-Caveat Lector-

<http://www.worldtribune.com/hu-1.html>

"People have gradually forgotten what the Soviet Union was like.
They have unlearned the lessons of "utopia," and, as a result,
the Left has regained power in many of the advanced industrial
countries, notably the United States, Britain, Germany, France,
and Italy. Nearly all of Europe, save Spain, has gone socialist.
Socialists have achieved all this under the guise of moderation.
It describes its new approach as a third way. Unfortunately, the
third way leads nowhere."


Resisting the utopian impulse

by Margaret Thatcher
THE HUDSON INSTITUTE


For conservatives engaged in practical politics, utopia is
something to be suspected and resisted. Conservatives, of course,
believe in social improvement and in leaving our children a
better country than the one we inherited from our parents. But we
know that a better Britain or a better America can only arise
from the existing Britain or the existing America. It cannot be
created de novo from blueprints for an ideal Britain or perfect
America some philosophers have dreamed up. The perfect expression
of "utopia" is the new residential housing estates that have won
all the architectural awards but which not many people want to
live in.

The obvious example is the Soviet Union. That was the alleged
utopia: everything fixed, everything organized, everything the
same. For more than eighty years, every device of oppression and
lying was employed to persuade the Russian people first to build
utopia, then to maintain it, and then to support it and spread it
to other countries. At no point, however, did the Russian people
ever believe that they were living in utopia. There were people
outside Russia who regarded the Soviet Union as utopia. The
radical Left and some of the liberal Left, such as John Kenneth
Galbraith, believed in the Soviet utopia. But eventually the
Soviet Union itself did the world one great service. For most
people in the West, it became a symbol of how awful and how
destructive utopian politics can be. The Soviet Union proved that
utopia was inhuman. When asked how many political prisoners were
in the USSR, Soviet dissident Vladimir Bukovsky said that there
were 280 million. He was right, of course; everyone in that
country was a political prisoner.

The end of the Cold War and the collapse of Communism removed a
permanent threat to peace, liberated the millions of people
living under Communist tyranny, and demonstrated the bankruptcy
of planned socialist economies and the superiority of the free
market. It proved the latter beyond all doubt. We now know full
well that the societies and economies that flourish are those
that allow the distinctive talents of individuals to blossom.
Societies that dwarf, crush, distort, or manipulate individuals
cannot progress. The nations that place a high value on
individual freedom experience the greatest advances. So it is
that the West, because of its fundamental grounding in individual
liberty, and because its beliefs are founded on a moral basis,
has produced the very best results and a significantly richer
life for all our people.

If we consider the economic and technological advances around the
world and compare them with progress in the USSR, we see what an
enormous mistake communism was. The West is partly responsible,
of course. Britain took in Karl Marx and gave him use of the
British library, which is where he wrote his great treatise on
communism. Switzerland allowed Lenin to return to Russia near the
end of World War I. Those two decisions changed the whole course
of history for the worse, particularly for the nations that would
become the Soviet Union.

The West is now poised to make similar mistakes. People have
gradually forgotten what the Soviet Union was like. They have
unlearned the lessons of "utopia," and, as a result, the Left has
regained power in many of the advanced industrial countries,
notably the United States, Britain, Germany, France, and Italy.
Nearly all of Europe, save Spain, has gone socialist. Socialists
have achieved all this under the guise of moderation. It
describes its new approach as a third way. Unfortunately, the
third way leads nowhere.

Those who posit a third way between capitalism and state
socialism argue that the Left deserves power because it
administers the market economy more compassionately than the
Right. This notion is absolute poppycock. Behind a guise of
moderation, the Left is still flexing its old utopian instincts.
It is implementing them through at least three new brands of
utopian politics.


Regulatory State

The first new instrument of utopian politics is the regulated
society: the increasing volume of regulations on private
endeavors. The new utopians retain free enterprise because
everyone knows that nationalization fails totally: it fails to
produce the right goods and produces substantial social losses.
Instead of nationalization, the new utopians achieve the
equivalent of socialism by instituting countless regulations,
controlling everything they can. This is obvious in the European
Union, where regulations are legion.

The regulatory state does not produce a better society, however;
it simply puts extra costs on business. Those costs ultimately
produce unemployment. Hence, mainland Europe now endures
unemployment of some 10 or 11 percent, which is appalling. In
Britain, by contrast, unemployment is only 4 to 5 percent because
Britain has resisted many of the EU regulations�so far. The
regulatory state creates an economy so heavily burdened that it
can only compete with freer economies by erecting trade barriers,
and that is exactly what we do not need. We need much freer trade
all over the world. Unfortunately, under its new socialist
government, Britain has joined the Social Charter, and will
therefore have to institute many of the regulations it has so far
resisted.

The regulated economy is only half of utopia; the other half is
the regulated society. The new leviathan does not merely regulate
industry, it manages social life as well. This is the case in
Great Britain and sometimes in the United States, and is
certainly so in Europe. Consider a few examples. Speech codes at
universities now minutely regulate anything that might
conceivably offend any minority�racial, ethnic, religious, or
sexual. Proposed tobacco regulations force individuals to modify
their behavior even though they might calculate the risk quite
differently from the bureaucracies that decide for them.
Government increasingly interferes with how people bring up their
children�by, for instance, forbidding parents the right to
institute even very mild punishment if the child deserves it.
These are matters on which there is no single "correct" view, but
the utopian government forces everyone to conform to its notions.
Furthermore, the state that wants to regulate every home
sometimes neglects the children in its direct care, as we have
seen in some very tragic cases recently.

The state lays down new laws almost every minute, new regulations
on how we should lead our lives. This practice creates a rather
passive populace. Remember that 1984 begins with Winston Smith
doing compulsory physical exercise. Ironically, in that case as
in reality, the tremendous number of new regulations, which is
meant to create the new utopia, in fact creates the very
opposite.


Multicultural Society

The second element of utopia is the multicultural society, and
it, too, undermines the achievement of the utopian vision.
Britain and America are two of the most tolerant societies in
history, having demonstrated that tolerance by welcoming refugees
and immigrants from all parts of the world and then turning them
into British and American citizens by inducting them into the
national community. These immigrants learned our language and
adopted our history as their own. Such cultural inclusion is, in
fact, the only way to achieve a successful multiethnic society.
Previous generations achieved such a society by creating a
healthy, unified culture in which all people are encouraged to
feel loyalty and patriotism toward their country regardless of
whether they were born there or arrived by immigration.

The concept of multiculturalism threatens to unravel all that
good work. Here is a genuinely utopian enterprise, more utopian
indeed than the Tower of Babel. (The Babel builders did not
intend for people to end up speaking different languages. That
was a divine punishment.) In the United States, multiculturalism
is an aspect of devolution. The U.S. is moving toward a system in
which the government presides over a number of different social
groups, some of which have their own language and type of
education. This approach undermines social unity and allows
construction of a multicultural society, which is the very
opposite of America's previous practice. The government aims to
supervise these different groups and keep the peace by
redistributing income from one to another.

Thus the utopia of multiculturalism involves a bureaucratic class
presiding over a nation divided into a variety of ethnic
nationalities. That, of course, looks awfully like the old Soviet
Union. Such as system cannot work, and its failure is likely to
inflict great damage on the people, their traditions, and their
liberties.


European Superstate

The third utopian project is the European superstate. This is a
horrific idea. Europe, of course, currently comprises a group of
nation states, each with its own language, history, loyalties,
customs, and rates of taxation, and in many cases these various
characteristics differ greatly across the continent. Great
Britain, moreover, is probably more different from the rest of
Europe than the various continental nations are from one another.

Consider, for example, the seemingly simple matter of retirement.
Upon joining the EC, Britain had two different retirement ages;
one for men and another for women. The EC, however, had a
directive that said that the retirement ages had to be equal.
Naturally, they expected me to reduce the retirement age for men
from sixty-five to sixty, which is what it was for women.
Instead, we chose to raise the retirement age for women to
sixty-five over the next twenty years. That, of course, will
significantly reduce the cost of Social Security in Britain. In
Europe, by contrast, they pile on state systems. Britain has a
very low, very basic state system, and the individual is expected
to provide for himself through his company's scheme and through
other investments. Britain's system is not in financial
difficulty, because the scheme is very conservative. In Europe,
the very opposite is true.


Rule of Law

As noted earlier, every country in Europe, except Spain, is
socialist. All of Europe has high taxes and burdensome
regulations, and Great Britain is the only outpost of liberty in
the EU. Britain's greatest gift to the world, however, may be the
rule of law. A nation cannot have liberty without it.

The rule of law, in fact, is what saved some Asian countries from
collapse last year�especially those that were once part of the
British empire, such as Singapore, Hong Kong, and Malaysia�when
many other countries in that region floundered badly. The former
British nations were saved by the rule of law because the latter
requires public integrity, and that integrity made their banks
and contracts sound and minimized corruption. Many other Asian
countries, by contrast, were plagued by corruption, and their
banks were totally unsound. Hence, it was hardly surprising that
their currencies collapsed. But it all arose from corruption and
the absence of rule of law. The economic collapse of so many
Asian countries has certainly harmed those that had the rule of
law, but in the latter, their institutions are intact and their
banks are sound. They are recovering fairly quickly.

Nations that do not have the rule of law, such as China and
Russia, can fall apart quite rapidly. That is what brought on the
Soviet Union's collapse. By granting some increased freedom,
including freedom of speech, Gorbachev inadvertently undermined
the regime. Freedom of speech led to freedom of action. The
people pressed for more freedom, and eventually the process led
quite suddenly to the collapse of both communism and then of the
Soviet Union itself. A similar process has occurred in large
parts of Asia.

No one has figured out how to make the transition from a totally
controlled Communist state to one in which citizens are expected
to exercise responsibility. When the system denies you liberty
and any sense of responsibility and makes certain that you have
few if any real opportunities to succeed, you do not learn how to
make it on your own. And when such a system stops functioning,
the vast majority of people cannot exercise self-rule. And in the
absence of rule of law, organized crime takes over. This process
has been quite devastating for the people of the Soviet Union.


Ill-Advised Bailouts

The collapse of a nation such as Russia quickly induces
multinational relief agencies such as the International Momentary
Fund (IMF) to move in and give help. The IMF has gone into
Russia, Indonesia, Mexico, and many other countries. In Russia,
however, as noted earlier, corruption is rampant, and much of the
nation is run by the mafia. Thus the money the IMF sent to Russia
quickly went out of the country into the bank accounts of former
Communists and other organized-crime figures. The government
utterly failed to ensure that the international aid money was
spent on the purposes for which it was given.

In Indonesia, too, the aid money has been handled corruptly.
Consequently, many analysts are now suggesting that the IMF
should not be handing out large sums of money to corrupt nations
because doing so creates a moral hazard. Governments can say,
"Well, there's no point in us behaving absolutely perfectly�we
can get money from the IMF if we need to." International
financial institutions must be much more careful in what they do
with their money. This money was given for a specific purpose and
must be used for that purpose. It must be spent on projects that
will raise the well-being of the people until they can raise
their standard of living themselves.

Russia, after all, has the richest stock of natural resources in
the world. She has almost everything: diamonds, platinum, gold,
silver, all the industrial metals, and marvelous soil. If natural
resources mean anything, Russia should be the richest country in
the world. Thus its poverty tells us something very significant.
A nation's success is not based on its natural resources, nor
even on the talents and abilities of the people. It is based on
whether that country has the rule of law and a tax regime that
encourages individuals' talents and abilities to flourish and
enables people to profit from them.

Great Britain has a wonderful heritage, as does the United
States. These two nations are far more similar to each other than
to any other countries in the world. There is an old saying that
applies very well here: "That which thy fathers bequeath thee,
earn it anew if thou wouldst possess it." In looking to the
future, we should resist the temptation toward utopian schemes
and depend on our venerable traditions of individual freedom and
the rule of law.

The Rt. Hon. the Baroness Margaret Thatcher was Prime Minister of
the United Kingdom from 1979 to 1990 and is an author, lecturer,
and member of the British House of Lords.


Contact World Tribune.com at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Return to World Tribune.com front page


=================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

  FROM THE DESK OF:
                     *Michael Spitzer*  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                      ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
=================================================================

<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