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The Paradise Perspective: Commentary from a Free and Compassionate Alternate Reality Psychology of the Quantum Wrongness Field: Please Disconnect Your Desire for Compassion from the Violence and Corruption of the State - Part 2 by Glen Allport Exclusive to STR April 6, 2009 -
1 - Will
Misperceiving Evil be the End of Humanity? Some
of the worst mass-murderers in history – many of them, in fact – are
idols and folk heroes to millions of people, not for what the
mass-murderers actually did,
but for what those murderers and their supporters said
about and wanted to believe about
the mass-murderers. In many cases, the people idolizing the mass-murderers
are strongly in favor of a more compassionate world, yet they are unable
to see the truth about the particular tyrants they admire. This leads
millions of otherwise compassionate people to support both tyrants and
policies that cause harm, either directly or in the long term. That
is a huge problem for the world; an even more terrible and dangerous
problem than it might first appear. In the next few decades, mankind will
either resolve this problem (an unlikely but not impossible outcome) or
quite possibly put an end to civilization or even to human life. And
yes: the problem really is that
serious. Most
people have heard that power corrupts,
but nearly everyone refuses to see the extent to which power destroys and kills. Spend a moment on the topic: Cold-blooded
murder:
In the recently-ended 2oth Century, governments murdered
roughly 262 million human
beings; an average of more than two million, six hundred thousand
murders per year – for the entire century. Those
figures do not include war dead. As R.
J. Rummel has extensively documented, far more people are simply
murdered by governments than die in war – astonishing considering the
many millions of war dead. War:
15 million dead in WWI,
50 to 70 million dead (including "around 47 million" civilians per the linked article) in WWII,
and many millions more in the dozens of other
wars fought by governments in the 2oth Century. Vast
fields of death are not the only evil wrought by the coercive power of
government. Many millions of people suffered in horrifying ways in the
previous century (and millions more already
have in this century), both directly and indirectly, from government
action. Among other horrors, people were victimized by: -
Injury, maiming, or permanent disabling in war or other ways -
Torture, which is often systematic and widespread -
Rape, which is also often systematic and widespread -
Severe and needless poverty -
Malnutrition or near-starvation -
Unjust imprisonment -
Loss of one or both parents or other loved ones In
addition, reflect on the constant, daily restraint
and bullying that defines "coercive government" even in the
best of times, from drug
prohibition laws to regulatory
"protection" (see also here,
not to mention threatening
cherry and cranberry growers and other
farmers with fines and worse for providing truthful information about
the health benefits of their products, including data from publicly-funded research!), from confiscatory levels of taxation to eminent
domain (abusive even when used "as intended"), from
censorship to "gun
control" (a.k.a. "victim disarmament"), from coercive
schooling to corporatism
and the general siphoning of money and power from the people to
corporations, special interest groups, and government itself. Today's
multi-trillion dollar
"bailouts" and "stimulus plans" are only the most
obvious and breathtaking recent examples of this legalized theft. Large,
powerful government is the biggest danger to human life on this Earth; it
is also the biggest danger to prosperity and to healthy society generally.
After spending decades researching the topic and writing Death
by Government, Power
Kills, and other works, professor R. J. Rummel has this to say about
the importance of restraining
government power: In
light of all this [in particular, mass murder and war], the peaceful,
nonviolent, pursuit and fostering of civil liberties and political rights
must be made mankind's highest humanitarian goal. Not simply to give the
greatest number the greatest happiness, not simply to obey the moral
imperative of individual rights, not simply to further the efficiency and
productivity of a free society, but also and mainly because freedom
preserves peace and life. --
War Isn't This
Century's Biggest Killer Despite
decades of work on the topic by Rummel and others, even academics in
related fields seem unaware of the serious danger represented by coercive
government – which is to say, these academics, along with almost
everyone else, are misperceiving
the true nature of government power. Rummel sums up his view of this state
of affairs in typically direct fashion: I
think the ignorance of the incredible murder by government is a moral,
intellectual, and academic scandal. It is the biggest and most significant
black hole in our educational system and literature.* In
addition to Dr. Rummel's work, I recommend both The
Black Book of Communism (written by leftists, not Rush Limbaugh) and Humberto
Fontova's ongoing attempts to educate the public about Che, Castro,
and Communist Cuba in general, including his recent Hollywood
Movie and Bestselling Book Parrot Castroite Propaganda. Please note
that Rummel's work includes plenty of information on right-wing
dictatorships and other non-leftist nightmares; I am not simply picking on
Communism. It is Power itself, not a particular flavor of Power, that is
the problem. -
- - - - Imagine
that a particular type of organization was both omnipresent around the
world and the single worst danger
to life, limb, prosperity, and physical and emotional health for all mankind. Imagine that this violent, Frankenstein-like
organization was based on the use of force and thus – not surprisingly
– had a horrifying track record stretching back thousands of years to
the edge of recorded history and beyond. Then imagine that nearly everyone thought this deadly organization was somehow a
"necessary evil" or, even more bizarrely, "beneficial"
or "compassionate." There
is no need to imagine such a thing; we are actually living in that situation. What a nightmare! -
2 - Confusing
Twigs and Branches for Roots A
related problem is the misperception of secondary (and even
further-removed) phenomena as primary causes. Prohibition
is a perfect example. During the Prohibition
years – by which I mean alcohol prohibition in the Pop
quiz:
the corruption, violence, and other related problems (including death or
blinding from bad booze) of the Prohibition years were caused by:
If
you answered "none of the
above", go to the head of the class. The correct answer to
"what caused the problems of the Prohibition years" is E):
"Prohibition itself, as enabled by the violence and coercion of the
State." Proof
(although for the life of me I can't see why further proof would be
necessary) is that So
we have the following situation: Almost immediately after making alcohol
illegal, violence, corruption, and
other problems (including a truly dangerous lack of consumer
protection) emerged, then intensified, and then continued – year after
year and despite ever-harsher penalties, including the infamous life
for a pint laws. Thirteen years later, we ended
Prohibition and the problems vanished overnight. Was
there any connection between using government laws to prohibit sale and
use of alcohol, and all that "alcohol-related" violence and
corruption? Nah.
Of course not. That,
apparently, was the actual conclusion most people (both the public and, of
course, government
"experts") came to during the Prohibition years, and it
remains the conclusion of most people today – about not only the
Prohibition years of the early 1900s but also about the modern version:
the carefully misnamed War on Drugs.
"War on people who prefer certain types of mostly-quite-safe drugs
and herbs to the far-more dangerous legal
drugs, such as tobacco and alcohol and prescription chemicals" just
doesn't have the same catchy sound. Let's
diagram the problem: Government
power -->
Prohibition -->
"Alcohol violence" and other symptoms Today's
version would be: Government
power -->
War on Drugs -->
"Drug violence" and other symptoms Without
government power, there is no
Prohibition – not the coercive, throw-you-in-jail version, anyway,
although social sanctions, religious edicts, and other forms of
prohibition could still be in effect – and thus no widespread violence,
corruption, and lack of consumer protection. Government power is the root
of the problem; everything else is a leaf, a twig, or at most a
branch. But many people here in the 21st Century can apparently watch The
Untouchables (1987; Kevin Costner, Sean Connery, Robert De Niro)
without any more understanding of this point than shown by the characters
in the film. Did I mention that we are actually living in a nightmare? Glen
Allport
co-authored The User's Guide to OS/2
from
Compute! Books and is the author of The
Paradise Paradigm: On Creating a World of Compassion, Freedom, and Prosperity.
He maintains paradise-paradigm.net.
This is one in a series of columns on the human condition. |