http://www.monbiot.com/2011/12/19/how-freedom-became-tyranny/

Rightwing libertarians have turned “freedom” into an excuse for greed and
exploitation.

By George Monbiot, published in the Guardian
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/dec/19/bastardised-libertarianism-makes-freedom-oppression>20th
December 2011

Freedom: who could object? Yet this word is now used to justify a thousand
forms of exploitation. Throughout the rightwing press and blogosphere,
among thinktanks and governments, the word excuses every assault on the
lives of the poor, every form of inequality and intrusion to which the 1%
subject us. How did libertarianism, once a noble impulse, become synonymous
with injustice?

In the name of freedom – freedom from regulation – the banks were permitted
to wreck the economy. In the name of freedom, taxes for the super-rich are
cut. In the name of freedom, companies lobby to drop the minimum wage and
raise working hours. In the same cause, US insurers lobby Congress to
thwart effective public healthcare; the government rips up our planning
laws(1); big business trashes the biosphere. This is the freedom of the
powerful to exploit the weak, the rich to exploit the poor.

Right-wing libertarianism recognises few legitimate constraints on the
power to act, regardless of the impact on the lives of others. In the UK it
is forcefully promoted by groups like the TaxPayers’ Alliance, the Adam
Smith Institute, the Institute of Economic Affairs and Policy Exchange(2).
Their conception of freedom looks to me like nothing but a justification
for greed.

So why have been been so slow to challenge this concept of liberty? I
believe that one of the reasons is as follows. The great political conflict
of our age – between neocons and the millionaires and corporations they
support on one side and social justice campaigners and environmentalists on
the other – has been mischaracterised as a clash between negative and
positive freedoms.

These freedoms were most clearly defined by Isaiah Berlin in his essay of
1958, Two Concepts of Liberty(3). It is a work of beauty: reading it is
like listening to a gloriously crafted piece of music. I will try not to
mangle it too badly.

Put briefly and crudely, negative freedom is the freedom to be or to act
without interference from other people. Positive freedom is freedom from
inhibition: it’s the power gained by transcending social or psychological
constraints. Berlin explained how positive freedom had been abused by
tyrannies, particularly by the Soviet Union. It portrayed its brutal
governance as the empowerment of the people, who could achieve a higher
freedom by subordinating themselves to a collective single will.

Rightwing libertarians claim that greens and social justice campaigners are
closet communists trying to resurrect Soviet conceptions of positive
freedom. In reality the battle mostly consists of a clash between negative
freedoms.

As Berlin noted, “no man’s activity is so completely private as never to
obstruct the lives of others in any way. ‘Freedom for the pike is death for
the minnows’”. So, he argued, some people’s freedom must sometimes be
curtailed “to secure the freedom of others.” In other words, your freedom
to swung your fist ends where my nose begins. The negative freedom not to
have our noses punched is the freedom that green and social justice
campaigns, exemplified by the Occupy movement, exist to defend.

Berlin also shows that freedom can intrude upon other values, such as
justice, equality or human happiness. “If the liberty of myself or my class
or nation depends on the misery of a number of other human beings, the
system which promotes this is unjust and immoral.” It follows that the
state should impose legal restraints upon freedoms which interfere with
other people’s freedoms – or on freedoms which conflict with justice and
humanity.

These conflicts of negative freedom were summarised in one of the greatest
poems of the 19th Century, which could be seen as the founding document of
British environmentalism. In The Fallen Elm, John Clare describes the
felling of the tree he loved, presumably by his landlord, that grew beside
his home(4). “Self-interest saw thee stand in freedom’s ways/So thy old
shadow must a tyrant be./Thou’st heard the knave, abusing those in
power,/Bawl freedom loud and then oppress the free.”

The landlord was exercising his freedom to cut the tree down. In doing so,
he was intruding upon Clare’s freedom to delight in the tree, whose
existence enhanced his life. The landlord justifies this destruction by
characterising the tree as an impediment to freedom: his freedom, which he
conflates with the general liberty of humankind. Without the involvement of
the state (which today might take the form of a tree preservation order)
the powerful man could trample the pleasures of the powerless man. Clare
then compares the felling of the tree with further intrusions on his
liberty. “Such was thy ruin, music-making elm;/The right of freedom was to
injure thine:/As thou wert served, so would they overwhelm/In freedom’s
name the little that is mine.”

But rightwing libertarians do not recognise this conflict. They speak, like
Clare’s landlord, as if the same freedom affects everybody in the same way.
They assert their freedom to pollute, exploit, even – among the gun nuts –
to kill, as if these were fundamental human rights. They characterise any
attempt to restrain them as tyranny. They refuse to see that there is a
clash between the freedom of the pike and the freedom of the minnow.

Last week, on an internet radio channel called The Fifth Column(5), I
debated climate change with Claire Fox of the Institute of Ideas, one of
the right-wing libertarian groups which rose from the ashes of the
Revolutionary Communist Party(6). Claire Fox is a feared interrogator on
the BBC show The Moral Maze. Yet when I asked her a simple question – “do
you accept that some people’s freedoms intrude upon other people’s
freedoms?” – I saw an ideology shatter like a windscreen. I used the
example of a Romanian lead smelting plant I had visited in 2000, whose
freedom to pollute is shortening the lives of its neighbours(7). Surely the
plant should be regulated in order to enhance the negative freedoms –
freedom from pollution, freedom from poisoning – of its neighbours? She
tried several times to answer it, but nothing coherent emerged which would
not send her crashing through the mirror of her philosophy.

Modern libertarianism is the disguise adopted by those who wish to exploit
without restraint. It pretends that only the state intrudes on our
liberties. It ignores the role of banks, corporations and the rich in
making us less free. It denies the need for the state to curb them in order
to protect the freedoms of weaker people. This bastardised, one-eyed
philosophy is a con trick, whose promoters attempt to wrongfoot justice by
pitching it against liberty. By this means they have turned “freedom” into
an instrument of oppression.

www.monbiot.com

References:

1. http://www.monbiot.com/2011/09/06/making-a-mockery-of-localism/

2. http://www.monbiot.com/2011/09/12/think-of-a-tank/

3.
http://www.wiso.uni-hamburg.de/fileadmin/wiso_vwl/johannes/Ankuendigungen/Berlin_twoconceptsofliberty.pdf

4. http://www.poemhunter.com/best-poems/john-clare/the-fallen-elm/

5.
http://www.thefifthcolumn.co.uk/the-interrogator/global-warming-does-it-matter/

6. http://www.monbiot.com/2003/12/09/invasion-of-the-entryists/

7. http://www.monbiot.com/2000/05/19/the-most-polluted-place-in-europe/
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