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My Route To Voluntaria by James L. Payne [Editor’s
Note: Political scientist James Payne has taught at Yale, Wesleyan, Johns
Hopkins, and Texas A&M. He wrote his first book (published by Yale
University Press) while an undergraduate at Oberlin College and now has
over a dozen books and monographs to his credit. Disappointed with the
irrelevance and left-wing orientation of the academic political science
discipline, Payne resigned his tenured professorship (at Texas A&M) in
1985, and became an independent, free-lance scholar living in Sandpoint,
Idaho. His recent works include an analysis of Congress and the budget
(THE CULTURE OF SPENDING: WHY CONGRESS SPENDS BEYOND OUR MEANS), an
evaluation of the tax system (COSTLY RETURNS: THE BURDENS OF THE U. S. TAX
SYSTEM), and an examination of social assistance policies (OVERCOMING
WELFARE: EXPECTING MORE FROM THE POOR - AND OURSELVES).
When
I began writing the first book of the Princess Navina series in 1978, I
had no idea that my efforts would culminate in 2002 with a volume laying
out a picture of a voluntary society. In fact, I wasn’t at that time a
voluntaryist, as I now call myself, and probably would have laughed at
someone who tried to put forward a model of a voluntary regime. I was a
professor of political science at a state university (grossly overpaid, I
can now confess), and committed to finding ways to fix the flaws of
government. These,
I was discovering, were more numerous and appalling than I, or almost
anyone, had dared to report. In fact, I was seeing that when government
policies are closely examined, they often seem diabolically perverse, as
if policy makers had started out with the aim of doing as much harm as
possible. This thought provoked me to invent, as an intellectual exercise,
a fictional country where the rulers deliberately intend to inflict harm
and sow havoc. It was remarkable to see how often the policies developed
by these evil-intentioned rulers were the same as those cherished by
modern lawmakers. Seeing that my friends enjoyed this little tale, I
eventually published it (PRINCESS NAVINA VISITS MALVOLIA, 1990). This
book, like the others in the series, is a short, illustrated volume in
large type. My aim was to make my points quickly and easily for an adult
audience and to avoid at all costs anything dull and ponderous. I saw my
books as an imitator of GULLIVER’S TRAVELS but one that avoided the
interminable verbiage of that work. (PRINCESS NAVINA VISIT MALVOLIA
employs but 9,000 words; in the same space Gulliver has not even begun
making a single point.) As it turned out, the casual format gives the work
the appearance of a children’s book, and it has also succeeded in that
market. The
Malvolia book and the two sequels that also explored government
dysfunctions propelled me to a deeper level of analysis. Almost any
thoughtful person can see that government is laughable, and often
tragically, inept. But what is the underlying cause of its incompetence?
The quest to that question led, in the end, to PRINCESS NAVINA VISITS
VOLUNTARIA. The
problem, it seemed to me, is centralization. With government, a small
number of people attempt to manage much more than they can possibly
understand. Imagine, for example, setting a minimum wage for scores of
millions of people in tens of thousands of employment situation. Any rule
on the subject made from the center would necessarily be inappropriate,
ineffective, or harmful in countless numbers of cases. Similarly, how
could a tiny handful of men and women wisely oversee the spending of two
trillion dollars in tens of thousands of programs and services? Such a
system would necessarily involve massive amounts of waste and
misallocation. It became increasingly clear that the only rational way to
tackle the provision of community services is a highly decentralized
system where tiny units deal with problems small enough for the relevant
decision makers to grasp, tiny units like individuals, families, and local
commercial and voluntary organizations. As the Princess put it (in
PRINCESS NAVINA VISITS NUEVA MALVOLIA), “What’s wrong with politics is
that everyone’s trying to fix things from a distance, like cooks trying
to bake a pudding through the speaking tube. No wonder they blunder. When
you tend things right under your hands, you can succeed.” If
small-scale decision-making is best, why has the world opted for
centralization? One is at first tempted to blame it on the hubris of
politicians. I have spent many years researching the psychology of
politicians, interviewing both American and Latin American leaders in an
effort to determine their motivational outlook. The results clearly show
that most of them are egotistical status seekers, craving fame and glory.
It is natural, then, that they should seek to implement grandiose,
centralized schemes in hopes of becoming national heroes. But
yet, the blame lies not only with politicians. Political leaders play to a
mass audience that obviously endorses this penchant for centralization.
When a national leader gets up and promises to fix the country’s
education, agriculture, or medical care, the public does not mark him as
an idiot. They think he is making sensible, commendable proposals! So
the underlying problem is that human beings are not by nature constructed
to be humble. We always seem to think our opinions are valid, even though
those opinions might be based on mere fragments of information, whim,
shallow impressions, hearsay, or emotion. The result is almost everyone
wants to impose his ideas on far-away situations where it appears at first
glance that something is wrong. For example, when it is reported that
workers are paid seemingly low wages in some job thousands of miles away,
very few people have the ability to suspend judgment, saying, “I’ve
only heard a tiny fragment of what is bound to be complex social and
economic arrangement, and therefore I have no rational grounds for drawing
conclusions about right or wrong, or making recommendations for
improvement.” Instead,
most people, including intelligent and educated people, will say, “How
wrong that is! The workers should be paid more!” The politicians merely
reflect this widespread tendency to form opinions about complex, distant
circumstances. That is the basic cause of government’s destructive,
inefficient centralization. It
seems clear that this problem cannot be cured by expecting people to
become more sophisticated about social and economic realities. Most people
have great difficulty mastering even elementary points of economics (such
as the idea that there is no free lunch). It is utopian indeed to expect
the population of any country to achieve a mature humility about the human
capacity to wisely address countrywide problems. The
conclusion I reached, therefore, was that if one cannot control the motive
to centralize management of the social world, the alternative must be to
control the means--which is, of course, the use of force. It is
force that enables far-off individuals, be they senators or voters, to
impose their whims on situations which they imperfectly understand.
Without employing the threat of violence, these individuals would have to
rely on voluntary means, like persuasion, or give up expecting their
existing opinions to be made effective. Thus,
the person, who believes that far-off workers are underpaid would have to
try to persuade employers to raise their wages. His advice could be taken
or ignored, of course. Or, if the reformer were really idealistic, he
could donate money to be added to the paychecks of the underpaid workers.
Or he could try to persuade the workers to quit their underpaid jobs. The
reformer who is deprived of the use of force is not without means of
implementing his opinions, but these voluntary methods are necessary
piecemeal and partial. The harmful, irrational centralized control we now
associate with government cannot take place. I
concluded, then, that the ideal society would be one where the members
deliberately refrained from the use of force, or to put it more carefully,
where they abstained from the initiation of force to attempt to solve
social problems. Thus was the land of Voluntaria born. I tried to show how
the public functions now undertaken by a coercive, centralized government
would be undertaken in a voluntary regime more efficiently and with less
vexation by small-scale units, especially voluntary organizations. Although
my aim was to identify a society where social policy was made in a
rational, helpful manner, as I got into writing the story, I found myself
making other points. As I tried to visualize patterns of behavior in a
voluntary society, it became clear that voluntary arrangements foster
friendship, generosity, and a sense of community. When you can’t use
force to change other people’s behavior, this more or less compels you
to approach them in a friendly, non-combative way. And when you can’t
use force to improve the world, you soon realize that an improved world
must depend on strengthening attitudes of helpfulness and cooperation. Thus, I discovered that a voluntary system does not merely make good policy. It tends to make good people. discuss this column in the forum This essay originally appeared in The Voluntaryist newsletter, which the editor highly recommends.
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