|
May 29, 2006
Bush's
True Political Philosophy
by Gordon Francis Corbett
In replying to a letter about appointees to the
Supreme Court, one of my "progressive"
correspondents said,
- You nailed that! Absolutely! Bush has to
nominate far-right ideologues like himself. Good
thinking!
Evidently he and I differ concerning what
constitutes "far-right ideologues" and what makes
up President Bush's own ideology, such as it is.
The first thing is to look at the definitions of
"ideology" and "ideologue." The second is to see
whether either fits Bush.
Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary
defines an "ideology" as,
- 1.: visionary theorizing;
-
- 2.: a.: a systematic body of concepts esp.
about human life or culture; b.: a manner or the
content of thinking characteristic of an
individual, group, or culture; c.: the
integrated theories, assertions, and aims that
constitute a sociopolitical program.
On the other hand, Webster's defines an
"ideologue" as,
- 1.: an impractical idealist: THEORIST.
-
- 2.: an advocate or adherent of a particular
ideology.
Run these definitions through a blender and pour
out the remains: systematic belief systems, some of
whose adherents' idealism blinds them to
reality.
Bush is an idealist? A theorist?
Balderdash.
Today, ideologies take second place to
pragmatism. Pragmatists see life as a series of
idiosyncratic problems to be solved, often through
bargaining. They denounce ideologies as "rigid,"
because ideologies prescribe and proscribe criteria
for choices. Some are dead flat wrong, and
some of their fervent advocates are blind to
reality. Naziism and Marxism-Leninism head that
list.
Nevertheless, some philosophies' evidence,
premises, and reasoning demonstrate their rightness
so well that people learn them and use them to
interpret reality. This is why men invented
philosophy.
The Greek Stoics said that the universe operates
by reason. Because Man is part of the universe, its
reason pervades Man. Man can use his mind to
discover this reason if he so chooses, but, the
Stoics said, he can also choose neither to reason,
nor to obey the ideas that reason would let him
discover.
Somewhere around 350 B.C., Aristotle invented
the study of ethics, which focusses on how men
should act.
Around 1250 A.D., Christian scholar Thomas
Aquinas said that the natural law is that part of
the law of God that lets Man discover God's law,
and therefore, allows him to figure out how God
wants human beings to interact. He also said that
men have no duty to obey any statute that
contradicts the natural law.
In the sixteen hundreds, Dutch jurist Hugo
Grotius said that because humans are social, they
should reason out rules for living
harmoniously.
In the seventeen hundreds, John Locke's essays
about rights proposed why and how government should
and should not act, and so helped to inspire our
break with Britain.
Novelist-philosopher Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum,
who wrote as "Ayn Rand," said that a right is "a
moral principle that defines and sanctions a man's
freedom of action in a social context."
Only individuals can own rights. Every person's
prime right is his right to his own life. All other
rights flow from it, because their owner needs them
to live. Author Sheldon Richman said that
collectively, a person's rights form a zone of
sovereignty protecting him against all human
predation.
Obligations are rights' behavioral guardians. An
obligation is someone's expectation, perhaps based
on a moral premise, that another will either act or
refrain. If the "expectee" flouts this expectation,
the "expecter" (or the government) will exact a
penalty.
That penalty must conform to the natural law.
Proper law only sanctions a supposed obligation if
meeting it protects someone's right. That stricture
limits our paid public guardians to enforcing
ethically valid obligations.
Every person has exactly the same rights. Taken
together, they form the following simple, but
crucial, idea: every person may do anything if that
action will not injure the precisely equal rights
of another person. As a corollary, no individual
may stop another person from doing anything unless
that action would injure the rights of another
person. This is the essence of natural human
rights.
One very important right is the right to make
contracts. To do that, we agree to act or to
refrain from acting in return for some specific
benefit. The parties create obligations for each to
perform as he promises; they also create, for each,
a consequential right to expect that the other will
do likewise. They meet their obligations in one of
two ways. If a person does something to satisfy an
obligation, he acts positively. If, to meet an
obligation, he refrains from doing something, he
acts negatively. One party's default triggers a
lawsuit by the other.
We need not dwell on voluntarily created
obligations. However contractual parties satisfy
them, we must remember that the parties create
them. People may make any agreement that defrauds
no contracting party and injures no one else's
rights. Otherwise, what satisfies the contracts'
obligations is irrelevant because they hurt no
one.
No agreement creates the involuntarily created
obligation. An involuntary obligation, satisfied by
negative action, springs from a natural right. The
right's owner expects that no one will violate it.
When someone does transgress this right, the owner
may protect himself directrly or request
governmental help.
Anyone can name involuntarily created
obligations that negative action satisfies. Follow
these steps:
- 1. Think of a right
- 2. Think of how people can violate it.
- 3. Think of prohibiting that action.
Step No. 3 gives the involuntary obligation. Not
doing the action in Step No. 2 is the negative
action meeting the obligation in Step No. 3.
People violate other's rights by initiating
either force or fraud. Webster's New Collegiate
Dictionary defines force as "violence,
compulsion, or constraint exerted against a person
or thing." Webster's defines fraud as
"intentional perversion of truth in order to induce
another to part with something of value or to
surrender a legal right."
To envision how involuntary obligations prohibit
force, consider the natural right to live.
Individuals can violate that right by murdering
other people. A law prohibiting murder protects
that right. Not initiating deadly force satisfies
that law.
Similarly, consider the natural right to own.
People can violate that right by defrauding others.
A law prohibiting fraud protects that right. Not
lying to others for gain satisfies that law.
So far, we have examined voluntarily created
obligations satisfied by both positive and negative
action, and involuntarily created obligations which
negative actions satisfy. One more category
remains: involuntarily created obligations
satisfied by positive action.
This category has one occupant: obligations
created consequentially, as when a couple's
conceiving a baby obligates them to care for their
baby.
Otherwise, this category is empty. No one must
act positively to preserve another's natural right,
because natural rights function only
negatively.
Because the nature of rights limits public
guardians to the enforcement of valid obligations,
the right forms the foundation of politics.
Politics studies the sanctioned use of force among
human beings.
What is the origin of the conventional political
labels, "left" and "right"?
After the French Revolution, the French national
legislature's members seated themselves according
to their philosophies. The revolutionary Jacobins
sat on the chamber's left side; their royalist
opponents sat on the right. The situational
"leftists" said that they stood for modernity and
progress. The situational "rightists" said that
because they wanted to restore the "ancien
régime," or "old leadership," they stood
for tradition.
In the twentieth century, someone created a
circular political chart putting liberalism in one
part and conservatism in another. Go too far in one
direction, and you run into the other side's
extremity. Only a middle position makes sense. This
chart may have been created, not to describe
liberalism and conservatism, but to facilitate
compromise between their advocates.
A better chart describes a linear spectrum that
orders governments' power over the individual's
rights. "Left" indicates power that regulates or
denies to citizens the use of their individual's
rights. "Right," on the other hand, shows
corresponding decreases in that power. Political
theories often prescribe these increases and
decreases.
From some kind of rough mid-point, "left" would
indicate, perhaps in this order, FDR liberalism,
Canadian socialism, British socialism, Swedish
socialism, generic "banana republic" Latin American
dictatorship, British, French, and Italian royal
rule in the Middle Ages, Mussolini's fascism, Nazi
fascism, Soviet satellite communism, Soviet
communism under Stalin, Cuban communism, and
Chinese communism.
Each of these categories concerns the respective
rulers' actions. All emphasize that rights are the
property of government, which therefore may decide
citizens' important matters and punish refusal to
obey its decisions. These decisions and punishments
violate individual citizens' or subjects' rights.
Thus, the essence of leftist rule is the
denial of those rights. The accidental
differences, as Thomists would say, involve the
degree to which each system seeks to deny
them.
Here is a very brief sketch describing some of
our country's history from an ethically "rightist"
point of view.
The Founding Fathers divided themselves into
"Federalists" (nevertheless favoring a unitary
system) and "Anti-Federalists" (nevertheless
favoring a truly federative system). They wrote our
Constitution to protect citizens' rights by
restricting officials' prerogatives and by creating
conflicts of levels and interests.
First, they restricted our officials by writing
specific powers for Congress and giving them such
additional authority as would be "necessary and
proper" to implement the foregoing enumerated
powers. Second, they wrote the Bill of Rights
to deny Federal officials prerogatives enjoyed by
King George III's policemen, and to protect any
individuals' rights not mentioned in the
Constitution. Third, they wrote the Tenth Amendment
to keep Washington from supervising the States, to
foster experimentation within the States, and to
protect competition between them. Fourth, they set
the Federal divisions--legislative, executive, and
judicial--against one another and did likewise with
State and Federal levels. That is why they had
States' legislators elect Senators: to let States
over-rule proposed laws passed in the House.
With "Freedom Through Gridlock" thus made the
law of the land, Federal public guardians were
hobbled, but the people were free. The resulting
boom, interrupted only by the Civil War and its
aftermath, lasted throughout the nineteenth
century.
That tragic conflict did more than interrupt
America's economic boom. Its aftermath shackled the
economy of the regained Southern States. Worse,
with the help of militarily dominated Southern
legislatures, the Radical Republicans crippled the
Tenth Amendment's diversity by passing the
Fourteenth Amendment to let Washington give the
States uniform standards. This laid the foundation
for a unitary government. In other words,
seventy-seven years after the Bill of Rights was
adopted, the anti-federative and politically
unitarian Federalists won. Nevertheless, American
citizens could use their rights more than any
people before them ever could.
This was not true for all. Most black Americans
lacked citizenship because they were slaves.
Indians were not regarded as citizens, but as
foreigners; worse, their technologically weak
tribes were seen as targets we could rob.
Women also could not use their rights fully. For
instance, most States did not let them vote. They
won that right by using the Constitution. Article
1, Section 2, Clause 1, says, "...the electors
[voting in Federal elections] shall have
the qualifications requisite for electors of the
most numerous branch of the State Legislature." No
smart man marries a stupid woman, and vice-versa.
That is why women had always exercised political
power behind the scenes. Nevertheless, some
organized to win the franchise for all. As their
movement spread, their arguments slowly changed
men's attitudes. Men's realization that their wives
and they were equally intelligent carried the day.
State by State, men voted to let women choose their
States' legislators, and that permission let them
vote in Federal elections. When the Nineteenth
Amendment passed, most women were already
voting.
This story illustrates the Framers' genius.
Americans identified a wrong. Using Constitutional
provisions, they percolated the issue through the
body politic and the States' legislatures. Although
one could argue that the States' individual
approvals of women's suffrage obviated the
Nineteenth Amendment, we can celebrate the fact
that the result gave women the legal power to use a
right that was always inherently theirs, and did so
without violence.
Not every Amendment has defended Americans'
rights. At least one violated them. The Eighteenth
Amendment forbade the manufacture, importation, and
sale of alcoholic beverages. Americans wanted to
continue drinking, and sought alcohol from illegal
sources. Criminal gangs obtaining and selling it
corrupted officials and shed blood throughout our
country. Finally, the Twenty-First Amendment
restored the citizens' freedom to buy alcoholic
beverages.
To designate positions to the right of the
Constitution, I can only cite theorists or their
specific works. From the Constitution, I think that
the order might run like this: John Locke, Thomas
Jefferson's draft of the Kentucky Resolution
(because it proposed the Doctrine of
Nullification), Patrick Henry and George Mason
("Anti-Federalist" theorists), novelist-philosopher
Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum (Ayn Rand), Alfred Jay
Nock, and Lysander Spooner.
The paragraph above cites authors or their
creations. Neither the ideas in the authors'
general writings, nor those in the cited specific
works, have been fully tried. Nevertheless, they
all emphasize that because only individuals own
rights, including the right to decide, they may
decide important matters for themselves.
Government's job is to protect all of those rights.
Therefore, the essence of rightist
guardianship is the protection of those rights. The
accidental differences concern the degree
and manner in which each system seeks to guarantee
them.
Using an ideology requires knowledge of its
tenets and arguments. Learning one requires hard
study. Skill in selling it comes only after a
depressing series of defeats. This process takes
persistence, patience, and resilience.
Marxism is a good example of an ideology.
Marxism is an extremely complex body of theory and
supposed facts whose understanding and application
require a lot of brainpower. Conservative
commentator William S. Lind, who is associated with
the Free Congress Foundation, says that studying
Marxism in a postgraduate program taught him to
respect the intelligence of anyone who can
interpret reality through its lens.
Another is my favorite, Objectivism. Rosenbaum
took many other philosophers' ideas and fit them
together with a lot of her own hard thinking.
Objectivism, too, is very complex, and I have quite
some distance to go before mastering it. The
Objectivist Center's David Kelley, among others, is
filling in the gaps that Rosenbaum lacked the time
to cover. He also is correcting some of her
mistakes.
President George W. Bush's decisions seem to
have no philosophic basis. Nevertheless, each
decision is a chip of information. Taken together,
they form a revealing mosaic.
Purportedly, President Bush defended our Second
Amendment by having Ambassador John Negroponte tell
a United Nations conference on the limitation of
small arms that the United States would accept no
restriction on its citizens' right to keep and bear
arms; but, President Bush also has announced that
he favors renewing President Clinton's misnamed
"assault weapons" ban. Together, these indicators
say that while he opposes a foreign body's
overruling the Second Amendment, he does want it
curtailed.
Every person has an inalienable right to defend
his property against all criminals, private and
public. His primary property is his life. When
criminals endanger his life, he may defend it with
deadly force. "Deadly force" subsumes the use of
firearms. Any policy supporting that right is
rightist. Because any policy abridging that right
transfers ownership of his life to another entity,
it is leftist.
One very big clue to Bush's true philosophy is
his expenditures, which he camouflages with theater
and subterfuge. On the one hand, he cuts our open
income taxes. On the other, he finances gargantuan
expenditures through borrowing. Most of the
creditors are governments like Europe's, Japan's,
and Red China's.
Just as installment payments "tax" our personal
salaries to pay our private debts, our
government taxes us openly to pay its public
debts. For the most part, though, the Federal
Reserve System taxes us covertly. It creates new
dollars faster than our economy's goods and
services can grow. This process is true inflation;
but, because we ship most of these new dollars to
foreign creditors, they do not raise our domestic
prices until foreign trade returns them. The result
shrinks our purchasing power slowly, without the
average citizen's realizing who, how, or why. A
pickpocket's victim knows more.
Purportedly, President Bush defended American
sovereignty by withdrawing from the Kyoto Protocol.
This agreement included "greenhouse gas"
limitations on rich nations' economies, to make
rich countries transfer economic assets to poor
ones. After Bush withdrew us from Kyoto, he made
Congress pass CAFTA. CAFTA will regulate our trade
with Central American nations. As NAFTA did for
Canada and Mexico, CAFTA will send Central America
our wealth and jobs. Where the Kyoto Protocol would
help all poor nations, NAFTA and CAFTA will send
assets only to Western Hemispheric countries. That
flow will give greater Hemispheric economic power
to the American Establishment.
Furthermore, Bush's proposed "Free Trade Area of
the Americas" would begin by abolishing trade
barriers among the Western Hemispheric nations and
end by joining them into one amalgamated country. A
similar process turned 1957's European Coal and
Steel Community into the European Union.
Our national sovereignty stems from American
citizens' right to own property individually and
severally. That property's outer edge comprises our
nation's borders, which the citizens' rights
require their public guardians to defend. The
parameters of that defense are set by our
Constitution.
Abolishing these borders would weaken our public
guardians' ability to protect nearby property and
would weaken the legality of private property.
Abolishing our Constitution would remove every
restraint the Founders crafted to confine our
guardians to protecting our rights. Eliminating
these geographic and political limits would reduce
every American citizen's rights to a legal nullity
and deliver their ownership to the Hemispheric
political amalgam. Any policy favoring that result
can only be classified as leftist.
In the wake of 11 September, President Bush has
purportedly defended America by having our armed
forces fight specific enemies; but because he
fights without a Congressional declaration of war,
his orders are un-Constitutional.
11 September's attack violated directly the
rights of everyone who lost life or physical
property. Indirectly, it violated every American's
rights. And, it amounted to an especially dastardly
declaration of war.
Declarations emanate from declarers. The true
declarer of 11 September's war is Osama bin Laden's
sponsor, a politician whose commissioning of bin
Laden's attack President Bush has never mentioned,
and about whose identity no Washington "journalist"
has even asked. None of these people wants us to
realize that bin Laden serves a sponsor. That
realization might hamper secret diplomatic
bargaining. Europeans call the preservation of such
options "reasons of state."
The whole concept of "The State" assumes either
that the state's citizens' rights are the state's
leaders' to manage, or that only "The State" can
own rights. Either way, "The State" is a leftist
concept. When our president acts upon this premise,
his actions can only be leftist.
Leftist laws, in order to be leftist, must
violate our rights. They violate them because they
stem from the idea that rights belong not to
individuals, but to groups; and, ultimately, that
they belong to all mankind collectively. Bush's
actions are demonstrably leftist. Regardless,
because he pays lip service to his party's
conservative base and does not endorse the state as
the proper manager of the people's collectively
owned rights, ideological leftists do not "claim"
Bush.
They would remonstrate that Bush is not leftist,
but corrupt. They would cite open leftists like Jim
Hightower, Bill Moyers, Ralph Nader, and David
Cobb. They would ask how their ideas compare with
the actions of George W. Bush. They would point to
Woodrow Wilson and Franklin Roosevelt, who advanced
the leftist cause of world government, and ask how
George W. Bush has furthered their work. They would
protest that Bush has prevented the United Nations'
dominating the Internet, disarming American
civilians, and sending assets from our economy to
poor ones around the world. And, of course, they
would point to his connections with Halliburton
Oil, the Carlyle Group, and other major
beneficiaries.
No, George W. Bush is not a
philosophical leftist. His rhetoric differs
from that of the men named in the preceding
paragraph; and his actions, albeit leftist, he
cloaks in a pragmatically unsavory and specious
patriotism.
Disarm a man, and you reduce his freedom. Suck
the purchasing power from a man's savings, and you
reduce his freedom. Ignore the sponsor of a
terrible attack and conquer another nation that has
not attacked us, and you expose him to hazards that
reduce his freedom. Amalgamate our government with
Western Hemispheric regimes, and their tyrants will
reduce his freedom.
When finally our American is dirt poor, and can
feed himself and his family only by renouncing his
economically worthless freedom, we will understand
how Germany could host the Holocaust.
Bush is not the only politician whose policies
would reduce our freedom, but he is the one in
power. We need to replace him with someone who
respects and will fight for our rights.
Corbett
Archive
Enrich
your life with a book about politics and current
events...
Enrich
your political & social life with a politics or
news magazine...
|