Friday, 9 December 2016

The three most pressing threats to liberty today

 

Populism, identity politics (left and right), and radical Islam --- they share both the prize of being the three most pressing threats to liberty today, argues Tom Palmer in this guest post, and many common intellectual fountainheads.

A spectre is haunting the world: the spectre of radical anti-liberty movements, each grappling with the others like scorpions in a bottle and all competing to see which can dismantle the institutions of liberty the fastest. Some are ensconced in the universities and other elite centres, and some draw their strength from populist anger. The leftist and the rightist versions of the common anti-libertarian cause are, moreover, interconnected, with each fuelling the other.

All explicitly reject individual liberty, the rule of law, limited government, and freedom of exchange; all promote instead radical, albeit aggressively opposed, forms of identity politics and authoritarianism. They are dangerous and should not be underestimated.

Palmer1In various guises, such movements are challenging libertarian values and principles across the globe. They share a radical rejection of the ideas of reason, liberty, and the rule of law that animated the American Founding Fathers and are, indeed, the foundations of modernity. .

INTRO: THREE THREATS

There are at least three symbiotic threats to liberty on the horizon:

  • identity politics and the zero-sum political economy of conflict and aggression they engender;
  • populism and the yearning for strongman rule that invariably accompanies it; and
  • radical political Islamism.

Surprising to some, they share certain common intellectual fountainheads and form an interlocking network, energising each other at the expense of the classical liberal consensus.

Although all those movements are shot through with fallacies (especially economic) they are not driven merely by lack of understanding of economic principles, as so many statist interventions are. While most support for the minimum wage, trade restrictions, or prohibition of narcotics rests on factual misapprehensions of their consequences, the intellectual leaders of these illiberal movements are generally not thoughtless people. [And often embrace the negative outcomes as a positive – Ed.]

They often understand libertarian ideas fairly well, and reject them root and branch. They believe that the ideas of the classical liberal consensus are are phony, self-interested camouflage for exploitation promoted by evil elites; that equality before the law, of rule-based legal and political systems, of toleration and freedom of thought and speech, of voluntary trade — especially among strangers — for mutual benefit, and of imprescriptible and equal individual rights are all illusory, delusional and merely a front for exploitation by the evil elites they each rant against, and that those who uphold them are either evil themselves or hopelessly naïve [or “cucks” – Ed.]

It’s time for advocates of liberty to realise that some people reject liberty for others (and even for themselves) not merely because they don’t understand economics or because they will realise material benefits from undermining the rule of law, but because they oppose the principles and the practice of liberty, and embrace the consequences of its obliteration.

They don’t seek equality before the law; they reject it and prefer politics based on unequal identities.

They don’t believe in your right to disagree with them, and they certainly will not defend your right to do so.

They consider trade a plot of some sort.

They prefer a politics of will to one of processes – the rule of men, and not of law.

And they will attack anyone for offending their sacred identities.

In short, they do not want to “live and let live.” To that, is what they are opposed.

THREAT #1: IDENTITY POLITICS

It took decades, but a robustly anti-libertarian and anti-tolerationist movement on the left side of the spectrum has effectively taken over a great deal of academia in much of Europe and North America, and elsewhere.

Their goal is to use administrative punishment, intimidation, and disruption to suppress all views they consider incompatible with their vision. This movement is rooted in the writings of a German Marxist who studied under the Nazi theoretician Martin Heidegger. His name was Herbert Marcuse, and after he came to the United States he became very influential on the far left.

Marcuse’s 1965 essay “Repressive Tolerance” argued that to achieve liberation, or at least his distorted vision thereof, would require

the withdrawal of toleration of speech and assembly from groups and movements that promote aggressive policies, armament, chauvinism, discrimination on the grounds of race and religion, or that oppose the extension of public services, social security, medical care, etc. Moreover, the restoration of freedom of thought [sic] may necessitate new and rigid restrictions on teachings and practices in the educational institutions which, by their very methods and concepts, serve to enclose the mind within the established universe of discourse and behaviour – thereby precluding a priori a rational evaluation of the alternatives.

For Marcuse, as for his contemporary followers (many of whom have never heard of him), “Liberating tolerance, then, would mean intolerance against movements from the Right and toleration of movements from the Left.” Following that script, those who dissent from the new orthodoxy are shouted down, denied platforms, forced into sensitivity re-education courses, forbidden from speaking, intimidated, mobbed, and even threatened with violence to get them to shut up. Consider again University of Missouri professor Melissa Click’s call to her backers — “Hey, who wants to help me get this reporter out of here? I need some muscle over here!” That was Marcuse’s message in action.

Palmer2Political correctness on the left has called forth an equally anti-libertarian reaction on the right. The far-right movements that are gaining ground in Europe and the “alt-right” fusion of populism and white nationalism in the United States have attracted followers who are already convinced that their existence or way of life is threatened by capitalism, by free trade, and by ethnic pluralism, but they have been infuriated and stirred into action by the illiberal left-wing domination of speech and witch hunts against dissidents. In a sense they have become the mirror image of their persecutors. In European parties they have resurrected the poisonous political ideologies and language of the 1930s, and in the United States they have been energised by and attached themselves to the Trump movement, with its attacks on international trade, its denigration of Mexicans and Muslims, and its stirring up of resentment against elites.

The call for politically correct “safe spaces” reserved for minorities is mirrored by white nationalists who call for affirming “white identity” and a “white nation.” The doyen of white nationalism (also known as “Identitarianism,” in the United States) is one Jared Taylor, who recently told National Public Radio that

_Quote_Idiotthe natural tendency of human nature is tribal. When black people or Asians or Hispanics express a desire to live with people like themselves, express a preference for their own culture, their own heritage, there’s considered nothing wrong about that. It’s only when whites say, well, yes, I prefer the culture of Europe and I prefer to be around white people — for some reason, and only for whites, this is considered the profoundest sort of immorality.

One collectivism begets another.

Embracing the common thread tying the illiberal left with the illiberal right is philosophy professor Slavoz Žižek, an influential voice on the far left, better known in Europe than America, but with a growing following worldwide. Žižek insists that freedom in liberal societies is an illusion, and works to make it so.

That common thread also runs through the work of the National Socialist law professor Carl Schmitt, a collaborator of Martin Heidegger who famously reduced “the specific political distinction … to that between friend and enemy.” Žižek affirms “the unconditional primacy of [this] inherent antagonism as constitutive of the political.”

Palmer3For thinkers such as these, ideas of social and economic harmony and philosophies of “live and let live” are just so much self-delusion; for them what is real is only the struggle for dominance. Indeed, in a very deep sense, the flesh-and-blood individuated person does not even exist for such thinkers; for what truly exists, to them, are only social forces or identities: indeed, the “individual”(they hold) is nothing but the instantiation of forces or collective identities that are inherently antagonistic to each other.

THREAT #2: POPULIST AUTHORITARIANISM

Populism often parallels the various forms of identity politics, but adds angry resentment of “elites,” crackpot political economy, and a yearning for a leader who can focus the “authentic will” of the people. Populist movements have erupted in numerous countries, from Poland and Spain to the Philippines and the United States. This is the modern version of the nineteenth-century longing for The Man On Horseback. [For all his posturing, Winston Peters is but a pale simulacrum of the real thing – Ed.] 

In his book The Populist Persuasion Michael Kazin defines populism as: “a language whose speakers conceive of ordinary people as a noble assemblage not bounded narrowly by class, view their elite opponents as self-serving and undemocratic, and seek to mobilise the former against the latter.” The normal tendency of such movements is to follow a charismatic leader who, in his or her own person, embodies the people and focuses the popular will.

A common theme among populists is to empower a leader who can cut through procedures, rules, checks and balances, and protected rights, privileges, and immunities and “just get things done.” In The Road to Serfdom F. A. Hayek described that impatience with rules as the prelude to totalitarianism:

It is the general demand for quick and determined central government action that is the dominating element in the situation, dissatisfaction with the slow and cumbersome course of democratic processes which make action for action’s sake the goal. It is then the man or the party who seems strong and resolute enough to ‘get things done’ who exercises the greatest appeal.

Populist and authoritarian parties have taken over and are cementing their power in several countries.

Palmer4In Russia Vladimir Putin has created a new authoritarian government that dominates all other institutions in society and depends on his own personal decisions. Putin and his cronies systematically and completely took over the media and used it to generate a deep feeling of a nation under siege, whose uniquely great culture is constantly threatened by its neighbours, and which is defended only by the “strong hand” of their leader.

The government of Hungary, after securing a two-thirds parliamentary majority in 2010, began to institutionalise control of all organs of the state by ruling Fidesz party loyalists. It depicted its leader, Viktor Orbán, as a national saviour and launched an increasingly anti-libertarian agenda of nationalisation, cronyism, and restrictions on freedom of speech. Orbán declared that “[We are] breaking with the dogmas and ideologies that have been adopted by the West and keeping ourselves independent from them … to construct a new state built on illiberal and national foundations within the European Union.” (“Within the European Union” translates into “subsidised by the taxpayers of other countries.”) [No surprise that Viktor Orbán has been lauded by many in the alt-right – Ed.]

After Fidesz’s 2010 victory, the leader of the nationalist and anti-market Polish Law and Justice Party Jaroslaw Kaczyński declared Orbán’s nationalist, populist, and cronyist strategy “an example of how we can win.” Kaczyński managed to combine identity politics with populism to oust the centre-right government of a country with a growing economy and then began to institute the kinds of populist and protectionist measures that have proven themselves inimical to prosperity.

The classical liberal Timbro Institute of Sweden’s 2016 Timbro Authoritarian Populism Index concluded that on both left and right, in contemporary Europe “populism is not a temporary challenge but a permanent threat.”

Putin, the pioneer in the trend toward authoritarianism, has poured hundreds of millions of dollars into promoting anti-libertarian populism across Europe and through a sophisticated global media empire, including RT and Sputnik News, as well as a network of internet troll factories and numerous made-to-order websites.

Palmer5Russian media pioneer Peter Pomerantsev in his remarkable book Nothing Is True and Everything Is Possible notes that “the Kremlin switches messages at will to its advantages… . European right-wing nationalists are seduced with an anti-EU message; the Far Left is co-opted with tales of fighting US hegemony; US religious conservatives are convinced by the Kremlin’s fight against homosexuality.” Clouds of lies, denunciations, denials, and more are issued to undermine the confidence of defenders of classical liberal institutions. It’s a well-financed post-modern assault on truth in the service of dictatorship. [Libertarians too have been seduced. See in this vein Mikhail Svetov’s ‘Putin’s Libertarians’ – Ed.]

WHAT TRIGGERS AUTHORITARIANISM?

Such movements are not solely the result of a lack of education. They are deeply ideological in character. They embrace collectivism and authoritarianism while rejecting individualism and constitutional rules. What has caused them to generate so much popular support so rapidly?

Current research indicates that authoritarian responses are triggered by the perception of threats to physical security, group identity, and social status. When all three are present, conditions are ripe for an explosion of authoritarianism.

Radical Islamist violence, recycled through the 24/7 news cycle to seem even more widespread and common than it is, certainly presents an apparently alarming external threat.

Group integrity and status are also at stake. Research by the political scientist Karen Stenner supports the idea that there is an authoritarian predisposition that is triggered by “normative threats,” that is: perceptions that traditional views are endangered or no longer shared across a community. Such normative threats trigger a response among those predisposed to authoritarianism to become active “boundary-maintainers, norm-enforcers, and cheerleaders for authority.”

Threats to social status further exacerbate such authoritarian responses.

Palmer6The core support for authoritarian populist movements in Europe, as well as the radical fringe of the Trump movement in America, has been less-educated white males, who have seen their relative social status decline as those of others (females and foreigners) have risen. In the United States, white males 30-49 with high school degrees or less have seen their labour force participation rates drop precipitously, to the point where more than one in five are not even seeking work but have left the labour force entirely. Without remunerative and fulfilling work they have experienced a substantial loss of social status.

Absolute living standards can rise for all (and living standards and real wages have risen dramatically over the past decades), but relative status cannot rise for all. If some groups are rising, others must be falling. Those in the groups that have been falling and who are predisposed to authoritarianism will be strongly drawn to authoritarian figures who promise to redress things, or to restore lost greatness.

THREAT #3: RADICAL ISLAMISM

Radical Islamism mirrors some of the themes of the other anti-libertarian movements, including

  • identity politics (the belief that the community of believers is at war with all infidels),
  • authoritarian populist fears of threats to group identity and social status, and
  • enthusiasm for charismatic leaders who will “Make Islam Great Again.”

Radical Islamism even shares with the far left and far right common intellectual roots in European fascist political ideology and collectivist ideas of “authenticity.”

Palmer7The Islamist movement in Iran that created the first “Islamic Republic” was deeply influenced by European Fascist thinkers, notably Martin Heidegger. Ahmad Fardid promoted Heidegger’s toxic ideas in Iran, and his follower Jalal Al-e Ahmad denounced alleged western threats to the authentic identity of Iran in his book Westoxification.

As Heidegger pronounced after the victory of the Nazi Party, the age of liberalism was “the I-time. Now is the We-time.” Ecstatic collectivism promised to deliver the German people from their “inauthentically historical existence,” and lead them toward “authenticity,” the cause now embraced alike by such apparently diverse bands as social justice warriors, alt-right “identitarians,” and radical Islamists.

All those trends are mutually reinforcing: Each demonises the other; and as one grows, so grows the existential threat against which the others struggle. The growth of radical Islam draws recruits to populist parties in Europe (and America), and the hostility toward Muslims and their alienation from their societies increases the ability of Islamic State and other groups to recruit. At the same time, politically correct social justice warriors cannot bring themselves to condemn radical Islamism — after all, isn’t it just a response to the colonial oppression visited on non-Christians by the dominant Christian/white/European hegemony? — and often they find themselves not only unable to condemn Islamist crimes, but they even promote anti-Semitism themselves.

Indeed, hostility to Jews and to capitalism is a disturbingly common feature of all three movements [as they have been commonly tied throughout history – Ed.].

CONCLUSION: THE NEED TO DEFEND LIBERTY

The various anti-libertarian movements grow at the expense, not of each other, but of the centre, as it were, made up of tolerant producing and trading members of civil society who live, whether consciously or not, by the precepts of classical liberalism.

Palmer8We have seen that dynamic before, in the 1930s, when collectivist movements vied with each other to destroy freedom as fast as they could. The Fascists claimed that only they could defend against Bolshevism. The Bolshevists mobilized to smash Fascism. They fought each other, but they had far more in common than either wished to admit.

Unfortunately, the best argument that the defenders of civil society typically offer in response to those challenges is that the complex of personal liberty, the rule of law, and free markets creates more prosperity and a more commodious life than the alternatives. That’s true, but it’s not enough to deflect the damaging blows of the illiberal triumvirate of identity politics, authoritarian populism, and radical Islamism who value neither. [Their nihilist emotionalism is real – Ed.]

The moral goodness of liberty needs to be upheld, not only in head-to-head encounters with adversaries, but as a means of stiffening the resistance of classical liberals, lest they continue retreating. [And the philosophical underpinnings of morality and markets must be both well understood, and well articulated – Ed.]

Freedom is not an illusion, but a great and noble goal. It’s moral justification lies not in what it can do for the group, but in the moral space it allows each individual.

A life of freedom is better in every respect than a life of submission to others. Violence and antagonism are not the foundation of culture, but their negation.

Now is the time to defend the liberty that makes possible a global civilisation that respects and protects the individualist values that underpin and enable friendship, family, cooperation, trade, mutual benefit, science, wisdom — in a word, life — to challenge the modern anti-libertarian triumvirate, and reveal the emptiness at its heart.


Tom Palmer

Tom Palmer is executive vice president for international programmes at the Atlas Network and a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and director of the Institute's educational program, Cato University.
This piece previously appeared as a
Cato Policy Report and at FEE.

.

7 comments:

tombr said...

Mandatory reading. Tom G Palmer is great and gets to the guts of this issue.

Richard Wiig said...

Again we see "Radical Islam" as opposed to just Islam.

Even the apparent freedom lovers are lost.

Libertyscott said...

Excellent piece, I'd add the radical environmentalists as well, but the identity politics mob are the same tribe, but with different tactics.

Anonymous said...

kill yourself cress well, and the world will be a little happier and we will have more sanity

Richard McGrath said...

Wow, anonymous, I'm impressed by your detailed and utterly compelling argument.

paul scott said...

Oh God, there’s a spectre is haunting the world : the CATO institute of the elitist libertarian bible again
Populism
Lets go with Populism as the intellectual Michael Kazin defines. ::
“a language whose speakers conceive of ordinary people as a noble assemblage not bounded narrowly by class,
view their elite opponents as self-serving and undemocratic, and seek to mobilise the former against the latter.”

So far so good, and
“”The normal tendency of such movements is to follow a charismatic leader who, in his or her own person, embodies the people and focuses the popular will.”

Although this CATO institute doctrinaire is somewhere in an Office in North America side we could apply this description to John Key.
So what are the bogeyman dangers of the man Populist as he “kicked cans down the road “for ten years.
Maybe he will re-emerge as Governor General soft cuck within the Republic and insist on a Waitangi Treaty Trick Constitution
No/?.

Or maybe the Blogger here is referring to the demented Gareth Morgan who with 5% of useful idiots could along with Hone and Mana // Maori bring the
Mother fuckers” to our knees.
No/?

Scratch a libertarian and you will find a progressive.
Populism means bad, racist, xenophobic, Islamophobic, insular., uneducated, old, too stupid, a spectre is haunting the world.
Bla bla bla what Populism means is what libertarian wants it to mean, in this case, Winston Peters.
tough
Nationalism and National borders, New Zealanders before Immigrants and Islam refugees, and social justice garbage, coming at you ready or not.

Libertyscott said...

Don't forget Viktor Orban nationalised Hungarians' private pension funds and has effectively taken over the main broadcasters to be entirely placid. The EU of course has done little to change this. At best he has undermined the neo-Nazi Jobbik movement, but at worst he's done so by emulating some of its policies. Having said that, controlling its border with Serbia isn't a negative in my books given the absolute disaster of the German approach to the refugee crisis.