OWS:
Plato Bets on Tyranny
By Ed Kaitz
Here's a link to Book VIII. Plato's objective is to show
how highly self-disciplined regimes gradually devolve into more inferior and
immoderate governments. Socrates begins the discussion showing how
Aristocracies (rule of the wisest) devolve into Timocracies (rule of the
military) which then descend into Oligarchies (rule of the wealthy).
Oligarchies descend into Democracies (rule of the people) which in turn become
Tyrannies.
Pay attention to the final section: how a Democracy
becomes a Tyranny. The process starts back when the rulers are
Oligarchs. A kind of Government/Business nexus (think Fannie Mae) figures
out that certain undisciplined borrowers will be unable to pay back their
loans. The lenders acquire the property and recoup their losses with some
kind of bailout. Socrates says none of this crazy lending would have
happened if the lenders had had to risk their own funds:
"For if it be enacted that voluntary contracts be
as a general rule entered into at the proper risk of the contractor, people
will be less shameless in their money-dealings in the city, and such ills as we
have now described will be less common."
Democracy arises when those thrown out of their homes
discover that the rich Oligarchs and their kids are soft and lazy. They
rebel and set up popular rule. The people want freedom more than anything
else, so they are highly sensitive to any kind of "master" including
objective standards of behavior, merit, and manners. Therefore, the
people's desire for freedom makes anyone in a position of authority highly
suspect.
For example, politicians who urge self-restraint,
thrift, and balanced-budgets are punished and cursed while those politicians
who promise whatever the people want in "copious draughts" are
rewarded. Parents are afraid to discipline their kids, and teachers begin
flattering their students (grade inflation, extra credit, etc.).
Authority figures are afraid to establish boundaries since this would violate
the people's "freedom." Even national boundaries are no longer
respected: "resident aliens, and foreigners, are all perfectly
equal."
Politicians find it prudent to play the underdog and
join with the people in their condemnation of those whose success is a product
of frugality and self-discipline. Certain "wicked-wine bearers"
promise the voters "the unmixed wine of liberty far beyond due
measure" and begin attacking the business class. Businessmen are in
turn accused of plotting against the people.
A "special leader" arises who promises even
more: cancelling all debts and redistributing the land. The special
leader "stirs up faction against the propertied class" but protects
himself with a special bodyguard. He starts unnecessary wars to
divert attention, becomes unpopular, and then aligns himself more closely with
foreigners. To protect himself even further he takes away the people's
weapons. The special leader is now a Tyrant.
Plato's Republic is about 2,400 years
old but Plato's profound observation of human nature still stands: those
who cannot master themselves will cry out for someone to master them.
Eric Hoffer offered a similar conclusion much more recently:
"People who bite the hand that feeds them usually
lick the boot that kicks them."
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