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| [Reprinted from Ch.4,
One Is A Crowd, published in 1952 of Devin-Adair Co., New
York] |
IT All BEGAN, as you know, with the Declaration of Independence. The
Americans stated their case, both as to the disabilities put upon them
by the British Crown and as to the kind of government they considered it
fitting for men to live under. The indictment was rejected and the issue
was joined in baffle. The god of war decided in favor of the Americans,
insofar as removing the grievous rule was concerned; but in the
establishment of a government to their liking the victors were on their
own. Nobody could help them. Even history could not make a suggestion;
for never had there been a political establishment constructed or
operating on principles laid down in the Declaration.
These principles, moreover, were quite metaphysical, completely outside
the realm of experience. They were: one, that all men are created equal,
and, two, that all men are endowed with inalienable rights. When you
come down to it, the two metaphysical concepts are really one. For the
postulate of equality did not apply to human capacities or attributes,
which are quite unequal and far beyond the scope of government, but to
the enjoyment of rights or prerogatives. In that respect, they
maintained, all men must be considered on a par.
This was a brand-new base for government. In all political science
hitherto known it had been an axiom that rights were privileges handed
down to subjects by the sovereign power; hence there was nothing
positive about them. A new king or a new parliament could abrogate
existing rights or extend them to other groups or establish new
favorites. The Americans, however, insisted that in the nature of things
all rights inhere in the individual, by virtue of his existence, and
that he instituted government for the sole purpose of preventing one
citizen fr6m violating the rights of another. Sovereign power, they
said, resides in the individual; the government is only an agency of his
will. If it fails to carry out its duties properly, or if it itself
presumes to invade his rights, then the moral thing to do is to kick it
out.
But, government is not an abstraction; it consists of people, and the
inclination of all people is to improve upon their circumstances with
whatever skills or capacities they possess and by whatever opportunities
they meet up with. The power placed in the hands of this agency -- to
enforce the observance of an equality of rights -- is in itself a
temptation from which only the saintly are delivered. The Founding
Fathers were therefore confronted with a difficult contradiction: men
being what they are, a government is necessary; and government being
what it is, men must be safeguarded against it. Their recipe was the
Constitution. Whether or not the ensuing government would materialize
the metaphysics of the Declaration, the Constitution was, at any rate, a
definite pattern; and when it was ratified and put into operation, it
became the end-product of the Revolution.
To be sure, the Constitution cut corners around the doctrine of natural
rights. We must remember that it was, after all, a political instrument,
concocted by men. Only in its preamble can such an instrument serve the
moralities; its working parts must be geared to the interests of the
dominating groups in society, and hence it must be a compromise; to
effect the compromise the moralities must be watered down. The
Constitution was no exception. The assumed equality of rights was
distinctly out of line with the profitable slave-trade; owners of large
estates wondered how it might affect their business; merchants and
manufacturers deemed it dangerous to their preferred position. The
Constitution was therefore so framed that the doctrine could not be
employed to disrupt the status. There were many Americans who contended
that the profit of the Revolution was liquidated by the Constitution and
at their insistence a Bill of Rights was included.
The Basic Social Struggle
The Founding Fathers forged well. Putting aside what it might have
been, the Constitution did pay homage to the doctrine of natural rights.
It did so by the simple expedient of putting restraints and limitations
on the powers of government. We learn from their published statements
that the intent of the Founding Fathers was to prevent the despised "democrats,"
should they come into power, from using it for spoliation. They were
quite forthright about it, and not a little could be said in favor of
their thesis. In recent years the "mob" they feared has indeed
come into power and the result seems to support the contention of
Madison, Adams and Hamilton. But regardless of their argument and
regardless of their intent, the Constitutional shackles did in fact,
though perhaps inadvertently, protect the people in the enjoyment of
their cherished rights.
From this we learn a little heeded lesson in social science, namely,
that the real struggle that disturbs the enjoyment of life is not
between economic classes but between Society as a whole and the
political power which imposes itself on Society. The class-struggle
theory is a blind alley. True, people of like economic interests will
gang up for the purpose of taking advantage of others. But within these
classes there is as much rivalry as there is between the classes. When,
however, you examine the advantage which one class obtains over another
you find that the basis of it is political power. It is impossible for
one person to exploit another, for one class to exploit another, without
the aid of law and the force to back up the law. Examine any monopoly
and you will find it resting on the State. So that the economic and
social injustices we complain of are not due to economic inequalities,
but to the political means that bring about these inequalities. If peace
is to be brought into the social order it is not by accentuating a
class-struggle, but by restraining the basic cause of it; that is, the
political power. To bring about a condition of equal rights, which is a
condition of justice, the hands of the politician must be so tied that
he cannot extend his activities beyond the simple duty of protecting
life and property, his only competence.
To the extent, then, that the Founding Fathers delimited the powers of
the new government -- by the system of checks-and-balances-to that
extent did they render inestimable social service. And to that extent
did they insure the victory of the Revolution.
The Three Immunities
For about a century and a half the American citizen enjoyed, in the
main, three immunities against the State: in respect to his property; in
respect to his person; in respect to his thought and expression.
Pressure upon them was constant, for in the pursuit of power the State
is relentless, but the dikes of the Constitution held firm and so did
the immunities. Only within our time did the State effect a vital breach
in the Constitution, and in short order the American, no matter what his
classification, was reduced to the status of subject, as he was before
1776. His citizenship shrivelled up when the Sixteenth Amendment
replaced the Declaration of Independence.
The income tax completely destroys the immunity of property. It flatly
declares a prior right of the State to all things produced. What it
perrmits the individual to retain is a concession to expediency, not by
any means a right; for the State retains the liberty to set rates and to
fix exemptions from year to year, as its convenience dictates. 'Thus,
the sacred right of private property is violated, and the fact that it
is done
pro forma makes the violation no less real than when it is done
arbitrarily by an autocrat. The blanks we so dutifully fill out simply
accentuate our degradation to subject-status.
Demagoguery loves to emphasize a distinction between human rights and
property rights. The distinction is without validity and only serves to
arouse envy. The right to own is the mark of a free man. The slave is a
slave simply because he is denied that right. And because the free man
is secure in the possession and enjoyment of what he produces, and the
slave is not, the spur to production is in one and not in the other. Men
produce to satisfy their desires and if their gratifications are curbed
they cease to produce beyond the point of limitation; on the other hand
the only limit to their aspirations is the freedom to enjoy the fruits
of their labors. That fact, deep-rooted in the nature of man, accounts
for the progress of civilization when and where the right of property is
recognized, and for the retrogression that follows from its denial.
Property rights and human rights are more than complementary; they are
identical.
The income tax did more than revoke the immunity of property. It gave
the State the means of effectively attacking the immunities of mind and
of person; it transferred to the State that sovereignty which, according
to the American theory, is lodged in the individual. In the final
analysis, sovereignty is a matter of dollars. The more dollars the more
sovereignty. The individual is no longer sovereign when his living is
dependent on a superior will, when that will becomes dominant by the
economic strength behind it. The edicts of the State are not
self-enforcing, since they lack the voluntary support of public opinion,
and are therefore only as effective as the size of the police force; but
the police force must be paid, and since the payments must come out of
the property of those upon whom the edicts fall, there is no standing up
to it. Without an F.B.I., military conscription -- which violates the
immunity of person -- would be impossible; it failed during the Civil
War simply because Lincoln did not have the funds to support such an
agency. The Espionage Act -- which violated the immunity of mind-would
have been but a piece of paper but for the thugs hired by the State to
enforce it.
Bribing the Constitution
Further, the wealth acquired by the State at the expense of the
producers enabled it to buy its way into sovereignty. The Founding
Fathers put a check on the central power by clearly delimiting its
scope, specifying that all other prerogatives, named and unnamed, shall
reside in the component and autonomous commonwealths. They knew from
experience what a far-away and self-sufficient authority could do to
human liberty, and sought to avoid that danger by making local
government the residuary of all unspecified power; not that the local
politician is different in kind from the national politician, but that
his proximity to the people makes him more sensitive to their will.
However, with the advent of the income tax this safeguard lost all
meaning, for from then on the local politician was less and less under
obligation to his constituents; on the other hand, they fell under his
obligation by his ability to hand out gratuities derived from federal
grants, for which he gave up nothing but the dignity vested in him by
the Constitution. His political preferment is now largely a matter of
dispensing federal patronage. The American no longer regards his local
government as anything more than an agency of the State. Thus, the
original federation -- the Union-has been superseded in fact by a
single, centralized power, and the citizen of the commonwealth has
become a subject of that power. The income tax alone made this possible,
inevitable.
The transmutation of the Constitution by bribery has also been effected
through private channels. The income tax has made the State the largest
single buyer in the country and, since "the customer is always
right," it is unthinkable that the recipients of its patronage
would oppose the State on any issue important to its purposes.
Subvention of agriculture, education and the press has been supplemented
by gratuities to sundry pressure-groups, all easing the shift of
sovereignty from the individual to the State. To top it all off, the
capital absorbed by the State, via the income tax, has put it into
business in a big way, so that it is now the largest employer in the
nation; loyalty to a boss of that potential breeds a peculiar kind of
freedom of conscience.
Lost Will for Freedom
Our forefathers were not unaware of the inverse ratio of taxation to
liberty. Their experience with the British Crown was still fresh when
the Founding Fathers came up with the Constitution, and they scrutinized
its taxing provisions most carefully. About the only fiscal power
generally con-ceded to the federal authority was a levy on imports.
Hamilton knew this would hardly yield enough to support the
establishment contemplated and pleaded with great acumen for the right
to levy internal excise taxes. His argument prevailed, but only because,
as he pointed out, without this revenue the government would be
compelled to ask for the unthinkable: a land tax or an income tax. And,
until 1913, the federal establishment had to get along as best it could
with what it picked up from custom duties and a few excise taxes. Its
sovereignty was thus contained.
In 1913 the relationship between the State and Society was reversed.
Areas which had heretofore been considered within the private domain,
sacred ground so to speak, were now invaded by the arrogant and enriched
State, and within thirty years the individual was squeezed into a corner
so small that even his soul lacked elbow-room. His case was far worse
than it was in 1776; in exchange for an income tax King George III would
have conceded every point made against him by the colonists, and might
even have done penance for past sins. But, such was the character of
these Americans that they challenged him to battle because he presumed
to impose a miserable tax on tea. What they won at Yorktown was lost by
their offspring one hundred and thirty-two years later.
Were the dispositi6n of the current crop of Americans comparable to
that of their forbears, a new revolution, to regain the profit of the
first one, would be in order. There is far more justification for it now
than there was in 1776. But, people do not do what reason dictates; they
do what their disposition impels them to do. And the American
disposition of the 1950s is flaccidly placid, obsequious and completely
without a sense of freedom; it has been molded into that condition by
the proceeds of the Sixteenth Amendment. We are Americans
geographically, not in the tradition. In the circumstances, a return to
the Constitutional immunities must wait for a miracle.
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