By Zach Foster
One of the remarkable things about this Batman series
is the way Hollywood — a bastion of tired, often-rehashed, leftist propaganda —
has unwittingly allowed an obscenely wealthy capitalist who lives a decadent
bourgeois lifestyle (when not fighting crime) to be the hero! It was noted somewhere that Murray Rothbard was
a fan of the James Bond films partly because Bond was unrepentantly bourgeois
and knew how to live it up in style. I think Rothbard — who has forgotten more
about Austro-libertarianism than I could ever hope to learn in my lifetime —
would have liked Christian Bale's portrayal of Bruce Wayne, neither afraid to
make large investments nor afraid to be seen driving the ladies around in his
European sports cars.
Another thing about Bruce Wayne/Batman is that he's a
shining example of what can be accomplished by the private sector. None of
Wayne's state-of-the-art technology is sponsored by government grants, though
there would be little doubt Wayne Enterprises sells to the government. Nonetheless,
Wayne's research is fueled by his own profits, not government grants or
subsidies, and with the help of his top man, Lucius Fox, he develops the
technology that enables him to be an effective one-man army and fight organized
crime that borders on terrorism, while responsibly avoiding the corruption of
the military-industrial complex.
Jeffrey Tucker was correct to note that the mob's
extensive operations and violence (as well as law enforcement often turning a
blind eye) are fueled by prohibition — that is, government intervention — much
the way Prohibition fueled the gang wars and the rise of organized crime in the
1920s. The utopian idea held by leftists and neoconservatives alike that people
can be legislated into healthy, responsible behavior is responsible for the
damages caused by neo-Prohibition — the war on drugs — fueling not only
organized crime but also the chaotic drug war/civil war that has left 55,000
dead in Mexico.
The Dark Knight featured a number of private-sector innovations, including a new Batmobile from which Batman is able to eject with an emergency motorcycle. The writers and producers of The Dark Knight Rises outdid themselves imagining the type of free-market ingenuity that brought a flying Batmobile chopper to outdo armored paramilitary vehicles used by looters. Tucker may just have to update his Jetsons book! I can guarantee everyone, while this technology may or may not be in the works by the defense contractors and private military companies, it never would have been dreamed up for the Soviet army or the Chinese PLA during the Cold War. As a matter of fact, the majority of times the Eastern bloc — with near-nonexistent civil liberties and planned economies ever controlled by the centralized grip of the Communist Party — made any great leaps in military technology was when they shot down a CIA spy plane and salvaged the wreckage for ideas.
But it's easy to pick on the commies; the defense
contractors in the real-world private sector deserve to have light shed on
their greed and laziness. These contractors might be closer to the development
of such remarkable technology as seen in Batman or the James Bond films if they
weren't busy lobbying to lengthen the Afghan war (now extended until 2024) and
to expand the United States' military presence around the world, nursing off of
endless government contracts and continuing to produce the same old military
weapons and equipment while the government gravy train keeps on rolling. While
government contracts are effective in cutting costs and spending through
eliminating bureaucracy in production of goods and services via the private
sector, they are a double-edged sword in the way firms often rely on government
for continued business and government contracts for particular goods and
services transformed into Keynesian-style welfare programs. This is what brings
big business to lobby in Washington DC, polluting the free market with
unbalanced legislation and corrupting republican democracy.
It was the neo-Keynesian economist Paul Krugman who
said in his recent televised debate with Ron Paul(and I paraphrase), "I
believe in the market economy, but there are times when the free market fails
and government must take action to slow recessions and stimulate growth."
Were I a Marxist — per Mises's "The Conflict of
Ideologies" — simply stating the orientation of Krugman's
ideology would be enough to denounce him for all eternity (given that the
"end stage of history" is near), but luckily the Austrian School
prides itself on having solid logical foundations outside of fallacious
class-warfare propaganda and ad hominem attacks. Excellent refutations to the
Keynesian idol worship of central banking and government intervention in the
market economy can be found in Rothbard's Economic Depressions. Easy-to-understand
explanations of these theories are found in chapter 3 of Kel Kelly's Case for Legalizing
Capitalism and in chapters 9 and 10 of Robert
Murphy's Politically Incorrect
Guide to Capitalism.
In the face of the neo-Keynesian idea that government
bailouts — today almost universally reviled by the American public — are good
for the economy and for overall prosperity, I'm pretty sure Wayne Enterprises
never needed to be bailed out, although General Motors and JPMorgan/Chase
certainly did! Even though Bruce's eight years of solitude take their toll on
the company, it still survives from its basic profits and no assistance of any
kind.
Throughout his private-sector career, Bruce Wayne is a
savvy businessman unafraid to take risks. In Batman Begins he
fires the chairman of the board of directors for his bad business plan and
bitter belittling of Lucius Fox, and takes the risk of promoting Fox to occupy
the newly vacant position — a risk that pays off as Fox is given the authority
and resources he needs to develop works of tactical and technological genius
that help Batman fight the villains seeking to deprive the people in Gotham
City of their rights to life, liberty, and property.
One thing all the villains in this trilogy seem to
have in common is the desire for chaos and disorder. What Ra's al Ghul, the
Joker, and Bane share — in their own twisted ways — is the desire to see Gotham
City burn and descend into anarchy and chaos, even if they themselves must
catalyze the process. While I'm philosophically far less inclined to anarchy
than I am to localized, limited constitutional government, the anarchy the
villains try to create in the Batman trilogy in no way resembles the
anarcho-capitalist society envisioned by many libertarians. The chaos sought by
these villains more closely resembles the inevitable chaos of anarcho-communism
in a failed state, where harmony never occurred and the proletarians can
neither plan effectively nor produce nor cooperate — thus they resort to
looting and fighting over dwindling resources.
The image I saw during the segment where the
mercenaries and convicts take over Gotham City reminded me of the Russian
Revolution but combined with Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged. Vanguarded
by Bane's mercenaries and the released prison convicts, common people allow
themselves to become ravenous mobs. They seize and detain all wealthy people,
confiscating (wildly and destructively looting) their property and then
subjecting them to show trials in which the defendants' guilt "has already
been established." These show trials, reminiscent both of the Jacobin-led
show trials of the French Revolution as well as Lenin's show trials of the
kulaks, are given the euphemism of "sentencing hearings" (led by the
vengeful Scarecrow) in which the already-guilty defendant can choose death or
exile (which will surely result in death).
Throughout all of this the looters arrest some, shoot others,
and loot the property of them all in the name of "the people of Gotham
City," even though the self-appointed warlord Bane never intends to share
real power (much like Lenin and Stalin). The heroes, on the other hand, are the
industrialists — the Hank Reardens, Dagny Taggarts, and Midas Mulligans — who
use their minds, their superior technology, and their unbreakable spirits to
defeat the looters and save the lives of the innocent (though many don't
deserve it).
Libertarian philosophy stresses a supreme importance
in the respect of life, liberty, and private property (or the pursuit thereof)
for every individual, whereas Marx's end stage of history — envisioned to be
spontaneous order and harmony in the form of communism after the final
abolition of the state — can result only from the total abolition of private
property and the dissolution of the bourgeoisie. The destruction of the latter
comes in two forms: one is the conversion of all people into proletarians and
the other is the physical destruction of "the most fanatical bearers of
counter-revolution" during the socialist stage of the Dictatorship of the
Proletariat (see documentary film The Soviet Story for more on
revolutionary genocide). Bane sets to bring about the next phase of Western
civilization by completely destroying the old (with a nuclear weapon).
Ra's al Ghul and his secret society — believing that
every great civilization is doomed eventually to fall — not only believe in the
inevitability of Gotham City's collapse into chaos; they believe that they must
be the catalyst to seal Gotham's fate. This is no far cry from Marx's warped
take on Hegel's dialectic, reinvented by the former as dialectical materialism
— the belief that humanity advances in historical stages by opposition and
struggle — and even more Marxist in the belief that they, the revolutionary
vanguard, must launch the final struggle.
While the Joker is a fascinating character because he
personifies pure evil, he represents real people in this world who seize
opportunities to spread chaos and violence simply for the nihilistic joy of
witnessing disorder and destruction. Picture the Unabomber becoming one of
those uneducated young leftists who advocate for anarchy and an end to government
without actually knowing what the heck they're talking about, and voila! We
have the Joker.
Bane is a fascinating and unique character. He is
cold, calculating, very detail oriented, and well trained in the disciplines of
hand-to-hand combat and pain management. Bane is similar to Ra's al Ghul and
the Joker in sharing a common goal for Gotham City, but different in his
motivations (both his love for his leader and his twisted dialectical mission).
Ra's al Ghul believes he does the work of history whereas the Joker does what
he does for the sadistic fun of causing havoc. Bane, on the other hand (as well
as his leader, the daughter of Ra's al Ghul), resembles Hitler and Stalin in
that he lived a horrible childhood and derives his motivation from a special
grudge he holds for the world. He will not stop until all are punished as he
sees fit. When holding Bruce Wayne captive and torturing him, Bane proclaims,
"When Gotham is ashes, you have my permission to die." Like Hitler
and Stalin, Bane targets specific people for death, beating and torturing them
with cruel precision before murdering them, meanwhile inflicting widespread
terror on society in order to make his message painfully clear.
Selina Kyle/Catwoman, played by the lovely Anne
Hathaway, is a beautiful walking metaphor for the modern bourgeois
anticapitalist. Always seen wearing exquisite designer clothing and ever an
economic opportunist, she enjoys many of the finer things in life while deeply
resenting the wealthy. Regarding the coming state of emergency for Gotham City
caused by Bane and his terrorists, Kyle says to Bruce Wayne, "There's a
storm coming, Mister Wayne.… When it hits, you're all going to wonder how you
ever thought you could live so large and leave so little for the rest of us."
Throughout much of the film Kyle favors the assault on
the rich by gangs looting mansions and "liberating" private property.
This type of behavior was common practice after the October Revolution in
Russia and "Liberation" in China. With her misdirected anger and such
an attitude of entitlement, Selina Kyle sure would have fit in beautifully with
the Occupy Wall Street crowd! Luckily for her she eventually joins forces with
Batman to stop Bane's terrorists from turning Gotham to ashes. Much the way
Hayek abandoned his socialist views and became a student of Mises, Selina Kyle
sees the error of her ways, and Catwoman joins Batman in fighting the
terrorists she helped empower.
Bruce Wayne/Batman is unique in that his sacred honor
is his most prized possession. "You don't owe these people anymore,"
Catwoman chastises him, "You've given them everything!"
"Not everything," Batman solemnly replies,
"Not yet."
Even if he must give up his life fighting evil so that
the innocent may live, he will never give up his integrity. While the looters
destroy, Wayne creates. While the villains attack the innocent, Batman goes out
of his way to protect them. Despite the darkest trials — and the hard times
seen in the Batman trilogy are especially dark — the forces of good will never
give in to the forces of evil. Ludwig von Mises and the students of the
Austrian School he inspired have adopted as their personal motto the
phrase Tu ne cede malis, sed contra audentior ito: Do not give in
to evil but proceed ever more boldly against it.
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