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Liberty and Virtue: Invaluable and Inseparable, Part 1
by Doug Bandow, December 1999
There is no quicker means of raising a skeptical eye among many
conservatives and libertarians alike than to endorse both liberty and
virtue. Many people who consider freedom the preeminent political objective
perceive support for virtue to be an implicit call for restrictive new
laws. More than a few advocates of virtue treat a vigorous defense of
liberty like the promotion of vice. This mutual hostility is evidenced by
the growing strains between many economic libertarians and social
conservatives, who once submerged their differences in the pursuit of
common goals. Yet neither liberty nor virtue is likely to survive alone.
Both freedom and virtue are under serious assault today. Government takes
and spends nearly half of the nation's income. Regulation further extends
the power of the state in virtually every area of people's lives.
Increasing numbers of important, personal decisions are ultimately made by
some public functionary somewhere. Virtue, too, seems to be losing ground
daily. The legal and political systems are increasingly based on theft and
irresponsibility. Families and communities increasingly break down, if they
form at all. Popular culture celebrates many of humanity's worst
attributes.
At this critical time, some supporters of either liberty or virtue are
setting one against the other, treating them as frequent antagonists, if
not permanent opponents. At the very least, the competing advocates
suggest, you cannot maximize both values, but instead have to choose which
to expand and which to constrict.
However, it would be a mistake to assume that one must be sacrificed for
the other. Rather, freedom and morality are complementary. That is, liberty
-- the right to exercise choice, free from coercive state regulation -- is
a necessary precondition for virtue. And virtue is ultimately necessary for
the survival of liberty. Anyone interested in building a good society
should desire to live in a community that cherishes both values. As Robert
Sirico of the Acton Institute points out, "Common sense tells any sane
person that a society that is both free and virtuous is the place he or she
would most want to live."
Virtue cannot exist without freedom, without the right to make moral
choices. Coerced acts of conformity with some moral norm, however good, do
not represent virtue; rather, the compliance with that moral norm must be
voluntary. As Sirico explains, liberty should be seen "as the overarching
context in which anything may be said to be virtuous."
There are times, of course, when coercion is absolutely necessary -- most
importantly, to enforce an interpersonal moral code governing the relations
of one to another. Sanctions against crimes such as murder, enforcement of
contracts and property ownership, and prohibition of fraud are obvious
examples. In these cases, law is necessary not to promote virtue, which
depends on voluntary compliance based on internal conscience, but to defend
the rights of people.
Very different, however, are attempts to mandate virtue, which reflects a
standard of intrapersonal morality. As such, it is an area that lies
largely beyond the reach of state power. Which makes the role of
non-governmental institutions, particularly the family and church, so much
more important.
The statist temptation nevertheless remains strong, and for obvious
reasons. America today does not seem to be a particularly virtuous place.
But then, the natural human condition, certainly in Christian theology, and
in historical experience, too, is not one of virtue. "There is no one
righteous, not even one," Paul wrote in his letter to the Roman church,
citing the Psalms (Rom. 3:10). This explains the necessity of a
transcendent plan of redemption.
Societies can be more or less virtuous. Although one should be skeptical of
the assumption that there ever was a "golden age," symptoms of moral
decline do surround us. The critical question, however, is: Did America
(and other nations) become less virtuous because government no longer tries
so hard to mold souls? Blaming moral shifts on legal changes mistakes
correlation for causation.
In fact, America's one-time cultural consensus eroded during an era of
strict laws against homosexuality, pornography, adultery, and even
fornication. Only the end of this consensus led to changes in the law. In
short, as more people viewed sexual mores as a matter of taste rather than
as a question of right and wrong, the moral underpinnings of the laws
collapsed, followed by the laws themselves. The loss of virtue fatally
undermined the laws supposedly promoting virtue, not the other way around.
This phenomenon should surprise no one. Government has proved that it is
not a particularly good teacher of virtue. The state tends to be effective
at simple, blunt tasks, such as killing and jailing people. It has been far
less successful at the much more delicate task of reshaping individual
consciences. Even if one could pass the laws without changing America's
current moral ethic, the result would not be a more virtuous nation. True,
there might be fewer overt acts of immorality. But there would be no change
in individual hearts: Forcibly preventing people from victimizing
themselves does not automatically make them more righteous. It is, in
short, one thing to improve appearances, but quite another to improve
society's moral core. And the latter is what virtue is all about.
Mr. Bandow is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and the author of
several books, including Beyond Good Intentions: A Biblical View of
Politics (Crossway) and The Politics of Envy: Statism as Theology
(Transaction).
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