Literature and the Search for
Liberty
What is lost on collectivists is the prime importance of individual freedom for societies to flourish and economies to thrive.
Having abandoned the Marxist myths that took in so many of my generation, I
soon came to genuinely believe that I had found a truth that had to be shared
in the best way I knew—through the art of letters. Critics on the left and
right have often praised my novels only to distance themselves from the ideas
I've expressed. I do not believe my work can be separated from its ideals.
It is the function of the novelist to tell timeless and universal truths
through the device of a fashioned narrative. A story's significance as a piece
of art cannot be divorced from its message, any more than a society's prospects
for freedom and prosperity can be divorced from its underlying principles. The
writer and the man are one and the same, as are the culture and its common
beliefs. In my writing and in my life I have pursued a vision not only to
inspire my readers but also to share my dream of what we can aspire to build
here in our world.
Those who love liberty are often ridiculed for their idealism. And at times
we can feel alone, as there appear to be very few dedicated to the ideals of
true "liberalism."
In the United States, the term "liberal" has come to be
associated with leftism, socialism, and an ambitious role for government in the
economy. Many who describe their politics as "liberal" emphatically
favor measures which desire to push aside free enterprise. Some who call
themselves liberal show even greater hostility toward business, loudly
protesting the very idea of economic freedom and promoting a vision of society
not so different from the failed utopian experiments of history's socialist and
fascist regimes.
In Latin America and Spain, where the word "liberal" originated
to mean an advocate of liberty, the left now uses the label as an invective. It
carries connotations of "conservative" or reactionary politics, and
especially a failure to care for the world's poor. I have been maligned in this
way.
Ironically enough, part of the confusion can be pinned on some who champion
the market economy in the name of old liberalism. They have at times done even
more damage to freedom than the Marxists and other socialists.
There are those who in the name of the free market have supported Latin
American dictatorships whose iron hand of repression was said to be necessary
to allow business to function, betraying the very principles of human rights
that free economies rest upon. Then there are those who have coldly reduced all
questions of humanity to a matter of economics and see the market as a panacea.
In doing so they ignore the role of ideas and culture, the true foundation of
civilization. Without customs and shared beliefs to breathe life into democracy
and the market, we are reduced to the Darwinian struggle of atomistic and
selfish actors that many on the left rightfully see as inhuman.
What is lost on the collectivists, on the other hand, is the prime
importance of individual freedom for societies to flourish and economies to
thrive. This is the core insight of true liberalism: All individual freedoms
are part of an inseparable whole. Political and economic liberties cannot be
bifurcated. Mankind has inherited this wisdom from millennia of experience, and
our understanding has been enriched further by the great liberal thinkers, some
of my favorites being Isaiah Berlin, Karl Popper, F.A. Hayek and Ludwig von
Mises. They have described the path out of darkness and toward a brighter
future of freedom and universal appreciation for the values of human dignity.
When the liberal truth is forgotten, we see the horrors of nationalist
dictatorship, fascism, communism, cult fanaticism, terrorism and the many
savageries that have defined all too much in the modern era. The problem is
less pronounced in the United States, but here there still remain problems
resulting from the abandonment of these key principles.
Many cling to hopes that the economy can be centrally planned. Education,
health care, housing, money and banking, crime control, transportation, energy
and far more follow the failed command-and-control model that has been
repeatedly discredited. Some look to nationalist and statist solutions to trade
imbalances and migration problems, instead of toward greater freedom.
Yet there is reason for hope here and elsewhere. The American system still
allows for open dissent, the hallmark of a free society, and in a healthy
fashion both left and right practice this cherished freedom. Throughout the
world, anti-Americanism and anticapitalism are in decline. In Latin America,
outside of Venezuela and Cuba, dictatorship of the old socialist and fascist
varieties is dead, with market reforms sweeping even nominally leftist regimes.
The search for liberty is simply part of the greater search for a world
where respect for the rule of law and human rights is universal—a world free of
dictators, terrorists, warmongers and fanatics, where men and women of all
nationalities, races, traditions and creeds can coexist in the culture of
freedom, where borders give way to bridges that people cross to reach their
goals limited only by free will and respect for one another's rights. It is a
search to which I've dedicated my writing, and so many have taken notice. But
is it not a search to which we should all devote our very lives? The answer is
clear when we see what is at stake.
No comments:
Post a Comment