-Caveat Lector-

I especially liked the part about schools and the "state is equivalent to the
country it rules."



The State and Illusion
by Gene Callahan
A theme running through several recent pieces on both this site and other
sites is that the state is sustained by illusion. I thought it might be
useful to examine the notion of illusion more thoroughly, to deepen our
understanding of what is indicated by this theme.

What do we mean by illusion? Does this mean that the state is like a dream or
a movie, that it is some sort of fantasy? Although this definition of
illusion may pass muster in common usage, we need to be more precise. Dreams
or fantasies are not inherently illusory. As Michael Oakeshott points out,
every experience is real if we do not take it for more or less than it is. A
dream is real: it is a real dream. Illusion arises when we take fact for
non-fact or non-fact for fact. If I dream that I have sold my next book for a
million dollars, I had a real experience. But, if I wake up the next day and
try to start spending the money by purchasing things with my credit card, I
am under an illusion. The dream money does not exist in the realm of fact,
but the bills I subsequently will receive do! I have mistaken a non-fact for
a fact.

Belief is necessary for illusion to persist. While transitory illusions occur
all the time – for instance, when someone mistakes a certain play of light
and shadow for an animal – the nature of the world of facts is such that the
truth tends to intrude and dispel the illusion. I might easily mistake a
moving shadow for an animal. But if I attempt to live by eating these
illusions, I will soon find myself very hungry. I can only maintain such an
illusion if I adopt a belief that supports it, such as deciding that these
shadows are spirit animals that vanish back into the spirit world upon my
approach.

Belief in illusion will occur when the believer is unwilling or unable to
confront the facts of the situation. Someone who is fearful of his own death
might find it easier to externalize that fear, seeing ghosts and spirits in
the shadows, instead of his own mortality. Or consider a person who doesn't
wish to give up some unfortunate practice, such as stealing from his
employer. He may adopt a belief that he is owed the money he steals, and that
his victim really stole it from him, by "exploiting" his labor.

Illusion cannot be forced on anyone. Social pressure to go along with some
illusion may be a powerful motivator, but ultimately a person must buy into
the illusion-supporting belief on his own. Thinking is, as Mises points out,
an action. All action is undertaken by individuals, and has the goal of
replacing what is with what ought to be. Therefore, the person adopting an
illusory belief must feel he is better off having done so.

"All right, all right," you say, "what has all this to do with the state?"
Well, I was getting to that, but since you're rushing me, I'll jump right
into it. Here are just a few of the illusions that support the state:

Public schools are necessary to socialize children.
When my wife and I tell people that we intend to home school our children,
this is the most frequent comment we hear. People are willing to believe that
we can handle the instructional tasks of the schools, but what about
socialization?

This is clearly a non-fact taken as a fact. The non-fact seems to originate
chiefly from the teacher's unions. A little examination shows how fragile
this particular illusion is. Institutional schooling has only been widespread
in the last 150 years. Before that, we had three or four million years of
human history during which, by some means, children managed to become
socialized. Furthermore, we have strong theoretical and empirical reasons to
believe that the public schools de-socialize rather than socialize children.
Where were the pre-modern Columbines, where adolescents simply go bonkers and
wipe out large numbers of people at random? The public schools are so many
thousand experiments in duplicating the scenario of The Lord of the Flies.

The state must exist in order to provide us with security.
But the state has been the main threat to the life of its own citizens, let
alone the lives of citizens of other states, during most of the twentieth
century. Hans-Hermann Hoppe has brilliantly outlined how security against war
and invasion can be better provided privately than by the state. Daniel
McCarthy notes that traditional law enforcement often was performed by
private citizens. As governments have seized this role, disorder and lack of
security have become the rule.

The state is equivalent to the country it rules.
Recently, in response to a column from Benjamin Kepple in Front Page
Magazine, "A Real American" wrote in that: "It is long past due that someone
exposed the Libertarians for the traitors that they are." By talking about
secession, anarchy, and so on, we are betraying our neighbors, friends, and
family – our "community" and "homeland." They are one with the state, and to
act against the state is to reject all social bonds.

Let's think about this for a moment. Although social contract theory as the
basis for the state has more than a few theoretical holes in it (see, for
instance, Anthony de Jasay's great work, The State), let's imagine for a
moment that there was such a contract. We'll call it "The U.S. Constitution."
Based on an examination of this contract, who, exactly, has betrayed whom? I
have paid my taxes, I haven't led an armed revolt, and have obeyed the law
(well, mostly). But the state has violated my right to free speech, my
freedom of association, my right to bear arms, my right to freedom from
unreasonable search and seizure, and has usurped powers explicitly left to
the people and the states. It has interfered in my pursuit of life, liberty,
and happiness. The verdict is clear: the traitor is the modern state.

The state is necessary to provide us with roads.
When I suggested to a good friend that the state was unnecessary, he asked,
"Then who would provide all of these roads?"

"What about that paper on your desk?" I asked him. "How was that provided?"

"You're saying we should have private roads? That would be chaos!"

The idea is simply accepted without examination. But what is more chaotic
than the current system of state-provided roads? For many people it is
difficult to predict, from one day to the next, whether their trip to work
will take thirty minutes or two hours. The state closes lanes at its whim.
One day I discovered the New York State Thruway completely closed at 10:30 in
the morning. Other days, I have passed several miles of cones blocking off a
lane to find that the actual work area comprised only a few yards of highway.
It seems unlikely that private road owners would be able to impose such costs
on their customers without driving them to an alternate provider.

Furthermore, private roads could provide different levels of service suited
to different drivers' needs. In my neighborhood, there are two supermarkets.
One of them has relatively high prices, but no lines. The other has low
prices, but often has long lines. Shoppers can make a trade-off between money
and time. Competing road providers could obviously do the same.

Of course, these are just a few examples, and more could be given. So why
does belief in such non-facts persist? One explanation is that those in power
cynically propagate such ideas because it suits their ends. This explanation
is partially true, but it is far from the whole story. For one thing, it
fails to explain why those who are not in power adopt these beliefs.

Also, I must confess that I can speak from personal experience about the
beliefs of government employees. Like so many Irish immigrants, my family has
gone in for "civil service" in a major way. Among my close relatives are a
state's attorney, a colonel in the Army, the former Chief Justice of the
Connecticut Supreme Court, a public school teacher, and more. I can attest to
the fact that not a single one of them holds the cynical view outlined in the
previous paragraph. They all, to a man, believe that they are providing
socially useful services. And, in fact, to some extent all of them are. But
they have failed to question the context within which their work takes place.

The simple fact of the matter is that it is much easier to take the world as
one finds it than to deeply question the prevailing social order. Basically
decent people will go along with indecent schemes if these seem to be
inevitable features of their world. To many, questioning the need for the
state seems as daft as arguing with gravity. A comparison with the
institution of slavery is once again apt. Note the attitude of the American
founders toward slavery. Not a grand thing, perhaps, but there it is, and
what is one to do about it? The decent people of the time, if they found
themselves owning slaves, attempted to be decent masters.

Such an instinctive conservatism is not to be dismissed lightly. The current
system can claim that it has at least proven itself to be a possible way of
ordering social life. Look, here it is, and we're living in it. For most of
us, life is not altogether unpleasant. We have a wealth of material goods, a
variety of choices as to how to conduct our life, and a degree of personal
freedom.

I believe that the conservative argument for the status quo can be best
answered by highlighting the dynamics of the state. As Sanford Ikeda
demonstrates in The Dynamics of the Mixed Economy and his more recent work on
social norms, there is an irrepressible tendency for the state to continue
expanding, destroying the institutions of civil association that stand in its
path. It is not so much a static survey of the current situation that will
rouse people to action, as a dynamic look across the last several centuries.
Recent history is littered with the wreckage of institutions beloved by
conservatives. Once the dynamic of the state is set in motion, the wreckage
will follow. The foremost attempts to control the state, the American and
British forms of government, have failed. Grendel roams the land, and though
we prefer home and hearth, we must take up sword and shield while there are
still warriors left.*

* Hey, I'm talking metaphorically here, OK? An actual sword is very little
use against the BATF.

July 26, 2001

Gene Callahan [send him mail] has just finished a book, Economics for Real
People, to be published this year by the Ludwig von Mises Institute.

© 2001, Gene Callahan

Gene Callahan/Stu Morgenstern Archives

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