<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>Thomas Jefferson &#8211; The American Mercury</title>
	<atom:link href="https://theamericanmercury.org/tag/thomas-jefferson/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>https://theamericanmercury.org</link>
	<description>Founded by H.L. Mencken in 1924</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Tue, 01 Jun 2010 15:01:35 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language>en-US</language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>
	hourly	</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>
	1	</sy:updateFrequency>
	
	<item>
		<title>Anarchist&#8217;s Progress</title>
		<link>https://theamericanmercury.org/2010/06/anarchists-progress/</link>
					<comments>https://theamericanmercury.org/2010/06/anarchists-progress/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Ann Hendon]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 01 Jun 2010 15:01:35 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Vintage Mercury]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Albert Jay Nock]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Anarchism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Democrats]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Freedom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Libertarianism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Liberty]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Republicans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The American Mercury]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Thomas Jefferson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[US Constitution]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://theamericanmercury.org/?p=733</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[by Albert Jay Nock This classic essay on freedom was published in The American Mercury in 1927. I. The Majesty of the Law When I was seven years old, playing in front of our house on the outskirts of Brooklyn one morning, a policeman stopped and chatted with me for a few moments. He was a kindly man, of a <a class="more-link" href="https://theamericanmercury.org/2010/06/anarchists-progress/">Continue Reading &#8594;</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by Albert Jay Nock</p>
<p>This classic essay on freedom was published in <em>The</em> <em>American Mercury</em> in  1927.</p>
<p><strong><a name="i">I.  The Majesty of the Law</a></strong></p>
<p>When I was seven years old, playing in front of our house on the  outskirts of Brooklyn one morning, a policeman stopped and chatted with  me for a few moments. He was a kindly man, of a Scandinavian blonde type  with pleasant blue eyes, and I took to him at once. He sealed our  acquaintance permanently by telling me a story that I thought was  immensely funny; I laughed over it at intervals all day. I do not  remember what it was, but it had to do with the antics of a drove of  geese in our neighborhood. He impressed me as the most entertaining and  delightful person that I had seen in a long time, and I spoke of him to  my parents with great pride.</p>
<p>At this time I did not know what policemen were. No doubt I had seen  them, but not to notice them. Now, naturally, after meeting this highly  prepossessing specimen, I wished to find out all I could about them, so I  took the matter up with our old colored cook. I learned from her that  my fine new friend represented something that was called the law; that  the law was very good and great, and that everyone should obey and  respect it. This was reasonable; if it were so, then my admirable friend  just fitted his place, and was even more highly to be thought of, if  possible.</p>
<p>I asked where the law came from, and it was explained to me that men  all over the country got together on what was called election day, and  chose certain persons to make the law and others to see that it was  carried out; and that the sum total of all this mechanism was called our  government. This again was as it should be; the men I knew, such as my  father, my uncle George, and Messrs. So-and-so among the neighbors  (running them over rapidly in my mind), could do this sort of thing  handsomely, and there was probably a good deal in the idea. But what was  it all for! Why did we have law and government, anyway! Then I learned  that there were persons called criminals; some of them stole, some hurt  or killed people or set fire to houses; and it was the duty of men like  my friend the policeman to protect us from them. If he saw any he would  catch them and lock them up, and they would be punished according to the  law.</p>
<p>A year or so later we moved to another house in the same  neighborhood, only a short distance away. On the corner of the block –  rather a long block – behind our house stood a large one-story wooden  building, very dirty and shabby, called the Wigwam. While getting the  lie of my new surroundings, I considered this structure and remarked  with disfavor the kind of people who seemed to be making themselves at  home there. Someone told me it was a &#8220;political headquarters,&#8221; but I did  not know what that meant, and therefore did not connect it with my  recent researches into law and government. I had little curiosity about  the Wigwam. My parents never forbade my going there, but my mother once  casually told me that it was a pretty good place to keep away from, and I  agreed with her.</p>
<p>Two months later I heard someone say that election day was shortly  coming on, and I sparked up at once; this, then, was the day when the  lawmakers were to be chosen. There had been great doings at the Wigwam  lately; in the evenings, too, I had seen noisy processions of drunken  loafers passing our house, carrying transparencies and tin torches that  sent up clouds of kerosene smoke. When I had asked what these meant, I  was answered in one word, &#8220;politics,&#8221; uttered in a disparaging tone, but  this signified nothing to me. The fact is that my attention had been  attracted by a steam calliope that went along with one of the first of  these processions, and I took it to mean that there was a circus going  on; and when I found that there was no circus, I was disappointed and  did not care what else might be taking place.</p>
<p>On hearing of election day, however, the light broke in on me. I was  really witnessing the august performances that I had heard of from our  cook. All these processions of yelling hoodlums who sweat and stank in  the parboiling humidity of the Indian-summer evenings – all the squalid  goings on in the Wigwam – all these, it seemed, were part and parcel of  an election. I noticed that the men whom I knew in the neighborhood were  not prominent in this election; my uncle George voted, I remember, and  when he dropped in at our house that evening, I overheard him say that  going to the polls was a filthy business. I could not make it out.  Nothing could be clearer than that the leading spirits in the whole  affair were most dreadful swine; and I wondered by what kind of magic  they could bring forth anything so majestic, good, and venerable as the  law. But I kept my questionings to myself for some reason, though, as a  rule, I was quite a hand for pestering older people about matters that  seemed anomalous. Finally, I gave it up as hopeless, and thought no more  about the subject for three years.</p>
<p>An incident of that election night, however, stuck in my memory. Some  devoted brother, very far gone in whisky, fell by the wayside in a  vacant lot just back of our house, on his way to the Wigwam to await the  returns. He lay there all night, mostly in a comatose state. At  intervals of something like half an hour he roused himself up in the  darkness, apparently aware that he was not doing his duty by the  occasion, and tried to sing the chorus of &#8220;Marching Through Georgia,&#8221;  but he could never get quite through three measures of the first bar  before relapsing into somnolence. It was very funny; he always began so  bravely and earnestly, and always petered out so lamentably. I often  think of him. His general sense of political duty, I must say, still  seems to me as intelligent and as competent as that of any man I have  met in the many, many years that have gone by since then, and his mode  of expressing it still seems about as effective as any I could suggest.</p>
<p><strong><a name="ii">II.  Reformers, Noble and Absurd</a></strong></p>
<p>When I was just past my tenth birthday we left Brooklyn and went to  live in a pleasant town of ten thousand population. An orphaned cousin  made her home with us, a pretty girl, who soon began to cut a fair swath  among the young men of the town. One of these was an extraordinary  person, difficult to describe. My father, a great tease, at once  detected his resemblance to a chimpanzee, and bored my cousin abominably  by always speaking of him as Chim. The young man was not a popular idol  by any means, yet no one thought badly of him. He was accepted  everywhere as a source of legitimate diversion, and in the graduated,  popular scale of local speech was invariably designated as a fool – a  born fool, for which there was no help.</p>
<p>When I heard he was a lawyer, I was so astonished that I actually  went into the chicken court one day to hear him plead some trifling  case, out of sheer curiosity to see him in action; and I must say I got  my money&#8217;s worth. Presently the word went around that he was going to  run for Congress, and stood a good chance of being elected; and what  amazed me above all was that no one seemed to see anything out of the  way about it.</p>
<p>My tottering faith in law and government got a hard jolt from this.  Here was a man, a very good fellow indeed – he had nothing in common  with the crew who herded around the Wigwam – who was regarded by the  unanimous judgment of the community, without doubt, peradventure, or  exception, as having barely sense enough to come in when it rained; and  this was the man whom his party was sending to Washington as contentedly  as if he were some Draco or Solon. At this point my sense of humor  forged to the front and took permanent charge of the situation, which  was fortunate for me, since otherwise my education would have been  aborted, and I would perhaps, like so many who have missed this great  blessing, have gone in with the reformers and uplifters; and such a  close shave as this, in the words of Rabelais, is a terrible thing to  think upon.</p>
<p>How many reformers there have been in my day; how nobly and absurdly  busy they were, and how dismally unhumorous! I can dimly remember  Pingree and Altgeld in the Middle West, and Godkin, Strong, and Seth Low  in New York. During the nineties, the goodly fellowship of the prophets  buzzed about the whole country like flies around a tar barrel – and,  Lord! where be they now?</p>
<p><strong><a name="iii">III. To Abolish Crime or to Monopolize It?</a></strong></p>
<p>It will easily be seen, I think, that the only unusual thing about  all this was that my mind was perfectly unprepossessed and blank  throughout. My experiences were surely not uncommon, and my reasonings  and inferences were no more than any child, who was more than  halfwitted, could have made without trouble. But my mind had never been  perverted or sophisticated; it was left to itself. I never went to  school, so I was never indoctrinated with pseudo-patriotic fustian of  any kind, and the plain, natural truth of such matters as I have been  describing, therefore, found its way to my mind without encountering any  artificial obstacle.</p>
<p>This freedom continued, happily, until my mind had matured and  toughened. When I went to college I had the great good luck to hit on  probably the only one in the country (there certainly is none now) where  all such subjects were so remote and unconsidered that one would not  know they existed. I had Greek, Latin, and mathematics, and nothing  else, but I had these until the cows came home; then I had them all over  again (or so it seemed) to make sure nothing was left out; then I was  given a bachelor&#8217;s degree in the liberal arts, and turned adrift.</p>
<p>The idea was that if one wished to go in for some special branch of  learning, one should do it afterward, on the foundation laid at college.  The college&#8217;s business was to lay the foundation, and the authorities  saw to it that we were kept plentifully busy with the job. Therefore,  all such subjects as political history, political science, and political  economy were closed to me throughout my youth and early manhood; and  when the time came that I wished to look into them, I did it on my own,  without the interference of instructors, as any person who has gone  through a course of training similar to mine at college is quite  competent to do.</p>
<p>That time, however, came much later, and meanwhile I thought little  about law and government, as I had other fish to fry; I was living more  or less out of the world, occupied with literary studies. Occasionally  some incident happened that set my mind perhaps a little farther along  in the old sequences, but not often. Once, I remember, I ran across the  case of a boy who had been sentenced to prison, a poor, scared little  brat, who had intended something no worse than mischief, and it turned  out to be a crime. The judge said he disliked to sentence the lad; it  seemed the wrong thing to do; but the law left him no option. I was  struck by this. The judge, then, was doing something as an official that  he would not dream of doing as a man; and he could do it without any  sense of responsibility, or discomfort, simply because he was acting as  an official and not as a man. On this principle of action, it seemed to  me that one could commit almost any kind of crime without getting into  trouble with one&#8217;s conscience.</p>
<p>Clearly, a great crime had been committed against this boy; yet  nobody who had had a hand in it – the judge, the jury, the prosecutor,  the complaining witness, the policemen and jailers – felt any  responsibility about it, because they were not acting as men, but as  officials. Clearly, too, the public did not regard them as criminals,  but rather as upright and conscientious men.</p>
<p>The idea came to me then, vaguely but unmistakably, that if the  primary intention of government was not to abolish crime but merely to  monopolize crime, no better device could be found for doing it than the  inculcation of precisely this frame of mind in the officials and in the  public; for the effect of this was to exempt both from any allegiance to  those sanctions of humanity or decency which anyone of either class,  acting as an individual, would have felt himself bound to respect – nay,  would have wished to respect. This idea was vague at the moment, as I  say, and I did not work it out for some years, but I think I never quite  lost track of it from that time.</p>
<p>Presently I got acquainted in a casual way with some officeholders,  becoming quite friendly with one in particular, who held a high elective  office. One day he happened to ask me how I would reply to a letter  that bothered him; it was a query about the fitness of a certain man for  an appointive job. His recommendation would have weight; he liked the  man, and really wanted to recommend him – moreover, he was under great  political pressure to recommend him – but he did not think the man was  qualified. Well, then, I suggested offhand, why not put it just that  way? – it seemed all fair and straightforward. &#8220;Ah yes,&#8221; he said, &#8220;but  if I wrote such a letter as that, you see, I wouldn&#8217;t be reelected.&#8221;</p>
<p>This took me aback a bit, and I demurred somewhat. &#8220;That&#8217;s all very  well,&#8221; he kept insisting, &#8220;but I wouldn&#8217;t be reelected.&#8221; Thinking to  give the discussion a semihumorous turn, I told him that the public,  after all, had rights in the matter; he was their hired servant, and if  he were not reelected it would mean merely that the public did not want  him to work for them any more, which was quite within their competence.  Moreover, if they threw him out on any such issue as this, he ought to  take it as a compliment; indeed, if he were reelected, would it not tend  to show in some measure that he and the people did not fully understand  each other! He did not like my tone of levity, and dismissed the  subject with the remark that I knew nothing of practical politics, which  was no doubt true.</p>
<p><strong><a name="iv">IV.  The Prevalent Air of Cynicism</a></strong></p>
<p>Perhaps a year after this I had my first view of a legislative body  in action. I visited the capital of a certain country, and listened  attentively to the legislative proceedings. What I wished to observe,  first of all, was the kind of business that was mostly under discussion;  and next, I wished to get as good a general idea as I could of the kind  of men who were entrusted with this business. I had a friend on the  spot, formerly a newspaper reporter who had been in the press gallery  for years; he guided me over the government buildings, taking me  everywhere and showing me everything I asked to see.</p>
<p>As we walked through some corridors in the basement of the Capitol, I  remarked the resonance of the stonework. &#8220;Yes,&#8221; he said, thoughtfully,  &#8220;these walls, in their time, have echoed to the uncertain footsteps of  many a drunken statesman.&#8221; His words were made good in a few moments  when we heard a spirited commotion ahead, which we found to proceed from  a good-sized room, perhaps a committee room, opening off the corridor.  The door being open, we stopped, and looked in on a strange sight.</p>
<p>In the center of the room, a florid, square-built, portly man was  dancing an extraordinary kind of breakdown, or Kazakh dance. He leaped  straight up to an incredible height, spun around like a teetotum,  stamped his feet, then suddenly squatted and hopped through several  measures in a squatting position, his hands on his knees, and then  leaped up in the air and spun around again. He blew like a turkeycock,  and occasionally uttered hoarse cries; his protruding and fiery eyes  were suffused with blood, and the veins stood out on his neck and  forehead like the strings of a bass-viol. He was drunk.</p>
<p>About a dozen others, also very drunk, stood around him in crouching  postures, some clapping their hands and some slapping their knees,  keeping time to the dance. One of them caught sight of us in the  doorway, came up, and began to talk to me in a maundering fashion about  his constituents. He was a loathsome human being; I have seldom seen one  so repulsive. I could make nothing of what he said; he was almost  inarticulate; and in pronouncing certain syllables he would slaver and  spit, so that I was more occupied with keeping out of his range than  with listening to him. He kept trying to buttonhole me, and I kept  moving backward; he had backed me thirty feet down the corridor when my  friend came along and disengaged me; and as we resumed our way, my  friend observed for my consolation that &#8220;you pretty well need a  mackintosh when X talks to you, even when he is sober.&#8221;</p>
<p>This man, I learned, was interested in the looting of certain  valuable public lands; nobody had heard of his ever being interested in  any other legislative measures. The florid man who was dancing was  interested in nothing but a high tariff on certain manufactures; he  shortly became a Cabinet officer. Throughout my stay I was struck by  seeing how much of the real business of legislation was in this category  – how much, that is, had to do with putting unearned money in the  pockets of beneficiaries – and what fitful and perfunctory attention the  legislators gave to any other kind of business. I was even more  impressed by the prevalent air of cynicism; by the frankness with which  everyone seemed to acquiesce in the view of Voltaire, that government is  merely a device for taking money out of one person&#8217;s pocket and putting  it into another&#8217;s.</p>
<p><strong><a name="v">V.  The Unique Anomalies of the State</a></strong></p>
<p>These experiences, commonplace as they were, prepared me to pause  over and question certain sayings of famous men, when subsequently I ran  across them, which otherwise I would perhaps have passed by without  thinking about them. When I came upon the saying of Lincoln, that the  way of the politician is &#8220;a long step removed from common honesty,&#8221; it  set a problem for me. I wondered just why this should be generally true,  if it were true. When I read the remark of Mr. Jefferson, that  &#8220;whenever a man has cast a longing eye on office, a rottenness begins in  his conduct,&#8221; I remembered the judge who had sentenced the boy, and my  officeholding acquaintance who was so worried about reelection. I tried  to reexamine their position, as far as possible putting myself in their  place, and made a great effort to understand it favorably.</p>
<p>My first view of a parliamentary body came back to me vividly when I  read the despondent observation of John Bright, that he had sometimes  known the British Parliament to do a good thing, but never just because  it was a good thing. In the meantime I had observed many legislatures,  and their principal occupations and preoccupations seemed to me  precisely like those of the first one I ever saw; and while their  personnel was not by any means composed throughout of noisy and  disgusting scoundrels (neither, I hasten to say, was the first one), it  was so unimaginably inept that it would really have to be seen to be  believed. I cannot think of a more powerful stimulus to one&#8217;s  intellectual curiosity, for instance, than to sit in the galleries of  the last Congress, contemplate its general run of membership, and then  recall these sayings of Lincoln, Mr. Jefferson, and John Bright.<a id="_ftnref1" title="_ftnref1" name="_ftnref1">[1]</a></p>
<p>It struck me as strange that these phenomena seemed never to stir any  intellectual curiosity in anybody. As far as I know, there is no record  of its ever having occurred to Lincoln that the fact he had remarked  was striking enough to need accounting for; nor yet to Mr. Jefferson,  whose intellectual curiosity was almost boundless; nor yet to John  Bright. As for the people around me, their attitudes seemed strangest of  all. They all disparaged politics. Their common saying, &#8220;Oh, that&#8217;s  politics,&#8221; always pointed to something that in any other sphere of  action they would call shabby and disreputable. But they never asked  themselves why it was that in this one sphere of action alone they took  shabby and disreputable conduct as a matter of course. It was all the  more strange because these same people still somehow assumed that  politics existed for the promotion of the highest social purposes. They  assumed that the State&#8217;s primary purpose was to promote through  appropriate institutions the general welfare of its members.</p>
<p>This assumption, whatever it amounted to, furnished the rationale of  their patriotism, and they held to it with a tenacity that on slight  provocation became vindictive and fanatical. Yet all of them were aware,  and if pressed, could not help acknowledging, that more than 90 percent  of the State&#8217;s energy was employed directly against the general  welfare. Thus one might say that they seemed to have one set of credenda  for weekdays and another for Sundays, and never to ask themselves what  actual reasons they had for holding either.</p>
<p>I did not know how to take this, nor do I now. Let me draw a rough  parallel. Suppose vast numbers of people to be contemplating a machine  that they had been told was a plow, and very valuable – indeed, that  they could not get on without it – some even saying that its design came  down in some way from on high. They have great feelings of pride and  jealousy about this machine, and will give up their lives for it if they  are told it is in danger. Yet they all see that it will not plow well,  no matter what hands are put to manage it, and in fact does hardly any  plowing at all; sometimes only with enormous difficulty and continual  tinkering and adjustment can it be got to scratch a sort of furrow, very  poor and short, hardly practicable, and ludicrously disproportionate to  the cost and pains of cutting it. On the other hand, the machine  harrows perfectly, almost automatically. It looks like a harrow, has the  history of a harrow, and even when the most enlightened effort is  expended on it to make it act like a plow, it persists, except for an  occasional six or eight percent of efficiency, in acting like a harrow.</p>
<p>Surely such a spectacle would make an intelligent being raise some  inquiry about the nature and original intention of that machine. Was it  really a plow? Was it ever meant to plow with! Was it not designed and  constructed for harrowing? Yet none of the anomalies that I had been  observing ever raised any inquiry about the nature and original  intention of the State. They were merely acquiesced in. At most, they  were put down feebly to the imperfections of human nature which render  mismanagement and perversion of every good institution to some extent  inevitable; and this is absurd, for these anomalies do not appear in the  conduct of any other human institution. It is no matter of opinion, but  of open and notorious fact, that they do not. There are anomalies in  the church and in the family that are significantly analogous; they will  bear investigation, and are getting it; but the analogies are by no  means complete, and are mostly due to the historical connection of these  two institutions with the State.</p>
<p>Everyone knows that the State claims and exercises the monopoly of  crime that I spoke of a moment ago, and that it makes this monopoly as  strict as it can. It forbids private murder, but itself organizes murder  on a colossal scale. It punishes private theft, but itself lays  unscrupulous hands on anything it wants, whether the property of citizen  or of alien. There is, for example, no human right, natural or  constitutional, that we have not seen nullified by the United States  government. Of all the crimes that are committed for gain or revenge,  there is not one that we have not seen it commit – murder, mayhem,  arson, robbery, fraud, criminal collusion, and connivance. On the other  hand, we have all remarked the enormous relative difficulty of getting  the State to effect any measure for the general welfare.</p>
<p>Compare the difficulty of securing conviction in cases of notorious  malfeasance, and in cases of petty private crime. Compare the smooth and  easy going of the Teapot Dome transactions with the obstructionist  behavior of the State toward a national child-labor law. Suppose one  should try to get the State to put the same safeguards (no stronger)  around service income that with no pressure at all it puts around  capital income: what chance would one have? It must not be understood  that I bring these matters forward to complain of them. I am not  concerned with complaints or reforms, but only with the exhibition of  anomalies that seem to me to need accounting for.</p>
<p><strong><a name="vi">VI.  The Assumption of a Professional Criminal Class</a></strong></p>
<p>In the course of some desultory reading I noticed that the historian  Parkman, at the outset of his volume on the conspiracy of Pontiac,  dwells with some puzzlement, apparently, upon the fact that the Indians  had not formed a State. Mr. Jefferson, also, who knew the Indians well,  remarked the same fact – that they lived in a rather highly organized  society, but had never formed a State. Bicknell, the historian of Rhode  Island, has some interesting passages that bear upon the same point,  hinting that the collisions between the Indians and the whites may have  been largely due to a misunderstanding about the nature of land tenure;  that the Indians, knowing nothing of the British system of land tenure,  understood their land sales and land grants as merely an admission of  the whites to the same communal use of land that they themselves  enjoyed.</p>
<p>I noticed, too, that Marx devotes a good deal of space in <em>Das  Kapital</em> to proving that economic exploitation cannot take place in  any society until the exploited class has been expropriated from the  land. These observations attracted my attention as possibly throwing a  strong side light upon the nature of the State and the primary purpose  of government, and I made note of them accordingly. At this time I was a  good deal in Europe. I was in England and Germany during the Tangier  incident, studying the circumstances and conditions that led up to the  late war. My facilities for this were exceptional, and I used them  diligently. Here I saw the State behaving just as I had seen it behave  at home.</p>
<p>Moreover, remembering the political theories of the 18th century, and  the expectations put upon them, I was struck with the fact that the  republican, constitutional-monarchical, and autocratic States behaved  exactly alike. This has never been sufficiently remarked. There was no  practical distinction to be drawn among England, France, Germany, and  Russia; in all these countries the State acted with unvarying  consistency and unfailing regularity against the interests of the  immense, the overwhelming majority of its people.</p>
<p>So flagrant and flagitious, indeed, was the action of the State in  all these countries, that its administrative officials, especially its  diplomats, would immediately, in any other sphere of action, be put down  as a professional-criminal class – just as would the corresponding  officials in my own country, as I had already remarked. It is a  noteworthy fact, indeed, concerning all that has happened since then,  that if in any given circumstances one went on the assumption that they  were a professional-criminal class, one could predict with accuracy what  they would do and what would happen; while on any other assumption one  could predict almost nothing. The accuracy of my own predictions during  the war and throughout the Peace Conference was due to nothing but their  being based on this assumption.</p>
<p>The Liberal Party was in power in England in 1911, and my attention  became attracted to its tenets. I had already seen something of  liberalism in America as a kind of glorified mugwumpery. The Cleveland  Administration had long before proved what everybody already knew, that  there was no essential difference between the Republican and Democratic  parties; an election meant merely that one was in office and wished to  stay in, and the other was out and wished to get in. I saw precisely the  same relation prevailing between the two major parties in England, and I  was to see later the same relation sustained by the Labour  Administration of Mr. Ramsay MacDonald. All these political permutations  resulted only in what John Adams admirably called &#8220;a change of  impostors.&#8221;</p>
<p>But I was chiefly interested in the basic theory of Liberalism. This  seemed to be that the State is no worse than a degenerate or perverted  institution, beneficent in its original intention, and susceptible of  restoration by the simple expedient of &#8220;putting good men in office.&#8221;</p>
<p>I had already seen this experiment tried on several scales of  magnitude, and observed that it came to nothing commensurate with the  expectations put upon it or the enormous difficulty of arranging it.  Later I was to see it tried on an unprecedented scale, for almost all  the governments engaged in the war were liberal, notably the English and  our own. Its disastrous results in the case of the Wilson  Administration are too well known to need comment; though I do not wish  to escape the responsibility of saying that of all forms of political  impostorship, liberalism always seemed to me the most vicious, because  the most pretentious and specious. The general upshot of my  observations, however, was to show me that whether in the hands of  Liberal or Conservative, Republican or Democrat, and whether under  nominal constitutionalism, republicanism or autocracy, the mechanism of  the State would work freely and naturally in but one direction, namely,  against the general welfare of the people.</p>
<p><strong><a name="vii">VII. The Origin of the State</a></strong></p>
<p>So I set about finding out what I could about the origin of the  State, to see whether its mechanism was ever really meant to work in any  other direction – and here I came upon a very odd fact. All the current  popular assumptions about the origin of the State rest upon sheer  guesswork – none of them upon actual investigation. The treatises and  textbooks that came into my hands were also based, finally, upon  guesswork. Some authorities guessed that the State was originally formed  by this or that mode of social agreement; others, by a kind of muddling  empiricism; others, by the will of God; and so on. Apparently none of  these, however, had taken the plain course of going back upon the record  as far as possible to ascertain how it actually had been formed, and  for what purpose. It seemed that enough information must be available;  the formation of the State in America, for example, was a matter of  relatively recent history, and one must be able to find out a great deal  about it. Consequently I began to look around to see whether anyone had  ever anywhere made any such investigation, and if so, what it amounted  to.</p>
<p>I then discovered that the matter had, indeed, been investigated by  scientific methods, and that all the scholars of the Continent knew  about it, not as something new or startling, but as a sheer commonplace.  The State did not originate in any form of social agreement, or with  any disinterested view of promoting order and justice. Far otherwise.  The State originated in conquest and confiscation, as a device for  maintaining the stratification of society permanently into two classes –  an owning and exploiting class, relatively small, and a propertyless  dependent class. Such measures of order and justice as it established  were incidental and ancillary to this purpose; it was not interested in  any that did not serve this purpose; and it resisted the establishment  of any that were contrary to it. No State known to history originated in  any other manner, or for any other purpose than to enable the  continuous economic exploitation of one class by another.<a id="_ftnref2" title="_ftnref2" name="_ftnref2">[2]</a><a id="_ftnref2" title="_ftnref2" name="_ftnref2"></a></p>
<p>This at once cleared up all the anomalies which I had found so  troublesome. One could see immediately, for instance, why the hunting  tribes and primitive peasants never formed a State. Primitive peasants  never made enough of an economic accumulation to be worth stealing; they  lived from hand to mouth. The hunting tribes of North America never  formed a State, because the hunter was not exploitable. There was no way  to make another man hunt for you; he would go off in the woods and  forget to come back; and if he were expropriated from certain hunting  grounds, he would merely move on beyond them, the territory being so  large and the population so sparse. Similarly, since the State&#8217;s own  primary intention was essentially criminal, one could see why it cares  only to monopolize crime, and not to suppress it; this explained the  anomalous behavior of officials, and showed why it is that in their  public capacity, whatever their private character, they appear  necessarily as a professional-criminal class; and it further accounted  for the fact that the State never moves disinterestedly for the general  welfare, except grudgingly and under great pressure.</p>
<p>Again, one could perceive at once the basic misapprehension which  forever nullifies the labors of liberalism and reform. It was once quite  seriously suggested to me by some neighbors that I should go to  Congress. I asked them why they wished me to do that, and they replied  with some complimentary phrases about the satisfaction of having someone  of a somewhat different type &#8220;amongst those damned rascals down there.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Yes, but,&#8221; I said, &#8220;don&#8217;t you see that it would be only a matter of a  month or so – a very short time, anyway – before I should be a damned  rascal, too!&#8221;</p>
<p>No, they did not see this; they were rather taken aback; would I  explain!</p>
<p>&#8220;Suppose,&#8221; I said, &#8220;that you put in a Sunday-school superintendent or  a Y.M.C.A. secretary to run an assignation house on Broadway. He might  trim off some of the coarser fringes of the job, such as the badger game  and the panel game, and put things in what Mayor Gaynor used to call a  state of &#8216;outward order and decency,&#8217; but he must run an assignation  house, or he would promptly hear from the owners.&#8221;</p>
<p>This was a new view to them, and they went away thoughtful.</p>
<p>Finally, one could perceive the reason for the matter that most  puzzled me when I first observed a legislature in action, namely, the  almost exclusive concern of legislative bodies with such measures as  tend to take money out of one set of pockets and put it into another –  the preoccupation with converting labor-made property into law-made  property, and redistributing its ownership. The moment one becomes aware  that just this, over and above a purely legal distribution of the  ownership of natural resources, is what the State came into being for,  and what it yet exists for, one immediately sees that the legislative  bodies are acting altogether in character, and otherwise one cannot  possibly give oneself an intelligent account of their behavior.<a id="_ftnref3" title="_ftnref3" name="_ftnref3">[3]</a></p>
<p>Speaking for a moment in the technical terms of economics, there are  two general means whereby human beings can satisfy their needs and  desires. One is by work – i.e., by applying labor and capital to natural  resources for the production of wealth, or to facilitating the exchange  of labor-products. This is called the economic means. The other is by  robbery – i.e., the appropriation of the labor products of others  without compensation. This is called the political means. The State,  considered functionally, may be described as the organization of the  political means, enabling a comparatively small class of beneficiaries  to satisfy their needs and desires through various delegations of the  taxing power, which have no vestige of support in natural right, such as  private land ownership, tariffs, franchises, and the like.</p>
<p>It is a primary instinct of human nature to satisfy one&#8217;s needs and  desires with the least possible exertion; everyone tends by instinctive  preference to use the political means rather than the economic means, if  he can do so. The great desideratum in a tariff, for instance, is its  license to rob the domestic consumer of the difference between the price  of an article in a competitive and a non-competitive market. Every  manufacturer would like this privilege of robbery if he could get it,  and he takes steps to get it if he can, thus illustrating the powerful  instinctive tendency to climb out of the exploited class, which lives by  the economic means (exploited, because the cost of this privilege must  finally come out of production, there being nowhere else for it to come  from), and into the class which lives, wholly or partially, by the  political means.</p>
<p>This instinct – and this alone – is what gives the State its almost  impregnable strength. The moment one discerns this, one understands the  almost universal disposition to glorify and magnify the State, and to  insist upon the pretence that it is something which it is not –  something, in fact, the direct opposite of what it is. One understands  the complacent acceptance of one set of standards for the State&#8217;s  conduct, and another for private organizations – of one set for  officials, and another for private persons. One understands at once the  attitude of the press, the Church and educational institutions, their  careful inculcations of a specious patriotism, their nervous and  vindictive proscriptions of opinion, doubt, or even of question. One  sees why purely fictitious theories of the State and its activities are  strongly, often fiercely and violently, insisted on; why the simple  fundamentals of the very simple science of economics are shirked or  veiled; and why, finally, those who really know what kind of thing they  are promulgating, are loath to say so.</p>
<p><strong><a name="viii">VIII. After the Revolution, Napoleon!</a></strong></p>
<p>The outbreak of the war in 1914 found me entertaining the convictions  that I have here outlined. In the succeeding decade nothing has taken  place to attenuate them, but quite the contrary. Having set out only to  tell the story of how I came by them, and not to expound them or indulge  in any polemic for them, I may now bring this narrative to an end, with  a word about their practical outcome.</p>
<p>It has sometimes been remarked as strange that I never joined in any  agitation, or took the part of a propagandist for any movement against  the State, especially at a time when I had an unexampled opportunity to  do so. To do anything of the sort successfully, one must have more faith  in such processes than I have, and one must also have a certain  dogmatic turn of temperament, which I do not possess. To be quite  candid, I was never much for evangelization; I am not sure enough that  my opinions are right, and even if they were, a second-hand opinion is a  poor possession.</p>
<p>Reason and experience, I repeat, are all that determine our true  beliefs. So I never greatly cared that people should think my way, or  tried much to get them to do so. I should be glad if they thought – if  their general turn, that is, were a little more for disinterested  thinking, and a little less for impetuous action motivated by mere  unconsidered prepossession; and what little I could ever do to promote  disinterested thinking has, I believe, been done.</p>
<p>According to my observations (for which I claim nothing but that they  are all I have to go by) inaction is better than wrong action or  premature right action, and effective right action can only follow right  thinking.</p>
<p>&#8220;If a great change is to take place,&#8221; said Edmund Burke, in his last  words on the French Revolution, &#8220;the minds of men will be fitted to it.&#8221;</p>
<p>Otherwise the thing does not turn out well; and the processes by  which men&#8217;s minds are fitted seem to me untraceable and imponderable,  the only certainty about them being that the share of any one person, or  any one movement, in determining them is extremely small. Various  social superstitions, such as magic, the divine right of kings, the  Calvinist teleology, and so on, have stood out against many a vigorous  frontal attack, and thrived on it; and when they finally disappeared, it  was not under attack. People simply stopped thinking in those terms; no  one knew just when or why, and no one even was much aware that they had  stopped. So I think it very possible that while we are saying, &#8220;Lo,  here!&#8221; and &#8220;Lo, there!&#8221; with our eye on this or that revolution,  usurpation, seizure of power, or what not, the superstitions that  surround the State are quietly disappearing in the same way.<a id="_ftnref4" title="_ftnref4" name="_ftnref4">[4]</a><a id="_ftnref4" title="_ftnref4" name="_ftnref4"></a></p>
<p>My opinion of my own government and those who administer it can  probably be inferred from what I have written. Mr. Jefferson said that  if a centralization of power were ever effected at Washington, the  United States would have the most corrupt government on earth.</p>
<p>Comparisons are difficult, but I believe it has one that is  thoroughly corrupt, flagitious, tyrannical, oppressive. Yet if it were  in my power to pull down its whole structure overnight and set up  another of my own devising – to abolish the State out of hand, and  replace it by an organization of the economic means – I would not do it,  for the minds of Americans are far from fitted to any such great change  as this, and the effect would be only to lay open the way for the worse  enormities of usurpation – possibly, who knows! with myself as the  usurper! After the French Revolution, Napoleon!</p>
<p>Great and salutary social transformations, such as in the end do not  cost more than they come to, are not effected by political shifts, by  movements, by programs and platforms, least of all by violent  revolutions, but by sound and disinterested thinking. The believers in  action are numerous, their gospel is widely preached, they have many  followers.</p>
<p>Perhaps among those who will see what I have here written, there are  two or three who will agree with me that the believers in action do not  need us – indeed, that if we joined them, we should be rather a dead  weight for them to carry. We need not deny that their work is educative,  or pinch pennies when we count up its cost in the inevitable reactions  against it. We need only remark that our place and function in it are  not apparent, and then proceed on our own way, first with the more  obscure and extremely difficult work of clearing and illuminating our  own minds, and second, with what occasional help we may offer to others  whose faith, like our own, is set more on the regenerative power of  thought than on the uncertain achievements of premature action.</p>
<p><strong><a name="notes">Notes</a></strong></p>
<p><a id="_ftn1" title="_ftn1" name="_ftn1">[1]</a> As  indicating the impression made on a more sophisticated mind, I may  mention an amusing incident that happened to me in London two years ago.  Having an engagement with a member of the House of Commons, I filled  out a card and gave it to an attendant. By mistake I had written my name  where the member&#8217;s should be, and his where mine should be. The  attendant handed the card back, saying, &#8220;I&#8217;m afraid this will &#8216;ardly do,  sir. I see you&#8217;ve been making yourself a member. It doesn&#8217;t go quite as  easy as that, sir – though from some of what you see around &#8216;ere, I  wouldn&#8217;t say as &#8216;ow you mightn&#8217;t think so.&#8221;</p>
<p><a id="_ftn2" title="_ftn2" name="_ftn2">[2]</a> There  is a considerable literature on this subject, largely untranslated. As a  beginning, the reader may be conveniently referred to Mr. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_A._Beard">Charles A. Beard</a>&#8216;s  <em><a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=lHQiAAAAMAAJ&amp;pgis=1">Rise  of American Civilization</a></em> and his work on the Constitution of  the United States. After these he should study closely – for it is hard  reading – a small volume called <em>The State</em> by Professor Franz Oppenheimer, of the University of Frankfort. It has  been well translated and is easily available.</p>
<p><a id="_ftn3" title="_ftn3" name="_ftn3">[3]</a> When  the Republican convention which nominated Mr. Harding was almost over,  one of the party leaders met a man who was managing a kind of  dark-horse, or one-horse, candidate, and said to him,</p>
<blockquote><p>You can pack up that candidate of yours, and take him home now. I  can&#8217;t tell you who the next President will be; it will be one of three  men, and I don&#8217;t just yet know which. But I can tell you who the next  Secretary of the Interior will be, and that is the important question,  because there are still a few little things lying around loose that the  boys want.</p></blockquote>
<p>I had this from a United States Senator, a Republican, who told it to  me merely as a good story.</p>
<p><a id="_ftn4" title="_ftn4" name="_ftn4">[4]</a> The  most valuable result of the Russian Revolution is in its liberation of  the idea of the State as an engine of economic exploitation. In Denmark,  according to a recent article in <em>The English Review</em>, there is a  considerable movement for a complete separation of politics from  economics, which, if effected, would of course mean the disappearance of  the State.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
					<wfw:commentRss>https://theamericanmercury.org/2010/06/anarchists-progress/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
			<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		
		
			</item>
	</channel>
</rss>
