Posted: 07/18/2008
The Sad
Road to Socialism
What
happens When Private Property is No Longer a Right
“But if the government undertakes to control and to raise
wages, and cannot do it; if the government undertakes to care for all who may
be in want, and cannot do it; if the government undertakes to support all
unemployed workers, and cannot do it; if the government undertakes to lend
interest-free money to all borrowers, and cannot do it; if .... ‘The state
considers that its purpose is to enlighten, to develop, to enlarge, to
strengthen, to spiritualize, and to sanctify the soul of the people’ -- and if
the government cannot do all of these things, what then? Is it not certain that
after every government failure -- which, alas! is more than probable -- there
will be an equally inevitable revolution?”- Frederic Bastiat, “The Law,” June, 1850
It’s been more than 150 years since Frederic Bastiat wrote
his treatise, The Law, a small work, challenging the ravages of failing
socialism thrust upon France as a
result of the French revolution.
In that unique pamphlet, Bastiat points out that when the
law of any country supports the moral belief systems of a people, defends the
rights of said people and their property, the law is perceived as being moral;
a defense against evil and those who flaunt it as being immoral. Payment of
taxes and civic obligations are perceived as a virtue and those who flout this
as criminals.
However, when the law becomes a source of plunder or pits
itself in opposition to the morals of the people, the people perceive the law
to be immoral and widely despise it. Indeed, in those times, flouting the law
is extolled as virtue.
Another book by contemporary author Hernando Desoto, The
Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere
Else, points out much the same thing, that the security of ownership of private
property guaranteed by law for the lower and middle classes has been the
essential ingredient resulting in the prosperity enjoyed by many western
countries. Without this security, where the state becomes an impediment to
commerce or property ownership, the people are forced to operate their
economies outside of law, which is once again perceived as evil, rather than a
force for good.
In essence, when a government goes from being a protector of
private property to a plunderer of it, it places itself on a course of chaos,
economic ruin and its own ultimate self-destruction.
The Three
Steps of Socialism
Socialism is the mechanism which transforms government from
its noble role as a protector into a predator and, since the citizens of our
fine country seem determined to plow through socialism to its bitter end, we
should examine the territory through which these three sad steps lead. The core
result of socialism is the destruction of private property and wealth.
The events described in this piece are a composite of the
ravages of socialism experienced in other countries. While each country does
experience all the events portrayed, all socialist countries follow the same
miserable path. The U.S. doesn’t
have to go down this path, but it seems determines to do so.
We’re Off
to See the Wizard
One of the
great dangers of any government by the people is that sooner or later their
politicians discover they can vote largess from the public trust. Their first
experiment at this bold new adventure invariably revolves around social
programs enacted in the name of morality and the public good or even solving
some current crisis. Who could oppose that? “After all,” it will be argued,
“don’t you care about people, or the welfare of the country, or the
environment?”
The lure of this argument has been absolutely irresistible
from the Roman Empire to the French and Bolshevik
revolutions to Socialist Parties (D) and (R) in the USA today.
Step One -
The Moral Argument: A Promise of Something for Nothing
The moral argument that we can finally solve poverty, pain,
sickness, and hunger with “free” money seems just to good to be true. It
usually is but it sells to the public. To fund these allegedly moral programs,
the assets of the gentle citizens must be quietly taxed in the name of the
public good.
Only a few wise and isolated voices warn that this baby
dragon they have just hatched will grow up to be a fire-breathing monster. But
not to fear, the wise voices are generally shouted down by the gentle
politicians, who fiercely demonize protestors as selfish “whabbledygots”
blocking the road to the perfect society. After all, how could something so
noble do anything bad to the country?
At first the rich are the only ones asked to pay more of
their “fair share.” In the U.S. income
tax originally only affected upper-bracket individuals. In this early stage,
few complain and everyone seems happy, except for those nagging voices still
warning of dire consequences ahead; the ones the gentle legislators wish would
just shut up. Other than that they have little to fear because the gentle
legislators appear to be heroes placing our feet firmly on the road to utopia.
Soon they promise all the have-nots will have and those who do have, will have
just a little less. After all, as we said, it’s just their “fair share.”
Ah but time rumbles onward, and the number of people
dependent upon these programs swells along with the number of “free” government
programs. Free things do sell, and that’s what politicians want to do: sell
their programs.
As the programs swell, they become unwieldy, requiring large
bloated bureaucracies to administer them to ward off the inevitable fraud and
corruption, consuming an ever greater part of the tax booty and servicing less
to the originally intended recipients. In order to control the chaos of a large
group of people cueing up to get something for nothing, large volumes of laws
and regulations have to be written to control who gets what and where and when
and who the givers and who the takers are. Now, the bureaucrats who administer
these programs are also dependent on them for their livelihoods. This
entrenches the program and assures its progression to Stage Two.
The Magic
Dragon Isn’t Cute Anymore
Somewhere
along the line, the gentle legislators discover that their baby dragon has
grown and it’s snarling at them a lot. It wants much food. They’re not
controlling it; it’s controlling them. However, in order to retain their
prestigious position, ever-increasing sources must be found to feed their
growing rapacious raptor.
The food source (tax burden) shifts rapidly downward into
the middle class, as the gentle politicians coo that only the rich are being
soaked. Concomitant with the increase of taxation, the miracle of hidden
taxation through monetary inflation is discovered as central banks print more
and more money to allow the good times to continue over and above what direct
taxation will allow.
This process of monetary inflation results in debasement of
the currency, causing the citizens to work harder and harder and run faster and
faster to keep up with the loss of their currency’s value and the concomitant
rise of prices. It’s slow at first but accelerates along an insidious exponential
path. Ultimately it destroys everything the middle class works for.
Additional reptilian food sources called “revenue streams”
are created. More fees, fines, “mitigation payments” and permits are required
to do almost anything, driving the cost of doing everything upwards. Coupled
with this is a bewildering array of regulation and laws making the business of
life more and more difficult to accomplish. Big businesses can absorb this but
the middle class ultimately buckles under the strain. The dragon is never
satisfied.
Stage 2:
Silent War Between Government and Its Citizens
At some point, the unwashed masses suspect their politicians
aren’t really gentle any more much less benevolent. This is where a silent war
between government and people erupts. It’s a blurry transition through
never-never land when the politicians still claim to be gentle but the people
sense that they have gone from being protectors of the public good and private
property to a plunderers of it; from morality to immorality.
The “Bastiat” transition doesn’t take place all at once but,
one by one, members of the working class realize they’re toiling like mad and
getting no where. What they do make is confiscated in taxes or destroyed in
inflation. They have little left over and their life’s savings are being
destroyed while the politicians tell them all is just fine, creating cognitive
dissonance between the hardship workers experience and the good times the
politicians promise.
But those friends of the dragon on the dole still insist the
dragon’s intentions are moral, even if its methods are not. As tax rates push
ever higher into confiscatory ranges, self-preservation kicks in and the people
take defensive action against what they no longer perceive as moral duty but
legally-sanctioned plunder. They do this at the same time they pretend the
gentle politicians are correct even though they know better.
The rich catch on and move their assets offshore and
sometimes themselves out of the reach of the dragon; they expatriate. They have
the means to structure their finances in such as way as preserve wealth.
Besides, the politicians are frequently among this class so they aren’t about
to let the dragon loose on themselves.
Unfortunately, the middle class doesn’t have this option, so
it fights the dragon by engaging in evasive maneuvers. Citizens cheat on taxes,
and seek to conceal taxable assets. Whenever possible transactions are shielded
from the ever-prying eyes of the hungry dragon.
As the ravages of taxation and inflation eat out the middle
class’s substance, a vibrant underground economy springs up, utilizing barter,
cash, foreign currencies, precious metals or other means to conceal taxable
activity. Regulatory laws are flouted as people try to “see what they can get
away with.” Often times this underground economy has an organized crime
component vis a vis the former Soviet Union .
The second half of Stage Two of the war kicks into gear as
the dragon responds to the rising opposition and imposes a growing panoply of
laws and regulations with increasing fines, penalties and prison sentences. To
block the rampant flouting of law, the dragon wants to monitor everything the
citizens do in order to assure that plunder shall be paid, all in the name of
the rule of law, public order and morality. Civil rights break down, all in the
name of morality and public security.
Every once in a while the beleaguered middle class pleads
with the gentle politicians to fix the problem, unaware that it was the gentle
politicians, who created it all in the first place. But politicians are more
than happy to be seen as dragon slayers, and create a series of scapegoats for
the problem, transferring blame for the mess and enacting a new series of
programs to supposedly fix the problem. In reality, they just delay the pain,
put the dragon on steroids and making the problem far worse.
The war is not without casualties. As it becomes ever more
difficult for small businesses to function in the poisoned atmosphere of taxes,
fees, fines, regulations and prosecutions, more of the middle class throws up
its hands and goes elsewhere or becomes part of the the dependent poor. Small
business goes out of business or operates illegally. As inflation devours life
savings, people are wiped out. Retirees have a difficult time getting on as
their lifetime achievements are destroyed. Most of the middle class slides
inexorably down the slope into poverty.
There is a moral consequence as scandals erupt in the
politico and monied classes. Disrespect of law is common. In the free-for-all,
everyone is in it for himself and no one can afford to obey the law. Jails
swell with those unfortunate enough to get caught. As more complex laws are
steadily passed, finally all citizens become law-breakers.
This enables the dragon to seek pretexts for seizing the
assets of citizens. Businesses are nationalized. Wage and price controls are
instituted. Property ownership is forcibly transferred from those who oppose
the dragon to those who support it. Retirement plans are brought under the
“protection” of government and their owners left with government-issued IOUs.
Assets are seized on the mere allegation of criminal activity. Indeed, law
enforcement agencies encourage their members to plunder. They even make
arrangements with organized crime at times. The list of plunder-and-defend
possibilities is astounding.
In an effort to stem the hemorrhage, the middle class starts
throwing out the rascal politicians, only to elect another group of rascals.
This has little effect, since the dragon is now a self-existing monster that
doesn’t require gentle politicians. By this stage it’s clear: Small and middle
class businesses, ranchers and farmers all know who the enemy is: the dragon.
There is no illusion that the politicians are gentle or acting in their best interests.
As the security of property ownership declines, investments
flee and the economic environment becomes unstable, no one wants to invest
where earnings will be heavily taxed, or even the possibility of direct
confiscation on the allegation of having violated a plethora of unknowable,
unobservable laws. Doing business is just too dangerous.
As doing business becomes dangerous, investments die, jobs
go out of existence, increasing the pain of the working lower and middle
classes. Small business is always the primary creator of employment and it is
the most abused. In the end, the rich are never soaked, the middle class is
destroyed and the poor discover that there is no free lunch.
Stage
Three: Dies Irae: A Day of Wrath and Mourning
Ultimately the dragon cannot keep its promises. This last
stage is where events turn nasty and chaotic. It is a dangerous time. It is a
time no country should ever wish to reach.
Politicians are perceived as ravenous wolves. Blame and
finger-pointing frenzies among politicians erupt to deflect responsibility for
the chaos they have caused as they attempt to hold onto their privileged
status.
Faith in government dissolves along with faith in the
currency. Widespread flouting of law is common and tax payments quit. If it
gets bad enough, crime flourishes, both organized and random. The domestic
economy collapses into a depression and the currency just collapses.
By this time there are several violently outraged groups of
people: the first group consists of those who have been dependent on the dragon
for their free programs, and once the dragon reneges on its promises to provide
these, they are outraged at the violation of their imagined rights to a free
lunch. This group can include pensioners who paid the dragon money but discover
the dragon spent it all before they retired.
The second group is the middle class, who have been beaten
to death to feed the dragon and his cronies. They have lost all their
livelihood and property. This is the point where many revolutions occur.
Sometimes the revolutions are non-bloody and occur only at the voting booths;
sometimes they are bloody and violent. It is a dangerous time because the chaos
caused by the breakdown of economic and political order coupled with the
collapse of morality often requires brute force to restore order, and brute
force is the fertile ground for dictators and the destruction of rights.
One of the great ironies of history is that those who
started the mess and benefitted greatly from it are rarely ever called to pay
for the crimes and carnage they caused.
Finally the dragon dies.
Conclusion
No country trapped in socialism goes through all the events
described above, which is a composite of past histories. It can turn itself at
any time providing it is prepared to discipline itself the undergo the pain
required to get off the public dole, much like coming off an addiction. Few
societies ever want to face that, so they condemn themselves to all three
stages. And the longer they wait to enact the necessary changes, the worse the
pain becomes.
From currency, to energy to property rights, issues today
are clouded with so much static and partisan bickering that the average person
has little real comprehension of what is happening. Frequently Democrats and
Republicans blame each other when often they’re both responsible and fiddle
while Rome burns.
Thus it is up to what actions are moral, legal and necessary
to see us, our families and friends safely through the tempest. But as a ray of
hope, it is here where Americans in times past have always shown themselves
most noble.
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