|
Poised to Implode by Jim Davies
July 18, 2008 Government
is doomed. The whole miserable apparatus of local, State and Federal
politicos, liars, thieves, pimps, bullies and bureau-rats will disappear a
couple of decades hence and a few years later, the peoples of every other
country in the world will follow our example. Those of us who understand
why it has to go are now, happily, equipped to make it happen. A
few weeks ago in Avalanche,
I asked Strike The Root readers to name any hostile action they could
think of, which government might use to stop this stampede towards
liberty. I had some lurid replies which I'd not considered--thank you very
much!--but was able to see how none of them could prevent the inexorable
progress towards freedom, given the three key assumptions named in that
article. So I've been able to complete my book about the final five years
of government in Having
done so, I considered again whether there might be anything I'd
overlooked, any obstacle that might darken the outlook. Since government
hostility will be impotent, might there be anything else that might delay
the arrival of a free society? I
can see only one possibility. All-out
War That
would be a showstopper, with nuclear and/or other weapons of mass
destruction. If that were to take place, all bets are off; the human race
may well not survive, or not in recognizable form. There's not much we can
do about this, except to pursue the termination of government with all
deliberate speed so as to minimize the exposure. So
far, no government of a well-developed nation has started such a
war--their leaders may be stupid, but they aren't dumb; even though they
may be unable to spell the word or keep pronouncing it "nucular,"
they know well that they would be personally fried, and that's not part of
their agenda. We've been lucky so far, but given time, it's inevitable
that one of them, in a fit of pique or by mistake, will press the button.
I don't want to give them time; I have some really cute
grandchildren. Recession,
or Worse Is
there anything else that might change the date on which government
evaporates? How about a
depression? It's
a fair question. Such massive dislocations have been introduced to this
and other major economies worldwide by the arrogant intrusion of
governments that it's a wonder they have continued, more or less, to stand
upright. Glen
Allport has given us a clear warning that they may be about to tumble.
Suppose that happens; will it delay the arrival of a free society, or will
it cause E-Day to arrive sooner? The
last one (1931-45) was a miserable affair, but greatly reduced the level
of liberty and enhanced the standing of government in society! Having
blundered into the depression, propaganda was so well managed as to
convince almost everyone that government was its solution instead of its
cause, and that fiction has lasted two whole generations and counting. No
wonder FDR carries the status of a saint among Pols of every stripe. He
magically plucked a government victory out of a government disaster. Never
before have so many been so thoroughly and wickedly deceived by so few. But
things are different now. For
one thing, there is a substantial, intelligent and articulate minority of
scholars and others who understand what really caused the catastrophe, and
Rothbard's Government's
grip on mass communication remains powerful, with indoctrination spewing
hourly from schoolteachers and TVs and magazines and even newspapers,
still, everywhere--but now there is the Internet. Anyone with a pulse can
Google "gas puzzler" for example, and find (as I just did) the
top three places of the search pointing to my recent article here under
that title, ahead of references to the phrase in major world
newspapers. Nobody could do that in 1929. It
may well be, therefore, that as disasters hit during the coming
depression, if they do, a lot of minds will be open to hear "we told
you so." Not, of course, that we should be too strident in using so
inflammatory a phrase; but stridently or subtly, that is what we will be
able to say, and what will matter is the context in which we say
it. The
context that counts is not so much just a public forum in which are aired
competing explanations of whatever disaster hit us, but rather the one of
inviting a friend to join the freedom school. Even if a free-market
interpretation of events were to win an "Editor's Pick" from the
New York Times or Washington Post--fat chance--that would not cause
government to evaporate. What will cause it to evaporate is that a TOLFA
graduate will be able to say, “Look at this Therefore,
in my opinion, it won't make a whole lot of difference whether a
depression takes place or not. Freedom is urgently necessary whether the
age of government becomes less tolerable or more so; the rational
imperative to end that age springs from fundamental reason, not from the
trappings of current prosperity or the lack of it. And once it is
achieved, any increase of poverty in the interim will be quickly swept
away by the torrent of enterprise, innovation and prosperity that will
follow. A
factor of slightly greater importance is the degree to which
freedom-seekers grasp the opportunity now available. The nature of
exponential growth means that one person joining today will bring a large
number with him downstream, after several years; so if another 500 were to
become active this Summer, a whole year would be clipped off the time
needed for government to vanish. A further 1,000 or so would chop it by a
second year. Root Strikers who haven't yet joined the Jim Davies is a retired businessman in New Hampshire who led the development of an on-line school of liberty in 2006, who expects to experience a free society in his lifetime, and who in 2008 wrote the books "A Vision of Liberty" and " Transition to Liberty." |