When the World Went Bankrupt
by Butler Shaffer
October 27, 2008

To understand the machinations of a complex world, one must become sensitive
to how apparently separate phenomena interconnect to produce unexpected
consequences. Otherwise intelligent men and women struggle to make sense of
the destructive turbulence that is fast becoming the norm in modern society.
Wars that fail to satisfy even the most meager of excuses for their
prosecution; rapidly-expanding police states rationalized as necessary for
the ferreting out of "terrorist" bogeymen; state-sponsored torture conducted
for no more apparent purpose than an end in itself; the wholesale looting
engaged in - with bipartisan support - for the purpose of creating trillions
of dollars of booty to subsidize the corporate owners of American society
for losses sustained through incompetent management; these are the major
examples of the failure to see interrelated causes of social disorder.

Throughout all of this, we see exhibited by those who presume the powers of
omniscience and rational planning, a thorough ignorance not only of the
causal factors that continue to produce our horribly disrupted world, but of
the propriety of statist actions that respond to such dislocations with the
same mindset that produced the turmoil. One sees symptoms of this
disconnectedness in such absurdities as Al Gore's receipt of the 2007 Nobel
Peace Prize, or the 2008 Nobel Prize in Economics to Paul Krugman. It is as
though the Nobel Prize judges wanted to go out of their collective way to
refute Einstein's proposition that one cannot solve a problem with the same
kind of thinking that produced it!

Another example of ultra-myopic thinking is to be found in a recent
editorial from the erstwhile free-market publication, The Economist.
Focusing on the travails that beset economies throughout the world, the
magazine advises: "This is a time to put dogma and politics to one side and
concentrate on pragmatic answers. That means more government intervention
and co-operation in the short term than taxpayers, politicians or indeed
free-market newspapers would normally like."

Whenever I hear or read such arrant nonsense, I am reminded of my law school
Jurisprudence professor, Karl Llewellyn's interchange with a classmate of
mine who had challenged a statement of Llewellyn's by saying: "that may be
good in theory, but it isn't practical." Llewellyn responded: "if it's not
practical, it's not good theory."

Much of the explanation for this disconnected mindset can be found in the
"specialized" ways in which we learn and work. Economists, lawyers,
historians, scientists, et al., are to learn and to practice a presumed
"expertise" in their chosen field. Each is to stick to his territory, and to
defend the collective interests of his colleagues by attacking those who
presume to speak or write in subject areas for which they do not hold
graduate degrees. This is the ultimate form of reductionist thinking, a
travesty which, fortunately, is openly confronted by the holistic premises
of chaos theory. The world is simply too complex; subject to a myriad of
interconnected influences that are both unidentifiable and not confined to
the tenets of any academic discipline.

So many of our current difficulties are underlain by the kind of unfocused,
fragmented thinking expressed in The Economist editorial. "Pragmatism" has
no meaning in the absence of ends to be served; objectives that necessarily
incorporate explicit or implicit values of the actor. One who seeks
"pragmatic answers" to problems - without addressing the principles by which
"answers" are to be evaluated - is engaged in the smuggling of hidden
premises into the discussion. If people act to be better off afterwards than
they were before, what criteria and purposes will motivate their actions?

In our commercially-dominant culture, it is too often assumed that material
values pre-empt all others, an assumption that seems to direct almost all of
the proposals offered in response to the economic turbulence now besetting
both America and the rest of the world. As one who regards the industrial
revolution as the most humanizing period in history, I unequivocally
acknowledge that material values are important to pursue. While such ends
are necessary for living well, they are not sufficient. Let any who doubt
this inform me of the value of a baby, or the costs associated with Nazi
concentration camps or Soviet gulags!

Materialistic thinking that is separated from other values dominates
proposals for dealing with the current economic collapse. Politicians and
media voices speak in terms of numbers, but not much else. Congress' giving
of trillions of dollars to banks is defended on the grounds that "it will
strengthen their balance sheets." Of course it will, just as a mugger will
have more money in his pockets after a night of robbery. But at whose cost?
"Will this work?" is another commonly-asked question, reflecting the same
kind of morally bankrupt questioning with which most address the continuing
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, or the propriety of torture.

If, as seems to be the case, Western civilization is in a state of collapse,
we might have occasion to consider the causes so that we might rethink our
assumptions - and behavior - for whatever is to follow. The well-being of
any system depends upon more than just its material characteristics. A
vibrant business organization, for instance, requires more than abundant
investment capital. Whether the firm's decision-making is centralized in an
individual who issues directives to underlings, or is decentralized among
those who perform the work of the organization, will have much to do with
determining how much creativity and job satisfaction will be fostered.
Likewise, the well-being of a family depends on more than the principal
wage-earner bringing money home for the purchase of goods and services.

In the same way, the prosperity of a society - or a civilization - requires
much more than the generation of material wealth. All dynamic systems depend
upon the integration of life-sustaining influences. For the same reason, the
disintegration of such qualities helps to bring about the demise of systems.
This is what is meant by living with integrity: interacting with others,
holistically, from within a non-contradictory center on the basis of values
and principles that sustain one's well-being.

Our ancestors seem to have had an intuitive awareness of the importance of
living the integrated life. The search of an etymological dictionary reveals
that the words "peace," "freedom," "love," and "friend," share some common
origins. Perhaps they implicitly understood what we, in our
overly-politicized world, can no longer grasp, namely, that "friends"
express "love" for one another by respecting one another's "freedom," and
that a world so constituted enjoys "peace." How impractical, we tell
ourselves, as we play out the violent, conflict-ridden premises in which our
thinking has been carefully structured. What masses of contradiction have we
become when we condemn young men who kill their classmates at school, while
cheering those who kill strangers in foreign lands; when we are unable to
see that "our representatives" in Washington, D.C. are treating us no
differently than is the mugger we encounter in a dark alley?

It has become fashionable to speak of the impending bankruptcy of the
American economic system. To so focus our attention, however, is to overlook
the fragmented nature of what we have allowed ourselves to become. Economic
bankruptcy does not arise independently of related factors. The seeds of
such bankruptcy were planted long ago, and have been carefully tended to by
subsequent generations. There is a more generalized bankruptcy whose
disintegrative influences have combined to produce our impending collapse.

The first of such causal forces can be referred to as moral bankruptcy, a
phrase intended to cut much deeper than the kinds of personal habits and
lifestyle concerns that get conservatives agitated. I refer, instead, to the
willingness of so many of us to rationalize the taking of the unearned from
owners and bestowing it upon others, provided the process is stamped with
the imprimatur of the state. This shortcoming also finds expression amongst
those who sanction the conduct of wars, or who have no problem devoting
their energies to designing or operating military weapons and other systems
for monitoring or controlling the actions of people.

A most troubling expression of moral bankruptcy is reflected in the
aforementioned editorial from The Economist: the failure to live an
integrated, centered life has pragmatic consequences. Moral and philosophic
principles have the most practical implications for the very existence of
our lives. Stated another way, the refusal to integrate moral and
philosophic principles in one's life is the reflection of a principle,
albeit one that is deftly smuggled into a discussion in service to unstated
ends. Upon close examination, however, one discovers that the disguised
principle is one that fragments rather than integrates one's life, producing
destructive conflict rather than wholeness.

Intellectual bankruptcy has been another major contributor to our socially
disordered world. The failure to understand the nature of economics, and the
principles of causation and conservation of both mass and energy; the
failure to respect the inviolability of property rights and contracts; as
well as an ignorance of history, have been additional catalysts for our
present disarray. Politicians who ought to have learned from recent history
about the destructive effects of inflation and the stultifying nature of
state socialism, responded to an immediate crisis by generating more than
$1,000,000,000,000 of additional inflation and partially socializing banks!
In so doing, Congress was unable to rise above the habit at which it has
proven itself adept, namely, to print more debased currency and bestow it
upon its corporate friends. As in the aftermath to 9/11, its reaction was
one of reflexive desperation rather than considered analysis; like blind men
throwing darts at a dart-board. As our entropic decline continues, the
politicos generate no more intelligent purpose than to preach the need for
"economic stabilization" (i.e., to maintain the status quo).

The intellectual insolvency of our culture has been demonstrated in the
response of many politicians and news media people to the McCain/Palin
charge that Obama is a "socialist." No doubt such allegations are correct -
so, too, of course, does the accusation apply to McCain - but notice the
response thereto. Were "socialism" to become an issue in this campaign, news
reporters, commentators, and political hacks, would have to be prepared to
analyze its philosophic, historic, and economic implications. One would have
to have a mind versed in intellectual concepts, and such are not part of the
curricula of journalism departments. The "debate" must thus be shifted to a
safe topic about which no challenges to the mind can arise: Sarah Palin's
wardrobe! One anti-conceptual group went so far as to try to equate
criticism of "socialism" as an expression of racism!

The confusion about socialistic thinking and government regulation has been
aided by the collapse of respect for the principle of privately-owned
property. This, in turn, has been abetted by what Joseph Schumpeter
identified as the movement from owner-controlled to manager-controlled
business firms. This transformation has produced a shift in perspective from
longer-term to shorter-term decision-making. I encountered this tendency
when, in law practice, I witnessed owners of businesses considering the
impact their actions might have on their children and grandchildren who
might one day own their enterprises, while managers - whom Schumpeter
correctly characterized as having the mindset of employees - tended to focus
the scope of their actions only upon immediate concerns. Politicians and
bureaucrats typify such thinking, looking only to the next election or their
retirement to define their time-frames.

We need to move beyond the kind of thinking that drives political systems.
Governmental policies are like so much of traditional medicine that only
covers up symptoms without treating the underlying disease. If Americans
have any hope of restoring a vibrant, productive economy, we need all the
destabilization we can muster. President Bush babbled such incoherencies as
how state socialism will preserve a free market - words that recall the
Vietnam War illogic about "destroying a village in order to save it." With
such thinking directing economic policies in Washington, you can be assured
that institutionalized foolishness is what will end up being stabilized.

It is the spiritual bankruptcy of our culture that is most in need of
recovery; a "bailout" that can be accomplished only by mobilizing the inner
resources of individuals. This is a topic I more thoroughly discussed
elsewhere. The regeneration of the human spirit can arise only from a 
person's
believing in his or her existential worthiness; to regard the individual, in
Kant's words, "always as an end and never as a means only." It is only in
the power of individuals to transcend their experiences and formal learning
that a society can be rejuvenated. As we rediscover our individuality and
withdraw our energies from the collective abstractions to which we have
attached ourselves, our personal and social integrity will no longer be in
destructive contradiction.

As institutional interests struggle to overcome their terminal fate, there
is a wonderful opportunity for each of us to reinvest in ourselves and, in
so doing, help our world to become human-centered. The corporate, political,
academic, and media voices will continue to condemn our "selfishness" even
as they insist upon satisfying their appetites for greed and power. But the
creative and orderly forces of chaos will prevail - they always have. When
Alan Greenspan testified, a few days ago, that he didn't see the economic
crisis coming, he was unwittingly admitting to anyone's incapacities to make
predictions in the face of complexity. "Neither all the king's horses nor
all the kings men" - with all of the violence, paper money, or prisons
available to them - can achieve by indirection, political magic, or other
quickie solutions to long-term problems, what you and I, alone, can
accomplish by introspection.

Ralph Waldo Emerson expressed our present situation quite well: "This time,
like all other times, is a very good one, if only we know what to do with
it."

* Butler Shaffer teaches at the Southwestern University School of Law. 
He is the author of the newly-released 
In Restraint of Trade: The Business Campaign Against Competition, 1918-1938 
and of Calculated Chaos: Institutional Threats to Peace and Human Survival.

http://www.lewrockwell.com/shaffer/shaffer184.html

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