The Social(ist) Contract

In two earlier posts (here and here) I tore into a blogger for his presumption that we don’t deserve what we earn. The blogger is, apparently, a proponent of Rousseau, who penned The Social Contract. Here are some tidbits about The Social Contract from Wikipedia:

Perhaps Rousseau’s most important work is The Social Contract, which outlines the basis for a legitimate political order. Published in 1762 and condemned by the Parlement of Paris when it appeared, it became one of the most influential works of abstract political thought in the Western tradition. Building on his earlier work, such as the Discourse on Inequality, Rousseau claimed that the state of nature eventually degenerates into a brutish condition without law or morality, at which point the human race must adopt institutions of law or perish. In the degenerate phase of the state of nature, man is prone to be in frequent competition with his fellow men whilst at the same time becoming increasingly dependent on them. This double pressure threatens both his survival and his freedom. According to Rousseau, by joining together through the social contract and abandoning their claims of natural right, individuals can both preserve themselves and remain free. This is because submission to the authority of the general will of the people as a whole guarantees individuals against being subordinated to the wills of others and also ensures that they obey themselves because they are, collectively, the authors of the law. Whilst Rousseau argues that sovereignty should thus be in the hands of the people, he also makes a sharp distinction between sovereign and government. The government is charged with implementing and enforcing the general will and is composed of a smaller group of citizens, known as magistrates…Much of the subsequent controversy about Rousseau’s work has hinged on disagreements concerning his claims that citizens constrained to obey the general will are thereby rendered free….

Rousseau was one of the first modern writers to seriously attack the institution of private property, and therefore is often considered a forebearer of modern socialism and communism (see Karl Marx, though Marx rarely mentions Rousseau in his writings). Rousseau also questioned the assumption that the will of the majority is always correct. He argued that the goal of government should be to secure freedom, equality, and justice for all within the state, regardless of the will of the majority….[emphasis added]

In other words, the magistrates decide what’s best for the people. As I said before, “there’s a philosophy that’s fit for (dare I say it?) Hitler’s Germany, Stalin’s Russian, and Mao’s China.” I rest my case.

Some "Thinkers" Just Think Too Hard

Graham Allison, director of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, writes:

What if Al Qaeda acquired a nuclear bomb? In releasing its report, the 9/11 Commission underscored bin Laden’s nuclear ambitions. As the commission members said, “Our report shows that Al Qaeda tried to acquire or make weapons of mass destruction for at least 10 years.” In commission chairman Thomas Kean’s words, “Everybody feels that they are trying to mount another attack, and everybody feels that, given their ideology, they’re doing their best to make it chemical, biological and nuclear because it kills more people.”

For most Americans, the question of what bin Laden could possibly hope to achieve by such devastation has been confused by Bush administration rhetoric that characterizes Al Qaeda as “nothing but cold-blooded killers.”

To the contrary, any careful reader of bin Laden’s fatwas, statements, and tapes will find a chilling but quite specific list of strategic objectives. Bin Laden’s demands of America include:

Withdrawal of all American troops from Saudi Arabia.

Elimination of American political and economic influence from Muslim countries.

End of the “Judeo-Christian crusades” that have occupied and/or corrupted Muslim countries.

End of American’s military, financial, and public support for regimes in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and other Arab countries.

Let’s see if I understand this. Suppose you own a store and an intruder rushes into your store brandishing an Uzi. He demands that you close your store because your business “offends” him. You know that he has killed other store owners whose businesses also offended him. Now he threatens to kill you if you don’t close your store.

It’s true that the intruder isn’t just a cold-blooded killer. He’s a cold-blooded killer who happens to be a fanatic. His fanaticism doesn’t cancel his cold-bloodedness, it only magnifies it.

(Thanks to The American Thinker for the tip.)

Aha!

In the previous post I suggested that a certain Chris Bertram was either omniscient or arrogant, and I pointed out that his line of thinking empowers the beast of the state.

Well, it turns out that Bertram is a member of the Rousseau Association. There’s a link on the Association’s site to a biography of Rousseau. It seems that Bertram, who presumes to judge whether we deserve what we have, emulates Rousseau in his arrogance, pretensions to omniscience, and willingness to entrust all to the state:

Rousseau reacted against the artificiality and corruption of the social customs and institutions of the time. He was a keen thinker, and was equipped with the weapons of the philosophical century and with an inspiring eloquence. To these qualities were added a pronounced egotism, self-seeking, and an arrogance that led to bitter antagonism against his revolutionary views and sensitive personality, the reaction against which resulted in a growing misanthropy. Error and prejudice in the name of philosophy, according to him, had stifled reason and nature, and culture, as he found it, had corrupted morals. In Emile he presents the ideal citizen and the means of training the child for the State in accordance with nature, even to a sense of God. This “nature gospel” of education, as Goethe called it, was the inspiration, beginning with Pestalozzi, of world-wide pedagogical methods. The most admirable part in this is the creed of the vicar of Savoy, in which, in happy phrase, Rousseau shows a true, natural susceptibility to religion and to God, whose omnipotence and greatness are published anew every day. The Social Contract, on the text that all men are born free and equal, regards the State as a contract in which individuals surrender none of their natural rights, but rather agree for the protection of them. Most remarkable in this projected republic was the provision to banish aliens to the state religion and to punish dissenters with death. The Social Contract became the text-book of the French Revolution, and Rousseau’s theories as protests bore fruit in the frenzied bloody orgies of the Commune as well as in the rejuvenation of France and the history of the entire Western world.

Ah, yes, “training the child for the State in accordance with nature,” and “banish[ing] aliens to the state religion and…punish[ing] dissenters with death.” Now, there’s a philosophy that’s fit for (dare I say it?) Hitler’s Germany, Stalin’s Russian, and Mao’s China — speaking of “frenzied bloody orgies.”

Who Decides Who’s Deserving?

I explained why we deserve what we have after being inspired to do so by Will Wilkinson’s Tech Central Station essay “Meritocracy: The Appalling Ideal?”. Now, Chris Bertram at Crooked Timber takes Wilkinson to task over a technical issue, which is whether the idea that we don’t deserve what we have can be attributed to John Rawls. Who cares? Stick to the point.

Bertram actually concedes the point that we deserve what we have when he says:

There does seem to be a psychological need for those who have profited from the system to be comforted by the idea that they deserve what they have. (Maybe some of them even do deserve what they have!)

Bertram gives away the game in the parenthetical comment. If “some of them” deserve what they have, which ones do and which ones don’t? If Bertram pretends to know the answer he is either delusional (thinks he’s God) or arrogant (thinks he knows who’s deserving and who isn’t). Or perhaps he has a formula for deciding who’s deserving and who isn’t: If you make more than, say, $200,000 a year you’re not deserving, but if you make a penny less, you’re deserving.

Mmm…as long as we’re being arbitrary, which Bertram is apparently willing to be, let’s try this definition of “deserving”: If you believe that all people aren’t deserving of what they have, then obviously you aren’t deserving of what you have. Your income will therefore be taxed at 100 percent, for redistribution to the deserving masses. Well, that’s how much sense he makes.

To quote my earlier post, here’s my take on the matter:

There are many, many, many people whose IQs are lower than mine but who have earned far more than me and who live far more lavishly than me. Do I begrudge them their earnings and lavish living? Not a bit. Not even dumb-as-doorknob Hollywood liberals whose idea of an intellectual conversation is to tell each other that Bush is a Nazi.

Unlike Chris Bertram, I don’t presume to judge whether people are deserving of what they have. That’s the difference between socialists like Bertram (well, he talks like one) and libertarians like me. And it’s an important difference, because once you let the state (who else?) decide who’s deserving and who’s not deserving, you have ceded omnipotence (if not omniscience) to the state. That’s okay as long as the state is doing things the way you’d like them to be done, but what happens when the state turns on you? Won’t you be sorry that you vested great power in the state?

Lefties like Bertram rail about things like the war on drugs, the Patriot Act, and corporate welfare, to name a few. How do they think such things came about? They didn’t happen overnight. They’re the result of a long accretion of power by the state, which began in earnest in the 1930s, thanks to the Chris Bertrams of that era.

It cuts both ways, laddie. When you loose the beast of the state, you are at its mercy, like the rest of us.

Krugman and DeLong, a Prevaricating Pair

A few days ago I called Brad DeLong for dishonestly focusing on the transition costs of privatizing Social Security. Now, DeLong’s intellectual peer, Paul Krugman, has done the same thing:

Social Security is, basically, a system in which each generation pays for the previous generation’s retirement. If the payroll taxes of younger workers are diverted into private accounts, there will be a gaping financial hole: who will pay benefits to older Americans, who have spent their working lives paying into the current system? Unless you have a way to fill that multitrillion-dollar hole, privatization is an empty slogan, not a real proposal.

Krugman conveniently ignores the same fact that DeLong ignores. I must, therefore, repeat what I said about DeLong:

[T]he cost of not privatizing Social Security will far exceed the transition costs. If Social Security isn’t privatized, benefits will be cut and/or payroll taxes will rise — and it will be forever, not just during a transition period….

Does Krugman not know that the transition costs argument is phony — a diversionary tactic to scare people away from privatization — or does he know this all too well?

In other words, is Krugman an idiot or a liar? Well, Krugman is a Ph.D. economist, so he’s probably not an idiot (though I’ve known some Ph.D. economists who came close). I must conclude that he’s a liar.

Interesting but Not Surprising

Kevin Hassett, writing at Tech Central Station, reports on Kerry’s budget proposals. The bottom line:

Even with [a] generous accounting, the Kerry spending promises add up to an extraordinary amount of money. Our best estimate is that Kerry’s proposals will add up to between $2 trillion and $2.1 trillion over the next ten years. Since the revenue from his tax proposals relative to the current baseline is actually negative, this implies that the Kerry proposal would increase the deficit by perhaps as much as $2.5 trillion over the next ten years.

It’s not the greater deficit that matters as much as the greater spending. The real cost of government is measured by the resources it commandeers through spending.

Boring Things

Just a quick list of boring things, starting with — but not limited to — sports on TV.

The Olympics — Winter, summer, spring, or fall, it doesn’t matter at all.

The Tour de France — Why not watch your neighbor mow his lawn?

Professional basketball — Ten tall guys running up and down a bowling alley elbowing each other.

Professional football, American style — A European once said it best: “They all stand up, they all fall down.”

Professional football, European style (a.k.a. soccer) — An exciting game ends in a 0-0 tie.

Major league baseball — Two-hundred ten minutes of non-stop boredom on TV. Two-hundred ten minutes of non-stop canned music at the ballpark.

Announcers, commentators, and analysts for all of the above — Never have so many people had to say so little of substance for so much money.

“Classical” music and visual art created after 1900 — Indecipherable nonsense into which pseudo-intellectuals and the nouveaux riches try, and fail, to pour meaning.

Ditto jazz created after 1940.

Most French movies, except for the actresses.

Any musical written after 1950, especially if it was written by Stephen Sondheim or Andrew Lloyd Weber.

Broadway-style singing, most of which derives from the “can belto” school of vocalism.

Andrea Bocelli, Charlotte Church, and all other over-amplified vocalists who mangle great arias.

Any novel written before 1900 and any “experimental” novel written anytime, anywhere, by anyone, starting with James Joyce. (For goodness sake, please provide a beginning, a middle, and an end. If I want to solve a puzzle I’ll buy a Rubik’s cube.)

The front section of the daily paper — It’s already been on cable news and the internet, so why kill a lot of trees to repeat stale news and views?

Ditto the sports section.

“Comic” strips that try to be realistic about families and personal relationships — Hey, we get enough of that at home.

Chris Matthews, Bill O’Reilly and their ilk — It pays (handsomely) to be rude, but I don’t have to watch it.

Daytime TV, “reality” shows, and situation comedies — Take up reading before your brain rots — really. Those things must cause Alzheimer’s disease.

Any “news story” that’s more than a day old — TV still isn’t safe for Laci Peterson’s parents. And, yes, I got the gist of the Abu Ghraib business the first time, thank you.

To quote Porky Pig — who was truly boring in contrast to such contemporaries as Daffy Duck, Sylvester, Bugs Bunny, and Tom & Jerry — B-b-b-b-b…that’s all, folks!

Literacy Tests — An Idea Whose Time Has Gone

Jonah Goldberg of The Corner favors literacy tests, in principle. It’s true that all votes aren’t created equal. Some are more informed and reasoned than others. Why should the stupid majority tyrannize the intelligent minority? But who would concoct such a test, and who would determine what constitutes a passing grade?

Ah, there’s the rub. You can be sure that the tests and standards would be jiggered to suit the party in power at the time they’re established. And you can be sure that, once established, it would be difficult thereafter to change the tests and standards. There would be the usual “firestorm of controversy” and all that. So we’d be stuck with some combination of tests and standards that tends to exclude certain classes of people and skew election outcomes in the way that literacy tests and poll taxes did in the South for so many decades.

The real problem isn’t that too many people vote. The real problem is that their elected representatives, in pandering for votes, have usurped powers that aren’t rightly theirs. The solution, if one is ever to be found, lies in the proper interpretation of the Constitution by the Supreme Court. Making that happen should become a serious, long-term project of conservatives and libertarians, working together.

(There, I’ve re-established my credentials as a true libertarian by shooting down the idea of literacy tests. And I’ve suggested an alternative that ought to please libertarians. Please, may I have my “libertarian” card back?)

I Missed This One

Thanks to Dean’s World, which points to The Queen of All Evil, I learned about this piece of trash that ran in the Austin American-Statesman about five weeks ago:

Ritter: The messages we send when moms stay home

By Gretchen Ritter

LOCAL CONTRIBUTOR

Tuesday, July 06, 2004

…It is time to have an honest conversation about what is lost when women stay home. In a nation devoted to motherhood and apple pie, what could possibly be wrong with staying home to care for your children?

Several things, I think.

It denies men the chance to be involved fathers…. [Not really. They don’t work all the time. Or should all fathers be stay-at-home dads?]

…It is not selfish to want to give your talents to the broader community — it is an important part of citizenship to do so, and it is something we should expect of everyone. [Working for pay isn’t an act of citizenship, it’s an economic act. Those mothers who choose not to do so are making a deliberate choice to raise their children rather than have them raised by strangers. That’s a rather decisive act of citizenship, if you’re looking for one.]

Full-time mothering is also bad for children. It teaches them that the world is divided by gender… [Only if they never see their fathers.]

…Our sons and daughters should grow up thinking that raising and providing for a family is a joint enterprise among all the adults in the family. [So, mothers who stay at home don’t “provide” for their families? Is that it? That’s hardly a good feminist attitude.]

…Many middle-class parents demand too much of their children. We enroll them in soccer, religious classes, dance, art, piano, French lessons, etc., placing them on the quest for continuous self-improvement. Many of these youngsters end up stressed out…. [She’s probably speaking from first-hand experience because she has no idea how it’s done by parents who really give a hoot about their children.]

Finally, the stay-at-home mother movement is bad for society. It tells employers that women who marry and have children are at risk of withdrawing from their careers, and that men who marry and have children will remain fully focused on their careers, regardless of family demands. Both lessons reinforce sex discrimination. [Well, then, let’s force all mothers to go to work.]

This movement also privileges certain kinds of families, making it harder for others. The more stay-at-home mothers there are, the more schools and libraries will neglect the needs of working parents, and the more professional mothers, single mothers, working-class mothers and lesbian mothers will feel judged for their failure to be in a traditional family and stay home their children. [I’d say that’s their problem. If they can’t stand the heat, they ought to get into the kitchen.]

By creating an expectation that mothers could and should stay home, we lose sight of the fact that most parents do work — and that they need affordable, high quality child care, after-school enrichment programs and family leave policies that allow mothers and fathers to nurture their children without giving up work. [So in fact most parents (i.e., mothers) do work (an unsupported statement), but it’s an invisible fact (don’t ask me how, if all those mothers are out there working), so that taxpayers (I guess they’re not mothers) don’t realize that they’re not shelling out enough for each others’ child care, etc., etc. That’s about the best I can do with that convoluted piece of “logic”.]

Raising children is one of the most demanding and rewarding of jobs. It is also a job that should be shared, between parents and within communities, for the sake of us all. [Ah so, it takes a village to raise your children, does it Ms. Ritter?]

Ms. Ritter is director of the Center for Women’s and Gender Studies (whatever that is) at the University of Texas and an associate professor of government and women studies (whatever that is). My Texas tax dollars at work. Grrrrrh!

Just the Facts

Bush won Florida, as close followers of the controversy will know. But it still bears repeating, so here’s the definitive account by Richard Baehr at The American Thinker. The bottom line:

The conclusion from all this is pretty clear. Florida had a very close election for President in 2000. It was so close that it was almost a tie. But by every official count that was made at any time during the 37 day recount period, and using virtually every consistent method for counting “undervotes” that was considered after the election, Bush won Florida and the Presidency. I will say it again. Bush won Florida. He did not steal it.

Time Out for Tenors

Enough of politics, economics, and philosophy. It’s time to talk about music. Specifically, it’s time to talk about great tenors of the past. Why? Because I was reminded of great tenors in this roundabout way:

Yesterday I was listening to the Classical Voices channel on Sirius satellite radio. (If you’re not a subscriber, try it free for three days by registering here.) Cecilia Bartoli was singing Scarlatti’s “The sun is sparkling more clearly from the Ganges” — which I recognized as an aria that Luciano Pavarotti recorded some years ago. Then, up pops Pavarotti, singing Handel’s “Wher’ere you walk” — which, for my money, was sung best by John McCormack, who recorded it decades ago. And being reminded of John McCormack reminded me, in turn, of all the other great tenors of the past whose voices had character.

I’ll come to some of those great tenors in a bit, but I must say something about character in a voice. A voice with character charms the listener, it conveys warmth, it seems personal rather than mechanical, it has overtones and undertones that can’t be written on a sheet of music. Pavarotti’s voice has character. The voice of Placido Domingo, Pavarotti’s great contemporary, though technically better in many respects — range, power, perhaps even accuracy — has almost no character. I have sometimes heard a bit of something by Domingo and asked “Who was that?” With Pavarotti, you never need to ask.

Now, let us visit some of the great tenor voices of the past. We begin our journey at the website of Nimbus Records, home of the Prima Voce line, which features great vocal recordings made between 1900 and 1940. There’s a page that lists all the Prima Voce tracks that can be heard on Real Audio, just by clicking a Real Audio icon. There are also links to each of the albums from which the tracks are drawn. For example, the first link is to The Prima Voce Treasury of Opera, Volume 2, which leads to a track listing for that album, where you can see everything that’s on the album. That’s my plug for Nimbus and Prima Voce. Now, in the order in which they appear on the complete Prima Voce listing of Real Audio tracks and complete with Real Audio links, here’s a selection of tracks by great tenors of the past — tenors with voices of character:

Giacomo Lauri-Volpi, LO SCHIAVO, Gomes, Quando nascesti tu

Beniamino Gigli, LA BOHÈME, Puccini, Che gelida manina

David Devriès, LA DAME BLANCHE, Boieldieu, Rêverie de Georges Brown

Beniamino Gigli, L’ELISIR D’AMORE, Donizetti, Quanto è bella, quanto è cara

Tito Schipa, MIGNON, Thomas, Ah! Non credevi tu

Tito Schipa, A GRANADA, C. Palacios, Cancion Andaluza

Tito Schipa, Traditional, ?arr. Vergine, Vieni sul mar!

Beniamino Gigli, MEFISTOFELE, Boïto, Dai campi, dai prati

Beniamino Gigli, Rossini, La Danza

Jussi Björling, PRINCE IGOR, Borodin, Vladimir’s Cavatina [Sung in Swedish]

Jussi Björling, MESSA DA REQUIEM, Verdi, Ingemisco

Jussi Björling, Tosti, Ideale

Jussi Björling, CARMEN, Bizet, La fleur que tu m’avais jetée

Jussi Björling, Widestedt, Sjung din hela làngtan ut

Jussi Björling, di Capua, O sole mio [sung in Italian]

John McCormack, LUCIA DI LAMMERMOOR, Donizetti, Fra poco a me ricovero

John McCormack, Edmund O’Rourke, writing as Edmund Falconer/Michael William Balfe, Killarney

John McCormack, LA TRAVIATA, Verdi, De’ miei bollenti spiriti

Enrico Caruso, MANON, Massenet, Il Sogno, (En fermant les yeux)

Enrico Caruso, E. di Capua, O Sole Mio

Enrico Caruso, Antonio Scotti, MADAMA BUTTERFLY, Puccini, Amore o grillo

Edmond Clément, MANON, Massenet, En fermant les yeux (Dream)

Richard Tauber, DIE ZAUBERFLÖTE, Mozart, Dies Bildnis ist bezaubernd schön

Joseph Schmidt, Strauss, Wiener Bonbons

Beniamino Gigli, PAGLIACCI, Leoncavallo, Recitar! … Vesti la giubba (Canio)

Antonio Cortis, RIGOLETTO, Verdi, Questa o quella

Giacomo Lauri-Volpi, LUISA MILLER, Quando le sere al placido

Leo Slezak, DIE KÖNIGIN VON SABA, Goldmark, Magische Töne

Georges Thill, MANON, Massenet, Ah! fuyez douce image

Enrico Caruso, Adam, Cantique de Noël

Paul Planel, Berlioz, L’Enfance du Christ – Le repos de la Sainte Famille

Karl Erb, Loewe, Des fremden Kindes heil’ger Christ

David Yuzhin, LA GIOCONDA, Ponchielli, Cielo e mar

Dmitri Smirnov, MEFISTOFELE,, Boito, Giunto sul passo estremo

Enrico Caruso, MARTHA, Flotow, M’apparì tutt’ amor

Enrico Caruso, LA BOHÈME, Puccini, Che gelida manina

John McCormack, Tosti, Goodbye

Lev Klement’yev, NERO, Rubinstein, Oh grief and care

Boris Slovtsov, THE SNOW MAIDEN, Rimsky Korsakov, Full of wonders

Vasily Damayev, SADKO, Rimsky Korsakov, Ho! my faithful company

Vilhelm Herold, RIGOLETTO, Verdi, Questa o quella

Enrico Caruso, Tosti, Addio

Enrico Caruso, Tosti, L’alba separa dalla luce l’ombra

Richard Crooks, Anon, Have you seen but a whyte lillie grow

Miguel Fleta, LA FAVORITA, Donizetti, Una vergine, un angel di Dio

Miguel Fleta, I PURITANI, Bellini, A te o cara

Tito Schipa, L’ELISIR D’AMORE, Donizetti, Una furtiva lagrima

Helge Roswaenge, LE POSTILLON DE LONJUMEAU, Adam, Mes amis, écoutez

(Listen for the D-flat above high C!)

Helge Roswaenge, EUGENE ONEGIN, Tchaikovsky, Echo lointain de ma jeunesse (Lenski’s aria)

Enrico Caruso, LES PÊCHEURS DE PERLES, Bizet, Je crois entendre encore

Enrico Caruso, RIGOLETTO, Verdi, La donna è mobile

Oops, Rudy’s Gone Over to the Dark Side

You can tell by the headlined sneer that The New York Times is afraid Rudy Giuliani might swing some votes to Bush: Leveraging Sept. 11, Giuliani Raises Forceful Voice for Bush

What’s Your Political Flavor?

I’ve come across three political quizzes that “place” you on various scales: left-right, authoritarian-libertarian, pragmatic-idealistic, etc. The three quizzes are Political Compass, Political Survey, and World’s Smallest Political Quiz.

Political Compass comprises about 40 questions, many of them ambiguously worded. Your score places you on a two-dimensional scale: economic left-right and libertarian-authoritarian. The labels are misleading because libertarianism, in this case, is something akin to anarchism. The author considers those whose scores place them in the lower-left quadrant (libertarian-economic left) to be libertarians, whereas they are in fact pot-smoking, pro-abortion, anti-war adherents of the welfare state — socialist-anarchist-libertines, if you will. My score, in the upper-right quadrant, makes me “right authoritarian” — which puts me in some pretty good company with the likes of Dean Esmay, Stephen Bainbridge, Michael Rappaport, Daniel Drezner, and Timothy Sandefur. What it really makes me is a personally conservative free-market capitalist libertarian who believes in a minimal state to protect Americans from force and fraud.

Political Survey comprises 75 questions, which are sharply worded. Your score places you on a two-dimensional scale: left-right and pragmatic-idealistic. The labels of the Political Compass survey would do as well. The scores are distributed similarly, with a strong bias toward the lower-left quadrant. I am, again, in the upper-right quadrant, this time surrounded by a lot of names I don’t recognize. (Political Survey has drawn far fewer participants than Political Compass.)

World’s Smallest Political Quiz, which is touted on the Libertarian Party’s home page, comprises 10 unambiguous questions, five about personal issues and five about economic issues. Your score places you on a two-dimensional grid with two axes: personal issues and economic issues. The surface of the grid is subdivided into five areas: libertarian, conservative, statist, liberal, and centrist. Which of the five areas you land in depends on your score. I’ve taken the quiz several times and always come out in the libertarian part of the grid. In fact, I took the quiz today and came out “pure” libertarian because there’s no longer a question about immigration, which I always got “wrong” in the past.

World’s Smallest Political Quiz is the easiest to take, and it places you accurately on a nuanced scale of political persuasions. Try it and see what political flavor you are.

Why We Deserve What We Earn

I’m lucky because I have a high IQ. I didn’t earn it, it just happened to me. So what? I had to do something with it, right? I did do something with it, but not as much as I could have because I couldn’t take the stress that’s required to be truly rich and/or politically powerful. So I kicked back a bit, made a good living, and retired to a comfortable but far from lavish existence.

There are many, many, many people whose IQs are lower than mine but who have earned far more than me and who live far more lavishly than me. Do I begrudge them their earnings and lavish living? Not a bit. Not even dumb-as-doorknob Hollywood liberals whose idea of an intellectual conversation is to tell each other that Bush is a Nazi.

By the same token, there are a lot of people whose IQs are higher than mine, and I’m willing to bet that some of them didn’t do as well financially as I did. So what? Should they have done better than me just because they have higher IQs? I don’t know where that rule is written. I’ll bet that there’s not a Democrat to be found who would subscribe to it.

Everyone deserves what they earn as long as they earn it without resorting to fraud, theft, or coercion. Members of Congress, by the way, resort to coercion when it comes to paying themselves. Yes, there’s the constitutional provision that congressional raises can’t take effect until the next session of Congress, but incumbents are almost certain of re-election, and most incumbents run for re-election. So the constitutional provision is mere window-dressing.

Back to the topic at hand. Tell me again why I am where I am because of luck. I had to do something with my genetic inheritance. I did what I wanted to do, which wasn’t as much as I might have done. Others, less “lucky” than me did more with their genetic inheritance. And others, more “lucky” than me did less with their genetic inheritance.

Well, I could go on in the same vein about looks, athletic skills, skin color, parents’ wealth, family connections, and all the rest. But I think you get the picture. “Luck” is a starting point. Where we end up depends on what we do with our “luck”.

Not so fast, you say. What about family connections? Suppose Smedley Smythe’s father, who owns General Junk Food Incorporated, makes Smedley the CEO of GJFI and pays him $1 million a year. If Smythe senior is the sole owner of the company, that’s his prerogative. The million is coming out of his hide or, if consumers are willing to pay higher prices to defray the million, out of consumers’ pockets. But no one is forcing consumers to buy things from GJFI; if its prices are too high, consumers will turn elsewhere and Smythe senior will rue his nepotism. Suppose GJFI is a publicly owned company? In the end, it amounts to the same thing; if the nepotism hurts the bottom line, its shareholders should rebel. If it doesn’t, well…

Now what about those who are born poor, who aren’t especially bright, good looking, or athletic, and who are, say, black rather than white. Do they deserve what they earn? The hard, cold answer is “yes” — if what they earn is earned without benefit of fraud, theft, or coercion. Why should I want to pay you more because of the circumstances of your birth, your IQ, your looks, your athleticism, or your skin color. What matters is what you can do for me and how much I am willing to pay for it.

But what about people who are poor because they have been unable to “rise above” their genetic inheritance and family circumstances. What about those people who are poor because they have incurred serious illnesses or have been severely injured? What about those people who didn’t save enough to support themselves in their old age? And on and on.

Those are hard questions. Such people may be helped, privately, out of compassion or duty or guilt. Such people may be helped through coercive government programs that draw on compassion, duty, guilt, and large measures of political opportunism and economic illiteracy. But the fact that they are helped in no way negates the truth that — except for criminals and Congress — we deserve what we earn.

(Inspired by Will Wilkinson’s Tech Central Station article, “Meritocracy: The Appalling Ideal?”.)

John Kerry Knows When He’s in Nevada

From Washingtontimes.com:

Kerry vows to abort Nevada waste plan

By Stephen Dinan

THE WASHINGTON TIMES

LAS VEGAS — Sen. John Kerry promised yesterday never to store the nation’s nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain in Nevada, a major play for votes in this swing state that would mean the waste would remain stored at dozens of sites throughout the country.

“When John Kerry is president, there’s going to be no nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain — period,” the Democratic nominee for president said at a forum with supporters held to highlight the issue….

If not Nevada, where? Massachusetts?

Let’s Just Say He’s a Bit Evasive

Brad DeLong has a post with the title “Why Oh Why Are We Ruled by These… Are They Idiots? Or Are They Liars?”. The idiots or liars, of course, are Bush and company. Why? Well, DeLong quotes from a Wall Street Journal article:

“I support the idea of creating a personal saving account for younger workers,” Mr. Bush told his audience.

The problem with that idea is finding the money to pay the current generation of retirees, if revenue from current workers is diverted into the workers’ own accounts. As a leading proponent of creating private accounts from Social Security, South Carolina’s Sen. Graham said he hopes Mr. Bush will promote the idea, which is the single biggest unfinished item from the 2000 campaign platform. But Mr. Graham has been willing to address the $1 trillion transition costs, whereas Mr. Bush has not. Mr. Graham would raise the amount of wages subject to payroll taxes to cover costs. But Mr. Bush has said he won’t raise taxes or reduce benefits…

Okay, so Bush isn’t going to stand on a campaign stump and announce that someone will have to pay for the transition costs. But neither is he going to spend valuable time on the campaign stump explaining that the cost of not privatizing Social Security will far exceed the transition costs. If Social Security isn’t privatized, benefits will be cut and/or payroll taxes will rise — and it will be forever, not just during a transition period.

DeLong chooses to focus on the transition issue:

You cannot–not given current projections–“support” all three of (a) diverting Social Security revenue to young workers’ private accounts, (b) maintaining benefits at their current levels, and (c) keeping payroll taxes from rising. One of the three must crack. Does Bush not know this? Or does he know this all too well?

Does DeLong not know that the transition costs argument is phony — a diversionary tactic to scare people away from privatization — or does he know this all too well?

In other words, is DeLong an idiot or a liar? Well, DeLong is a Ph.D. economist, so he’s probably not an idiot (though I’ve known some Ph.D. economists who came close). I must conclude that he’s a liar.

It’s About Time

I predict that knee-jerk “civil libertarians” and various ethnic groups will protest this: U.S. to Give Border Patrol New Powers to Deport Illegal Aliens (from NYTimes.com, free registration required). But the operative word is illegal. The Times explains:

[T]he Department of Homeland Security announced today that it planned to give border patrol agents sweeping new powers to deport illegal aliens from the frontiers abutting Mexico and Canada without providing the aliens the opportunity to make their case before an immigration judge.

The move…represents a broad expansion of the authority of the thousands of law enforcement agents who currently patrol the nation’s borders. Until now, border patrol agents typically delivered undocumented immigrants to the custody of the immigration courts, where judges determined whether they should be deported or remain in the United States.

Homeland Security officials described the immigration courts — which hear pleas for asylum and other appeals to remain in the country — as sluggish and cumbersome, saying illegal immigrants often wait more than a year before being deported, straining the capacity of detention centers and draining critical resources. Under the new system, immigrants will typically be deported within eight days of their apprehension, officials said.

Immigration legislation passed in 1996 allows the immigration service to deport certain groups of illegal aliens without judicial oversight [emphasis added], but until now the agency only permitted officials at the nation’s airports and seaports to do so. The new rule will apply to illegal aliens caught within 100 miles of the Mexican and Canadian borders who have spent 14 days or less within the United States. The border agents will focus on deporting third-country nationals, rather than Mexicans or Canadians, and they are expected to begin exercising their new powers on Aug. 24 in Tucson and Laredo, Tex.

So, it’s better than nothing. But why limit it to illegal aliens caught within 100 miles of a border? Why limit it to illegal aliens who’ve been in the country less than 14 days? And why tell everyone when and where enforcement will begin, unless it’s disinformation?

UPDATE: I’m not going to track all the negative comments about the new policy, but here’s a sample. Repeat after me: We’re talking about illegal immigrants.

More Trouble with Libertarianism

UPDATED WITH A P.S. AT THE END

Yesterday, thanks to this pointer by Mike Rappaport at The Right Coast, I read Edward Feser’s “The Trouble with Libertarianism” at Tech Central Station. I posted this response, not knowing that I was late to the party.

Feser’s article (dated 07/20/04) had already drawn a rebuttal (on the same day) by Julian Sanchez at Julian’s Lounge, another rebuttal (dated 07/28/04) by Will Wilkinson at Tech Central Station, and a third rebuttal by Randy Barnett at The Volokh Conspiracy. Feser replied to Wilkinson on 08/03/04. Wilkinson, writing at The Fly Bottle (his own blog) essayed a partial reply to Feser on 08/04/04, with a promise of more to come.

The centerpiece of Feser’s original essay is this provocative statement:

The trouble with libertarianism is that many of its adherents have for too long labored under the illusion…that their creed is a single unified political philosophy that does not, and need not, take a stand on the most contentious moral issues dividing contemporary society. This has led to confusion both at the level of theory and at the level of policy. Libertarians need to get clear about exactly what they believe and why. And when they do, they might find that their particular version of libertarianism commits them – or ought to commit them – to regard as rivals those they might once have considered allies.

What did Julian Sanchez say in reply to Feser? Here’s the bottom line:

The whole reason to have a neutral political conception is that citizens hold such incompatible doctrines. On Feser’s account, apparently, if I endorse a political conception from the perspective of a background picture that regards theological doctrines as in error, then somehow the doctrine itself becomes non-neutral. This gets coupled with the weird assertion that non-traditionalist libertarian views “entail” a social marginalization of those with traditionalist or bourgeois views. “Entails” in what sense? Your guess is as good as mine.

Will Wilkinson, in his article of 07/28/04, neatly summarizes Feser’s argument, then makes essentially the same point as Sanchez:

It’s hard to pin down the argument in Feser’s convoluted dissertation. I count at least four loosely confederated claims:

(1) ‘Libertarianism’ does not designate a single, coherent philosophical position. There are only “libertarianisms,” i.e., various mutually inconsistent brands of so-called libertarianism.

(2) Libertarianisms can be lumped into two main categories:

a. Traditionalism, natural rights classical liberalism with a “thick” conception of human nature and human natural ends. (I’ll call this “thick libertarianism.”)

b. “Economistic” consequentialist libertarianism, with a “thin,” reductionist conception of human nature and rational choice. I’ll call this (“thin libertarianism.”)

(3) Both thick and thin libertarianism pretend to be neutral between various moral worldviews, but aren’t really. In the end, each marginalizes someone.

(4) Thick libertarians have more in common with natural law conservatives than they do with thin libertarians, and ought to be wary of allying themselves with laissez allez economists.

It would be tedious to address each of these claims at length. Instead, I’m going to present what I take to be the most persuasive form libertarianism, which I’ll call “political libertarianism.” Now, political libertarianism just is libertarianism. Libertarianism is a political doctrine of liberal social order, not a metaphysical doctrine about human nature and the human good. Once you’ve got a grip on the idea of libertarianism as a distinctively political doctrine, it’s easy enough to see that Feser’s claim (1) is false, (2) and (4) are irrelevant, and (3) betrays rather stunning incomprehension of the idea of liberal (and libertarian) neutrality.

Next comes Randy Barnett (07/29/04), who refers to his paper on “The Moral Foundations of Modern Libertarianism”, the abstract of which is worth quoting in full:

Libertarians no longer argue, as they once did in the 1970s, about whether libertarianism must be grounded on moral rights or on consequences; they no longer act as though they must choose between these two moral views. In this paper, I contend that libertarians need not choose between moral rights and consequences because theirs is a political, not a moral, philosophy; one that can be shown to be compatible with various moral theories, which is one source of its appeal.

Moral theories based on either moral rights or on consequentialism purport to be “comprehensive,” insofar as they apply to all moral questions to the exclusion of all other moral theories. Although the acceptance of one of these moral theories entails the rejection of all others, libertarian moral rights philosophers on the one hand, and utilitarians on the other, can embrace libertarian political theory with equal fervor. I explain how can this be and why it is a strength rather than a weakness of libertarian political theory.

Conservatives, neoconservatives, and those on the left who seek to impose by force their comprehensive conception of “the good” neglect the “problem of power” – an exacerbated instance of the twin fundamental social problems of knowledge and interest. For a comprehensive moralist of the right or left, using force to impose their morality on others might be their first choice among social arrangements. Having another’s comprehensive morality imposed upon them by force is their last choice. The libertarian minimalist approach of enforcing only the natural rights that define justice should be everyone’s second choice. A compromise, as it were, that makes civil society possible. And therein lies its imperative.

Feser, in his article of 08/03/04, rejects the notion of a neutral “political libertarianism” of the sort advanced by Sanchez, Wilkinson, and Barnett:

When the semantic game-playing is put to one side, however, it is clear that, whatever one thinks of abortion, both pro-choice and pro-life advocates can be reasonable (in the everyday sense of “reasonable,” rather than the ideologically loaded Rawlsian or Wilkinsonian sense); and it is also clear that any view (whether one chooses to call it “political libertarianism” or not) which requires either legalized abortion or a prohibition on abortion is not genuinely neutral between all reasonable worldviews. It is obvious too that a vast theoretical and practical gulf separates pro-life and pro-choice libertarians, just as a vast theoretical and practical gulf separated those believers in natural rights who held slavery to be legitimate from those who held it to be unjust. Differences this big cannot fail to reflect deep differences over the nature of justice, rights, and the bearers of rights. Both the claims of my original article are thereby confirmed: the differences between the various versions of libertarianism are more significant than the similarities; and once one gets clear about exactly which version of libertarianism one is talking about, one will see that it is not genuinely neutral between all reasonable comprehensive doctrines.

Wilkinson, in his most recent entry (08/04/04), restates his position by contrasting libertarianism with competing political philosophies:

The libertarian conception of liberal order differs from the welfare liberal version and the conservative versions in exactly the way you would imagine, and in exactly the way I mentioned near the end of my TCS piece. The welfare liberal believes fairly extensive and deep-reaching redistributive and regulatory mechanisms are a necessary condition for stable liberal order. The conservative believes that a considerable number of restrictions on personal choice are required to maintain the conditions for the flourishing of the family, which is a necessary condition for stable liberal order. The libertarian thinks we need neither extensive and deep-reaching regulation and redistribution, nor considerable restriction on personal choice in order for liberal order to hum along quite nicely. Various views about the nature of rights and the rule of law are consistent with the libertarian view.

Feser in general seems to be obsessed with borderline cases, and how exactly to mark out the boundaries of categories. He should relax and acquiesce to the wisdom of ordinary use. While I don’t insist on self-identifying as a libertarian, other people identify me as a libertarian because I have a set of views that are characteristically shared by libertarians. That said, I believe in the possibility of a legitimate state. I believe in the desirability of some small-scale redistribution. I am not opposed to all paternalistic restrictions on behavior. I’m no purist. But people have no problem identifying me as a kind of libertarian. If my views shifted along one or another dimension, I might become more like a welfare liberal or a classical liberal conservative than a libertarian. The point on the continua where I would be best classified as something else, like the point of hair-loss at which I man is best classified as “bald”, is obscure. Nevertheless, I don’t imagine Feser has a problem identifying the bald. And I don’t suppose that people who identify me as a libertarian are confused.

As I said:

Conservative libertarians weigh their values and choose to be libertarians rather than conservatives, just as utilitarian libertarians weigh their values and choose to be libertarians rather than, say, anarchists. Even if these disparate libertarians are joined “only” in their commitment to the liberty afforded by the minimal state, that surely distinguishes them from those on the left and right who — separately and differently — seek the shelter of the regulatory-welfare state. Whatever divides libertarians is less significant than what unites them.

P.S.

As a pro-war libertarian, I would rather be allied, in the long run, with anti-war libertarians than with anti-war Democrats, whose anti-war rhetoric reflects Bush-hatred rather than a principled objection to any war that isn’t strictly defensive. I similarly reject any long-run alliance with pro-war Republicans, whose pro-war rhetoric knows no distinction between self-defense and hatred of all things Arabic and Islamic.

As someone who has reservations about abortion and same-sex marriage, for reasons too complex to explore here, I would rather be allied with libertarians who support or condone both causes than with Republicans whose religious views dominate their political views or Democrats whose support of abortion and same-sex marriage is simply a mindless mantra.

I will vote for Bush because, for me, he is the lesser of two evils; many (perhaps most) libertarians will not vote, waste a vote on a third-party candidate, or vote for Kerry because, for them, he is the lesser of two evils. Again, I would rather be allied with those libertarians, for the long haul, than with Democrats or Republicans, whose principles boil down to “spend and elect”.

In other words, I agree with Feser in this respect:

These disagreements and their inevitable political consequences cannot be wished away — or defined away — and libertarians do themselves no credit by pretending otherwise.

I do not pretend otherwise, nor do I expect other libertarians to pretend otherwise.

I accept that not all libertarians think alike about all issues, but neither do all conservatives, liberals, Democrats, or Republicans think alike about all issues. The important thing, to me, about conservatives, liberals, Democrats, and Republicans is that they don’t share my commitment to what Feser describes so well

as the view in political philosophy that the only legitimate function of a government is to protect its citizens from force, fraud, theft, and breach of contract, and that it otherwise ought not to interfere with its citizens’ dealings with one another, either to make them more economically equal or to make them more morally virtuous.

I therefore ally myself with those who share that view. If that isn’t moral neutrality, what is?

How True

I ran across an extinct anti-war blog where this is splashed below the title:

“War is a judgment that overtakes societies when they have been living upon ideas that conflict too violently with the laws governing the universe.” – Dorothy L. Sayers

And I thought, “How true.” The war being waged upon America and the West by Islamo-fascists overtook us because we had ignored for too long this “law”: Militant Islam is a implacable enemy of Western civilization. Militant Islam will not be bought off, mollified, or contained. It can only be crushed.

The Trouble with Libertarianism?

Edward Feser, writing at Tech Central Station, concludes that “The Trouble with Libertarianism”

is that many of its adherents have for too long labored under the illusion that…their creed is a single unified political philosophy that does not, and need not, take a stand on the most contentious moral issues dividing contemporary society. This has led to confusion both at the level of theory and at the level of policy. Libertarians need to get clear about exactly what they believe and why. And when they do, they might find that their particular version of libertarianism commits them – or ought to commit them – to regard as rivals those they might once have considered allies.

I will come to Feser’s challenge at the end of this post, after I give the main points of his argument.

Feser posits two main strands of libertarianism. Those strands differ in how their proponents arrive at what Feser describes, accurately, as the libertarian position:

[T]he only legitimate function of a government is to protect its citizens from force, fraud, theft, and breach of contract, and that it otherwise ought not to interfere with its citizens’ dealings with one another, either to make them more economically equal or to make them more morally virtuous.

On the one hand, there are “conservative” libertarians — most notably Locke, Smith, and Hayek (with Nozick lurking at the fringes) — who argue from God-given rights or, in Hayek’s case, the indispensability of moral tradition and social stability to liberty.

On the other hand, there are those who believe libertarianism is grounded in contractarianism, utilitarianism, and “economism”. Contractarianism amounts to a mutual hands-off agreement: “I’ll leave you alone if you’ll leave me alone.” Utilitarianism is an extension of contractarianism; that is, each of us will be better off if we’re left alone. “Economism” is really an economic interpretation of utilitarianism; as Feser observes:

At its most extreme, the results are artifacts like Richard Posner’s book Sex and Reason, which attempts to account for all human sexual behavior in terms of perceived costs and benefits.

Feser then argues that these two strands of libertarianism are irreconcilable; that is, contractarianism, utilitarianism, and “economism”

do not treat conservative views as truly moral views at all; they treat them instead as mere prejudices: at best matters of taste, like one’s preference for this or that flavor of ice cream, and at worst rank superstitions that pose a constant danger of leading those holding them to try to restrict the freedoms of those practicing non-traditional lifestyles. Libertarians of the contractarian, utilitarian, or “economistic” bent must therefore treat the conservative the way the egalitarian liberal treats the racist, i.e. as someone who can be permitted to hold and practice his views, but only provided he and his views are widely regarded as of the crackpot variety. Just as the Lockean, Smithian, Hayekian, and Aristotelian versions of libertarianism entail a social marginalization of those who flout bourgeois moral standards, so too do these unconservative versions of libertarianism entail a social marginalization of those who defend bourgeois moral standards. Neither kind of libertarianism is truly neutral between moral worldviews.

Feser then explains:

There are two dramatic consequences of this difference between these kinds of libertarianism. The first is that a society self-consciously guided by principles of the Lockean, Smithian, Hayekian, or Aristotelian sort will, obviously, be a society of a generally conservative character, while a society self-consciously guided by principles of a contractarian, utilitarian, or “economistic” sort will, equally obviously, be a society of a generally anti-conservative character….

The second dramatic consequence is that there are also bound to be differences in the public policy recommendations made by the different versions of libertarianism. Take, for example, the issue of abortion. Those whose libertarianism is grounded in Lockean, Aristotelian, or Hayekian thinking are far more likely to take a conservative line on the matter….

By contrast, libertarians influenced by contractarianism are very unlikely to oppose abortion….

There are also bound to be differences over the question of “same-sex marriage.”…

In the end, these differing conceptions of libertarianism are irreconcilable because

none of these doctrines takes liberty or freedom to be fundamental. What is taken to be fundamental is rather natural rights, or tradition, or a social contract, or utility, or efficiency; “freedom” falls out only as a consequence of the libertarian’s more basic commitment to one of these other values, and the content of that “freedom” differs radically depending on precisely which of these fundamental values he is committed to. For the Aristotelian-natural law theorist, freedom includes not only freedom from excessive state power, but also freedom from those moral vices which prevent the realization of our natural end; for the contractarian or utilitarian, however, freedom may well include freedom from the very concepts of moral vice and natural ends. Freedom would also entail for the latter the right to commit suicide, while for the Lockean, there can be no such right, since suicide would itself violate the rights of the God who created and owns us.

As Feser sees it:

This difference in the understanding of freedom has its parallel in a difference in what we might call the tone in which various libertarians assert the right of self-ownership. In the mouth of some libertarians, what self-ownership is fundamentally about is something like this: “Other human beings have an intrinsic dignity and moral value, and this entails a duty on my part not to use them as means to my own ends; I therefore have no right to the fruits of another man’s labor.” In the mouths of other libertarians, what it means is, at bottom, rather this: “I can do whatever what I want to do, as long as I let everyone else do what they want to do too; there are no grounds for preventing any of us from doing, in general, what we want to do.” The first view expresses an attitude of deference, the second an attitude of self-assertion; the first reflects a commitment to strong moral realism and a rich conception of human nature, the second a thin conception of human nature and a tendency toward moral minimalism or even moral skepticism. And the first, I would submit, is more characteristic of libertarians of a Lockean, Hayekian, or Aristotelian bent, while the latter is more typical of libertarians influenced by contractarianism, utilitarianism, or “economism.”

Thus

contemporary libertarianism…comprises an uneasy alliance, an association between incompatible factions committed to very different conceptions of freedom.

Which is why Feser seems to think (hope?) that libertarianism would splinter if we libertarians were to examine our premises more closely.

But the differences Feser writes about come as no news to libertarians, who are now engaged in a fairly acerbic intramural debate about the legitimacy of the war in Iraq, in particular, and about the propriety of pre-emptive warfare, in general. I wouldn’t be surprised if most of the pro-war libertarians were of the “conservative” variety and most of the anti-war libertarians were of the utilitarian variety.

The fact that libertarians arrive at their libertarianism by different routes simply means that libertarians — like all humans — arrive at their beliefs in rather convoluted and, really, inexplicable ways having to do with nature, nurture, experience, observation, and reason. It seems to me, however, that libertarians bring to the journey a larger portion of observation and reason than do the adherents of other coherent political philosophies. (Republicans and Democrats, per se, are not adherents of coherent political philosophies; they are merely partisans with somewhat different sets of preferred political outcomes.)

Here, then, is my answer to Feser. Conservative libertarians weigh their values and choose to be libertarians rather than conservatives, just as utilitarian libertarians weigh their values and choose to be libertarians rather than, say, anarchists. Even if these disparate libertarians are joined “only” in their commitment to the liberty afforded by the minimal state, that surely distinguishes them from those on the left and right who — separately and differently — seek the shelter of the regulatory-welfare state. Whatever divides libertarians is less significant than what unites them.