There is something very seductive about the Libertarian political ideal. It presents a system in which no one has to do anything that they don't want to do. Taxes are minimal, if they exist at all, and you don't have government always getting involved in your personal life. Drugs and prostitution would be legal, foreign wars and "police actions" would disappear, and everyone could just live their lives without undue interference.
Sounds lovely. But it is a total farce. There is nothing real about this utopian image, either in terms of the practical realities involved nor in terms of the moral rectitude that it tries to convey.
Let me state that again, more bluntly: There is nothing moral about Libertarian policies. In fact, Libertarianism is decidedly amoral.
Most people recognize that government just works better than private enterprise when it comes to certain things such as firefighting, police, education, national defense, and a whole host of other government-funded services that Libertarians would prefer to turn over to the private sector. Pragmatically speaking, Libertarianism just doesn't work, and has never worked, so there is no reason to believe that it ever will work. But that is a practical argument. My argument is that even if it could be done, implementing Libertarianism would give us as many moral problems as we face now, if not more.
The central Libertarian moral argument is that nothing should be illegal if it doesn't hurt anyone else, and no one should be compelled to do anything that they do not want to do. While I tend to agree with the former, the latter smacks of a disaffected teenager who feels too adult to be told what to do, but isn't adult enough to do those things anyway because that is what adults do -- without being told.
Here is the crux of my argument: Imagine you are walking along, minding your own business, and you notice that someone is in a locked cage and they cannot get out without help. Libertarianism would tell you that you are under no obligation to let the person out of the cage. You didn't put them there, so it isn't your responsibility to let them out. Of course, you could let them out, and a nice person would let them out, but you are under no obligation to be nice. You have a right to be an asshole, and compelling you to let that person out of the cage is no less an affront to your human dignity than it is for that person to be in a cage to begin with, and two wrongs do not make a right.
There is a certain appeal to this sort of argument, and it is a good one on many levels. However, as a society do we really think that one person's right to be an asshole is on the same level as another person's right to be free? If the only way to get that person out of the cage is to compel you to open the door, then I feel bad for your hurt dignity, but I will barely notice those feelings -- what with being overjoyed by the fact that an enslaved human has been set free.
Okay, so maybe that's just me. I can see how someone might not agree, that it is always wrong to compel someone to do something that he doesn't want to do. So let's make our analogy resemble life a bit more fully: Now, in addition to seeing a cage with a stranger inside of it, you also notice an electronic sign on the cage that shows you exactly how much money is being deposited into your bank account every day that this person is locked up. This may be news to you -- The "magical" appearance of that money was such an integral part of your reality that you never really noticed it, in the same way that we tend not to notice the oxygen that we breath every moment of the day. Okay, so you didn't know the true origin of all that money before, but now that you know the truth, would it still be morally acceptable to allow the person to remain imprisoned while you profit from their incarceration?
At this point, most people will acknowledge that a good moral compass would compel you to let the person out of the cage. Even the appearance of a conflict of interest should be enough to get any but the biggest assholes out there to let the poor man out of the cage. It's the only right thing to do. If someone tries to tell you that the only reason they didn't open the door is because they are not obligated to do so, they are only fooling themselves. The fact that they benefit from the man's continued incarceration is not just a happy (for them) coincidence; it is what makes the right to be an asshole so appealing in the first place.
In the real world, the analogy of the cage represents the institutional advantages that some people have that others do not. As a white, English-speaking, middle class, American, straight male, I pretty much have all of those advantages locked up, and I was quite precocious in this regard -- I had most of them under my belt before I even left the uterus! It would have been easy for me to miss just how good I have it, because I've never known anything else. People just let me do what I want to do most of the time, and if they don't, there is usually some reason for it that has nothing to do with the fact that I am white, English-speaking, middle class, American, straight, or male. This is the only reality I have personally known.
However, many of my friends of color have had a very different experience of life. Many of the doors that were wide open for me were at least partially closed to them, if not completely nailed shut. My life has not been easy, but how much harder would it have been if I had to expend extra effort just to overcome the obstacles presented by having a darker complexion, or "inside parts" instead of "outside parts"?
Although it took some work, at this point in my life I feel no guilt for having advantages that others do not. I did not give myself these advantages, that's just the nature of the playing field I was born into. I can only have real guilt or regret for the choices I have personally made, not those made by others long before I was born.
At the same time, however, the fact that I did not give myself these advantages does not give me free rein to abuse those advantages, or even to accept them without some consideration of the responsibilities that come with them. If I have advantages that I never had to work for, and others have disadvantages that they never did anything to deserve, then there is an imbalance. An amoral person wouldn't care, as long as he was on the winning side of that equation. But a moral person does care. A moral person wants everyone to have all the same great opportunities that he has had in life. A moral person does not turn a blind eye to the injustices served to his fellow human beings, no matter how far removed he is from the decisions that caused such injustices.
This is why Libertarianism is amoral -- it rails against any legislation that would address these institutional iniquities through programs such as welfare, affirmative action, social services, Pell grants, or any other publicly funded program designed to help the disadvantaged. For them, this is an involuntary confiscation of the money that they earned, and no positive use of that money can offset the fact that they were "robbed" of it in the first place.
What this worldview fails to consider is this: How much of that money were they able to earn thanks to the institutional power structures that favored them over others? This is an impossible question to answer in detail, but it still needs to be asked, because that's how we stay honest with ourselves. And if we are honest with ourselves, we must acknowledge that some effort must be put into neutralizing institutional advantages that lift some up by putting other people down. Until these iniquities no longer exist, and no longer present a danger of returning, Libertarian philosophies are -- in effect, if not intent -- little more than a smoke screen to protect the advantages of those already at the top. And there is nothing moral about that.
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I think that there is an incorrect assumption that libertarians think that a life of freedom is somehow 'utopian'. Freedom is often VERY messy, but it's preferably to being in nice cages. The great thing about the libertarian position is that if you would like to voluntarily place yourself in bondage to someone who will provide for you, you are more than welcome to do that- no one will stop you.
ReplyDeleteBut the alternative is not true. If I want freedom in your society to do drugs, if I want to, you won't let me.
And I don't understand AT ALL how you would call 'allowing people do do what they wish' as amoral, while saying that using force against them is somehow moral. Also, it assumes that some guy in Washington DC, who represents Goldman Sachs, knows better what I need than I do.
Also, to say that 'libertarianism has never worked' is like saying that the more than 100 years of our country, where we became the most economically prosperous country in the world, incorporating millions of immigrants while allowing them upward mobility and whose children almost always had a better life than they did was a 'disaster'. While at the same time claiming that the past 70 plus years of almost constant war, increasing income disparity, increasing poverty, forcible taxation, impossible to pay federal debt, 50% of the population in such dire straights that they rely on some sort of state assistance - has been a 'success'. Was the first 100 plus years a 'utopia'? Of course not. There were many problems, but it was good enough that people waxed poetic about the 'American Dream' and saved up to bring their relatives here. Today, even Mexican illegal immigrants are leaving, and few people have written, of late, about the 'American Dream'.
There is a great picture that goes around Facebook once in a while of a bear at a zoo that is standing on tiptoes trying to see over the wall of his cage, as if he's pining for freedom. Despite the fact that the wild can be messier, that food might be hard to come by, that there might be predators that try to hurt you, most people understand that life for a bear in the wild is far better for them than in a pretty cage. Why don't you assume that the same is true for humans?
Is it 'amoral' to let bears out of their cages and be free despite the fact that their life might be harder and that they will be pursuing 'their own self interests'., or is it amoral to keep them in a cage doing tricks which 'benefit society', when they would rather be free?
Wow. Nathan's article is so full of false and unverifiable information, I can't begin to know where to start to comment. I am not a Libertarian, but to say the government does anything better than private enterprise is totally, observably false.
ReplyDeleteWell ... considering you built the entire thing around a straw man ... its going to be slightly difficult to be rational while refuting what you said...
ReplyDeletewell ok ... so you also had
Appeal to Consequences
Appeal to Fear
Confusing Cause and Effect
I suggest you maybe rewrite your article and remove those fallacies ...
Nathan said, "Most people recognize that government just works better than private enterprise when it comes to certain things such as firefighting, police, education, national defense,"
ReplyDelete"Most people" also used to believe that the earth was the center of the universe and that the gods caused us to become sick to punish us. The fact that 'most people' believe something has absolutely nothing to do with scientific fact, and it's amazing to see an article done by a guy with a philosophy degree that includes the phrase 'most people believe' as if that makes it a fact.
This article is well written, informative and polite, but the central argument is a straw man. Nathan Whiteside presents a picture of a person trapped in a cage as an example of oppression in society. His premise is that libertarian principles apply to just the passive onlooker, but not to the cage. The fallacy is the implicit assumption that oppression, and injustice are like a cage. They are not.
ReplyDeleteOppression is an action. People who are oppressed, hurt, stolen from or victimized, in todays world, are not the result of well-designed hardware. They are the result of ACTIONS that people take. For every victim of theft, there is a thief. Weather they had a knife or a gun is irrelevant, and the fact that libertarianism does not punish knives or guns does not justify any crime involving such.
Peace and respect are not actions. They are simply the absence of aggression or disrespect. No government is required for there to be peace or respect between any two people. No agency can create peace or respect. It cannot make actions disappear. It can only act. That is the crux of the problem. If we hold people responsible for their actions and their actions alone, we don't need to punish innocent bystanders. We punish the people who put the person in the cage.
I can show that government will, at the very best, be less efficient in anything it does through a simple observation on how government budgets work. If you do not spend the money you get in your budget for that fiscal period, you will get that much less in your budget for the next period. This encourages government departments to spend the money on things they really don't need. I've heard of stories of dumping brand new equipment into the ocean and idling trucks for hours on end just to use up gas. Also, since tax money must be paid by force (or face jail time), the government has a seemingly unending stream of cash coming in.
ReplyDeleteThis budgetary system encourages massive waste.
Private businesses typically don't work this way--departments within big companies must still show a result of the money invested from the top, otherwise, their funding is pulled and the people would be fired for failing to produce.
Companies have a bottom line, and since they don't have a never-ending revenue stream from a captive audience, they must persuade their customers to purchase their products and services, or go bankrupt.
"The central Libertarian moral argument is that nothing should be illegal if it doesn't hurt anyone else, and no one should be compelled to do anything that they do not want to do."
ReplyDeleteAnd your argument is that it is perfectly moral to use violent force to compel people, who have harmed none, to pay for things they don't want, don't need, never asked for and/or are morally opposed to? This, in your mind, is moral?
"While I tend to agree with the former, the latter smacks of a disaffected teenager who feels too adult to be told what to do, but isn't adult enough to do those things anyway because that is what adults do -- without being told."
It only smacks of teenage angst because you seem to think libertarianism is all about "fuck you, don't tell me what to do!!!!" But it's not that at all. Libertarians are big fans of rules. For example, no libertarian will tell you that signing a contract, then defrauding the other party by failing to deliver the promised consideration is okay, and no one should compel the party to make good on their promises.
No libertarian would be down with dumping garbage on someone else's property and they snubbing their nose "NO! I won't clean it up, and you can't make me!!!!!"
Those are not libertarian ideals. The libertarian says that people ought to fulfill their contracts, make good on their promises, and do no harm to others.
Why are you attacking this simple philosophy of peace and prosperity? Why are you so threatened by it? Do you work for the state?
Wow absolutely terrible article. Misses the entire point of libertarian ideals and deserves no rebuttal. Mr Whiteside is either terribly misinformed or just being a troll
ReplyDelete