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Libertarian Rabbits by Bob Wallace There
is a continual rotation of books through my house.
Some I've read so many times I practically have them memorized,
others I never much cared for. If
I had kept every book I've bought since I starting buying them at age 11,
I'd probably have about a quarter-million by the time I come out on the
far end of the Geezerfier. Some
books, though, never leave. Among
the non-fiction ones there are Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn's Leftism
Revisited, Russell Kirk's The Conservative Mind, and Robert
Nisbet's The Quest for Community.
There's also Murray Rothbard, Ludwig von Mises, Milton Friedman,
and Friedrich Hayek. As
for fiction, there is of course Lord of the Rings, and C.S. Lewis'
"Space Trilogy" and The Chronicles of Narnia.
Another novel that is going no other place is Richard Adams' Watership
Down. I
first read Watership
Down in my teens. I
enjoyed it, but otherwise forgot about it.
Later, when I reread it, it was like experiencing it for the first
time. It seemed a book I had never read before.
Why didn't I catch all this great stuff in it the first time
around? Too young, I suppose. I
found in many ways the novel is as accurate about human nature as the
Bible. Indeed, in many ways it
is a Biblical story. It would
be entirely possible to be raised in a cave, read nothing but this novel,
and have more understanding of humanity and politics than most people.
But then, that's what literature is for--to take advantage of other
people's experience. The
book, for those who haven't read it, is about rabbits.
Talking rabbits.
It is a tribute to the power of this novel that by the second page,
I was able to suspend my disbelief to the extent I forgot they were
rabbits. They seemed like
people. The
book is about freedom and slavery, about tyrants, about community, about
politics, about the importance--indeed the necessity--of religion, and
about war. The rabbits are
just stand-ins for people--there is a warrior rabbit, a smart leader
rabbit, a comedian rabbit, and a psychic prophet rabbit.
Although it sounds ridiculous, it's anything but. The
novel opens with something straight out of the Old Testament.
Fiver, an undersized rabbit, turns out to be a prophet.
He realizes the whole warren is going to be awash with blood--to be
destroyed. Does the king
rabbit listen? No, of course
not. He doesn't believe in prophets. While
reading the first few pages, it struck me the warren wasn't a
"democracy." It was
a monarchy. However, the king
foolishly didn't listen to his prophet.
And in the Old Testament, when kings just as foolishly didn't
listen to their prophets,
destruction always followed. I'm
not giving anything away here, because it's obvious by the second page the
warren is in fatal danger. Fortunately,
Fiver is able to convince a few rabbits to listen to him.
Hazel, the smart rabbit, is one, and Bigwig, the warrior rabbit, is
another. So off they go, with
a few others, to found a new warren. The
rest of the book is taken up with their various adventures, good and bad.
Even though it's almost 500 paperback pages long, I couldn't put it
down. The
rabbits found what could be considered in many ways a libertarian warren.
Hazel becomes the leader--the Chief Rabbit--because of his
intelligence and competence. He
doesn't run his mouth incessantly and not say anything, like your typical
politician. He's not elected;
the other rabbits follow his advice because he has shown his worth.
There are problems in the warren, but there is no
politics. Part
of his competence lies in listening to Fiver.
He realizes Fiver has a prophetic talent he lacks, and is humble
enough to listen to Fiver's advice. The
first king didn't, which lead to the destruction of the warren.
Even the enormous soldier rabbit Bigwig realizes the competence and
intelligence of Hazel, and the prophetic powers of Fiver, and listens to
them. He could have easily
beaten both of them put together, but instead realizes they have something
he doesn't. What we're looking
at, more than anything else, is a free-market division of labor in a
voluntary community, where each finds his best niche.
Each is an important individual in a voluntary group. There
is a problem, though. A very
big problem. On one hand we
have the voluntary community of Hazel's warren, and a few miles away we
have another warren, not so libertarian. Indeed, it's a fascist warren. That
particular warren is ruled by the tyrant Woundwort, who appears to be the
Richard the III of rabbits. He
has become what he is because of what happened when he was young. I won't
give it away, but let's just say he is horribly warped by what he suffered
as a young rabbit. Woundwort
believes in complete security for his warren.
Not at all surprisingly, there is no freedom whatsoever.
There is no liberty at all, no privacy, no dignity, and everything
is politicized. In his world,
the personal has become the political.
His is a purely fascist society, with all behavior prescribed in
every way. The involuntary
group is everything; the individual, nothing.
Also not at all surprisingly, some of the rabbits try to escape,
and others become emotionally disturbed. Woundwort
also always tries to destroy any warrens close to his and enslave all the
rabbits in it. He sees any
other warren as a threat, even if it's not.
He makes perpetual war because he believes it will bring perpetual
peace. What
we're dealing with is a novel about freedom versus slavery, and the fact
that the only way anyone can have complete security is to completely give
up his freedom. Such security,
however, makes life not worth living, to the point some rabbits risk death
to escape. This false security
also brings eternal war with it. The
book is also about how one of the necessary ingredients to a happy life is
for an individual to be part of a voluntary community.
One of the things that necessarily binds a true community together
is its religion, in the form of an oral tradition.
In Woundwort's warren, there is no religion, and no mythic stories
to tell. If anything, he's the
god of his horrible warren, although in reality, completely unbeknownst to
him, he's Satan. Hazel
does something no other rabbit has ever done.
He makes friends with other animals.
He makes them his allies. First
he helps a mouse escape a predator, then he helps a gull with a hurt wing.
Since they are now his friends, the mouse warns him Woundwort and
his army are coming, and the gull--named Kehaar--helps them fight.
Woundwort, on the other hand, feels he has no need of allies.
In his hubris and his delusion, he thinks he can conquer the
rabbits' world on his own. Woundwort
doesn't even believe he's a tyrant. But
like most, if not all tyrants, he thinks he's a wise leader, indispensable
to his warren. In reality,
he's almost insane with his paranoia, his lust for power and his obsessive
desire for security. Woundwort's
warren also shows how easy it is for just a few individuals to take over a
community, because the majority didn't fight against it. The same thing
has always happened in the human world, too. Many people don't pay enough
attention, and end up with a suffocating "security" that costs
them their freedom and takes away all the hope and happiness in life. There's no need to give away any more of the novel. I will say that when it came out in 1972, ten days later it was on the best-seller list. I now understand why. We have in this book something very rare: It's both entertaining and educating. You can't ask for much more than that. discuss this column in the forum Bob Wallace has a degree in Journalism, is a former reporter and editor, and has been published at LewRockwell.com, Sierra Times, and The Libertarian Enterprise. |