-Caveat Lector-

------- Forwarded message follows -------


The following article is from the May 1950 issue of analysis, vol.
VI, no. 7.

United We Fall
by Frank Chodorov



The Union, next to our liberty, most dear.

~ John C. Calhoun

It is never too late to put up a fight for freedom. True, the
prospect for such a venture at this time seems bleak indeed, what
with the prevailing madness to push more power upon the political
overseer so that he might the better regulate our lives. Recruits
would be scarce. From the rank and file, those who under all
circumstances are determined to be harnessed, little can be
expected; they are too preoccupied with mere existence. And those
who seem to have the necessary ingredients � that is, those who
have by their own initiative pushed themselves above the general
level � are equally fervent for a regulated and subsidized existence
under an omnipotent State. Subvention has become everybody's
business.

The despair of those who still put a value on freedom is
understandable. Perhaps, as they say, it is best to let the country
have its fill of socialism � or fascism or communism or any other
pup from the litter of absolutism � and be done with a quixotic
struggle.

After a century or two of that kind of existence, when human dignity
shall have scraped bottom, a Moses will emerge from the bulrushes
and gain a respectable following. By that time, they point out, the
State shall have become emaciated from malnutrition, slaves being
poor providers, and a handful of resolute men can push it over. It
was ever thus. Every civilization we know of arose and flourished in
the sunshine of freedom; political institutions attached themselves
even at the beginning, but remained quiescent until an abundance
of economic goods stimulated cupidity; then followed a period of
increasing political predation until at long last the civilization
disintegrated and became an historical or archeological curio. After
a while, freedom germinates a new civilization. That is the
inevitable cycle, and we can do nothing, they say, to prevent or
retard it.

Maybe so; maybe our civilization is also doomed by the ineluctable
forces of history; maybe it is in the decline right now.

Nevertheless, men do what they are impelled by an inner urge to do,
not what history dictates. The stars in the heavens tend to their
eternal business while we transitory mortals travel within our own
specific orbits. It was no historical imperative that directed the
pens of those who signed the Declaration of Independence; it was
the integrity of the signers. There were many at the time � the Tories
� who deemed the venture foolhardy and undesirable, and they
could have argued the historical uselessness of all revolutions.
Nevertheless, the rebels (none of whom were driven to it by
economic necessity) put their signatures to what at that time
seemed to be their own death warrant. Why? For lack of better
answer, let us say they were made of a particular kind of stuff and
could not do otherwise.

Looking to history for causation, we find that man's constantly
recurring excursions in search of freedom are identified by their
leadership. The logical inference is that when men of that stripe
appear on the scene the cause of freedom is not neglected. If, for
instance, those who now prate about "free enterprise" were willing to
risk bankruptcy for it, as the men of the Declaration were willing to
risk their necks for independence, the present drive for the
collectivization of capital would not have such easy going. Assuming
that they are fully aware of the implications in the phrase they
espouse, and are sincere in their protestations, the fact that they
are unwilling to suffer mortification of the flesh disqualifies them
from leadership, and "free enterprise" remains merely a mouthing.

The present low estate of freedom in this country must be laid to
lack of leadership. Whether or not leadership could have averted, or
can still stop, the socialistic trend, may be open to question; that
a glorious fight for freedom might yet enliven the American scene is
not. And, if we can trust the historic pattern, the odds are that
nature will give us, in her own good time and at her pleasure, the
kind of men that can and will make the good fight.

A Block to Power

The American terrain, so to speak, is I fortuitously favorable for
the forces of freedom. Not only is there a strong a supporting
tradition, but the Constitutional form of government which grew out
of this tradition is still in existence, though somewhat distorted,
and could provide the favorable battle line. It must be remembered
that from the very beginning of the country political power has been
in bad repute; even though it is well on its way to religious status,
political power in America still lacks the adulation that it receives
from peoples long inured to submissiveness.

In the beginning, the Founding Fathers recognized the need of
government in organized society, but were ever jealous of its
powers.

They knew that political authority is constitutionally incapable of
moral inhibitions. It is force, and, like physical force, can be held
in check only by an equal and contrary force. For that reason, when
they came to organize a government to replace the one they had
thrown out, they put into its pattern provision for a series of
counterbalancing forces. Not only did they aim to keep the central
government weak by a division of authority, but also pitted against
it the governments of the component states. Freedom was to be
preserved by keeping political power decentralized and off balance.

The scheme worked well for a time, but no Constitution can of itself
constrain the inherent tendency of power to expand; only constant
surveillance and opposition can do that, and since the primary
concern of man is the business of living, political power makes its
way unnoticed. The present condition of freedom in this country is
due entirely to the breakdown of the strictures laid upon the
government by the Founding Fathers, most particularly the one
providing for the dual form; the powers of the central government
have been enhanced at the expense of the state governments.
Hence, any campaign to restore freedom in this country must begin
with an effort to reverse that process.

The virtue in the juxtaposition of local and federal governments is
demonstrated in reverse by the careers of tyrannies. In no country
where a totalitarian regime established itself did it have to contend
with the dual system that obtains in this country. When Hitler came
along there was still some semblance of the local autonomy that
Bismarck had broken through, but it was too attenuated to stay the
path of the conqueror; he had to meet nothing like our sovereign
state governments, legally entrenched and supported by a tradition
of voluntary association. Mussolini's march on Rome was likewise
facilitated by the structural consolidation begun by Cavour, and the
Czars had long ago effected all the centralization that Lenin needed.

Again, for centuries the seat of ultimate authority had been London
when the socialists took over: home government in England is
merely an administrative agency.

When the trend toward centralization in this country took definite
shape under the New Deal, its leaders ran head on into the
impediment of divided authority. They set out to remove it. They
went so far as to draw up a blueprint for a new political setup, one
that would circumvent, if not obliterate, the troublesome state lines.
In 1940 the National Resources Committee, in a report called
Regional Factors in National Planning, proposed to divide the
country into a dozen regional areas, as a basis for national planning
and the coordination of federal administrative services. It was a
proposal so violative of the spirit of the Constitution, if not the letter,
that the committee made haste to give assurance; the regional
organization, they said, "should not be considered as a new form of
sovereignty, even in embryo." It would have been foolhardy to say
anything else, especially since the consolidation of the states into a
national unit requires, under Constitutional procedure, the joint
action of Congress and the state legislatures. Nevertheless, the
committee insisted that the "division of Constitutional powers"
handicapped any program of national design; the report left no
doubt of the necessity of overcoming this division as a condition for
the federal solution of "otherwise insolvable problems." It was clearly
a bid for a nationalized system; and in the propaganda of the day
the prediction that the states are "finished" was uninhibited.

Thus, the proponents of planning, with its correlative of
restrictions on individual initiative, are on record as to their
strategic campaign. The separate states must be either wiped out or
reduced to parish status. It is impossible to effect complete control
over the individual of divided allegiance; he must have only one god.

History is on their side; no political power ever achieved absolutism
where the subjects were permitted to indulge more than one loyalty;
the Caesars persecuted the Christians because, despite the
homage they rendered Rome, they worshipped God.

Pending the organic consolidation of the states, the planners
adopted a policy of conquest by purchase. Armed with the
enormous revenues from the unlimited income tax, they have to all
intents and purposes penetrated and almost obliterated state lines.
All was done, is being done, in the name of "public welfare," but the
political effect of flood control, public housing projects, farm
subsidies, federal control of banks, loans and subventions of all
sorts, has been to win public support for the central government and
to discredit home government. The loyalty as well as the integrity of
the citizenry is purchased by gratuities derived from its own
substance, while bribery and blackmail reduce the petty local
politician to subservience. For a brief tenure of office the sovereignty
of the states is bartered away; such areas of independent action as
are left to them are those the federal government has not yet
chosen to absorb, like patrolling the streets or real estate taxation.
Washington has thus become the American Mecca and, if not
stopped by vigorous and uncompromising opposition, will become
its Moscow.

The Origin of States' Rights

The forces of centralization, then, have selected the "front," the
line of battle, and there is nothing for the opposition to do but to
meet them at this line. The issue is again the matter of states'
rights, but this time vitalized with the issue of freedom.

Specifically, it is the original American issue, before it became
sullied with sectionalism and racialism; it is the problem that
confronted the Founding Fathers.

The people of the recently liberated British colonies had had their
fill of government from afar, of impersonal government, of
government by decree. If they were going to have any government
at all they wanted one they could keep their eyes on and, if need be,
put their hands on. They were for Union, to be sure, for by such
cooperation they had rid themselves of a foreign tyrant, but they
recognized that under the Articles of Confederation the Union was
imperfect; it was to correct these imperfections that they sent
delegates to the Philadelphia Convention, not to draw up a new
Constitution. They accepted the Constitution rather grudgingly, even
though it left to the several states almost as much autonomy as they
had had; in internal matters the only material limitations on their
authority was in imposing interstate tariffs and in the matter of
issuing currency; in the important fiscal powers, with the exception
of import tariffs, the states gave up nothing, merely allowing the
federal government to share with them the right to levy excise taxes.
Direct taxation, on land and on incomes, remained the exclusive
prerogative of the states. And, while the Constitution did not touch
on the subject, the opinion prevailed that withdrawal from the Union
was permissible, an opinion that found expression first in the 1815
Hartford convention called for the purpose of exploring the
possibility of secession of the New England states. The first loyalty
of the early American was to his local government, and for good
reason.

There is no vice in the government of a large nation that cannot be
duplicated in the government of a small nation or of any political
sub-division. Even the Greek city-states had their tyrants. Our state
and city establishments have proven themselves susceptible to the
ubiquitous malady of corruption, and the rights of citizens have not
been immune to the power-complex of county sheriffs. If we were
divided into forty-eight nations, each independent of the other, the
case for freedom would hardly be better; it could be worse. But,
where power is diffused, as was contemplated in the original Union,
and the citizen can play one authority against another, his inherent
rights are less likely to be infringed upon. That political fact was
taken for granted, or rather sensed, by those who drafted, ratified
or opposed the Constitution; the arguments in the Convention, the
pleading for ratification in the Federalist and the warnings of anti-
ratificationist pamphleteers all bear evidence to a general distrust
of centralized power. Except for a handful who urged the monarchial
form of government, everybody was for local authority at least equal
in scope to that of the new national authority.

Freedom Is a Fight

Freedom is a personal experience; a free society is an association
of free individuals, nothing else. Freedom consists simply in the
absence of external restraints on thought and behavior. Yet,
because the individual, in his efforts to improve upon his
circumstances, not infrequently transgresses the equal freedom of
his fellow man, restraint becomes a necessary condition of social
living; it is the means of maintaining an equilibrium, or justice. But,
the administrators of justice are themselves men, possessed of the
frail ties common to all men, and in the exercise of the powers of
restraint vested in them are not immune from temptation. Power
over men is itself a satisfaction, besides providing opportunity to
better one's circumstances with a minimum of exertion. Hence, the
lust for power increases with its enjoyment and restraint is added to
restraint. The government instituted to prevent men from
transgressing one another's equal rights thus tends to become a
transgressor of the rights of all. The injustice is far more
oppressive than anyone man can do unto another, and the interests
of freedom can be served only by restraint of government.

The fight is unending. Man being what he is, government is
necessary; but government being subject to its own perversions,
must be kept in line by constant surveillance and opposition. At
times, as during the present, political power gets the upper hand
and seems well on the way to reduce the individual to animal status;
but because of man's innate urge for self-expression, which is the
essence of freedom, the struggle flares up again and again.
Between man and political power there is never peace, only a
temporary truce.

On this basic premise a states' rights movement can build an
appealing program. If it promises freedom, with decentralization as
a means only, it will speak to the hearts of men. The romantic
appeal of government by neighbors, of non-interference from
outsiders, of the preservation of cherished local customs, of the
pride of belonging to one's home environment � all this will have its
contributory effect; but far more fetching will be the expectation of
greater freedom, economic as well as political. That is the goal men
have always striven for.

And the promise must be implemented with specific objectives;
ideals alone will not do. Its platform must offer relief from all the
interventions in human affairs that the federal government, under
the guise of humanitarianism, has possessed itself of and without
compromise. Going to the tap-root of its present overweaning
power, repeal of the Sixteenth Amendment should be the keystone
of a states' rights program. The power to tax the earnings of men is
a denial of private property, the one right without which man is
reduced to subject-status. Our entire Bill of Rights became a dead
letter when the right to keep and enjoy the product of one's labor
was taken from us; for human dignity cannot be divorced from the
sense of ownership.

Once the political establishment acquired a proper lien on everything
produced, it had the means to undertake ventures for which it has
no competence in theory or practice, ventures which are properly in
the domain of individual initiative. It acquired the means of becoming
the Monopoly State Capitalist. Nor is there any power left to prevent
its achievement of that goal. For its enormous economic resources
enable it to maintain the machinery for the repression of opposition.

A states' rights movement that did not encompass repeal of the
Sixteenth Amendment would be meaningless. For the autonomy of
the state government was inevitably doomed when the incomes of
the people became the incidence of federal taxation. In the first
place, loyalty of the citizen, who before that had been primarily a
citizen of his state, and only secondarily of the nation, was
transferred to the authority that takes his wealth; he became a
subject of the government controlling his economy. And then, with
these funds at its disposal, the federal government was in position to
bring the local governments to heel, mainly through the process of
bribery. It is now clear that when the states ratified this amendment
they signed the death warrant of their own sovereignty.

Secession and Nullification

With that plank as a beginning, the platform should tear into every
device of centralization, always exposing it as a threat to freedom,
regardless of the promise with which it is eased into our lives. Let
us take the Federal Reserve System as an example. This was in the
beginning a quasi-public organization, or a private organization
under the aegis of the government; its function was to move money
from banks with an excess of it to banks that had a need of it for
sound purposes. However, through its monopoly privilege of making
money and issuing bonds, the government has reduced this
organization to subservience; it is now an arm of the government,
willy-nilly. As a consequence, the local bank, which once served the
commercial life of its community, is an obedient secretary of the U.
S. Treasury.

Since sixty percent of its assets are in the hands of the government,
the bank's interest in the local merchant and industrialist is only
forty percent. The banker is hardly the servicer of the society of
which he was a part, but has been fitted into the "foreign"
bureaucracy. Not only is his freedom being whittled away, but the
freedom of the citizen he once served is being limited by the rules
and regulations of the super-banker, the government. A states'
rights movement must not only I point out how the liquidation of
private banking came about, to the discouragement of private
initiative, but should advocate a system of state-chartered banks as
free as possible from federal entanglement.

But, whether it is against the banking system, or flood control
boards with authority superseding that of the states, or the
multitudinous lending and spending agencies that everywhere
demote civic management to secondary importance, the attacks
should be made with the purpose of laying upon the federal
government the odium of a "foreign" government. One, could make
a strong case for the proposition that the disabilities put upon the
colonials by George III compare favorably with the disabilities we
suffer under the Washington bureaucracy; the indictment of that
monarch in the Declaration of Independence needs little change to
fit it to the Trojan horse named "Welfare State." It must be the
business of a states' rights movement to point out that freedom can
be bartered away as well as taken away. The result is the same.

Important as is this ideological program, the movement must attach
to itself an economic interest. This is essential. In 1815, the
movement got up a head of steam only because "Mr. Madison's
War" was playing havoc with the merchants and individualists of
New England, and it was the economic difficulties of the South that
germinated interest in nullification and secession. No political
movement travels on ideals alone; it must be fueled by economics.
Through the intelligent use of the fiscal powers of the states, it is
possible to induce capital to engage in intra-state ventures; the
current attacks of big government on "big business" should favor
such decentralization, and the graduated income tax will in time
make the per-dollar return from a small investment more attractive
than possible earnings from a large undertaking. Farming freed from
local taxation should prove more profitable, and infinitely more
dignified, than subsidized and regulated farming. The exemption of
buildings from local levies would long ago have overcome the
housing shortage, upon which the bureaucracy has waxed fat, and
would have started a wage boom of proportions. In numerous ways,
the states individually or through voluntary agreements could go in
for encouraging local industry, to the disparagement of federal
methods.

In short, a states' rights movement should take the form of the
secession from Washington, not from the Union, and nullification of
the directives issuing from bureaucracies. It would be revolutionary
in character but legal in form, because the autonomy of the state
governments is inherent in the Constitution. Besides, there is no way
for the federal government to indict the state governments, and
revolution is always legal when it is successful.

Frank Chodorov (1887-1966), one of the great libertarians of the Old
Right, was the founder of the Intercollegiate Society of
Individualists and author of such books as The Income Tax: Root of
All Evil. Here he is on "Taxation Is Robbery."



------- End of forwarded message -------
--

Outgoing mail is certified virus free
Scanned by Norton AntiVirus

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance�not soap-boxing�please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds�is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to