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Via Antiwar.Com

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Life and Libertarians: Beyond Left and Right
by Alexander Cockburn
CounterPunch, April 3, 2000

I got an invitation to speak a couple of months ago from an outfit called
antiwar.com, which is run by a young fellow called Justin Raimondo.
"Antiwar.com is having its second annual national conference March 24 & 25, and
we'd like you to be the luncheon speaker," Raimondo wrote. "The conference will
be held at the Villa Hotel, in San Mateo (near the airport). The theme of the
conference is 'Beyond Left & Right: The New Face of the Antiwar Movement.' We
have invited a number of speakers spanning the political spectrum. Confirmed so
far: Patrick J. Buchanan, Tom Fleming (of Chronicles magazine), Justin Raimondo
(Antiwar.com), Kathy Kelly (Iraq Aid), Alan Bock (Orange County Register), Rep.
Ron Paul (R-Texas), representatives of the Serbian Unity Congress, and a host
of others."

Raimondo seasoned his invite with a burnt offering, in the form of flattery,
always pleasing to the nostrils:

"All of us here at Antiwar.com are big fans of your writing: we met, once, at a
meeting during the Kosovo war where you bravely took up the fight for the
united front left-right alliance against imperialist war. We can promise you a
small honorarium, a lunch, free admission to all conference events � and a good
time."

As a seasoned analyst of such communications, my eye of course fell sadly upon
the words "small honorarium" � a phrase that in my case usually means somewhere
between $150 and $350. I'd already noted that even though our task was to
transcend the tired categories of left and right, I was the only leftist
mentioned, with the possible exception of Kathy Kelly, from that splendid
organization, Voices in the Wilderness, which campaigns to lift the UN
sanctions on Iraq.

Being a libertarian Justin had boldly added the prospect of a "good time."
Leftist invitations rarely admit this possibility in formal political
communications, even in the distant days when the left supposedly had a lock on
drugs and sex.

I said I'd be happy to join in such an enterprise, and in due course got some
angry e-mails from lefties who seem to feel that any contiguity with Buchanan
is a crime, even if the subject was gardening and Dutch tulipomania in the
seventeenth century.

"Dear Alexander Cockburn:
I read with horror that you are speaking at an event (the Anti-War.com
conference) where Pat Buchanan is the keynote speaker. How could you knowing
that PB's policies are what could only be called fascist? I generally agree
with your opinion on imperialism, and supported your view of Seattle. However
speaking at an event which will amongst other things help to give Mr. Buchanan
respectability, is unconscionable. I hope you will reconsider. If not, we will
probably be able to greet each other, when you cross our picket line.
Dean Tuckerman
P.S. I am a member of Anti-Racist Action Bay Area."

"Dear Dean, thanks for yr note. So far as Buchanan is concerned, I assume he
was invited because he opposed the war in Kosovo, and calls for the lifting of
sanctions against Iraq. There is a lot that's funky about American
isolationism, but frankly, I don't mind sharing a conference schedule with
someone who opposes war on Serbs and on Iraqi kids. Nor do I think B is any
more of a fascist � in practical terms � than Albright and Clinton and Gore and
Bradley, with the first three literally with the blood of millions on their
hands. Go find Mailer's interview with Buchanan in Esquire a few years ago. See
you on the picket lines. Best, Alex Cockburn"

I pondered what to wear, deciding finally on a t-shirt advertising the Fully
Informed Jury Association, a group upholding the powers of the jury to set
aside the law and rule as the jurors' understanding of the case and their
consciences dictate. FIJA is also anathema to lefties, who equate juries with
redneck juries in the south in the early 1960s.  It's useless to point out to
them that northeastern juries were overturning laws and setting fugitive slaves
free long before the Civil War, or that an all-male jury supported Susan B.
Anthony's right to vote, only to be overruled by the judge. If a judge screws
up, lefties don't call for the abolition of judges. But let one jury come in
with an unwelcome verdict, as with Diallo, and you'll hear mumbles that the
jury is � as Michael Lind so memorably put it after the OJ decision, "a
barbaric Viking relic."

At the last minute Barbara said the Villa Hotel is relatively swanky and a T-
shirt might not cut it. I grudgingly switched to white shirt , chose the 67
convertible as properly defiant of the auto-safety lobby and headed south from
Berkeley. Barbara was right. This was most emphatically a shirt-and-tie, skirt-
and-nice-shoes. Justin Raimondo was draped in the sort of gray pinstripe
favored by London gents when they want a holiday from blue. But all the same
the folks were unmistakably libertarians, not Democrats or Republicans.
Democrats would have been more casual, Republicans far more assertive. From the
podium I gazed out at white faces, seeing only two black countenances, one of
them unmistakably that of yet another liberal bete-to-hate, Lenora Fulani.

An excellent crowd! Their amiable hilarity at my sallies reminded me of
Goldsmith's lines in the Deserted Village about the pupils of the country
schoolmaster: "Full well they laughed with counterfeited glee...At all his
jokes, and many a joke had he." (How many people have read the whole of that
wonderful poem, one of the most savage denunciations of free trade ever
written?)

And here now, cleaned up a bit, is what I said.
"Hello to you all.

W.H. Auden, poet, wrote a verse once about a rather mysterious character called
Gerald Hamilton who was actually the origin � if any of you have read
Christopher Isherwood's novels, Mr. Norris Changes Trains. And he wrote a
little poem which said: "So it's you that I now raise my glass to, although I
haven't the slightest idea, what in God's name you're up to, or why in God's
name you are here."

And I feel a little bit like that looking out on your pleasant faces. I've been
on the left, you know, and I can usually come to an audience and pretty much
characterize it. I could save the FBI a tremendous amount of money. They go to
extraordinary expense bugging people, going out in the hotel parking lot, and
writing down all the license tags. I could say the three old ladies on my left
there, they're all commies, they've been commies for sixty years. The people
over there carrying a copy of The Militant, they're Trotskyists. But when the
Feds come up after this one, I don't know what I'm going to say. I'm going to
throw in the towel.

People talk a lot about the need for new thinking, and the need for new ideas.
But mostly on the left, if you actually raise a new idea, it's a bit like
arriving at a town in the year 1348 with spots on your face saying, "Let me
in."

I remember some years ago I was in Detroit, a town I like a lot, and an
anarchist friend of mine said there's a terrible event on the weekend called
"Gunstock," and I said, "Oh, that sounds interesting, what's that?" He said,
oh, it's people against the UN, and people who are in favor of guns. I said,
"Let's go and look, let's go and talk to them, and see what's going on." And he
said, absolutely not. I said, "I thought you were an anarchist." So I went to
"Gunstock," and of course it was filled with amiable characters. There was a
definite sympathy for guns but not oppressively so. So I wrote a column in The
Nation saying actually there'd always been the talk of new ideas and I had a
new idea that was that our people should go to gun shows. Nation readers should
go to gun shows, carrying copies of The Nation and converse with people. There
was an absolute torrent of outrage. People didn't think that was a good idea at
all.

Before this event I got called by a reporter from the Examiner, and he asked
what I thought about Buchanan, and he said Buchanan had written the speech for
Nixon about going into Cambodia in 1970. Where were you, he asked. And I said,
oh, I was outside the American embassy in London-probably standing next to Bill
Clinton, who may or may not have been reporting to the FBI. He probably was. Or
the CIA.

And the Examiner reporter said, "how would you describe yourself?" And I said
"well, how about radical?" He wasn't totally happy with radical, and I said all
right, left, but then the word "left" can mean anything. There was probably a
left to the Nazi party in 1935, wanting to wipe out only half the Jews. The
word left does not mean much unless it is cashed in real currency, real
positions, like being against war on Serbia, for example. And if you're opposed
to that, you really do start looking around for allies and I have noticed you
find them increasingly in people like yourselves. People who would
conventionally be regarded on the libertarian right or people like Buchanan.

In any intervention there's a moment when the intervening power is trying to
achieve critical mass in its propaganda. The American people, generally, say at
first, 'huh, intervention, no, it doesn't sound like a very good idea.' And
then you get the usual arsenal of propaganda goes into motion. In Iraq, for
example, there was the incubator story. Human rights, of course, was really
brought into currency in the era of Jimmy Carter. The idea of the moral
mission. Of course, its historical antecedents are much, much longer, but it's
my belief that with that when the liberals began to try to regain the moral
confidence that they'd lost in the wake of Vietnam it took them from 1975 to
the Carter era, in other words no time at all, to reestablish or to begin the
work of reestablishing their moral credentials. We had the rhetoric of human
rights. Jimmy Carter pronounced the rhetoric of human rights just as he was
mandating the first Argentinean torturers into the creation of the contras. The
rhetoric, and the reality. And since that time, we've seen the gradual
accretion and accumulation of confidence of the intervention in the cause of
human rights plus a fairly impressive armory of techniques and accomplices.

Can we unite on the antiwar platform? We have already, in the case of Kosovo
for example. But where would you as libertarians want to get off the leftist
bus? A leftist says "Capitalism leads to war. Capitalism needs war." But you
libertarians are pro-capitalism, so you presumably have a view of capitalism as
a system not inevitably producing or needing war. Lefties have always said
capitalism has to maximize its profits and the only way you can maximize
profits in the end is by imperial war, which was the old Lenin thesis.

Leftists say that corporations must plunder the earth. Corporations will brook
no resistance. Corporations don't care for interference with their ways,
whether it's by the Zapatistas or by insurgent groups around the world. The
minute you have a insurgent group then the capitalists, the corporations say,
enough, and whistle up the state to do their bidding. In the early days of the
newsletter I co-edit, Counterpunch, we ran across a Chase Manhattan bank memo.
You know, occasionally you think, 'God, it's so tiring trying to find news,
let's just like think of what they would say and then write it and say they
said it.' I've never done that, but sometimes they say so exactly what you want
them to say, you're worried that other people will think that you made it up.

So a fellow hired by Chase Manhattan bank wrote a little memo, which had the
line, "the Zapatistas must be eliminated," simple as that. Must be eliminated.
It turned out to have been written, that memo, by a professor, a liberal
professor, as I recall, from Johns Hopkins.

So, my libertarian friends, at what point do you get off the train? You say,
'we like corporations, the right for people to associate and form a corporation
and issue publicly held stock and maximize profits. This is part and parcel of
the economic package we favor.' Then you have to do battle with leftists, those
who say corporate greed will lead to war and waste.

Take Pentagon spending. Is the economy basically underpinned by Pentagon
spending, defense spending, and has been ever since 1938-roughly when the New
Deal failed, which it did, effectively. Then they had to turn to war spending
to bail the whole system out, and ever since then we've had Pentagon spending
underwriting everything. Keynesianism. Military Keynesianism, at that. Now
that's another bit of left analysis, I wouldn't go on to tedious length with
the various weapons of argument in our arsenal. I'm saying that one could have
and should have important debates about why we think wars start.
I was asked by Justin to give a talk here . He cunningly billed my speech as
"The psychology of liberal interventionism," thus removing it from the
corporate economic plane to the mentally nutty plane.

A while back I did an interview, actually for a terrific book which I happen to
have written myself called "The Golden Age Is In Us," and I was interviewing
Chomsky. It was for a magazine called Grand Street, and the theme we were meant
to talk about was models. And so Chomsky and I were very pleased, we thought we
were going to talk about models, you know, in the normally Vogue magazine sense
of the word. But they said, no, they wanted us to talk about intellectual
constructs. Boring. But some of what Chomsky says is interesting. Bear with me,
I'll just read a couple of things he said.

"The same is true of intellectual development and the same is true of moral
life. You're constantly making choices and decisions and judgments. Sometimes
you don't know quite what to do, but over a wide range you know what's right.
And even when you disagree with people, you find shared moral ground on which
you can work things out. That's true on every issue. Take a look at the debate
over slavery. It was largely on shared moral ground, and some of the arguments
were not so silly. You could understand the slave owner's arguments. The slave
owner says, If you own property, you treat it better than if you rent property,
so I'm more humane than you are. We can understand that argument. You have to
figure out what's wrong with it, but there is shared moral ground over a range
that goes far beyond any experience. And this can only mean, again short of
angels, that it's growing out of our nature. It means that there must be
principles that are embedded in our nature or at the core of our understanding
of what a decent human life is, what a proper form of society is and so on."

Now, he goes on, "the idea that human beings are malleable and that people
don't have an instinctive nature is a very attractive one to people who want to
rule, and to control. If you look at the modern intelligentsia over the past
century or so, they're pretty much a managerial class, a secular priesthood.
They've basically gone in two directions, one is essentially Leninist. Leninism
is the ideology of a radical intelligentsia that says we have the right to
rule. Alternatively, they have joined the decision-making sector of state
capitalist society as managers in the political economic and ideological
institutions. The ideologies are very similar," says Chomsky who went on,"I've
sometimes compared Robert McNamara to Lenin, and you have only to change a few
words for them to say virtually the same thing. That's why people can jump so
quickly from being loyal communists to celebrating America, to take the
Partisan Review's famous phrase back in the early Cold War." "All of this,"
Chomsky concludes, "was predicted by the anarchist, Bakunin, probably the only
prediction in the social sciences that's ever come true."

Now that is a very provocative and stimulating set of propositions .This idea
of the managerial impulse, the technocratic impulse. What I'm sure is
attractive about the idea of the left-right opposition to war is the idea of a
shared moral outlook, which of course then has to confront or perhaps gloss
over temporarily economic and political differences. And I think the shared
moral outlook should extend beyond war into other very, important areas. I
might just suggest a few. To me they are enormously important.

If you're paralleling your opposition to intervention, to the liberal
humanitarian interventionist spirit at home, what are you talking really about?

You're talking about defense of liberty. What we are seeing at the moment is
the rise of the prosecutorial state, a ferocious onslaught on substantive
liberty, almost everywhere you look. Its reached epidemic crisis and emergency
proportions.

You can look across the country at one example after another of the cops, of
the prosecutorial system being out of control. Lying by cops in court is
endemic. Lying and snitching, that's the underpinnings of law enforcement. And
it is reaching, I think, a major crisis. And in this crisis constitutional
protections are going by the board.

The fourth amendment is gone. Absolutely gone. In a car you have no rights
whatsoever. They can do anything they want. The sixth amendment is gone. Now
your kids are driving down the road to San Francisco. No rights in a car, right
away. A cop sees them, thinks they're driving a V.W. with a hip hop beret on or
something like that, or a tail pipe is out, they'll stop them, it's a pretext
stop. They're got no protections. And then you've got, of course, all this
driving while black stuff, crowding in on top of that. Now you get into court,
you're confronted with cops perjuring themselves and jailhouse snitches saying
you confessed all to them in your cell. You've got people told to snitch or
they'll face 20 years, you've got the mandatory sentences, you've got the crack
disproportion, a 100 times disproportion in sentencing on powder cocaine and
crack cocaine. Take every instrumentality and abuse of the drug war, and
there's something on which everybody in this room could unite.

How many times have we heard a real debate thus far this year? On basic issues
of liberty and freedom? Not one bleat, except, I hope, from Mr. Buchanan when
he gets going. And Ralph Nader, hopefully when he gets going.

Now take the environment, and what we've seen over the last 20 years since that
great Green president Richard Nixon brought in EPA, is a steady conversion of
the militant organizing defense of nature, defense of open space, defense of
things we all like, into a collusive operation between extremely rich NGOs and
the government. Look at the big environmental organizations. Totally
undemocratic, socked in with major foundations like the Pew Foundation, like
Rockefeller, like Ford, like the MacArthur Foundation, whose processes are
secretive, the politics of manipulation, and ultimately coercive regulation
which causes huge offense to people who should be the allies of the Greens. I'm
talking about small ranches, I'm talking about small farmers who see themselves
being destroyed by big government.

So, in area after area, these things have to be argued through in an amiable
and pleasant and energetic way.

I think the old categories are gone. I see no virtue to them. I see Bernie
Sanders listed as an Independent Socialist in the U.S. Congress. I see what
Bernie Sanders has supported, starting with the war in Kosovo. And then I see
Ron Paul, on the other hand, writing stuff against war which could have been
written by Tom Hayden in 1967. I say what is the point of fooling around with
the old categories? Bernie Sanders says he's an economic populist. What's he
trying to do? He's trying to export the nuclear waste of the northeastern
states to a poor Spanish community in Texas. And that effort was stopped by
George W., figure that one out. Of course George W. had a Democratic opponent
in Texas who was making a stink about it, so he wanted to outflank him, that's
why he did it.

We live in exciting times. There's no question about it. It's been a long
process. I think I met my first libertarians back in the early 70s. I've seen
these shivering of the old categories go by the board over this period.
I don't know how much will happen this year. These are periods of action,
periods of creative effort, We've got two things to do: one is to cement our
basic capacities for alert resistance at the next specter of war, have  our
troops ready, our messages ready, have our propaganda ready, have our alliances
and our coalitions prepared.

And beyond that, through functions like this and the stuff that Justin's been
organizing, and hopefully something from the left, we have to reforge our ideas
and hopes, based on those simple ideas of Chomsky or the French Enlightenment
and move forward from there.

Thank you."

Hardly had I stopped before a Serb came up and said angrily that I wrecked
everything I'd said with my kindly allusion to the French Enlightenment. He
spat out the word Rousseau with the sort of indignation I imagine he attaches
to the name of Wesley Clark. I was trying to defend myself but then was
sidetracked by the effort of exchanging comradely greetings not only with
Lenora Fulani but of Ron Paul. Raimondo lived up to his promise. It was fun.
And it was fun later that afternoon to listen to Fulani give an interesting
address on the decline of the anti war left and to Raimondo talk about the 30s
isolationists. Alas, the Libertarians' presidential candidate, Harry Browne,
was repetitive and a bit of a bore.

Driving back to Berkeley with $300 in cash in my pocket, I mentally toasted
antiwar.com. Alas, not many leftists will ever want to have much to do with
them.

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