|
Send to a friend
How the State Became Immaculate, Part 1
by James Bovard, August
2000
The founding fathers took a dim view of claims of the unlimited beneficence of
government. George Washington declared, Government is not
reason, it is not eloquence it is force. John Adams wrote in
1772: There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free
government ought to be to trust no man living with power to endanger the
public liberty.
Thomas Jefferson wrote in 1799,
Free government is founded in jealousy, not confidence. It is jealousy and
not confidence which prescribes limited constitutions, to bind those we
are obliged to trust with power.... In questions of power, then, let no more
be heard of confidence in men, but bind him down from mischief by the
chains of the Constitutions.
James Madison bluntly warned:
The nation which reposes on the pillow of political confidence will
sooner or later end its political existence in a deadly lethargy.
The Founding Fathers views on
government power were shaped by the fact that that power was held by an
increasingly hostile government; thus, they had few incentives to delude
themselves about the inherent goodness of government. Besides, they had
seen government operate in Rhode Island and that was all they
needed to know about the potential degeneration of political institutions.
(Madison wrote of Rhode Island: Nothing can exceed the wickedness
and folly which continue to reign there. All sense of Character as well as
of Right is obliterated.)
However, a different intellectual tide
was rising in continental Europe. As political scientist Carl Friedrich
observed in 1939,
In a slow process that lasted several generations, the modern concept of
the State was ... forged by political theorists as a tool of propaganda for
absolute monarchs. They wished to give the kings government a
corporate halo roughly equivalent to that of the Church.
Thomas Hobbes, writing in 1651,
labeled the state Leviathan our mortal God.
Jean Jacques Rousseau, with his 1762
book, The Social Contract, effectively made self-delusion
about the nature of government into the highest political virtue. British
political philosopher Harold Laski later noted, Rousseaus
theory of the general will makes him ... the modern founder of the idealist
school of politics. Rousseaus idealistic
method was rarely more clearly stated than in the opening of his book,
Discourse on Inequality: Let us begin by laying facts
aside, as they do not affect the question. Rousseau propagated
faith in absolute power at the same time he appeared to be preaching
democracy:
The sovereign, being formed wholly of the individuals who compose it,
neither has nor can have any interest contrary to theirs; and consequently
the sovereign power need give no guarantee to its subjects, because it is
impossible for the body to wish to hurt all its members.... The sovereign,
merely by virtue of what it is, is always what it should be.
Rousseaus doctrine of the
general will also created the perfect pretext to pretend
that government is not coercive: the people were willing, whatever
government did to them. Rousseau recommended that a lawgiver
ought to feel himself capable ... of changing human nature, of
transforming each individual ... into part of a greater whole from which he
in a manner receives his life and being.
While Rousseaus romantic
glorification of democracy is well-known, his passion for unlimited
government power is less recognized. In a short essay entitled On
Public Happiness, Rousseau declared in 1767, Give man
entirely to the State or leave him entirely to himself. And
Rousseau clearly believed that men could not be left to themselves.
Rousseau also foresaw the need for
the government to nullify private property. In an essay on a proposed
constitution for Corsica, he declared,
In a word, I want the property of the state to be as great and
powerful, and that of the citizens as small and weak, as possible. With
private property being so weak and so dependent, the Government will
need to use very little force, and will lead the people, so to speak, with a
movement of the finger.
In The Social Contract,
he declared,
The citizen is no longer the judge of the dangers to which the law desires
him to expose himself; and when the prince says to him: It is
expedient for the State that you should die, he ought to die,
because it is only on that condition that he has been living in security up
to the present, and because his life is no longer a mere bounty of nature,
but a gift made conditionally by the State.
Rousseau implied that people should
be grateful that the government had not yet killed them. Thus, he vested in
the state more power over the lives of the citizens than many Southern
states in the United States vested in slaveowners. (It was a crime for a
slaveowner to wrongfully kill one of his slaves, though such killings were
not often punished.) He based his political philosophy on his own peculiar
version of the social contract:
The State, in relation to its members, is master of all their goods by the
social contract, which, within the State, is the basis of all rights.
But Rousseau never explained why
people would voluntarily put their heads on a political chopping block.
Rousseaus influence
Rousseaus consecration of
government power had vast influence on subsequent philosophers. German
philosophers zeroed in on some of his more absurd ideas and refined them
into sufficiently obscure language that they commanded respect among
academics for generations to follow.
Johann Gottlieb Fichte declared in
1809 in his Addresses to the German Nation: The
State is the superior power, ultimate and beyond appeal, absolutely
independent. Fichte had earlier advocated sharply limiting
government power. But as German humiliation grew over Napoleons
conquest and occupation of the German states, Fichte deified the state in
order to give it the power to drive the French out of the German lands
and to purify the German people so that they would never again be
conquered. He wrote, The end of the State is none other than that of
the human species itself: namely that all its [humanitys] relations
should be ordered according to the laws of Reason.
And since the government alone was
able to know what reason dictated, that meant that it must have unlimited
power to rationalize the citizenry. Fichte lifted the State
above traditional moral standards:
It is the necessary tendency of every civilized State to expand in every
direction.... Always, without exception, the most civilized State is the
most aggressive.
Thus, the fact that a state
successfully attacked its neighbors proved its moral superiority over its
victims.
G.W.F. Hegel, renowned as the
Royal Prussian Court Philosopher at the University of
Berlin, matched Fichte and raised the ante of glorified servitude.
According to Hegel, The State is the Divine Idea as it exists on
earth. He praised the state as the realization of the ethical
idea and asserted that all the worth which the human being
possesses all spiritual reality, he possesses only through the
State. He revealed that the state is the shape which the
perfect embodiment of Spirit assumes. He opposed any limits on
government power: The State is the self-certain absolute mind
which recognizes no authority but its own, which acknowledges no
abstract rules of good and bad, shameful and mean, cunning and
deceit.
Hegel also declared that the
State is ... the ultimate end which has the highest right against the
individual, whose highest duty is to be a member of the State. He
stressed the benefits of war, and stated that sacrificing oneself
for the individuality of the State is ... a general duty. He was also
an early advocate of positive thinking: In considering the idea of
the State, one must not think of particular states, nor of particular
institutions, but one must contemplate the idea, this actual God, by
itself.
Hegel was followed at the University
of Berlin by Friar J. Stahl, who revealed that the state is a moral
and intellectual domain ... a moral authority and power exalted and
majestic, to which the subjects must submit. Historian Heinrich
von Treitschke, who became famous for his advocacy of Realpolitik, wrote
that if the State may not enclose and repress like an egg-shell,
neither can it protect and stressed that the moral benefits
for which we are indebted to the State are above all price.
Historian F.S.C. Northrup noted in his book The Meeting of East and
West, The development of German thought and culture
following Kant clearly shows the individual person becomes swallowed up
in the Absolute.
Hegels work increasingly
dominated 19th-century and early 20th-century thinking about the state.
German philosopher Ernst Cassirer observed in 1945, No other
philosophical system has exerted such a strong and enduring influence
upon political life as the metaphysics of Hegel.... There has hardly been a
single great political system that has resisted its influence.
Cassirer noted that Hegels system is an entirely new type
of absolutism.
Mr. Bovard is the author of the newly published Feeling
Your Pain: The Explosion and Abuse of Government Power under
Clinton-Gore (St. Martins Press, August 2000).
Send to a friend
back to top
Subscribe to Freedom Daily.
|