.
Is Philosophical Anarchism Reviving? |
| [Reprinted from The
Gargoyle, April 1978] |
As government grows in power, Newton's Third Law: "To each and
every action there is an equal and opposite reaction" appears to
apply not only in the realm of physics but in the arena of social
science for an increasing horde of organizations and individuals are
joining in a chorus denouncing this proliferation of statist
authoritarianism.
In particular, among the young has arisen an articulate intellectual
group which goes under the heading of Libertarians. In large measure
they have adopted the economic principles of the Austrian School, but so
distrustful are they of the State that the difference between their
views and those of the philosophical anarchists is probably paper-thin.
Possibly some of them would classify themselves as individual
anarchists but as the term "anarchism" has acquired such a
perjorative sense, few do so.
Regardless of what they call themselves if the libertarians continue to
gain in strength, inevitably, whether they like it or not, they will be
compared with the 19th century anarchists.
Georgists should have some understanding and knowledge of the 19th
century anarchists for Henry George lived in that century, and when
PROGRESS AND POVERTY appeared, it drew upon itself not only attacks by
the establishment but by anarchists.
Possibly the most famous of the European anarchists who stressed
individualism was Max Stirner. His "Der Einzige and sein Eigentum"
(The Ego and His Own) constitutes one of the most trenchant attacks on
authoritarianism while at the same time stressing the uniqueness of the
individual. Recognizing the futility of violence, he urged personal
legation of the State. Violence he knew would merely result in
establishing a new state.
In America, according to James J. Martin in his work "Men Against
the State", during the period of 1825-1925 about fifty individual
anarchists had published anarchistic writings. Those best known were
probably Josiah Warren, Lysander Spooner, William B. Greene and Benjamin
R. Tucker, and no doubt their names will crop up again in the literature
as men cast wary eyes on the alarming growth of statism. Many of these
men had weird ' ideas on money and what should be done about it.
Economics does not seem to have Been their strong point, but rather
moral and ethical fervor.
Of particular interest to Georgists was Joshua K. Ingalls, Martin
states that Ingalls attacked Henry George's ideas in many articles, and
especially in his book "Social Wealth".
In his view, the single tax would make the people merely tenants of the
State. It would not protect them from state power. Thru leaseholds, a
group of super-taxpayers might be created who could shift the burden on
to others until the eventual payments of the tax would be made by the
lowest economic unit. He was especially opposed to the utilization of
taxation to right wrongs, for it tended to obscure the injustices which
the taxation was supposed to rectify.
His understanding of economics must have been quite limited for he said
that rent was something political and not economic. Russia has learned
the hard way that rent exists even tho they don't like it. They found
that rent is a measure of opportunity and unless collected, inures to
the benefit of those using the land. In addition, if rent is ignored,
inefficient utilization of land ensues.
Ingalls also argued that interest and profits were more exploitive than
rent. This is a clear indication of his lack of understanding of the
role of interest and profits.
One thing he did recognize was that social reformers suffered from an
infatuation for passing laws prohibiting some evil. He insisted that
social and economic problems would be solved quite readily by the repeal
of laws rather than enacting more of them. His solution to the land
problem was to let the present title holders keep the land until their
deaths. Then their titles to land would be given on the basis of
occupancy and use. It was due to Ingalls that the concept of
occupation-and-use tenure of land became one of the tenets of anarchist
thought.
According to the dictionary, anarchism is "the theory that formal
government of any kind is unnecessary and wrong in principle".
The principal problem which anarchists are up against is how would they
divide up the land without some formal organization and do it justly. As
land differs in productivity some kind of organization must be set up so
that those who are allocated the better land pay to the others for the
greater opportunities they have, since all men are equally entitled to
access to the land.
Interestingly, Ingalls looked with skepticism upon the anti-slavery
movement not that he favored slavery.
Far from it. It was merely that he recognized that setting a man free
without permitting him to have access to land made a mockery of freedom.
After the Civil War, he looked askance at the Homestead Act as
political trickery. He noted that enough land had been given to
railroads by the politicians to have furnished a £arm of 25 acres
to every family. To him it was plain that the private monopolization of
land had displaced slavery as the means to garner the wealth produced by
others.
Although Ingalls views on economic principles were not the soundest, he
did display the true aspect of a scientist. He never engaged in personal
attacks. To him, the institutions mar erected had to be attacked, not
individuals. Too many, annoyed by injustice attack individuals who they
believe are responsible, when the fact is that if an institution is at
fault, the removal of the despised individual would merely result in
others taking their places. By and large, most people are decent
individuals. Under the institutional conditions in which they find
themselves, they act as they believe they should.
While individual anarchism lost much of its vitality in the early part
of the 20th Century, it appears that it may be having a revival. The
statists have made such a mess of things, it would appear that some
attention should be given to the philosophical anarchists to see which
of their ideas have merit. Anarchism is nothing new. In Ancient Greece,
Zeno the founder of the Stoic philosophy, repudiated the state of Plato
and argued for the reign of individualistic moral law. Certainly, over
two thousand years, some of the ideas and principles discovered by
anarchists must have some value to society. The sooner we understand
them, possibly the better for all of us.
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