A False Dilemma
Scholars and
critics who deal with the life work of a significant thinker tend to divide
such a thinker’s work into periods. Even if the thinker’s ideas did not greatly
change over the years, it still makes them feel better to do this. Sometimes
there is a sufficient – even indecently large – reason to do this. One thinks
of Friedrich Naumann, whom contemporary Germans imagine to have been their
greatest "liberal", who went from Christian socialism, to
Kaiser-worship, to navalism, to impatient "national-social"
reformism, Central European hegemony for Germany, to New World Order internationalism.
The only consistent thread is that everywhere and always Naumann was a Schwärmer for
massive state intervention into everything. This great "liberal"
never understood the first thing about markets, private property, and the lot.
One is reminded of our own Max Lerner, whose ideological pratfalls set
international standards. Our esteemed neo-conservatives have made the long
march from Trotskyism through right-wing social democracy into their present
eminence, whence they try to supply what "brains" there are to be
found in the Republican Party’s "mainstream."
By such measures,
the late Murray Rothbard never changed at all. There is, however, a tendentious
standard whereby Rothbard, having observed that the outer world had changed a
bit between, say, 1946 and 1992, is burdened with inconsistency or – much worse
– a terrible descent into "conservatism." Some fifteen or twenty
years ago, one participant in such discussions – Samuel Edward Konkin III of
"agorist" fame – began distinguishing between
"left-Rothbardianism" (his position) and
"right-Rothbardianism" (allegedly Rothbard’s own position at that
time). Now we have to hear about "early" versus "late"
Rothbard or, even worse – from Chris Sciabarra writing in Critical
Review and Liberty – the shocking "one-dimensionality"
of Rothbard’s synthesis – Rothbard apparently having never gone to school with
Herbert Marcuse. And, of course, there was the little sally from the contrarian
editor of Liberty, Mr. Bill Bradford, about historians thinking
Rothbard a good economist and economists thinking him a good historian. Anyone
who has actually read Murray Rothbard comes away thinking he did rather well in
both fields. Compared to the boring twits in history and the dry-as-dust
technicians in economics, Rothbard was attempting something very bold: the
shaping of an interdisciplinary science of liberty, giving real meaning, one
might add, to the largely legless New Left demand for scholarly
"relevance."
Rothbard’s kind of
relevance was not wanted everywhere. Clearly, he was a dangerous fellow and one
to be watched closely, lest he stir up the animals. Alas, we are nearing
intramural ground, and most of the strident complainers about the alleged two –
or more – Rothbards are to be found in what passes these days for the "libertarian
movement." Many there are who are shocked – shocked – that Rothbard was,
and ever remained, a cultural conservative. To use a recurrent and defining
Rothbardianism, So what? Should he have taken up instead an "alternative
lifestyle" and devoted himself to configuring libertarianism for a
comfortable berth in an era of multicultural whining? Should he have tailored
his inquiries to the hermeneutics of suspicion, which, oddly, only suspects the
motives of white males? Not bloody likely. To paraphrase LBJ, Rothbard had an
abiding interest in preserving "the only civilization that you’ve
got."
Rothbard’s
approach to preserving civilization involved working to increase human liberty.
He never bought the traditionalist conservative line that liberty leads to
"license" and only line-by-line familiarity with the works of Edmund
Burke can prevent that sad outcome. On the other hand, Rothbard didn’t exactly
disbelieve in what we might call "ordered liberty." He thought that
real "law" had been discovered by applying a few obvious principles
to cases (as in English common law and the evolved parts of [Roman] civil law).
The philosopher Christian Bay denounced Rothbard’s For A New Liberty as too
"bourgeois" and a certain publication in the sunburnt southwest, The
Match, attacked him as a "statist" for believing in any kind of
law at all.
I shall say this
much about Rothbard’s "project" and "problematic" (as the
theory weasels would say): Rothbard meant to create a unified science of
liberty – a synthesis of classical liberalism, individualist anarchism,
critical sociology of states, historical revisionism, and Austrian economics –
"science" because it could be done rigorously; "unified"
because each element corrected or reinforced the others. Some of us think he
did a very good job, despite the high-theoretical complaints from one of those
journals.
Through all his
attempted "tactical alliances," participation in and secession from
the Libertarian Party, struggles with the Donor, and so on, Rothbard’s views
remained soundly "bourgeois" and culturally conservative. It
shouldn’t surprise anyone that he didn’t sign on for the present system of
mandatory public sensitivity dictated by the Left which, as we now know, was
the real winner in the Cold War. At the same time, Rothbard never praised any
President who held office in his lifetime. In a movement full of
quasi-Reaganites, his denunciations of Reagan and his works stood out. See his
commentaries all through the eighties if you don’t believe me.
Those who treat
Rothbard’s cultural conservatism and alleged "insensitivity" as
deplorable later developments, brought on perhaps by too-frequent meetings with
Thomas Fleming and Samuel Francis, ought to re-read some early Libertarian
Forums. Besides, these critics aren’t up to speed themselves. I mean,
if they were really sensitive they would be trudging around
like the depressed monks in the Monty Python film, rhythmically hitting
themselves in the head with books by critical race theorists.
Some libertarians
never recovered from the famous Rothbard piece on the "revolutionary"
prison rebellion at Attica, New York. Now, Rothbard did not invent the state,
he did not invent state prisons, and he never said a kind word for Nelson
Rockefeller. On this occasion, however, he said in effect, given that
there is a state prison, given that the worst murderers and
thugs in New York have taken hostages, what exactly was the Governor to do?
Call in a high-powered team of Canadian negotiators? Send out for tea and
crumpets? I actually slogged through most of Tom Wicker’s Gothic Southern
Liberal crying jag on Attica, before I got Rothbard’s point. (I quit around
page five hundred and something, when Wicker let slip that a handful of white
prisoners, who had somehow survived the "revolution" for a while,
suddenly turned up dead, which fact the racially sensitive author
had neither time nor need to explain.)
Setting the
Way-Back Machine for 1971, we find Rothbard writing that "apart from the
tendency on the Left to employ coercion, the Left seems to be constitutionally
incapable of leaving people alone in the most fundamental sense; it seems
incapable of refraining from a continual pestering, haranguing and harassment
of everyone in sight or earshot." On such matters, Early, Middle and Late
Rothbard will be found saying precisely the same things. Rothbard’s infamous –
in some circles – or merely premature attack on radical feminism came two years
before the words just quoted. I can’t recall that his position ever differed
much from that of 1969. If anything, he became more caustic as feminism and the
other isms became more entrenched and aggressive.
The years
1970-1972 are a gold mine for Rothbardian critiques of the Left. And why should
he have taken such a line when, arguably, the Left was pursuing the good work of
opposing the war in Vietnam? Precisely because the New Left displayed the
traits of the Old: hooliganism, destruction of private property, contempt for
ordinary life, and a pressing need to make everyone listen to "The East is
Red" all day, every day.
So why did
Rothbard "move right" once the Soviet Union fell? He wrote that it
was like coming home to the Old Right of his youth. He had denounced
conservatism war-mongering and interventionism for decades, and now some
conservatives at least were moving towards a new "isolationism."
Rothbard had plenty of fights with conservatives on many questions; but he knew
that, in the end, they were not in general the sworn enemies of the only
civilization we have. It is not possible to say that of the Left.
Rothbard always
defended the "old culture" and real films, which he called
"movie movies" – films which had some sort of point, continuity, and
artistry and were not just vehicles to express a director’s nihilism and angst.
Unlike certain neo-conservatives, he did not arbitrarily pick out the
high-modernist art of circa 1950, centered in Manhattan, and proclaim it the
summit of human achievement. He had a real sense that before World War II there
had been an American culture, one shown in old films, which will soon have to
be banned lest the sheep notice the difference between the New York of the
thirties and the New York produced by six decades of liberal benevolence and
philanthropy.
Rothbard’s
rejected egalitarianism – a book of his essays, after all, bore the title Egalitarianism
As a Revolt Against Nature – and was always a "paleo"
because he believed there was an ontological order, a nature of things, which
included human nature. His participation in the Aristotelian-Thomistic
philosophical tradition partly explains his interest in the Roman Catholic
intellectual tradition. Catholics had been around longer than Randians, he once
remarked, and might be thought to have solved a problem or two in that time.
Rothbard admired the rationalism he found in that tradition. G.K. Chesterton
was one of his favorite writers. In addition, he understood that Western
civilization without Christianity would not be Western civilization. He never
signed on for the new touchy-feely civilization just over the horizon –
heralded by the "classical liberal" Reason Magazine –
which will all turn out for the best, just as soon as we learn
to be more accepting of Others and tee-totalitarian-tolerant. (The Others,
apparently, are already up to speed on these virtues.)
Rothbard was
politically incorrect at the beginning and at the end of his career. In 1948,
he was, he later wrote, probably the only New York Jew to support the State
Rights Party ticket of Strom Thurmond. In the early fifties he denounced
pending Hawaiian statehood as an affront to the continental and organic
character of the American federation. In recent years, his slogan was
"universal rights, locally enforced." That second part is especially
wicked. It would leave nothing for NATO and the empire to do – a horrifying
prospect.
Mocking the
embarrassment of latter-day followers of J.M. Keynes at some of their leader’s
actual beliefs, Rothbard liked to say "Keynes was a Keynesian." But
Keynes really believed in his own ideas. So did Rothbard. Rothbard was a
Rothbardian. I can’t see the harm in that.
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