http://www.lewrockwell.com/rockwell/moderates-radicals.html

Moderates and Radicals
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.

In all times of state dominance, the instability of the system gives rise to 
two types of reformers: the moderates who want to work within the system but 
end up defending it, and the radicals who have the clarity to see that the 
only real solution is upheaval. If the latter prevail - and they often have 
in the history of politics - it is only after having endured the slings and 
arrows of the former.

The history of liberty is strewn with heroes who courageously championed 
radical reform, but in every case I can recall, these same people were 
traduced and reviled not only by the regime, but also by the moderate 
reformers, who always claimed to be working within the system. The moderates 
say that their efforts are being frustrated by the voices of the radicals, 
who are said to discredit the cause they purport to support.

This line of attack was used against the French liberal economist Fr�d�ric 
Bastiat, and still is. So it was with A.R.J. Turgot, the liberal reformer 
who served as finance minister under Louis XVI - Simon Schama says that his 
position in favor of radical reform discredited the efforts of the 
moderates. It was said of Cobden and Bright, as they sought to embarrass and 
disgrace the government and its bread tax. Their erstwhile allies constantly 
sought to muzzle them, with the idea that their extremism was harming an 
otherwise respectable cause.

So it was for Patrick Henry, who was urged to drop his agitations for 
revolution and, later, his attacks on the Constitution. F.A. Hayek was 
dogged by complaints that his radicalism was losing liberty more friends 
than it was gaining. Ludwig von Mises faced a blizzard of critics from 
German classical liberals, who somehow came to believe that liberalism's 
greatest enemy was the scholar who refused to compromise.

Of course Rothbard faced a lifetime of tut-tutting from people who said his 
libertarianism was dangerously irresponsible. Today it is the same with this 
website, the Mises Institute, Antiwar.com, FFF.org, the Independent 
Institute, and every radical libertarian blogger, academic, or journalist 
who stands accused of harming the cause of reform by holding out an ideal.

The pattern repeats itself so often that it almost seems to be a law of 
history: the radicals who change history must do so over the resistance of 
the moderates, who claim to be friendly to the same cause, but somehow 
always end up on the side of established interests. Thus can we conjure up 
this conjectural conversation in the Kremlin, circa 1955:

Comrade Liberal: "Khrushchev knows the failures of Stalinism in economics. 
He should seize the chance and allow full private property in land, give the 
factories to the workers, allow people to work where they want, and empty 
the prisons of economic criminals."

Comrade Conservative: "The way you talk! You are only discrediting the cause 
of reform! Our plan is to permit more personal production on public land, 
allow more flexibility in wages, speed up the applications process for 
permits to move, and give more power to regional economic councils so they 
can be more responsive to the people. Don't make the perfect the enemy of 
the good!"

Comrade Liberal: "But these are just cosmetic changes, and when they do not 
work, the cause of reform will have lost. We must tell the truth even if the 
powers that be don't want to hear it."

Comrade Conservative: "Don't enlist me in your disloyal extremist efforts. 
What you propose is anarchy. You and your ideas remind me of the enemies of 
socialism we have worked so hard to eradicate. Better that you be silenced, 
else responsible reformers will never make any progress."

Of course Khrushchev did reform along the conservative lines, and his 
failure ended up harming the idea of liberalization, thus delaying the 
inevitable and much needed upheaval for many decades. The upheaval happened 
anyway, and it occurred against the wishes and efforts of the moderate 
reformers, who had made their peace with the regime in the hopes of changing 
the system from the inside. The radicals on the outside couldn't help but 
notice that the reformers seemed to be increasing, rather than reducing, the 
size of the state.

Concerning the dispute between moderates and radicals, the glaringly obvious 
is seldom pointed out: it is a heck of lot easier to be a moderate than a 
radical. To be a moderate means to side, at least partially and often 
largely or completely, with conventional wisdom. It means that you can be 
friendly with powerful people because you are no threat to them. It means 
you accept the legitimacy of the established mechanisms for change, and 
thereby implicitly approve them.

Think of a prison populated by those who are planning a break and those who 
seek better food and more exercise time. To look at the two groups, there is 
no visible difference between the way they treat the wardens, except that 
internally those who plan to escape regard them as the enemy, while those 
who seek prison reform reconcile themselves to the warden-prisoner 
relationship, and try to get the best terms for themselves.

Who do the reformers fear most? Not the wardens, but the radicals whom they 
believe are setting back their cause. The radicals know that the reformers 
are not friends at all, but sideliners seeking favors from the privileged 
elite, for to seek and gain favor from powerful people, even in an 
ostensibly sensible cause, is to infuse the existing system with a 
legitimacy it does not deserve.

The analogy works in a huge range of cases from taxes to social security to 
education to foreign policy. Reformers are forever congratulating themselves 
for their respectability, etc., but in fact they are part of the problem. If 
the cause of freedom wins, it will be because of the pressure from the 
radicals felt by those in power.

As Mises said, no government is liberal by nature. Governments grant liberty 
only when forced to do so by public opinion. What causes a government to act 
is fear of opposition. But somehow, against all evidence, moderate reformers 
continue to believe that the powerful can be influenced by praise, cocktail 
parties, and the suggestion of marginal reforms.

The difference between the radical and the moderate is not one of degree. It 
is an intellectual and mental outlook of a completely different sort, one 
that goes to the very heart of whether one views the people in power as the 
source of the problem, or the source of the solution.

Let's consider an example.

A radical says: get the troops out of Iraq now! The implicit message is: the 
state cannot be trusted, the troops are causing trouble rather than helping, 
the US never should have invaded, and almost everything you hear from the 
government about this war is a lie.

A moderate reformer says: yes, get the troops out, but not yet. The implicit 
message is: we can trust the state to make the right judgment about when to 
leave, for now the troops are performing a service of some value, the 
invasion has done some good and we should complete the job, and the state is 
right that it is a source of some degree of order and justice in Iraq.

Now, this is a small change in words and political orientation that masks a 
massive difference in world view. The radical doesn't trust the state to 
reform itself. The moderate does. The radical does not seek the state's 
favor. The moderate depends wholly on it.

History, I believe, is on the side of the radical, for the moderate wants to 
play it safe. Now, for the most part, the moderate is a harmless creature, 
neither here nor there in terms of the overall direction of history, except 
in the following sense: he is useful to the powers-that-be as an instrument 
to keep the radicals in line.

This is precisely the role that the moderate critics of the Iraq War are now 
playing. They are blasting away at the antiwar crowd on the ostensible 
grounds that they too want to end the war, but we are making it harder for 
them to do so. What they are saying is that they favor the troops staying up 
until a certain point. This is the same as siding with the warmongers, just 
with different rhetoric.

The moderates always seem to come down on the side of the prison wardens. 
Only when the radicals have broken through the wall, and the path is 
perfectly clear and safe, do they grab the chance and make a run for it. In 
retrospect, for example, even moderate libertarians grant that the American 
Revolution, repealing the Corn Laws, and overthrowing Soviet central 
planning were wonderful things. But they know in their hearts that they 
would have lacked the courage to do their part.

February 2, 2005


-- 
Jay P Hailey ~Meow!~
MSNIM - jayphailey ;
AIM -jayphailey03;
ICQ - 37959005
HTTP://jayphailey.8m.com

No human being has the right -- under any circumstances -- to initiate force 
against another human being, nor to advocate, threaten or delegate its 
initiation



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