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The Passion of Liberty: Part Two - Respect One Another by Richard
Rieben When
I was living in the third world, over many years, I was struck (nearly
knocked over) by the idea of reciprocity. I encountered human beings
living under primitive, inefficient governments, and effecting an
awesomely humane environment through informal traditions of mutual
respect, reciprocated one to another, as their best and most effective
security for the boundaries of their own freedom of action. It
came to me that, with this essential idea, you wouldn’t need government
or a power structure. That this was the active principle of liberty. Researching
through old books, I have found many references to the reciprocity of
liberty, as an essential, definitive attribute. These were commonplace
references. It was experientially familiar to the authors and their
contemporaries. Tom Paine’s comments on the subject are almost
embarrassed by stating the obvious: “.
. . for every civil right has a natural right for its foundation, and it
includes the principle of a reciprocal guarantee of those rights from man
to man.” [On First Principles of Government, 1795] “The
principle of an Equality of Rights is clear and simple. Every man can
understand it, and it is by understanding his rights that he learns his
duties; for where the rights of men are equal, every man must finally see
the necessity of protecting the rights of others as the most effectual
security for his own.” [Ibid.] Respect
one another’s equally possessed sovereignty, in exchange for the same
value in return: respect, for the same quantity: the sovereign boundaries
of each person. The action of securing our boundaries is the reciprocal
exchange of respect, one to another. There
is little else needed. Certainly no formal government or institution
“over us.” Perhaps some form of agreement, mutually engaged, such as
to get us on the same page in regard to what individual sovereignty is,
what constitutes violations thereto, and how to effect repairs when the
contract is breached. It
is not founded on constraint, nor upon trust, but upon the self-interest
of each party to be secure in his sovereign control over the affairs of
his life, such that he recognizes that the best way to obtain this value
is to respect the same value in others. Formalize it however you wish, but
it is not a thing, once framed, that needs any but the individual to
practice it – and to effect it, in concert with his equally empowered
and equally self-interested neighbors. A
reader of my book, Reciprocia,
wrote to me: “The idea that respect and reciprocal relationship are the
foundation for human political interaction seems remarkable to me – one
of those concepts that in a certain way seem so self-evident you wonder
why we don’t embrace it forthwith.” Me,
too. Why don’t we? She went on, “Well, I can imagine those who
wouldn’t.” Who wouldn’t -? But . . . why not? I mean, aside from
those holding the whips, why do the rest of us continue to submit, when
there’s no need? In
Lowell Potter’s recent article, Board
Games, at Strike-The-Root.com, he comments, “I’ve got my own life
to run! The only thing I must remember while I do it is to respect other
folks while they’re busy running their lives. Simple, really--no scary
science or advanced math involved.” Unfortunately,
the science is all on the side of domination institutions. Well, it is not
science, really. During
the 1920s, the rage for logical positivism (an offshoot of empiricism) was
intent on analyzing and taking apart conceptual understandings, breaking
them into pieces of empirical data. The commonly accepted understanding of
reciprocal liberty was split into “positive liberty” and “negative
liberty.” This “scientific” interpretation declared that reciprocity
was really just two old bits of domination government, typical
master-slave stuff . . . and really much easier for masses to
understand (said the wizards of empiricism). The
masses, who had lived with reciprocal respect for several millennia
without any problems understanding this unified concept (which was just
what the wizards feared most), were beguiled by the scientific
methodology. When
empiricism was misapplied to the normative (prescriptive) branches of
philosophy, it was able to justify old clan concepts of bondage, slavery,
and power structure with intellectual rationalizations. This is what I
call “good old bullship logic” – the wrong conceptual tools for the
wrong job; like using screwdrivers and hammers to treat influenza. Only
wizards can get away with stuff like this. And they did. To
the western, educated public, who consider themselves modern and
scientific, the lack of “scary science or advanced math” (all
of it, admittedly, bullship) is the most suspicious part of liberty, of
reciprocal respect, and of humanity. You
may be thinking, “Come on, Richard, most people know what reciprocity
means, and, as you say, mutual or reciprocal respect is already the
subtext for the greater part of our social interaction. We are already
practicing it, for the most part, so what are you talking about here?” I’m
saying that reciprocal respect is not merely some part of what we
need for minimal levels of social harmony, it is all that is
needed, politically, in whole. Grasp
the arena to which it applies – the sovereignty of the individual –
and that one concept is all that is needed to secure our political
boundaries. Formalizing it in some sense, as an agreement or contract, is
mainly a matter of giving it recognition and primacy, such that we would
no longer be tempted by solutions of force, which destroy the efficacy of
reciprocity and subordinate ourselves to a group power or a group agenda. Because
you are correct: To the extent that we function at all, it is due
to this principle of reciprocal respect, and we fail to achieve individual
security and social harmony to whatever degree we depart from recognizing
and practicing this principle. But
we depart from it regularly on the premise that we need force in order to
attain security, and on the premise that we need the authority of a group
or collective in order to attain harmony, and both of these premises lead
to inquisitions, holocausts, wars, and continual crucifixions. I don’t
think it is because we lack faith in reciprocal respect, but because we
are indoctrinated by group priorities to discount its importance. According
to institutional propaganda, only group solutions based on force will be
effective in creating social harmony and security. This “science”
teaches us that reciprocal respect is weak, irrelevant or useless. The
group propaganda does not even recognize the sovereignty of the
individual, which should be a big tip-off, right there. Institutional
propaganda teaches us this misinformation because, with full recognition
and implementation of reciprocal respect for the boundaries of sovereign
individuals, we would have no use for empowered groups, would no longer
have any rationale for subordinating ourselves to such collectives, and
would not tolerate the possession and exercise of force by any group,
institution or agency to any end whatsoever. In
other words, we would take away their whips, strike the chains, and
invalidate the entire power structure of “civilization” for the past
10,000 years. Is there a reason why the concept of reciprocal respect of
sovereign boundaries is ignored, discounted, and discouraged? Did
I hear someone say “vested interests”? “no more empires”? “no
more power structure”? “no more slavery”? “there’s no profit in
it”? “no more hand-outs”? “no more meddling”? “no more
resentment, envy, hatred, and war”? Reciprocal
respect is the most profound, direct and effective means of securing
liberty. It’s the active principle of individual sovereignty. It
is what makes liberty tick. It is the only saving grace that allows human
societies function at all. Today,
it is a new idea – a salvation idea. Reciprocal respect is an expansive,
loving, giving, and healing message. It sets the stage for our capacity to
BE human. This message needs to sweep the world more rapidly,
thoroughly, and intimately than any religion has done in the past. Again.
Because it’s really an old idea. We just lost track of it. discuss this column in the forum Richard Rieben is a world traveler, house remodeler, and sometime author and philosopher. The thesis of his manifesto, Reciprocia, is, briefly: “Sovereignty is the base; reciprocity defines how to make it work.” Aside from harping incessantly on the theme of liberty, he leads a fairly normal life in middle America, where he scouts for silver-linings. His internet articles are featured at TakeLiberty.com. Comments may be e-mailed to: richard [at] reciprocia.com. |