men, women, and children, keep discovering new ways of doing so, a strategy that makes it increasingly impossible to plan for and prevent such attacks. It is also the case that those whose minds remain mired in early 20th-century thinking will have no understanding to contribute to the ending of our collective madness. Donald Trump shouted “this is war!” as the best, he could offer. At this point, I have not heard Hillary’s response, but I suspect she will be able to add two or three empty bromides. The minimal lesson to be learned from these recent events is that the outcome of this November’s presidential election will do nothing – absolutely nothing – to improve your life or liberty, or to make your world more peaceful and productive.

    Those we have allowed to be the keeper of the questions we are allowed to ask will continue to direct our attention to such utterly meaningless inquiries as whether Hillary mishandled classified government documents, or whether Trump is too politically incorrect. For the sake of our own well-being – if not survival itself – as well as the importance of living responsible lives, we must take back the control of our minds by asking the sorts of questions we have been conditioned to not ask. As our world continues to collapse around us, we must take our thinking into unfamiliar territories.

    Most of us live under the delusion that there is something that those in power can do to end our collective destructiveness. Fox News’ Greta Van Susteren expressed this quite well when, in her reports on the Nice atrocities, she asked: “why aren’t the world leaders getting together to do something about this?” The truth that thoughtful minds must discover is that political authorities are in control of nothing and that our world can be made better only by our willingness to question our tradition-bound answers, and to discover and continue to refine the quality of the questions we bring to our complex world.

    The Best of Butler Shaffer

    Butler Shaffer [send him e-mail] is Professor Emeritus at Southwestern University School of Law. He is the author of the newly-released In Restraint of Trade: The Business Campaign Against Competition, 1918–1938, Calculated Chaos: Institutional Threats to Peace and Human Survival, and Boundaries of Order. His latest book is The Wizards of Ozymandias.


    https://www.lewrockwell.com/2016/07/...ght-control-2/

    Copyright © 2016 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in part is gladly granted, provided full credit and a live link are provided.

    Just gotta keep on further dumbing it down for consumption by the peons, sheeple and proles.



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  3. #2
    Great article- Butler is On. The. Nose.

    Thanks for sharing!
    There is no spoon.

  4. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by Ender View Post
    Great article- Butler is On. The. Nose.

    Thanks for sharing!
    Butler is my long time very favorite at LRC.

    You're welcome.

  5. #4
    I don’t know when I have heard so much unfocused babbling in the media as I did in the days following Dallas. Presidents and other politicians with well-meaning but empty thoughts held together by clichés and bromides, all recited in their proper meter and rewarded with applause from an audience thankful that the speakers did not stray beyond the boundaries of permissible thought. (BTW, in the all-too-many funerals I have attended in my life, I do not remember a single instance in which praise for the deceased was followed by applause or cheering, or a speaker dancing to the “Battle Hymn of the Republic.”)

    “If you can't dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bull$#@!.”

    ― W.C. Fields
    Quote Originally Posted by Ron Paul View Post
    The intellectual battle for liberty can appear to be a lonely one at times. However, the numbers are not as important as the principles that we hold. Leonard Read always taught that "it's not a numbers game, but an ideological game." That's why it's important to continue to provide a principled philosophy as to what the role of government ought to be, despite the numbers that stare us in the face.
    Quote Originally Posted by Origanalist View Post
    This intellectually stimulating conversation is the reason I keep coming here.

  6. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by Suzanimal View Post
    “If you can't dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bull$#@!.”

    ― W.C. Fields
    Trump must be related to W.C. Fields.
    There is no spoon.

  7. #6
    Quote Originally Posted by Ender View Post
    Trump must be related to W.C. Fields.
    That goes for about 99% of all politicians.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ron Paul View Post
    The intellectual battle for liberty can appear to be a lonely one at times. However, the numbers are not as important as the principles that we hold. Leonard Read always taught that "it's not a numbers game, but an ideological game." That's why it's important to continue to provide a principled philosophy as to what the role of government ought to be, despite the numbers that stare us in the face.
    Quote Originally Posted by Origanalist View Post
    This intellectually stimulating conversation is the reason I keep coming here.

  8. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by Suzanimal View Post
    That goes for about 99% of all politicians.
    You may have missed a few.

  9. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by Ronin Truth View Post
    You may have missed a few.
    I left out Ron Paul and myself. We're cool.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ron Paul View Post
    The intellectual battle for liberty can appear to be a lonely one at times. However, the numbers are not as important as the principles that we hold. Leonard Read always taught that "it's not a numbers game, but an ideological game." That's why it's important to continue to provide a principled philosophy as to what the role of government ought to be, despite the numbers that stare us in the face.
    Quote Originally Posted by Origanalist View Post
    This intellectually stimulating conversation is the reason I keep coming here.



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  11. #9

  12. #10
    Quote Originally Posted by FindLiberty View Post
    Thanks for posting!
    You are welcome!

    Thanks for the +Rep!

  13. #11


    Jack Douglas Writes to Butler Shaffer

    Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.

    Butler,

    Passionately and beautifully said indeed.

    As you know so well, probably even from Law School days, thme Socratic Method of analysis begins with first questioning of concepts of thinking, experience, other ways of thinking, etc.

    Like serious thinkers in the Western World for the past few millennia, we old timers today generally started our serious educations by learning about and doing Socratic Dialogue. In the tenth grade my friend Bill Marina discovered the Duke list of 100 great books. From that I quickly discovered Ancient Greek thought, beginning with Jowett’s Plato’s Dialogues. I spent a year or more wandering around the Agora questioning with Socrates and Plato. It was a wonderfully, life transforming joy of discovery. I went on to Aristotle, et al. When I got to Harvard as a freshman I immediately took Demos’ Ancient Greek Phil. course. Demos even looked like Socrates and talked like him in Engish! And he had some fine section leaders who did Socratic dialogues with us.

    As far as I know, even the Marxists and Socialist Ideologists in Harvard Law commonly still use some Socratic methods to wake up the young minds of legalists. But most Americans now live Politically Correct Mindless Lives. It would be helpful to remind them of the 2400 years of Western creative thinking they have trashed and thrown away, especially in the vast realm of human studies.

    I always found the greatest value of such Socratic dialogue was not in questioning other people, who are now pretty comatose in their little ideological niches in America’s vast media prison of the mind, but in my questioning and analyzing things from all angles for myself. One example of this is like your questioning of Big Bang theory. I know the history of cosmology, so I know that astronomers have been through several basic revolutions in their thinking about the cosmos since roughly when we were born ca. 80 years ago, most of it in our lifetimes. There are now many basic, revolutionary discoveries that raise basic questions about Big Bangs, etc,, such as “What the hell is Black Matter that appears to make up most or our observable universe?” and “What in the world are we to make of all of Being that may be eternal and infinite?”

    Since you are obviously a reincarnation of Socrates, kind of a Socrates of the San Fernando Valley, I will mention that in my courses over in UCLA a half century ago I tried always to open minds and inspire creative self-questioning very gently by asking them basic questions about human life, such as “What is morality and law?” Then when they offered answers, I would gently ask, “But how do you know that?” I think that was still common way back in that ancient age of pre-Marxist America.

    Butler responds:

    Jack:

    Nicely stated, and thank you for the kind words. My retirement was hastened by the school’s pressures to abandon the processes by which we help students learn how to think, and to foster bar-preparation training. The contrast was well-expressed in Paul Bonnefon’s 1892 book in which he described the study of law as “a sort of search for truth, carried on by teacher and student in common, and which they feverishly undertook, opening up an endless field for philosophic speculation.” Prof. Kingsfield’s first day of class in Contracts law – in the film The Paper Chase – is a relatively recent example of how this used to be done. The emphasis, today, is on how to file discrimination charges against schools that do not provide for “transgender bathroom facilities.”

    3:15 pm on July 16, 2016

    Email Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.

    The Best of Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
    https://www.lewrockwell.com/lrc-blog...utler-shaffer/

  14. #12
    Who, other than the state, could regularly engage in such activities as war, capital punishment, eminent domain, maintaining prisons, conscription, asset forfeiture, genocide, taxation, fines, slavery, injunctions, contempt of court punishment, police brutality, torture, and other permanent powers each of which depends upon the well-organized machinery of violence that helps to define the state? The perpetual existence of the state also requires the protection of its legal monopoly to employ violence in a given area.
    Quoted for truth



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