The Fault Lies In Ourselves
By Paul Craig Roberts
10/26/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- During my professional lifetime, liberals
and the left-wing have focused on failures and misdeeds of the
private sector, while libertarians and conservatives have
focused on the failures and misdeeds of the public sector or
government. It turns out that both sides are right.
The Enron case and the other accounting scandals of this new
century are testimony to misdeeds driven by private sector
greed, just as the unjustifiable war in Iraq is testimony to the
abusive behavior of government.
Justice demands that we be always on guard against a
prosecutor’s case. However, the devastation wrought by fraud
committed by a few at the top of Enron seems real. Thousands of
employees lost jobs and pensions, and shareholders took a large
hit.
We now know that fraud on the part of the Bush administration
launched the ill-fated Iraqi war. The war’s financial and human
cost dwarf the Enron catastrophe. The out-of-pocket cost of the
war to date is $337 billion, with steep future costs for
veterans’ care and replacement of military equipment.
Approximately 3,000 US troops have been killed, and Department
of Veterans Affairs documents show that
100,000 veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan have been granted
disability compensation. Estimates of Iraqi civilian “collateral
damage” range from 30,000 to 655,000 deaths. America’s
reputation has been shattered, and the prospects for terrorist
“blow-back” are higher.
The most important difference between these two fraud cases,
however, is in accountability. The Enron executives have been
brought to justice with prison sentences, multi-million dollar
fines, and, in one case, by death from a heart attack brought
on, perhaps, by the stress of prosecution.
Even if the Bush administration and the rubber-stamp Congress
are held accountable in next month’s election, the ringleaders
of the war are unlikely to be brought to justice. Polls indicate
that the November election--if votes are honestly counted, an
uncertainty with the electronic voting machines--will hold Bush
and the Republicans accountable by ending one-party rule.
A number of commentators have noted that with the Democrats as
complicit in the war as the Republicans, a change in party
control over one or both houses of Congress is not exactly
accountability. But the problem is larger than that.
When government officials are held accountable, they are merely
voted out of office and not generally prosecuted. They do not
suffer the same severe punishments as their counterparts in the
private sector. Enron destroyed jobs, not people’s lives, and
the financial cost was inconsequential compared to Iraq. The
disparities in accountability and punishment for misdeeds in
government and private sectors are striking.
So far in history no private sector interest has been able to
achieve power over a population comparable to the power wielded
by Stalin or Hitler, and no private sector power has been able
to set aside civil liberties as Bush has done. The liberal-left
notion that government is our protector from the private sector
is as naive as the libertarian-right view that all wrong resides
in the government. The common denominator of wrong is the
fallibility of man.
The Founding Fathers gave us a government infused with
sufficient power to deliver justice to a people who believe in
justice, but structured to be incapable of enslaving the people.
The government’s powers were separated, dispersed, and tied down
with the Constitution and Bill of Rights. Law was made a shield
of the innocent rather than a weapon in the hands of government.
This Blackstonian concept of law was gradually eroded by the
Benthamite conception. In a nutshell, Jeremy Bentham’s argument
is that once democracy had triumphed over monarchy, people no
longer had reason to fear government which was now the product
of self-rule. Bentham argued that Blackstonian concepts
constrained government from using its power to do good, and that
the restraints should be removed in the interests of the
greatest good for the greatest number.
Over time Benthamite law gained in strength as various
ideologies or interests in power chaffed at restraints on their
agendas and as wars and the Great Depression, and now
“terrorism,” created crises which accumulated power in
government, as Robert Higgs has demonstrated.
A government that has set aside habeas corpus and the rule
against self-incrimination is the last place one should look for
protection. A Future of Freedom Foundation conference will echo
this theme next June. The underlying theme of the conference, as
the organizer, Jacob Hornberger, explained to me, is that
“blow-back” to US Middle East policy “resulted in the 9/11
terrorist attacks, which then led to the post-9/11 assaults on
civil liberties.”
I agree with Hornberger that the way to deal with terrorism is
to change the policies that provoke it. What the Bush
administration has done is to institutionalize elements of a
police state as protections against terrorists so that it
doesn’t have to change its policy in the Middle East. There is
no gain in being made more secure from terrorism by being made
less protected against the police power of government. One
threat simply replaces another, or is added to another.
However, if Hornberger believes that the assault on our civil
liberties began with 9/11, he hasn’t a clue as to how serious
the problem is. The year before 9/11 Lawrence M. Stratton and I
published a book, which we titled “How The Law Was Lost” and
which the publisher titled “The Tyranny of Good Intentions.” By
law, we meant the Blackstonian concept of law as a shield of the
people, which is enshrined in the Bill of Rights. We show in our
book that our civil liberties have been so eroded that many are
“dead-letter” rights. The Bush administration’s recent detainee
and torture legislation merely took some of these dead-letter
rights off the books. Even if the Supreme Court puts the rights
back on the books, they have been eroded by legal precedent and
neglect.
Both left and right have fallen into Benthamite thinking in
order to better chase after the particular devils in their
agendas. “Law and order conservatives,” for example, are
inclined to regard certain civil liberties as “coddling
criminals” and thoughtlessly take the side of police and
prosecutors against civil liberties. Both left and right are
prepared to deny First Amendment rights to the other side, and
political correctness makes it impossible to debate many issues
or to acknowledge many problems. The left has long campaigned
against the Second Amendment, an essential civil liberty.
When a problem is pointed out, people demand a program of action
as a solution. However, not every problem has a policy solution.
When people no longer understand that civil liberties are more
important than political agendas, they have lost sight of the
belief system that protects them. Beliefs are more important
than institutions. As Michael Polanyi noted many years ago, if
people believed in Stalinism, democracy would uphold Stalinism.
If people believe in Bentham over Blackstone, there will be no
civil liberties regardless of political accountability.
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