The Rise, Fall, and Renaissance of Classical Liberalism

Lumi

LOKI
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Aug 30, 2002
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[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Rise, Fall, and Renaissance of Classical Liberalism[/FONT]


<CENTER>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif][/FONT][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]by Ralph Raico[/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif][/FONT][/FONT]
by Ralph Raico [FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]
[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Recently by Ralph Raico: [/FONT][/FONT]
[/FONT][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]What Is Classical Liberalism?[/FONT] </CENTER><CENTER> </CENTER><CENTER>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]This article appeared in the Future of Freedom Foundation's[/FONT][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif] Freedom Daily, August 1992[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Classical liberalism ? or simply liberalism, as it was called until around the turn of the century ? is the signature political philosophy of Western civilization. Hints and suggestions of the liberal idea can be found in other great cultures. But it was the distinctive society produced in Europe ? and in the outposts of Europe, and above all America ? that served as the seedbed of liberalism. In turn, that society was decisively shaped by the liberal movement.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Decentralization and the division of power have been the hallmarks of the history of Europe. After the fall of Rome, no empire was ever able to dominate the continent. Instead, Europe became a complex mosaic of competing nations, principalities, and city-states. The various rulers found themselves in competition with each other. If one of them indulged in predatory taxation or arbitrary confiscations of property, he might well lose his most productive citizens, who could "exit," together with their capital. The kings also found powerful rivals in ambitious barons and in religious authorities that were backed by an international Church. Parliaments emerged that limited the taxing power of kings, and free cities arose with special charters that put the merchant elite in charge.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]By the Middle Ages, many parts of Europe, especially in the west, had developed a culture friendly to property rights and trade. On the philosophical level, the doctrine of natural law ? deriving from the Stoic philosophers of Greece and Rome ? taught that the natural order was independent of human design and that rulers were subordinate to the eternal laws of justice. Natural-law doctrine was upheld by the Church and promulgated in the great universities, from Oxford and Salamanca to Prague and Krakow.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]As the modern age began, rulers started to shake free of age-old customary constraints on their power. Royal absolutism became the main tendency of the time. The kings of Europe raised a novel claim: they declared that they were appointed by God to be the fountainhead of all life and activity in society. Accordingly, they sought to direct religion, culture, politics, and, especially, the economic life of the people. To support their burgeoning bureaucracies and constant wars, the rulers required ever-increasing quantities of taxes, which they tried to squeeze out of their subjects in ways that were contrary to precedent and custom.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The first people to revolt against this system were the Dutch. After a struggle that lasted for decades, they won their independence from Spain and proceeded to set up a unique polity. The United Provinces, as the radically decentralized state was called, had no king and little power at the federal level. Making money was the passion of these busy manufacturers and traders; they had no time for hunting heretics or suppressing new ideas. Thus de facto religious toleration and a wide-ranging freedom of the press came to prevail. Devoted to industry and trade, the Dutch established a legal system based solidly on the rule of law and the sanctity of property and contract. Taxes were low, and everyone worked. The Dutch "economic miracle" was the wonder of the age. Thoughtful observers throughout Europe noted the Dutch success with great interest.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]A society in many ways similar to Holland had developed across the North Sea. In the 17th century, England, too, was threatened by royal absolutism, in the form of the House of Stuart. The response was revolution, civil war, the beheading of one king and the booting out of another. In the course of this tumultuous century, the first movements and thinkers appeared that can be unequivocally identified as liberal.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]With the king gone, a group of middle-class radicals emerged called the Levellers. They protested that not even Parliament had the authority to usurp the natural, God-given rights of the people. Religion, they declared, was a matter of individual conscience; it should have no connection with the state. State-granted monopolies were likewise an infringement of natural liberty.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]A generation later, John Locke, drawing on the tradition of natural law that had been kept alive and elaborated by the Scholastic theologians, set forth a powerful liberal model of man, society, and state. Every man, he held, is innately endowed with certain natural rights. These consist in his fundamental right to what is his property ? that is, his life, liberty, and "estates" (or material goods). Government is formed simply to preserve the right to property. When, instead of protecting the natural rights of the people, a government makes war upon them, the people may alter or abolish it. The Lockean philosophy continued to exert influence in England for generations to come. In time, its greatest impact would be in the English-speaking colonies in North America.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The society that emerged in England after the victory over absolutism began to score astonishing successes in economic and cultural life. Thinkers from the continent, especially in France, grew interested. Some, like Voltaire and Montesquieu, came to see for themselves. Just as Holland had acted as a model before, now the example of England began to influence foreign philosophers and statesmen. The decentralization that has always marked Europe allowed the English "experiment" to take place and its success to act as a spur to other nations.[/FONT]
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</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]In the 18th century, thinkers were discovering a momentous fact about social life: given a situation where men enjoyed their natural rights, society more or less ran itself. In Scotland, a succession of brilliant writers that included David Hume and Adam Smith outlined the theory of the spontaneous evolution of social institutions. They demonstrated how immensely complex and vitally useful institutions ? language, morality, the common law, and above all the market ? originate and develop not as the product of the designing minds of social engineers, but as the result of the interactions of all the members of society pursuing their individual goals.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]In France, economists were coming to similar conclusions. The greatest of them, A.R.J. Turgot, set forth the rationale for the free market:[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The policy to pursue, therefore, is to follow the course of nature, without pretending to direct it. For, in order to direct trade and commerce it would be necessary to be able to have knowledge of all of the variations of needs, interests, and human industry in such detail as is physically impossible to obtain even by the most able, active, and circumstantial government. And even if a government did possess such a multitude of detailed knowledge, the result would be to let things go precisely as they do of themselves, by the sole action of the interests of men prompted by free competition.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The French economists coined a term for the policy of freedom in economic life ? they called it laissez-faire. Meanwhile, starting in the early 17th century, colonists coming mainly from England had established a new society on the eastern shores of North America. Under the influence of the ideas that the colonists brought with them and the institutions they developed, a unique way of life came into being. There was no aristocracy and very little government of any kind. Instead of aspiring to political power, the colonists worked to carve out a decent existence for themselves and their families.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Fiercely independent, they were equally committed to the peaceful ? and profitable ? exchange of goods. A complex network of trade sprang up, and by the mid-18th century the colonists were already more affluent than any other commoners in the world. Self-help was the guiding star in the realm of spiritual values as well. Churches, colleges, lending libraries, newspapers, lecture institutes, and cultural societies flourished through the voluntary cooperation of the citizens.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]When events led to a war for independence, the prevailing view of society was that it basically ran itself. As Tom Paine declared,[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Formal government makes but a small part of civilized life. It is to the great and fundamental principles of society and civilization ? to the unceasing circulation of interest, which passing through its million channels, invigorates the whole mass of civilized man ? it is to these, infinitely more than to anything which even the best instituted government can perform that the safety and prosperity of the individual and the whole depend. In fine, society performs for itself almost everything which is ascribed to government. Government is no further necessary than to supply the few cases to which society and civilization are not conveniently competent.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]In time, the new society formed on the philosophy of natural rights would serve as an even more luminous exemplar of liberalism to the world than had Holland and England before it.[/FONT]
<HR align=center width=300>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]As the 19th century began, classical liberalism ? or just liberalism, as the philosophy of freedom was then known ? was the specter haunting Europe ? and the world. In every advanced country the liberal movement was active.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Drawn mainly from the middle classes, it included people from widely contrasting religious and philosophical backgrounds. Christians, Jews, deists, agnostics, utilitarians, believers in natural rights, freethinkers, and traditionalists all found it possible to work towards one fundamental goal: expanding the area of the free functioning of society and diminishing the area of coercion and the state.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Emphases varied with the circumstances of different countries. Sometimes, as in central and eastern Europe, the liberals demanded the rollback of the absolutist state and even the residues of feudalism. Accordingly, the struggle centered on full private-property rights in land, religious liberty, and the abolition of serfdom. In western Europe, the liberals often had to fight for free trade, full freedom of the press, and the rule of law as sovereign over state functionaries.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]In America, the liberal country par excellence, the chief aim was to fend off incursions of government power pushed by Alexander Hamilton and his centralizing successors, and, eventually, somehow, to deal with the great stain on American freedom ? Negro slavery.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]From the standpoint of liberalism, the United States was remarkably lucky from the start. Thomas Jefferson, one of the leading liberal thinkers of his time, composed its founding document, the Declaration of Independence. The Declaration radiated the vision of society as consisting of individuals enjoying their natural rights and pursuing their self-determined goals. In the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, the Founders created a system where power would be divided, limited, and hemmed in by multiple constraints, while individuals could go about the quest for fulfillment through work, family, friends, self-cultivation, and the dense network of voluntary associations. In this new land, government ? as European travelers noted with awe ? could hardly be said to exist at all. This was the America that became a model to the world.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]One perpetuator of the Jeffersonian tradition in the early 19th century was William Leggett, a New York journalist and antislavery, Jacksonian Democrat. Leggett declared,[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]All governments are instituted for the protection of person and property; and the people only delegate to their rulers such powers as are indispensable to these objects. The people want no government to regulate their private concerns, or to prescribe the course and mete out the profits of their industry. Protect their persons and property, and all the rest they can do for themselves.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]This laissez-faire philosophy became the bedrock creed of countless Americans of all classes. In the generations to come, it found an echo in the work of liberal writers like E.L. Godkin, Albert Jay Nock, H.L. Mencken, Frank Chodorov, and Leonard Read. To the rest of the world, this was the distinctively, characteristically American outlook.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Meanwhile, the economic advance that had been slowly gaining momentum in the Western world burst out in a great leap forward. First in Britain, then in America and western Europe, the Industrial Revolution transformed the life of man as nothing had since the Neolithic age. Now it became possible for the vast majority of mankind to escape the immemorial misery they had grown to accept as their unalterable lot. Now tens of millions who would have perished in the inefficient economy of the old order were able to survive. As the populations of Europe and America swelled to unprecedented levels, the new masses gradually achieved living standards unimaginable for working people before.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The birth of the industrial order was accompanied by economic dislocations. How could it have been otherwise? The free-market economists preached the solution: security of property and hard money to encourage capital formation, free trade to maximize efficiency in production, and a clear field for entrepreneurs eager to innovate. But conservatives, threatened in their age-old status, initiated a literary assault on the new system, giving the Industrial Revolution a bad name from which it never fully recovered. Soon the attack was gleefully taken up by groups of socialist intellectuals that began to emerge.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Still, by midcentury the liberals went from one victory to another. Constitutions with guarantees of basic rights were adopted, legal systems firmly anchoring the rule of law and property rights were put in place, and free trade was spreading, giving birth to a world economy based on the gold standard.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]There were advances on the intellectual front as well. After spearheading the campaign to abolish the British Corn Laws, Richard Cobden developed the theory of nonintervention in the affairs of other countries as a foundation for peace. Fr?d?ric Bastiat put the case for free trade, nonintervention, and peace in a classic form. Liberal historians like Thomas Macaulay and Augustin Thierry uncovered the roots of freedom in the West. Later in the century, the economic theory of the free market was placed on a secure scientific footing with the rise of the Austrian School, inaugurated by Carl Menger.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The relation of liberalism and religion presented a special problem. In continental Europe and Latin America, freethinking liberals sometimes used the state power to curtail the influence of the Catholic Church, while some Catholic leaders clung to obsolete ideas of theocratic control. But liberal thinkers like Benjamin Constant, Alexis de Tocqueville, and Lord Acton saw beyond such futile disputes. They stressed the crucial role that religion, separated from government power, could play in stemming the growth of the centralized state. In this way, they prepared the ground for the reconciliation of liberty and religious faith.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Then, for reasons still unclear, the tide began to turn against the liberals. Part of the reason is surely the rise of the new class of intellectuals that proliferated everywhere. That they owed their very existence to the wealth generated by the capitalist system did not prevent most of them from incessantly gnawing away at capitalism, indicting it for every problem they could point to in modern society.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]At the same time, voluntary solutions to these problems were preempted by state functionaries anxious to expand their domain. The rise of democracy may well have contributed to liberalism's decline by aggravating an age-old feature of politics ? the scramble for special privilege. Businesses, labor unions, farmers, bureaucrats, and other interest groups vied for state privileges ? and found intellectual demagogues to rationalize their depredations. The area of state control grew, at the expense, as William Graham Sumner pointed out, of "the forgotten man" ? the quiet, productive individual who asks no favor of government and, through his work, keeps the whole system going.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]By the end of the 19th century, liberalism was being battered on all sides. Nationalists and imperialists condemned it for promoting an insipid peace instead of a virile and bracing belligerency among the nations. Socialists attacked it for upholding the "anarchical" free-market system instead of "scientific" central planning. Even church leaders disparaged liberalism for its alleged egotism and materialism.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]In America and Britain, social reformers around the dawn of the 20th century conceived a particularly clever gambit. Anywhere else the supporters of state intervention and coercive labor-unionism would have been called "socialists" or "social democrats." But since the English-speaking peoples appeared for some reason to have an aversion to those labels, they hijacked the term "liberal."[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Though they fought on to the end, a mood of despondency settled on the last of the great authentic liberals. When Herbert Spencer began writing in the 1840s, he had looked forward to an age of universal progress in which the coercive state apparatus would practically disappear. By 1884, Spencer could pen an essay entitled "The Coming Slavery." In 1898, William Graham Sumner, American Spencerian, free-trader, and gold-standard advocate, looked with dismay as America started on the road to imperialism and global entanglement in the Spanish-American War; he titled his response to that war, grimly, "The Conquest of the United States by Spain."[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Everywhere in Europe there was a reversion to the policies of the absolutist state, as government bureaucracies expanded. At the same time, jealous rivalries among the Great Powers led to a frenzied arms race and sharpened the threat of war. In 1914, a Serb assassin threw a spark onto the heaped-up animosity and suspicion, and the result was the most destructive war in history to that point. In 1917, an American president keen to create a New World Order led his country into the murderous conflict.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]"War is the health of the state," warned the radical writer Randolph Bourne. And so it proved to be. By the time the butchery ended, many believed that liberalism in its classical sense was dead.[/FONT]
<HR align=center width=300>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The First World War was the watershed of the 20th century. Itself the product of antiliberal ideas and policies, such as militarism and protectionism, the Great War fostered statism in every form. In Europe and America, the trend towards state intervention accelerated, as governments conscripted, censored, inflated, ran up mountains of debts, co-opted business and labor, and seized control of the economy. Everywhere "progressive" intellectuals saw their dreams coming true. The old laissez-faire liberalism was dead, they gloated, and the future belonged to collectivism. The only question seemed to be, which kind of collectivism?[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]In Russia, the chaos of the war permitted a small group of Marxist revolutionaries to grab power and establish a field headquarters for world revolution. In the 19th century, Karl Marx had concocted a secular religion with a potent appeal. It held out the promise of the final liberation of man through replacing the complex, often baffling world of the market economy by conscious, "scientific" control.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Put into practice by Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky in Russia, the Marxist economic experiment resulted in catastrophe. For the next seventy years, Red rulers lurched from one patchwork expedient to another. But terror kept them firmly in charge, and the most colossal propaganda effort in history convinced intellectuals both in the West and in the emerging Third World that Communism was, indeed, "the radiant future of all mankind."[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The peace treaties cobbled together by President Woodrow Wilson and the other Allied leaders left Europe a seething cauldron of resentment and hate. Seduced by nationalist demagogues and terrified of the Communist threat, millions of Europeans turned to the forms of state worship called fascism and National Socialism, or Nazism. Though riddled with economic error, these doctrines promised prosperity and national power through integral state control of society, while fomenting more and greater wars.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]In the democratic countries, milder forms of statism were the rule. Most insidious of all was the form that had been invented in the 1880s, in Germany. There Otto von Bismarck, the Iron Chancellor, devised a series of old-age, disability, accident, and sickness insurance schemes, run by the state. The German liberals of the time argued that such plans were simply a reversion to the paternalism of the absolutist monarchies. Bismarck won out, and his invention ? the welfare state ? was eventually copied everywhere in Europe, including the totalitarian countries. With the New Deal, the welfare state came to America.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Still, private property and free exchange continued as the basic organizing principles of Western economies. Competition, the profit motive, the steady accumulation of capital (including human capital), free trade, the perfecting of markets, increased specialization ? all worked to promote efficiency and technical progress and with them higher living standards for the people. So powerful and resilient did this capitalist engine of productivity prove to be that widespread state intervention, coercive labor-unionism, even government-generated depressions and wars could not check economic growth in the long run.[/FONT]
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</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The 1920s and '30s represent the nadir of the classical-liberal movement in the 20th century. Especially after government meddling with the monetary system led to the crash of 1929 and the Great Depression, dominant opinion held that history had closed the books on competitive capitalism, and with it the liberal philosophy.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]If a date were to be put on the rebirth of classical liberalism, it would be 1922, the year of the publication of Socialism, by the Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises. One of the most remarkable thinkers of the century, Mises was also a man of unflinching courage. In Socialism, he threw down the gauntlet to the enemies of capitalism. In effect, he said, "You accuse the system of private property of causing all social evils, which only socialism can cure. Fine. But would you now kindly do something you have never deigned to do before: would you explain how a complex economic system will be able to operate in the absence of markets, and hence prices, for capital goods?" Mises demonstrated that economic calculation without private property was impossible, and exposed socialism for the passionate illusion it was.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Mises's challenge to the prevailing orthodoxy opened the minds of thinkers in Europe and America. F.A. Hayek, Wilhelm R?pke, and Lionel Robbins were among those whom Mises converted to the free market. And, throughout his very long career, Mises elaborated and refined his economic theory and social philosophy, becoming the acknowledged premier classical-liberal thinker of the 20th century.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]In Europe and particularly in the United States, scattered individuals and groups kept something of the old liberalism alive. At the London School of Economics and the University of Chicago, academics could be found, even in the 1930s and '40s, who defended at least the basic validity of the free-enterprise idea.[/FONT]
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</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]In America, an embattled brigade of brilliant writers, mainly journalists, survived. Now known as the "Old Right," they included Albert Jay Nock, Frank Chodorov, H.L. Mencken, Felix Morley, and John T. Flynn. Spurred to action by the totalitarian implications of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal, these writers reiterated the traditional American creed of individual freedom and scornful distrust of government. They were equally opposed to Roosevelt's policy of global meddling as subversive of the American Republic. Supported by a few courageous publishers and businessmen, the "Old Right" nursed the flame of Jeffersonian ideals through the darkest days of the New Deal and the Second World War.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]With the end of that war, what can be called a movement came into being. Small at first, it was fed by multiplying streams. Hayek's Road to Serfdom, published in 1944, alerted many thousands to the reality that, in pursuing socialist policies, the West was risking the loss of its traditional free civilization.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]In 1946, Leonard Read established The Foundation for Economic Education, in Irvington, New York, publishing the works of Henry Hazlitt and other champions of the free market. Mises and Hayek, now both in the United States, continued their work. Hayek led in founding the Mont Pelerin Society, a group of classical-liberal scholars, activists, and businessmen from all over the world. Mises, unsurpassed as a teacher, set up a seminar at New York University, attracting such students as Murray Rothbard and Israel Kirzner. Rothbard went on to wed the insights of Austrian economics to the teachings of natural law to produce a powerful synthesis that appealed to many of the young. At the University of Chicago, Milton Friedman, George Stigler, and Aaron Director led a group of classical-liberal economists whose specialty was exposing the defects of government action. The gifted novelist Ayn Rand incorporated emphatically libertarian themes in her well-crafted bestsellers, and even founded a school of philosophy.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The reaction to the renewal of authentic liberalism on the part of the left ? "liberals" ? more accurately, the social-democrat establishment ? was predictable, and ferocious. In 1954, for instance, Hayek edited a volume entitled Capitalism and the Historians, a collection of essays by distinguished scholars arguing against the prevailing socialist interpretation of the Industrial Revolution. A scholarly journal permitted Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., Harvard professor and New Deal hack, to savage the book in these terms: "Americans have enough trouble with home-grown McCarthys without importing Viennese professors to add academic luster to the process."[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Other works the establishment tried to kill by silence. As late as 1962, not a single prominent magazine or newspaper chose to review Friedman's Capitalism and Freedom. Still, the writers and activists who led the revival of classical liberalism found a growing resonance among the public. Millions of Americans in all walks of life had all along quietly cherished the values of the free market and private property. The growing presence of a solid corps of intellectual leaders now gave many of these citizens the heart to stand up for the ideas they had held dear for so long.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]In the 1970s and '80s, with the evident failure of socialist planning and interventionist programs, classical liberalism became a worldwide movement. In Western countries, and then, incredibly, in the nations of the former Warsaw Pact, political leaders even declared themselves disciples of Hayek and Friedman. As the end of the century approached, the old, authentic liberalism was alive and well, stronger than it had been for a hundred years.[/FONT]



[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]And yet, in Western countries, the state keeps on relentlessly expanding, colonizing one area of social life after the other. In America, the Republic is fast becoming a fading memory, as federal bureaucrats and global planners divert more and more power to the center. So the struggle continues, as it must. Two centuries ago, when liberalism was young, Jefferson had already informed us of the price of liberty.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Reprinted from Mises.org.[/FONT]


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[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]August 27, 2010[/FONT]​
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Lumi

LOKI
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Aug 30, 2002
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0
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In the shadows
What Is Classical Liberalism?

What Is Classical Liberalism?

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]What Is Classical Liberalism?[/FONT]


<CENTER>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif][/FONT][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]by Ralph Raico[/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif][/FONT][/FONT]
by Ralph Raico [FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]
[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Recently by Ralph Raico: [/FONT][/FONT]
[/FONT][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Trotsky: The Ignorance and the Evil[/FONT] </CENTER><CENTER> </CENTER><CENTER> </CENTER><CENTER>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]This article originally appeared in American Conservatism: An Encyclopedia, edited by Bruce Frohnen, Jeremy Beer, and Jeffrey O. Nelson (Wilmington, Delaware: ISI Books, 2006), pp. 498?502.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]"Classical liberalism" is the term used to designate the ideology advocating private property, an unhampered market economy, the rule of law, constitutional guarantees of freedom of religion and of the press, and international peace based on free trade. Up until around 1900, this ideology was generally known simply as liberalism. The qualifying "classical" is now usually necessary, in English-speaking countries at least (but not, for instance, in France), because liberalism has come to be associated with wide-ranging interferences with private property and the market on behalf of egalitarian goals. This version of liberalism ? if such it can still be called ? is sometimes designated as "social," or (erroneously) "modern" or the "new," liberalism. Here we shall use liberalism to signify the classical variety.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Although its fundamental claims are universalist, liberalism must be understood first of all as a doctrine and movement that grew out of a distinctive culture and particular historical circumstances. That culture ? as Lord Acton recognized most clearly ? was the West, the Europe that was or had been in communion with the Bishop of Rome. Its womb, in other words, was the particular human society that underwent "the European miracle" (in E.L. Jones's phrase). The historical circumstances were the confrontation of the free institutions and values inherited from the Middle Ages with the pretensions of the absolutist state of the 16th and 17th centuries.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]From the struggle of the Dutch against the absolutism of the Spanish Hapsburgs issued a polity that manifested basically liberal traits: the rule of law, including especially a firm adherence to property rights; de facto religious toleration; considerable freedom of expression; and a central government of severely limited powers. The astonishing success of the Dutch experiment exerted a "demonstration effect" on European social thought and, gradually, political practice. This was even truer of the later example of England. Throughout the history of liberalism, theory and social reality interacted, with theory stimulated and refined through the observation of practice, and attempts to reform practice undertaken with reference to more accurate theory.[/FONT]
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</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]In the English constitutional struggles of the 17th century a number of individuals and groups displayed significant liberal traits. One stands out, however, as the first recognizably liberal party in European history: the Levellers. Led by John Lilburne and Richard Overton, this movement of middle-class radicals demanded freedom of trade and an end to state monopolies, separation of church and state, popular representation, and strict limits even to parliamentary authority. Their emphasis on property, beginning with the individual's ownership of himself, and their hostility to state power show that the amalgamation of the Levellers to the presocialist Diggers was mere enemy propaganda. Although failures in their time, the Levellers furnished the prototype of a middle-class radical liberalism that has been a feature of the politics of English-speaking peoples ever since. Later in the century, John Locke framed the doctrine of the natural rights to life, liberty, and estate ? which he collectively termed "property" ? in the form that would be passed down, through the Real Whigs of the 18th century, to the generation of the American Revolution.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]America became the model liberal nation, and, after England, the exemplar of liberalism to the world. Through much of the 19th century it was in many respects a society in which the state could hardly be said to exist, as European observers noted with awe. Radical liberal ideas were manifested and applied by groups such as the Jeffersonians, Jacksonians, abolitionists, and late-19th-century anti-imperialists.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Until well into the 20th century, however, the most significant liberal theory continued to be produced in Europe. The 18th century was particularly rich in this regard. A landmark was the work of the thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment, particularly David Hume, Adam Smith, Adam Ferguson, and Dugald Stewart. They developed an analysis that explained "the origin of complex social structures without the need to posit the existence of a directing intelligence" (in Ronald Hamowy's summary). The Scottish theory of spontaneous order was a crucial contribution to the model of a basically self-generating and self-regulating civil society that required state action only to defend against violent intrusion into the individual's rights-protected sphere. As Dugald Steward put it in his Biographical Memoir of Adam Smith (1811), "Little else is requisite to carry a state to the highest degree of opulence from the lowest barbarism, but peace, easy taxes, and the tolerable administration of justice; all the rest being brought about by the natural course of things." The Physiocratic formula, Laissez-faire, laissez-passer, le monde va de lui-m?me ("the world goes by itself"), suggests both the liberal program and the social philosophy upon which it rests. The theory of spontaneous order was elaborated by later liberal thinkers, notably Herbert Spencer and Carl Menger in the 19th century and F.A. Hayek and Michael Polanyi in the twentieth.[/FONT]
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</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]One argument between liberals and Burkean and other conservatives who in important respects stand close to liberalism is related to this central liberal conception. While liberals typically expect the market in the widest sense ? the network of voluntary exchanges ? to generate a system of institutions and mores conducive to its continuance, conservatives insist that the indispensable underpinning must be provided by the state beyond the simple protection of life, liberty, and property, including especially state support of religion.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]With the onset of industrialization, a major area of conflict opened up between liberalism and conservatism. Conservative elites and their spokesmen, particularly in Britain, often exploited the circumstances of early industrialism to tarnish the liberal escutcheon of their middle-class and Nonconformist opponents. In historical perspective, it is clear that what is known as the Industrial Revolution was Europe's (and America's) way of dealing with an otherwise intractable population explosion. Some conservatives went on to forge a critique of the market order based on its alleged materialism, soullessness, and anarchy.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]To the extent that liberals associated conservatism with militarism and imperialism, another source of conflict arose. While a strand of Whiggish liberalism was not averse to wars (beyond self-defense) for liberal ends, and while wars of national unification provided a major exception to the rule, by and large liberalism was associated with the cause of peace. The ideal type of antiwar and anti-imperialist liberalism was provided by the Manchester School and its leaders Richard Cobden and John Bright. Cobden, particularly, developed a sophisticated analysis of the motives and machinations of states leading to war. The panacea proposed by the Manchesterites was international free trade. Developing these ideas, Fr?d?ric Bastiat proposed an especially pure form of the liberal doctrine that enjoyed a certain appeal on the Continent and, later, in the United States.[/FONT]
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</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Liberalism's adherents were not always consistent. This was the case when they turned to the state to promote their own values. In France, for instance, liberals used state-funded schools and institutes to promote secularism under the Directory, and they supported anticlerical legislation during the Third Republic, while in Bismarck's Germany they spearheaded the Kulturkampf against the Catholic Church. These efforts, however, can be seen as betrayals of liberal principles and in fact were eschewed by those acknowledged to be the most consistent and doctrinaire in their liberalism.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The basis for a possible reconciliation of liberalism and antistatist conservatism emerged after the experience of the French Revolution and Napoleon. Its best exponent was Benjamin Constant, who may be viewed as the representative figure of mature liberalism. Faced with the new dangers of unlimited state power based on manipulation of the democratic masses, Constant looked for social buffers and ideological allies wherever they might be found. Religious faith, localism, and the voluntary traditions of a people were valued as sources of strength against the state. In the next generation, Alexis de Tocqueville elaborated this Constantian approach, becoming the great analyst and opponent of the rising omnipresent, bureaucratic state.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]In English-speaking countries the hostility of antistatist conservatives has been exacerbated by an extreme emphasis on the role of Bentham and the Philosophical Radicals in the history of liberalism. J.S. Mill's On Liberty (1859) actually deviated from the central line of liberal thought by counterposing the individual and his liberty not simply to the state but to "society" as well. Whereas the liberalism of the early Wilhelm von Humboldt and of Constant, for example, saw voluntary intermediate bodies as the natural outgrowth of individual action and as welcome barriers to state aggrandizement, Mill aimed at stripping the individual of any connection to spontaneously generated social tradition and freely accepted authority ? as, for instance, in his statement in On Liberty that the Jesuit is a "slave" of his order.[/FONT]
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</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]It is the socialist state that classical liberalism has opposed most vigorously. The Austro-American Ludwig von Mises, for example, demonstrated the impossibility of rational central planning. Prolific for more than fifty years, Mises restated liberal social philosophy after its eclipse of several decades; he became the acknowledged spokesman for liberal ideology in the 20th century. Among the many students on whom Mises exercised a remarkable influence was Murray N. Rothbard, who wedded Austrian economic theory to the doctrine of natural rights to produce a form of individualist anarchism, or "anarchocapitalism." By extending the realm of civil society to the point of extinguishing the state, Rothbard's view appears as the limiting case of authentic liberalism.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Classical liberalism is often contrasted with a new social liberalism, which is supposed to have developed out of the classical variety around 1900. But social liberalism deviates fundamentally from its namesake at its theoretical root in that it denies the self-regulatory capacity of society: the state is called on to redress social imbalance in increasingly ramified ways. The plea that it intends to preserve the end of individual freedom, modifying only the means, is to classical liberals hardly to the point ? as much could be claimed for most varieties of socialism. In fact, social liberalism can scarcely be distinguished, theoretically and practically, from revisionist socialism. Furthermore, it can be argued that this school of thought did not develop out of classical liberalism around the turn of the century ? when, for instance, the alleged fraudulence of freedom of contract in the labor market is supposed to have been discovered. Social liberalism existed full-blown at least from the time of Sismondi, and elements of it (welfarism) can be found even in great classical-liberal writers such as Condorcet and Thomas Paine.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]With the end of the classical-socialist project, classical liberals and antistatist conservatives may agree that it is contemporary social liberalism that now stands as the great adversary of civil society. The political preoccupation of classical liberals is, of necessity, to counteract the current now leading the world toward what Macaulay called "the all-devouring state" ? the nightmare that haunted Burke no less than Constant, Tocqueville, and Herbert Spencer. As older quarrels grow increasingly obsolete, liberals and antistatist conservatives may well discover that they have more in common than their forebears ever understood.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Reprinted from Mises.org.[/FONT]

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Lumi

LOKI
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In the shadows
Trotsky: The Ignorance and the Evil

Trotsky: The Ignorance and the Evil

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Trotsky: The Ignorance and the Evil[/FONT]


<CENTER>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif][/FONT][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]by Ralph Raico[/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif][/FONT][/FONT]
by Ralph Raico [FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]
[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Recently by Ralph Raico: [/FONT][/FONT]
[/FONT][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Classical-Liberal Exploitation Theory[/FONT] </CENTER><CENTER> </CENTER><CENTER>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Leon Trotsky ? By Irving Howe ? Viking Press, 1978 ? 214 pages. This review originally appeared in Libertarian Review, March 1979.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Leon Trotsky has always had a certain appeal for intellectuals that the other Bolshevik leaders lacked. The reasons for this are clear enough. He was a writer, an occasional literary critic ? according to Irving Howe, a very good one ? and an historian (of the revolutions of 1905 and 1917). He had an interest in psychoanalysis and modern developments in physics, and, even when in power, suggested that the new Communist thought-controllers shouldn't be too harsh on writers with such ideas ? not exactly a Nat Hentoff position on freedom of expression, but about as good as one can expect among Communists.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Above all, Trotsky was himself an intellectual, and one who played a great part in what many of that breed have considered to be the real world ? the world of revolutionary bloodshed and terror. He was second only to Lenin in 1917; in the Civil War he was the leader of the Red Army and the Organizer of Victory. As Howe says, "For intellectuals throughout the world there was something fascinating about the spectacle of a man of words transforming himself through sheer will into a man of deeds."[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Trotsky lost out to Stalin in the power struggle of the 1920s, and in exile became a severe and knowledgeable critic of his great antagonist; thus, for intellectuals with no access to other critics of Stalinism ? classical liberal, anarchist, or conservative ? Trotsky's writings in the 1930s opened their eyes to some aspects at least of the charnel-house that was Stalin's Russia. During the period of the Great Purge and the Moscow show trials, Trotsky was placed at the center of the myth of treason and collaboration with Germany and Japan that Stalin spun as a pretext for eliminating his old comrades. In 1940, an agent of the Soviet secret police, Ramon Mercador, sought Trotsky out at his home in Mexico City and killed him with an ice ax to the head.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Irving Howe, the distinguished literary critic and editor of Dissent, tells the story of this interesting life with great lucidity, economy, and grace. The emphasis is on Trotsky's thought, with which Howe has concerned himself for almost the past 40 years. As a young man, he states, "I came for a brief time under Trotsky's influence, and since then, even though or perhaps because I have remained a socialist, I have found myself moving farther and farther away from his ideas."[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Howe is in fact considerably more critical of Trotsky than I had expected. He identifies many of Trotsky's crucial errors, and uses them to cast light on the flaws in Marxism, Leninism, and the Soviet regime that Trotsky contributed so much to creating. And yet there is a curious ambivalence in the book. Somehow the ignorance and evil in Trotsky's life are never allowed their full weight in the balance, and, in the end, he turns out to be, in Howe's view, a hero and "titan" of the 20th century. It's as if Howe had chosen not to think out fully the moral implications of what it means to have said and done the things that Trotsky said and did.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]We can take as our first example Howe's discussion of the final outcome of Trotsky's political labors: the Bolshevik revolution and the Soviet regime. Throughout this book Howe makes cogent points regarding the real class character of this regime and other Communist governments ? which, he notes, manifested itself very early on:[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]A new social stratum ? it had sprung up the very morning of the revolution ? began to consolidate itself: the party-state bureaucracy which found its support in the technical intelligentsia, the factory managers, the military officials, and, above all, the party functionaries?. To speak of a party-state bureaucracy in a country where industry has been nationalized means to speak of a new ruling elite, perhaps a new ruling class, which parasitically fastened itself upon every institution of Russian life. [emphasis in original][/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Howe goes on to say that it was not to be expected that the Bolsheviks themselves would realize what they had done and what class they had actually raised to power: "It was a historical novelty for which little provision had been made in the Marxist scheme of things, except perhaps in some occasional passages to be found in Marx's writings about the distinctive social character of Oriental despotism."[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]This is not entirely correct. Howe himself shows how Trotsky, in his book 1905 (a history of the Russian revolution of that year), had had a glimpse of this form of society, one in which the state bureaucracy was itself the ruling class. In analyzing the Tsarist regime, Trotsky had picked up on the strand of Marxist thought that saw the state as an independent parasitic body, feeding on all the social classes engaged in the process of production. This was a view that Marx expressed, for instance, in his Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]More importantly, the class character of Marxism itself ? as well as the probable consequences of the coming to power of a Marxist Party ? had been identified well before Trotsky's time. The great 19th-century anarchist Michael Bakunin ? whose name does not even appear in Howe's book, just as not a single other anarchist is even mentioned anywhere in it ? had already subjected Marxism to critical scrutiny in the 1870s. In the course of this, Bakunin had uncovered the dirty little secret of the future Marxist state:[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The State has always been the patrimony of some privileged class or other; a priestly class, an aristocratic class, a bourgeois class, and finally a bureaucratic class?. But in the People's State of Marx, there will be, we are told, no privileged class at all ? but there will be a government, which will not content itself with governing and administering the masses politically, as all governments do today, but which will also administer them economically, concentrating in its own hands the production and the just division of wealth, the cultivation of land, the establishment and development of factories, the organization and direction of commerce, finally the application of capital to production by the only banker, the State. All that will demand an immense knowledge and many "heads overflowing with brains" in this government. It will be the reign of scientific intelligence, the most aristocratic, despotic, arrogant, and contemptuous of all regimes. There will be a new class, a new hierarchy of real and pretended scientists and scholars. [Emphasis added.][/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]This perspective was taken up somewhat later by the Polish-Russian revolutionist, Waclaw Machajski, who held, in the words of Max Nomad, that ? "nineteenth century socialism was not the expression of the interests of the manual workers but the ideology of the impecunious, malcontent, lower middle-class intellectual workers ? behind the socialist 'ideal' was a new form of exploitation for the benefit of the officeholders and managers of the socialized state."[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Thus, that Marxism in power would mean the rule of state functionaries was not merely intrinsically probable ? given the massive increment of state power envisaged by Marxists, what else could it be? ? but it had also been predicted by writers well known to a revolutionary like Trotsky. Trotsky, however, had not permitted himself to take this analysis seriously before committing himself to the Marxist revolutionary enterprise. More than that: "To the end of his days," as Howe writes, he "held that Stalinist Russia should still be designated as a 'degenerated workers' state' because it preserved the nationalized property forms that were a 'conquest' of the Russian Revolution" ? as if nationalized property and the planned economy were not the very instruments of rule of the new class in Soviet Russia![/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]It remained for some of Trotsky's more critical disciples, especially Max Shachtman in the United States, to point out to their master what had actually happened in Russia: that the Revolution had not produced a "workers' State," nor was there any danger that "capitalism" would be restored, as Trotsky continued to fret it would. Instead, there had come into an existence in Russia a "bureaucratic collectivism" even more reactionary and oppressive than what had gone before.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Trotsky rejected this interpretation. In fact he had no choice. For, as Howe states, the dissidents "called into question the entire revolutionary perspective upon which [Trotsky] continued to base his politics?. There was the further possibility, if Trotsky's critics were right, that the whole perspective of socialism might have to be revised." Indeed.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]To his credit, Howe recognizes that a key period for understanding Bolshevism, including the thought of Trotsky, is the period of war communism, from 1918 to 1921. As he describes it, "Industry was almost completely nationalized. Private trade was banned. Party squads were sent into the countryside to requisition food from the peasants." The results were tragic on a vast scale. The economic system simply broke down, with all the immense suffering and all the countless deaths from starvation that such a small statement implies. As Trotsky himself later put it, "The collapse of the productive forces surpassed anything of the kind that history had ever seen. The country, and the government with it, were at the very edge of the abyss."[/FONT]
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</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]How had this come about? Here Howe follows the orthodox interpretation: War communism was merely the product of emergency conditions, created by the Revolution and the Civil War. It was a system of "extreme measures [which the Bolsheviks] had never dreamt of in their earlier programs."[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Now, this last may be, strictly speaking, correct. It may well be, that is, that the Bolsheviks had never had the slightest idea of what their aims would mean concretely for the economic life of Russia, how those aims would of necessity have to be implemented, or what the consequences would be.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]But war communism was no mere "improvisation," whose horrors are to be chalked up to the chaos in Russia at the time. The system was willed and itself helped produce that chaos. As Paul Craig Roberts has argued in his brilliant book Alienation and the Soviet Economy, war communism was an attempt to translate into "Reality" the Marxist ideal: the abolition of "commodity production," of the price system and the market.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]This, as Roberts demonstrates, was what Marxism was all about. This is what the end of "alienation" and the final liberation of mankind consisted in. Why should it be surprising that when self-confident and determined Marxists like Lenin and Trotsky seized power in a great nation, they tried to put into effect the very policy that was their whole reason for being?[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]As evidence for this interpretation, Roberts quotes Trotsky himself (ironically, from a book of Trotsky's writings edited by Irving Howe):[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif][T]he period of so-called "war communism" [was a period when] economic life was wholly subjected to the needs of the front ? it is necessary to acknowledge, however, that in its original conception it pursued broader aims. The Soviet government hoped and strove to develop these methods of regimentation directly into a system of planned economy in distribution as well as production. In other words, from "war communism" it hoped gradually, but without destroying the system, to arrive at genuine communism ? reality, however, came into increasing conflict with the program of "war communism." Production continually declined, and not only because of the destructive action of the war.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Roberts goes on to quote Victor Serge: "The social system of those years was later called 'War Communism.' At the time it was called simply 'Communism' ? Trotsky had just written that this system would last over decades if the transition to a genuine, unfettered Socialism was to be assured. Bukharin ? considered the present mode of production to be final."[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]One slight obstacle was encountered, however, on the road to the abolition of the price system and the market: "Reality," as Trotsky noted, "came into increasing conflict" with the economic "system" that the Bolshevik rulers had fastened on Russia. After a few years of misery and famine for the Russian masses ? there is no record of any Bolshevik leader having died of starvation in this period ? the rulers thought again, and a New Economic Policy (NEP) ? including elements of private ownership and allowing for market transactions ? was decreed.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The significance of all this cannot be exaggerated. What we have with Trotsky and his comrades in the Great October Revolution is the spectacle of a few literary-philosophical intellectuals seizing power in a great country with the aim of overturning the whole economic system ? but without the slightest idea of how an economic system works. In State and Revolution, written just before he took power, Lenin wrote,[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The accounting and control necessary [for the operation of a national economy] have been simplified by capitalism to the utmost, till they have become the extraordinarily simple operations of watching, recording and issuing receipts, within the reach of anybody who can read and write and knows the first four rules of arithmetic.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]With this piece of cretinism Trotsky doubtless agreed. And why wouldn't he? Lenin, Trotsky, and the rest had all their lives been professional revolutionaries, with no connection at all to the process of production and, except for Bukharin, little interest in the real workings of an economic system. Their concerns had been the strategy and tactics of revolution and the perpetual, monkish exegesis of the holy books of Marxism.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The nitty-gritty of how an economic system functions ? how, in our world, men and women work, produce, exchange, and survive ? was something from which they prudishly averted their eyes, as pertaining to the nether-regions. These "materialists" and "scientific socialists" lived in a mental world where understanding Hegel, Feuerbach, and the hideousness of Eugen Duehring's philosophical errors was infinitely more important than understanding what might be the meaning of a price.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Of the actual operations of social production and exchange they had about the same appreciation as John Henry Newman or, indeed, St. Bernard of Clairvaux. This is a common enough circumstance among intellectuals; the tragedy here is that the Bolsheviks came to rule over millions of real workers, real peasants, and real businessmen.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Howe puts the matter rather too sweetly: once in power, he says, "Trotsky was trying to think his way through difficulties no Russian Marxist had quite foreseen." And what did the brilliant intellectual propose as a solution to the problems Russia now faced? "In December 1919 Trotsky put forward a series of 'theses' [sic] before the party's Central Committee in which he argued for compulsory work and labor armies ruled through military discipline?."[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]So, forced labor, and not just for political opponents, but for the Russian working class. Let Daniel and Gabriel Cohn-Bendit, the left-anarchists from the May days of 1968 in Paris, take up the argument:[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]"Was it so true," Trotsky asked, "that compulsory labor was always unproductive?" He denounced this view as "wretched and miserable liberal prejudice," learnedly pointing out that "chattel slavery, too, was productive" and that compulsory serf labor was in its times "a progressive phenomenon." He told the unions [at the Third Congress of Trade Unions] that "coercion, regimentation, and militarization of labor were no mere emergency measures and that the workers' State normally had the right to coerce any citizen to perform any work at any place of its choosing."[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]And why not? Hadn't Marx and Engels, in their ten-point program for revolutionary government in The Communist Manifesto, demanded as point eight, "Equal liability for all to labor. Establishment of industrial armies, especially for agriculture"? Neither Marx nor Engels ever disavowed their claim that those in charge of "the workers' state" had the right to enslave the workers and peasants whenever the need might arise. Now, having annihilated the hated market, the Bolsheviks found that the need for enslavement had, indeed, arisen. And of all the Bolshevik leaders, the most ardent and aggressive advocate of forced labor was Leon Trotsky.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]There are other areas in which Howe's critique of Trotsky is not penetrating enough, in which it turns out to be altogether too soft-focused and oblique. For instance, he taxes Trotsky with certain philosophical contradictions stemming from his belief in "historical materialism." All through his life, Howe asserts, Trotsky employed "moral criteria by no means simply derived from or reducible to class interest. He would speak of honor, courage, and truth as if these were known constants, for somewhere in the orthodox Marxist there survived a streak of nineteenth century Russian ethicism, earnest and romantic."[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Let us leave aside the silly implication that there is something "romantic" about belief in ethical values, as against the "scientific" character of orthodox Marxism. In this passage, Howe seems to be saying that adherence to certain commonly accepted values is, among Marxists, a rare kind of atavism on Trotsky's part. Not at all.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Of course historical materialism dismisses ethical rules as nothing more than the "expression," or "reflection," or whatever, of "underlying class relationships" and, ultimately, of "the material productive forces." But no Marxist has ever taken this seriously, except as pretext for breaking ethical rules (as when Lenin and Trotsky argued in justification of their terror). Even Marx and Engels, in their "Inaugural Address of the First International," wrote that the International's foreign policy would be to "vindicate the simple laws of morals and justice [sic] which ought to govern the relations of private individuals, as the laws paramount of the intercourse of nations."[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]That Trotsky admired honor, courage, and truth is not something that cries out for explanation by reference to Russian tradition of "ethicism" (whatever that might be). The admiration of those values is a part of the common heritage of us all. To think that there is a problem here that needs explaining is to take "historical materialism" much too seriously to begin with.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Similarly with other contradictions Howe thinks he has discovered between Trotsky's Marxist philosophy and certain statements Trotsky made in commenting on real political events. Of the Bolshevik Revolution itself, Trotsky says that it would have taken place even if he had not been in Petrograd, "on condition that Lenin was present and in command." Howe asks, "What happens to historical materialism?" The point Howe is making, of course, is that in the Marxist view individuals are not allowed to play any critical role in shaping really important historical events, let alone in determining whether or not they occur.[/FONT]
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</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]But the answer to Howe's question is that, when Trotsky commits a blunder like this, nothing happens. Nothing happens, because "historical materialism" was pretentious nonsense from the beginning, a political strategy rather than a philosophical position. Occasionally, in daubing in some of the light patches of sky that are intended to make up for the dark ones in Trotsky's life, Howe comes perilously close to slipping into a fantasy world.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]He says that in the struggle with Stalin, Trotsky was at a disadvantage, because he "fought on the terrain of the enemy, accepting the damaging assumption of a Bolshevik monopoly of power." But why is this assumption located on the enemy's terrain? Trotsky shared that view with Stalin. He no more believed that a supporter of capitalism had a right to propagate his ideas than a medieval inquisitor believed in a witch's right to her own personal style. And as for the rights even of other socialists ? Trotsky in 1921 had led the attack on the Kronstadt rebels, who merely demanded freedom for socialists other than the Bolsheviks. At the time, Trotsky boasted that the rebels would be shot "like partridges" ? as, pursuant to his orders, they were.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Howe even stoops to trying a touch of pathos. In sketching the tactics Stalin used in the struggle with Trotsky, he speaks of "the organized harassment to which Trotskyist leaders, distinguished Old Bolsheviks, were subjected by hooligans in the employ of the party apparatus, the severe threats made against all within the party?." Really now ? is it political violence used against Leon Trotsky and his "distinguished" followers that is supposed to make our blood run cold? No: if there was ever a satisfying case of poetic justice, the "harassment" and "persecution" of Trotsky ? down to and including the ice ax incident ? is surely it.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The best example of Howe's strange gentleness toward Trotsky I have saved for the last. What, when all is said and done, was Trotsky's picture of the Communist society of the future? Howe does quote from Trotsky's Literature and Revolution the famous, and ridiculous, last lines: "The average human type [Trotsky wrote] will rise to the heights of an Aristotle, a Goethe, or a Marx. And above this ridge new peaks will rise." He doesn't, however, tell us what precedes these lines ? Trotsky's sketch of the future society, his passionate dream. Under Communism, Trotsky states, Man will[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]reconstruct society and himself in accordance with his own plan?. The imperceptible, ant-like piling up of quarters and streets, brick by brick, from generation to generation, will give way to the titanic construction of city-villages, with map and compass in hand?. Communist life will not be formed blindly, like coral islands, but will be built up consciously, will be erected and corrected?. Even purely physiologic life will become subject to collective experiments. The human species, the coagulated Homo sapiens, will once more enter into a state of radical transformation, and, in his own hands, will become an object of the most complicated methods of artificial selection and psycho-physical training?. [It will be] possible to reconstruct fundamentally the traditional family life?. The human race will not have ceased to crawl on all fours before God, kings and capital, in order later to submit humbly before the laws of heredity and sexual selection! ? Man will make it his purpose ? to create a higher social biological type, or, if you please, a superman.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]"Man ? his own plan ? his purpose? his own hands." When Trotsky promoted the formation of worker-slave armies in industry, he believed that his own will was the will of the Proletarian Man. It is easy to guess whose will would stand in for that of Communist Man when the time came to direct the collective experiments on the physiological life, the complicated methods of artificial selection and psycho-physiological training, the reconstruction of the traditional family, the substitution of "something else" for blind sexual selection in the reproduction of human beings, and the creation of the superhuman.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]This, then, is Trotsky's final goal: a world where mankind is "free" in the sense that Marxism understands the term ? where all of human life, starting from the economics, but going on to embrace everything, even the most private and intimate parts of human existence ? is consciously planned by "society," which is assumed to have a single will. And it is this ? this disgusting positivist nightmare ? that, for him, made all the enslavement and killings acceptable![/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Surely, this was another dirty little secret that Howe had an obligation to let us in on.[/FONT]
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</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Howe ends by saying of Trotsky that "the example of his energy and heroism is likely to grip the imagination of generations to come," adding that, "even those of us who cannot heed his word may recognize that Leon Trotsky, in his power and his fall, is one of the titans of our century."[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]This is the kind of writing that covers the great issues of right and wrong in human affairs with a blanket of historicist snow. The fact is that Trotsky used his talents to take power in order to impose his willful dream ? the abolition of the market, private property, and the bourgeoisie. His actions brought untold misery and death to his country.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Yet, to the end of his life, he tried in every way he could to bring the Marxist revolution to other peoples ? to the French, the Germans, the Italians ? with what probable consequences, he, better than anyone else, had reason to know. He was a champion of thought-control, prison camps, and the firing squad for his opponents, and of forced labor for ordinary, nonbrilliant working people. He openly defended chattel slavery ? which, even in our century, must surely put him into a quite select company.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]He was an intellectual who never asked himself such a simple question as: "What reason do I have to believe that the economic condition of workers under socialism will be better than under capitalism?" To the last, he never permitted himself to glimpse the possibility that the bloody, bureaucratic tyranny over which Stalin presided might never have come into existence but for his own efforts.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]A hero? Well, no thank you ? I'll find my own heroes somewhere else. A titan of the 20th century? In a sense, yes. At least Leon Trotsky shares with the other "titans" of our century this characteristic: it would have been better if he had never been born.[/FONT]


[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Reprinted from Mises.org.[/FONT]


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[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]July 29, 2010[/FONT]​
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In the shadows
Ralph Raico: Archives

[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Past articles by Ralph Raico on LewRockwell.com[/FONT]​
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Rise, Fall, and Renaissance of Classical Liberalism[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on our roots.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]What Is Classical Liberalism?[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on our roots.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Premature Nazi[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on Trotsky, the ignorance and the evil.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Class That Exploits Us[/FONT]
Not businessmen, but civil servants and their cohorts.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Our Greatest Presidents?[/FONT]
Don?t make Ralph Raico laugh.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Taboo Against the Truth[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on lies of the historians.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Secret Truth About Government and Politics[/FONT]
Murray Rothbard told it.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Time To Stop Blaming the Germans[/FONT]
The Nazis are long gone, says Ralph Raico.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Just How Evil Was Keynes?[/FONT]
He was pro-Soviet, pro-Nazi, pro-fascist. Article by Ralph Raico.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Dick Francis[/FONT]
Ralph Raico remembers a real Englishman.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]A Little Perspective, Please[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on the Ayn Rand he knew, and the Brandens he wished he didn't.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Rethinking Churchill[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on the real Winnie.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Evil Man, Evil Ideas[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on the idiotic, if widespread, notion that Keynes was a classical liberal. (PDF).
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[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]War and the State[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]And Obama too. Podcast with Ralph Raico.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]When the US Nuked Civilians[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Ralph Raico on the war criminal Truman.[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Man of Blood[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on Winston Churchill.
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[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]America First[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Ralph Raico on a foreign policy of peace.[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]America's First Fascist President[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on FDR.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Is Libertarianism Amoral?[/FONT]
Look at Constant, Tocqueville, Bastiat, and Acton, says Ralph Raico.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Hiroshima and Nagasaki[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on two Truman war crimes.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Serial Killer in the White House[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on Truman and the atom bombs.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]When Fascism Came to America[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on Franklin D. Roosevelt. A classic!
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Who Exactly Was Winston Churchill?[/FONT]
As the mock-heroic politicians seek to imitate him, Ralph Raico reminds us about who their model really was.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]German Liberalism[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on a heroic heritage.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Conservatism vs. Libertarianism[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on liberty.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Great War Retold[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on The Western Front by Hunt Tooley.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Trouble With Conservatives[/FONT]
They are blind nationalists, aggressive militarists, and envious puritans. A classic by Ralph Raico.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Study With Ralph Raico[/FONT]
The great historian of liberty on MP3, for free, from the Mises Institute.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]A Day That Will Live in Infamy[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on Truman and the atom bomb.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Real Liberalism[/FONT]
Classical, that is. Ralph Raico on Ludwig von Mises's great book.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]War Criminal-in-Chief[/FONT]
Ralph Raico on Harry Truman.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Draft Will Subvert the Empire[/FONT]
Ralph Raico still can't believe a libertarian would advocate it.
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[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Other War That Never Ends[/FONT][FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]
Ralph Raico on some recent books on WWI.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Does Libertarianism Mean 'Open Borders'?[/FONT]
See this special issue of the Journal of Libertarian Studies, edited by Ralph Raico.
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Great Historians of Liberty[/FONT]
Ralph Raico at the London MPS meeting.
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[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Passing Scene
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[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Sheldon Richman, Alan Turin, Tom DiLorenzo, Greg Bresiger, and Ralph Raico.[/FONT][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif] [/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Passing Scene[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Taki, Peirce, Locke, Hornberger, Richman, DiLorenzo, and Raico.[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Passing Scene[/FONT]
A pointed potpourri from Ralph Raico.
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[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Empires Kill[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]So grow up, Canada and the rest of you.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]On the Brink of World War II[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Ralph Raico reviews Justus Doenecke's Storm on the Horizon. (Note: free Adobe Acrobat download required.)[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Keynes Was an Apologist for Stalin[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]But this goes unmentioned in his official biographies.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]How Nozick Became a Libertarian[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]A historical note from Ralph Raico.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Viva Italia Liberteria![/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]They're great, they're Rothbardians, and now they've clued Europe in on the State massacre at Waco.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Tell the Whole Story, Mr. Allen[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Ralph Raico on the real meaning of animal names for teams: rampant speciesism, rampant maleism, and universal wife beating.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Catholic Church's Discriminatory Heart[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Exposed by Ralph Raico.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Media Madness[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Ralph Raico reflects on the role of the media in the current government crime wave.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]If You Ever Thought Your Vote Didn't Count (Smirk, Smirk)[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]And why Charley Reese deserves a nation's thanks.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]This Perfect Hell[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Ira Levin wrote the greatest anti-utopian novel, better than 1984 or Brave New World. It's pro-tobacco and anti-world government. No wonder Hollywood hasn't made a movie of it. Article by Ralph Raico.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Triumphs and Challenges[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]More from Ralph Raico on the rise, fall, and renaissance of classical liberalism.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Classical Liberalism[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Classical liberalism is the signature political philosophy of Western civilization.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Holiday Books and Movies[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Recommendations from Michael Allen, Peter Brimelow, Paul Cantor, Ralph Raico, J.D. Tuccille, and yours truly, among others.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Complete Series on FDR[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]His Greatness, FDR[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Ralph Raico's stunning series on That Man in the White House continues.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Unbounded Greatness of FDR[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]What we are supposed to think about this monster, by our leading historian of liberty, Ralph Raico.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]FDR in 1920s Politics[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]The rough beast, slouching towards Washington to be born. By Ralph Raico.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Roosevelt in World War I[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Part IV of Ralph Raico's anti-FDR masterpiece.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]That Liar in the White House[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]No, not Clinton, but the real master, FDR. Another installment in the superb Ralph Raico series.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]That Man in the White House[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]More from Ralph Raico on the monster FDR.[/FONT]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]FDR ? The Man, the Leader, the Legacy: Part 1[/FONT]​
 
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