Congress should
- be less, not more, willing to go to war than "Just War
Theory" allows.
"Just War Theory" is not enough to prevent America from engaging in the most egregious and unChristian wars. What we need is a principled objection to all war. "War" is an unChristian concept.
What we call "Just War Theory" emerged in Christian history
through Saint
Augustine and Thomas
Aquinas.
From a purely Biblical perspective, there is no such thing as a
"Just War." After Christ's death on the Cross, no war is
"just."
What Constitutes a "Just War?"
What Constitutes a "Just Robbery?"
What Constitutes a "Just Rape?"
Some will say that a "defensive" war is just.
-
David Rutledge: As
a pacifist, how do you evaluate the just
war tradition?
Stanley
Hauerwas: I’m certainly willing
always to join serious just war thinkers
in trying to think through what the
implications of being a just warrior
should be. But if you take the war on
Iraq: why is America able to even imagine
going to war in Iraq? It’s because we
can. We’ve got all this unbelievable
military power, so we can envision it,
because we have the capacity for it. Now,
the question is: did you get the capacity
to wage that kind of war on just war
considerations? Is the United States’
foreign policy a just war foreign policy?
Is the United States’ military
preparedness based on just war
considerations? No way! They’re based on
presuppositions, that you’d better have
as much military might as you can, in a
world of anarchy, because the one with the
most weapons at the end, wins.
Now,
if just war people were more serious about
raising questions about the implications
of what just war would commit them to —
for example, the war on terrorism could
not possibly be a just war. I don’t even
think it’s a war, I mean that’s a
metaphorical use of the word ‘war’
that comes from Americans’ views of —
you know, the ‘war on drugs’, the ‘war
on crime’ — I mean, it’s just crap.
Because what they need to think about is:
just war is always about a political end,
that you need to declare, so your enemy
will know how they can resign and
surrender. And so if you’re about
annihilating your enemy, as we were in
World War II — that is, we fought it for
unconditional surrender — you can’t
fight a just war for unconditional
surrender, because you’re not trying to
destroy your enemy, you’re only trying
to stop your enemy from doing the wrong
that you declared the war for. I mean,
there can’t be a just war against
terrorism, because you don’t even know
who the enemy is, and you get to keep
changing it, and the presumption that a
just war should be in response to
aggression: well, in what way is Iraq
really threatening America? That hasn’t
been shown at all. What Iraq threatens is
American imperial hegemony in the world.
How is that a criterion for just war?
|
|
|
All U.S. wars and foreign policy have been offensive rather than
defensive. No war that the United States has engaged in for
the last 250 years can be justified on a Christian basis:
Imagine "the enemy nation" shoots a missile at our nation. So
you shoot the missile out of the sky and prevent it from hitting its
target. That's "National Defense." But it's not "war."
It's just a defensive "action." "War" is when
you retaliate and bomb a few cities over which the political sociopath who
launched the missile claims "jurisdiction," and then the enemy
retaliates again, and on it goes until one or both nations collapse in
exhaustion.
A Christian theory of "Just War" must take into account the
Biblical prohibition against vengeance.
"Just War Theory" is based on a faulty understanding of
"Self-Defense,"
which is usually just vengeance in disguise.
Romans 13
Arguments about "Just War Theory" only scratch the surface of
some of the bigger issues we face in the quest for peace.
Much of the "Just War Theory" depends on an unBiblical
interpretation of Romans 13, which legitimizes an institution of
systematic violence called "The State." We have examined this
doctrinal pantheon here:
www.Romans13.com
While Romans 13 does not legitimize the existence of a monopoly of
violence, it plainly forbids violent revolution against it. It is a
continuation of the argument in the previous chapter (Romans
12), which is a restatement of Christ's ethic in "the Sermon on
the Mount," which requires love of enemy and turning the other cheek.
From a Christian perspective, "National
Defense" is Sinful.
The errors found in most teaching about Romans 13 come from a
misunderstanding of "the sword" and the function of what we call
"capital punishment" in the Old Testament. We have examined
these errors here:
www.GodandtheDeathPenalty.com
|| summary
This has led to a misunderstanding of Old Testament Scriptures which
are called "Holy War" in our day. These "wars"
were actually priestly rituals,
not "war" as we think of it today, and they cannot be used to
justify war conducted by a secular government.
All these errors ultimately spring from a failure to take Biblical
teachings on vengeance
seriously.
Those links will take a serious investment of time to digest. A
lifetime has been invested in writing them.
About the Author
Kevin Craig is the founder of a non-profit tax-exempt educational
organization called "Vine & Fig Tree."
The name is taken from the Old Testament prophet Micah, who told us of
God's will that we "beat swords into plowshares"
so that everyone could dwell safely under his vine and
fig tree. You can read the complete prophecy and get an overview of
the worldview here:
www.VFTonline.org
Kevin Craig was personally tutored by R.J.
Rushdoony and Greg
Bahnsen. He passed the California Bar Exam, but was denied a license
to practice law because America is now officially an atheistic nation, and
Christians who are committed to following Christ's Sermon on the Mount
have been held to be ineligible to become attorneys. This
ridiculous-sounding claim is documented here:
Why a Christian Cannot be
an Attorney
A deposition from that case, explaining how the author became a
pacifist, is here:
http://KevinCraig.us/pacifist.htm
The verses quoted in that deposition constitute a "prima
facie case" for pacifism. An
anthropologist from Mars, here to study the human race, specializing in
the teachings and influence of Jesus Christ, would see immediately that
Christ and the Bible advocate pacifism. Christ did not defend
Himself against attack, and we are to follow "in His steps" (1
Peter 2:18-24). "Thou shalt not kill"
and "love your enemies" are clear commands. Elizabeth Flower, of
the University of Pennsylvania, writing in The
Dictionary of the History of Ideas,
observes,
The perplexing issue is why such straightforward and unambiguous
teaching came to be ignored, or at least taken as a "counsel of
perfection" impossible of realization in this world. In any case, .
. . Christians began to accommodate to the social
realities of civil government, military service, taxation, etc.;
and then to develop their own political power. Yet the literal
directives of the Sermon [on the Mount] were time-resistant and
Christian pacifism has not lacked for bold and uncompromising advocates
in such early Church Fathers as Clement, Justin, and above all Origen,
in sects such as the Quakers, Schwenkenfelders, and Doukhobors, and in
such modern proponents as Leo Tolstoy, Jacques Maritain, and A.J. Muste.
. . . Yet historical Christianity generally compromised its pacifist
commitments.
"Just War Theory" is one such accommodation to "social
realities." It is an attempt to escape the clear teaching of
Christ and the Scripture.
We are currently creating a comprehensive examination of "Just War
Theory," but until that resource is complete, please consider the
following:
We oppose the "Just War Theory" on Calvinistic
and Reconstructionist
grounds, not from the perspective of "sects such as the Quakers,
Schwenkenfelders, and Doukhobors."
For Further Reading: Swords into
Plowshares
|
All Wars Are Unjust
|
By Murray
N. Rothbard |
By Kevin Craig |
Much of “classical international law” theory,
developed by the Catholic Scholastics, notably the 16th-century
Spanish Scholastics such as Vitoria and Suarez, and then the Dutch
Protestant Scholastic Grotius and by 18th- and 19th-century jurists,
was an explanation of the criteria for a just war. For war, as a grave
act of killing, needs to be justified. |
While Rothbard seeks to
explicate the implications of "classical international law,"
I am going to view war from a Christian, Biblical
worldview.
(Rothbard's article is more about the Civil War than "just
war" theory. This may seem extraneous, but it's not. Many
Americans think the Civil War was a noble war, because we've been
trained to think there was a legitimate enemy, and we were fighting to
"liberate negroes from slavery." Just as we've been trained
to think the purpose for fighting World War II was "liberating
the Jews from the Nazi concentration camps." Unfortunately, those
who led us into war had other motivations. Lincoln didn't care about
Negroes, and FDR
didn't care about the Jews. Thus, two of America's most beloved
wars, two which everybody agrees were "just," were unjust
from a purely Christian perspective.)
|
My own view of war can be put simply: a just war
exists when a people tries to ward
off the threat of coercive domination by another people, or to
overthrow an already-existing domination. A war is unjust, on
the other hand, when a people try to impose domination on another
people, or try to retain an already existing coercive rule over them. |
According to Christian
principles, we are not to engage in war or violent
revolution "to
overthrow an already-existing domination." The Bible says
to be in subjection and pay your taxes to such a domination. More
here.
The Roman Empire invaded and occupied Israel shortly before the
incarnation of Christ, and it was a hot-topic among Israelites. The
"Zealots" advocated armed revolution. Jesus did not take
their side. The Apostle Paul also rejected the "just war
theories" of the Zealots, and urged Christians to be subject and
pay the tribute (Romans 13). The
Apostle Peter told Christians to follow in the steps of Christ, who
did not engage in any "just war" thinking when He was
arrested by the Roman Empire and tortured to death. (1
Peter 2:13-17, 21-24)
If the Bible prohibits overthrow of an already-existing domination,
then it logically prohibits violence and mass death trying to "ward
off" a mere "threat
of coercive domination by another people."
The phrase "another people," is interesting. What is a
"people?" Suppose "my people" and I are under the
domination of the Voldavians. The government of Backistan threatens to
invade my country -- to take over the economy now dominated by the
Voldavian central planners. By any rational measurement, the Backistan
government is just as free or just as unfree as the Voldavians. The
Voldavians conscript me to fight the invading Backistani army. I
happen to have many friends in Backistan, and it is likely that the
Backistani government has conscripted my friends to invade my country,
now under Voldavian domination.
The "threat" of "domination" by "another
people" is usually, if not always, a threat of domination by some
government. And the most likely party to resist the invading
government is the current government of the
"threatened" country.
"The People" don't give a fig which government coerces
them, unless the government manipulates "The People" through
propaganda to "fight for their country," that is, for the
government.
From a Christian perspective, is it ever "just" for
Christians under Voldavian domination to kill Christians who have been
conscripted by (or are unsanctified enough to enlist in) the
Backistani army? |
During my lifetime, my ideological and political
activism has focused on opposition to America's wars, first because I
have believed our waging them to be unjust, and, second, because war,
in the penetrating phrase of the libertarian Randolph Bourne in World
War I, has always been “the health of the State,” an instrument
for the aggrandizement of State power over the health, the lives, and
the prosperity, of their subject citizens and social institutions.
Even a just war cannot be entered into lightly; an unjust one must
therefore be anathema. |
Rothbard (and Bourne) are
correct: war increases the power of the State. I share their concern.
Some will therefore respond, "Doesn't a failure to "ward off
the threat of coercive domination by another people" raise the
risk of coercive domination?
If it is contrary to Biblical Law to violently resist domination,
then violation of God's Commandments cannot bring "the
blessings of liberty." War always diminishes freedom, and
increases government domination -- even if "victory" is
obtained.
If I help the Voldavians fight the invading Backistanis, I am
increasing the power of the Voldavian government. After the Voldavian
government achieves victory over the Backistan invasion, do you
seriously believe that the Voldavian government is going to ratchet
back their power to pre-war levels?
Start your education here: Crisis
and Leviathan: Critical Episodes in the Growth of American Government |
There have been only two wars in American history that
were, in my view, assuredly and unquestionably proper and just; not
only that, the opposing side waged a war that was clearly and notably
unjust. Why? Because we did not have to question whether a threat
against our liberty and property was clear or present; in both of
these wars, Americans were trying to rid themselves of an unwanted
domination by another people. And in both cases, the other side
ferociously tried to maintain their coercive rule over Americans. In
each case, one side — “our side” if you will — was notably
just, the other side — “their side” — unjust. |
In any war, both sides
can be (and are) unjust. |
To be specific, the two just wars in American history
were the American Revolution, and the War for Southern Independence. |
Jesus
Would Not Celebrate Independence Day (the American Revolution).
Jesus Would Not
Celebrate Memorial Day (which originally marked the end of the
"War for Southern Independence.")
|
I would like to mention a few vital features of the
treatment of war by the classical international natural lawyers, and
to contrast this great tradition with the very different “international
law” that has been dominant since 1914, by the dominant partisans of
the League of Nations and the United Nations. |
|
The classical international lawyers from the 16th
through the 19th centuries were trying to cope with the implications
of the rise and dominance of the modern nation-state. They did not
seek to “abolish war,” the very notion of which they would have
considered absurd and Utopian. Wars will always exist among groups,
peoples, nations; the desideratum, in addition to trying to persuade
them to stay within the compass of “just wars,” was to curb and
limit the impact of existing wars as much as possible. Not to try to
“abolish war,” but to constrain war with limitations imposed by
civilization. |
If we seek to follow the
Bible, we must seek "utopia"
and the abolition of war.
The Bible commands us to hammer our "swords
into plowshares" and never train for war any more (Micah
4:1-7).
Even "Just War" Theory seeks to abolish an
"unjust" war," not merely limit it. An
"unjust" war should not be prosecuted at all,
according to "just war theory."
|
Specifically, the classical international lawyers
developed two ideas, which they were broadly successful in getting
nations to adopt: (1) above all, don't target civilians. If you must
fight, let the rulers and their loyal or hired retainers slug it out,
but keep civilians on both sides out of it, as much as possible. The
growth of democracy, the identification of citizens with the State,
conscription, and the idea of a “nation in arms,” all whittled
away this excellent tenet of international law. |
Ironically, the
much-denounced and equally misunderstood "Crusades" respected
civilians more than post-medieval governments.
"Utopian" pacifism is the "salt of the earth,"
but if the salt replaces utopia with the more "practical"
thinking of "just war" theorists, then it's good for
nothing, and unjust wars increase. Governments and soldiers might
pooh-pooh utopian pacifism, but deep-down it eats at them, and
ultimately has an effect: reducing war. "Just War" theory
rationalizes war.
|
(2) Preserve the rights of neutral states and nations.
In the modern corruption of international law that has prevailed since
1914, “neutrality” has been treated as somehow deeply immoral.
Nowadays, if countries A and B get into a fight, it becomes every
nation's moral obligation to figure out, quickly, which country is the
“bad guy,” and then if, say, A is condemned as the bad guy, to
rush in and pummel A in defense of the alleged good guy B. |
|
Classical international law, which should be brought
back as quickly as possible, was virtually the opposite. In a theory
which tried to limit war, neutrality was considered not only
justifiable but a positive virtue. In the old days, “he kept us out
of war” was high tribute to a president or political leader; but
now, all the pundits and professors condemn any president who “stands
idly by” while “people are being killed” in Bosnia, Somalia,
Rwanda, or the hot spot of the day. In the old days, “standing idly
by” was considered a mark of high statesmanship. Not only that:
neutral states had “rights” which were mainly upheld, since every
warring country knew that someday it too would be neutral. A warring
state could not interfere with neutral shipping to an enemy state;
neutrals could ship to such an enemy with impunity all goods except
“contraband,” which was strictly defined as arms and ammunition,
period. Wars were kept limited in those days, and neutrality was
extolled. |
|
In modern international law, where “bad-guy”
nations must be identified quickly and then fought by all, there are
two rationales for such world-wide action, both developed by Woodrow
Wilson, whose foreign policy and vision of international affairs has
been adopted by every President since. The first is “collective
security against aggression.” The notion is that every war, no
matter what, must have one “aggressor” and one or more “victims,”
so that naming the aggressor becomes a prelude to a defense of “heroic
little” victims. The analogy is with the cop-on-the-corner. A
policeman sees A mugging B; he rushes after the aggressor, and the
rest of the citizens join in the pursuit. In the same way, supposedly,
nations, as they band together in “collective security”
arrangements, whether they be the League, the United Nations, or NATO,
identify the “aggressor” nation and then join together as an “international
police force,” like the cop-on-the-corner, to zap the criminal. |
|
In real life, however, it's not so easy to identify
one warring “aggressor.” Causes become tangled, and history
intervenes. Above all, a nation's current border cannot be considered
as evidently just as a person's life and property. Therein lies the
problem. How about the very different borders ten years, twenty years,
or even centuries ago? How about wars where claims of all sides are
plausible? But any complication of this sort messes up the plans of
our professional war crowd. To get Americans stirred up about
intervening in a war thousands of miles away about which they know
nothing and care less, one side must be depicted as the clear-cut bad
guy, and the other side pure and good; otherwise, Americans will not
be moved to intervene in a war that is really none of their business.
Thus, feverish attempts by American pundits and alleged foreign-policy
“experts” to get us to intervene against the demonized Serbs ran
aground when the public began to realize that all three sides in the
Bosnian war were engaging in “ethnic cleansing” whenever they got
the chance. This is even forgetting the fatuity of the propaganda
about the “territorial integrity” of a so-called “Bosnian state”
which has never existed even formally until a year or two ago, and of
course in actuality does not exist at all. |
|
If classical international law limited and checked
warfare, and kept it from spreading, modern international law, in an
attempt to stamp out “aggression” and to abolish war, only
insures, as the great historian Charles Beard put it, a futile policy
of “perpetual war for perpetual peace.” |
|
The second Wilsonian excuse for perpetual war,
particularly relevant to the “Civil War,” is even more Utopian:
the idea that it is the moral obligation of America and of all other
nations to impose “democracy” and “human rights” throughout
the globe. In short, in a world where “democracy” is generally
meaningless, and “human rights” of any genuine sort virtually
non-existent, that we are obligated to take up the sword and wage a
perpetual war to force Utopia on the entire world by guns, tanks, and
bombs. |
"Democracy"
and "human rights"
are both dangerous myths. |
The Somalian intervention was a perfect case study in
the workings of this Wilsonian dream. We began the intervention by
extolling a “new kind of army” (a new model army if you will)
engaged in a new kind of high moral intervention: the U.S. soldier
with a CARE package in one hand, and a gun in the other. The new “humanitarian”
army, bringing food, peace, democracy, and human rights to the
benighted peoples of Somalia, and doing it all the more nobly and
altruistically because there was not a scrap of national interest in
it for Americans. It was this prospect of a purely altruistic
intervention — of universal love imposed by the bayonet — that
swung almost the entire “anti-war” Left into the military
intervention camp. Well, it did not take long for our actions to have
consequences, and the end of the brief Somalian intervention provided
a great lesson if we only heed it: the objects of our “humanitarianism”
being shot down by American guns, and striking back by highly
effective guerrilla war against American troops, culminating in
savaging the bodies of American soldiers. So much for “humanitarianism,”
for a war to impose democracy and human rights; so much for the new
model army. |
|
In both of these cases, the modern interventionists
have won by seizing the moral high ground; theirs is the cosmic “humanitarian”
path of moral principle; those of us who favor American neutrality are
now derided as “selfish,” “narrow,” and “immoral.” In the
old days, however, interventionists were more correctly considered
propagandists for despotism, mass murder, and perpetual war, if not
spokesmen for special interest groups, or agents of the “merchants
of death.” Scarcely a high ground. |
|
The cause of “human rights” is precisely the
critical argument by which, in retrospect, Abraham Lincoln's War of
Northern Aggression against the South is justified and even glorified.
The “humanitarian” goes forth and rights the wrong of slavery,
doing so through mass murder, the destruction of institutions and
property, and the wreaking of havoc which has still not disappeared. |
|
Isabel Paterson, in The
God of the Machine, one of the great books on political philosophy
of this century, zeroed in on what she aptly called “The
Humanitarian with the Guillotine.” “The humanitarian,” Mrs.
Paterson wrote, “wishes to be a prime mover in the lives of others.
He cannot admit either the divine or the natural order, by which men
have the power to help themselves. The humanitarian puts himself in
the place of God.” But Mrs. Paterson notes, the humanitarian is “confronted
by two awkward facts: first that the competent do not need his
assistance; and second, that the majority of people, if unperverted,
positively do not want to be 'done good' by the humanitarian.”
Having considered what the “good” of others might be, and who is
to decide on the good and on what to do about it, Mrs. Paterson points
out: “Of course what the humanitarian actually proposes is that he
shall do what he thinks is good for everybody. It is at this point
that the humanitarian sets up the guillotine.” Hence, she concludes,
“the humanitarian in theory is the terrorist in action.” |
|
There is an important point about old-fashioned, or
classical, international law which applies to any sort of war, even a
just one: |
|
Even if country A is waging a clearly just war against
country B, and B's cause is unjust, this fact by no means imposes any
sort of moral obligation on any other nation, including those who wish
to abide by just policies, to intervene in that war. On the contrary,
in the old days neutrality was always considered a more noble course,
if a nation had no overriding interest of its own in the fray, there
was no moral obligation whatever to intervene. A nation's highest and
most moral course was to remain neutral; its citizens might cheer in
their heart for A's just cause, or, if someone were overcome by
passion for A's cause he could rush off on his own to the front to
fight, but generally citizens of nation C were expected to cleave to
their own nation's interests over the cause of a more abstract
justice. Certainly, they were expected not to form a propaganda
pressure group to try to bulldoze their nation into intervening; if
champions of country A were sufficiently ardent, they could go off on
their own to fight, but they could not commit their fellow countrymen
to do the same. |
|
Many of my friends and colleagues are hesitant to
concede the existence of universal natural rights, lest they find
themselves forced to support American, or world-wide intervention, to
try to enforce them. But for classical natural law international
jurists, that consequence did not follow at all. If, for example,
Tutsis are slaughtering Hutus in Rwanda or Burundi, or vice versa,
these natural lawyers would indeed consider such acts as violations of
the natural rights of the slaughtered; but that fact in no way implies
any moral or natural-law obligation for any other people in the world
to rush in to try to enforce such rights. We might encapsulate this
position into a slogan: “Rights may be universal, but their
enforcement must be local” or, to adopt the motto of the Irish
rebels: Sinn Fein, “ourselves alone.” A group of people may have
rights, but it is their responsibility, and theirs alone, to defend or
safeguard such rights. |
|
To put it another way, I have always believed that
when the left claims that all sorts of entities — animals,
alligators, trees, plants, rocks, beaches, the earth, or “the
ecology” — have “rights,” the proper response is this: when
those entities act like the Americans who set forth their declaration
of rights, when they speak for themselves and take up arms to enforce
them, then and only then can we take such claims seriously. |
"Animal
Rights" |
I want to now return to America's two just wars. It is
plainly evident that the American Revolution, using my definition, was
a just war, a war of peoples forming an independent nation and casting
off the bonds of another people insisting on perpetuating their rule
over them. Obviously, the Americans, while welcoming French or other
support, were prepared to take on the daunting task of overthrowing
the rule of the most powerful empire on earth, and to do it alone if
necessary. |
From a Christian
perspective, a violent revolution against the most Christian and
civilized government on earth resulted in the killing of tens of
thousands of Christians, and set in motion the creation of the
most evil tyranny on earth (the U.S. Federal Government).
From a Rothbardian perspective, that's OK.
|
What I want to focus on here is not the grievances
that led the American rebels to the view that it had become “necessary
for One People to dissolve the political bonds which have connected
them with another.” What I want to stress here is the ground on
which the Americans stood for this solemn and fateful act of
separation. The Americans were steeped in the natural-law philosophy
of John Locke and the Scholastics, and in the classical republicanism
of Greece and Rome. There were two major political theories in Britain
and in Europe during this time. One was the older, but by this time
obsolete, absolutist view: the king was the father of his nation, and
absolute obedience was owed to the king by the lesser orders; any
rebellion against the king was equivalent to Satan's rebellion against
God. |
The ACLU would call John
Locke a "Theocrat." Locke and the rest of America's
Founding Fathers were well-educated, and better-acquainted with
"the classical republicanism of Greece and Rome," but as
Christians -- children of Jerusalem -- they took what came from Athens
with a grain of salt. |
The other, natural law, view countered that
sovereignty originated not in the king but in the people, but that the
people had delegated their powers and rights to the king. Hugo Grotius
and conservative natural lawyers believed that the delegation of
sovereignty, once transferred, was irrevocable, so that sovereignty
must reside permanently in the king. The more radical libertarian
theorists, such as Father Mariana, and John Locke and his followers,
believed, quite sensibly, that since the original delegation was
voluntary and contractual, the people had the right to take back that
sovereignty should the king grossly violate his trust. |
"We the People"
and "consent of the
governed" were still Theocratic principles. |
The American revolutionaries, in separating themselves
from Great Britain and forming their new nation, adopted the Lockean
doctrine. In fact, if they hadn't done so, they would not have been
able to form their new nation. It is well known that the biggest moral
and psychological problem the Americans had, and could only bring
themselves to overcome after a full year of bloody war, was to violate
their oaths of allegiance to the British king. Breaking with the
British Parliament, their de facto ruler, posed no problem; Parliament
they didn't care about. But the king was their inherited sovereign
lord, the person to whom they had all sworn fealty. It was the king to
whom they owed allegiance; thus, the list of grievances in the
Declaration of Independence mentioned only the king, even though
Parliament was in reality the major culprit. |
The trend was
established. In the 21st century, oaths
mean nothing. |
Hence, the crucial psychological importance, to the
American revolutionaries, of Thomas Paine's Common Sense, which not
only adopted the Lockean view of a justified reclaiming of sovereignty
by the American people, but also particularly zeroed in on the office
of the king. In the words of the New Left, Paine delegitimized and
desanctified the king in American eyes. The king of Great Britain,
Paine wrote, is only the descendent of “nothing better than the
principal ruffian of some restless gang; whose savage manner or
preeminence in subtlety obtained him the title of chief among
plunderers.” And now the kings, including the “Royal Brute of
Great Britain,” are but “crowned ruffians.” |
We must now
de-sanctify the entire concept of the State. But this is the task of
evangelism, not violent revolution. |
In making their revolution, then, the Americans cast
their lot, permanently, with a contractual theory or justification for
government. Government is not something imposed from above, by some
divine act of conferring sovereignty; but contractual, from below, by
“consent of the governed.”
That means that American polities inevitably become republics, not
monarchies. What happened, in fact, is that the American Revolution
resulted in something new on earth. The people of each of the 13
colonies formed new, separate, contractual, republican governments.
Based on libertarian doctrines and on republican models, the people of
the 13 colonies each set up independent sovereign states: with powers
of each government strictly limited, with most rights and powers
reserved to the people, and with checks, balances, and written
constitutions severely limiting state power. |
There's nothing great
about "republican" governments:
Our ultimate allegiance
must be to God and His Law, not ourselves and our
"republics."
|
These 13 separate republics, in order to wage their
common war against the British Empire, each sent representatives to
the Continental Congress, and then later formed a Confederation, again
with severely limited central powers, to help fight the British. The
hotly contested decision to scrap the Articles of Confederation and to
craft a new Constitution demonstrates conclusively that the central
government was not supposed to be perpetual, not to be the sort of
permanent one-way trap that Grotius had claimed turned popular
sovereignty over to the king forevermore. In fact, it would be very
peculiar to hold that the American Revolutionaries had repudiated the
idea that a pledge of allegiance to the king was contractual and
revocable, and break their vows to the king, only to turn around a few
short years later to enter a compact that turned out to be an
irrevocable one-way ticket for a permanent central government power.
Revocable and contractual to a king, but irrevocable to some piece of
paper! |
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And finally, does anyone seriously believe for one
minute that any of the 13 states would have ratified the Constitution
had they believed that it was a perpetual one-way Venus fly trap — a
one-way ticket to sovereign suicide? The Constitution was barely
ratified as it is! |
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So, if the Articles of Confederation could be treated
as a scrap of paper, if delegation to the confederate government in
the 1780s was revocable, how could the central government set up under
the Constitution, less than a decade later, claim that its powers were
permanent and irrevocable? Sheer logic insists that: if a state could
enter a confederation it could later withdraw from it; the same must
be true for a state adopting the Constitution. |
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And yet of course, that monstrous illogic is precisely
the doctrine proclaimed by the North, by the Union, during the War
Between the States. |
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In 1861, the Southern states, believing correctly that
their cherished institutions were under grave threat and assault from
the federal government, decided to exercise their natural,
contractual, and constitutional right to withdraw, to “secede”
from that Union. The separate Southern states then exercised their
contractual right as sovereign republics to come together in another
confederation, the Confederate States of America. If the American
Revolutionary War was just, then it follows as the night the day that
the Southern cause, the War for Southern Independence, was just, and
for the same reason: casting off the “political bonds” that
connected the two peoples. In neither case was this decision made for
“light or transient causes.” And in both cases, the courageous
seceders pledged to each other “their lives, their fortunes, and
their sacred honor.” |
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What of the grievances of the two sets of seceders?
Were they comparable? The central grievance of the American rebels was
the taxing power: the systematic plunder of their property by the
British government. Whether it was the tax on stamps, or the tax on
imports, or finally the tax on imported tea, taxation was central. The
slogan “no taxation without representation” was misleading; in the
last analysis, we didn't want “representation” in Parliament; we
wanted not to be taxed by Great Britain. The other grievances, such as
opposition to general search warrants, or to overriding of the ancient
Anglo-Saxon principle of trial by jury, were critical because they
involved the power to search merchants' properties for goods that had
avoided payment of the customs taxes, that is for “smuggled”
goods, and trial by jury was vital because no American jury would ever
convict such smugglers. |
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One of the central grievances of the South, too, was
the tariff that Northerners imposed on Southerners whose major income
came from exporting cotton abroad. The tariff at one and the same time
drove up prices of manufactured goods, forced Southerners and other
Americans to pay more for such goods, and threatened to cut down
Southern exports. The first great constitutional crisis with the South
came when South Carolina battled against the well named Tariff of
Abomination of 1828. As a result of South Carolina's resistance, the
North was forced to reduce the tariff, and finally, the Polk
administration adopted a two-decade long policy of virtual free trade. |
|
John C. Calhoun, the great intellectual leader of
South Carolina, and indeed of the entire South, pointed out the
importance of a very low level of taxation. All taxes, by their very
nature, are paid, on net, by one set of people, the “taxpayers,”
and the proceeds go to another set of people, what Calhoun justly
called the “tax-consumers.” Among the net tax-consumers, of
course, are the politicians and bureaucrats who live full-time off the
proceeds. The higher the level of taxation, the higher the percentage
which the country's producers have to give the parasitic ruling class
that enforces and lives off of taxes. In zeroing in on the tariff,
Calhoun pointed out that “the North has adopted a system of revenue
and disbursements, in which an undue proportion of the burden of
taxation has been imposed on the South, and an undue proportion
appropriated to the North, and for the monopolization of Northern
industry.” |
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What of the opposition to these two just wars? Both
were unjust since in both the case of the British and of the North,
they were waging fierce war to maintain their coercive and unwanted
rule over another people. But if the British wanted to hold on and
expand their empire, what were the motivations of the North? Why, in
the famous words of the abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison, at least
early in the struggle, didn't the North “let their erring sisters go
in peace?” |
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The North, in particular the North's driving force,
the “Yankees” — that ethnocultural group who either lived in New
England or migrated from there to upstate New York, northern and
eastern Ohio, northern Indiana, and northern Illinois — had been
swept by a new form of Protestantism. This was a fanatical and
emotional neo-Puritanism driven by a fervent “postmillenialism”
which held that as a precondition for the Second Advent of Jesus
Christ, man must set up a thousand-year Kingdom of God on Earth. |
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The Kingdom is to be a perfect society. In order to be
perfect, of course, this Kingdom must be free of sin; sin, therefore,
must be stamped out, and as quickly as possible. Moreover, if you
didn't try your darndest to stamp out sin by force you yourself would
not be saved. It was very clear to these neo-Puritans that in order to
stamp out sin, government, in the service of the saints, is the
essential coercive instrument to perform this purgative task. As
historians have summed up the views of all the most prominent of these
millennialists, “government
is God's major instrument of salvation.” |
Obama still promises salvation. |
Sin was very broadly defined by the Yankee
neo-Puritans as anything which might interfere with a person's free
will to embrace salvation, anything which, in the words of the old
Shadow radio serial, could “cloud men's minds.” The particular
cloud-forming occasions of sin, for these millennialists, were liquor
(“demon rum”), any activity on the Sabbath except reading the
Bible and going to Church, slavery, and the Roman Catholic Church. |
|
If anti-slavery, prohibitionism, and anti-Catholicism
were grounded in fanatical post-millennial Protestantism, the
paternalistic big government required for this social program on the
state and local levels led logically to a big government paternalism
in national economic affairs. Whereas the Democratic Party in the 19th
century was known as the “party of personal liberty,” of states'
rights, of minimal government, of free markets and free trade, the
Republican Party was known as the “party of great moral ideas,”
which amounted to the stamping-out of sin. On the economic level, the
Republicans adopted the Whig program of statism and big government:
protective tariffs, subsidies to big business, strong central
government, large-scale public works, and cheap credit spurred by
government. |
"Anti-Catholicism"
was a mutant hold-over from colonial thinking, which noted that Catholicism
was monarchical. But by the 1860's, Catholics were opposed by
forces of Big Government, not because they were monarchical, but
because they were parochial, that is, they represented an alternative
zone of enterprise and government, e.g., catholic schools. Today's
Catholics (there are three or four on the U.S. Supreme Court) oppose
private protestant schools and homeschooling for the exact same
"anti-catholic" reasons: they want government control of
these autonomous zones, which represent rival governments. |
The Northern war against slavery partook of fanatical
millennialist fervor, of a cheerful willingness to uproot
institutions, to commit mayhem and mass murder, to plunder and loot
and destroy, all in the name of high moral principle and the birth of
a perfect world. The Yankee fanatics were veritable Patersonian
humanitarians with the guillotine: the Anabaptists,
the Jacobins, the Bolsheviks of their era. This fanatical spirit of
Northern aggression for an allegedly redeeming cause is summed up in
the pseudo-Biblical and truly blasphemous verses of that
quintessential Yankee Julia Ward Howe, in her so-called “Battle Hymn
of the Republic.” |
It is a mistake to tar
all "Puritans" as well as all "Anabaptists." |
Modern left-liberal historians of course put this case
in a slightly different way. Take for example, the eminent
abolitionist historian of the Civil War James McPherson. Here's the
way McPherson revealingly puts it: “Negative liberty [he means
"liberty"] was the dominant theme in early American history
— freedom from constraints on individual rights imposed by a
powerful state.” “The Bill of Rights,” McPherson goes on, “is
the classic expression of negative liberty, or Jeffersonian humanistic
liberalism. These first ten amendments to the Constitution protect
individual liberties by placing a straitjacket of 'shall not' on the
federal government.” “In 1861,” McPherson continues, “Southern
states invoked the negative liberties of state sovereignty and
individual rights of property [i.e., slaves] to break up the United
States.” |
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What was McPherson's hero Abraham Lincoln's response?
Lincoln, he writes, “thereby gained an opportunity to invoke the
positive liberty [he means "statist tyranny"] of reform
liberalism, exercised through the power of the army and the state, to
overthrow the negative liberties of disunion and ownership of slaves.”
Another New Model Army at work! McPherson calls for a “blend” of
positive and negative liberties, but as we have seen, any such “blend”
is nonsense, for statism and liberty are always at odds. The more that
“reform liberalism” “empowers” one set of people, the less “negative
liberty” there is for everyone else. It should be mentioned that the
southern United States was the only place in the 19th century where
slavery was abolished by fire and by “terrible swift sword.” In
every other part of the New World, slavery was peacefully bought out
by agreement with the slaveholders. But in these other countries, in
the West Indies or Brazil, for example, there were no Puritan
millennialists to do their bloody work, armed with gun in one hand and
hymn book in the other. |
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In the Republican Party, the “party of great moral
ideas,” different men and different factions emphasized different
aspects of this integrated despotic world-outlook. In the fateful
Republican convention of 1860, the major candidates for president were
two veteran abolitionists: William Seward, of New York, and Salmon P.
Chase of Ohio. Seward, however, was distrusted by the anti-Catholic
hotheads because he somehow did not care about the alleged Catholic
menace; on the other hand, while Chase was happy to play along with
the former Know-Nothings, who stressed the anti-Catholic pant of the
coalition, he was distrusted by Sewardites and others who were
indifferent to the Catholic question. Abraham Lincoln of Illinois was
a dark horse who was able to successfully finesse the Catholic
question. His major emphasis was on Whig economic statism: high
tariffs, huge subsidies to railroads, public works. As one of the
nation's leading lawyers for Illinois Central and other big railroads,
indeed, Lincoln was virtually the candidate from Illinois Central and
the other large railroads. |
|
One reason for Lincoln's victory at the convention was
that Iowa railroad entrepreneur Grenville M. Dodge helped swing the
Iowa delegation to Lincoln. In return, early in the Civil War, Lincoln
appointed Dodge to army general. Dodge's task was to clear the Indians
from the designated path of the country's first heavily subsidized
federally chartered trans-continental railroad, the Union Pacific. In
this way, conscripted Union troops and hapless taxpayers were coerced
into socializing the costs on constructing and operating the Union
Pacific. This sort of action is now called euphemistically “the
cooperation of government and industry.” |
|
But Lincoln's major focus was on raising taxes, in
particular raising and enforcing the tariff. His convention victory
was particularly made possible by support from the Pennsylvania
delegation. Pennsylvania had long been the home and the political
focus of the nation's iron and steel industry which, ever since its
inception during the War of 1812, had been chronically inefficient,
and had therefore constantly been bawling for high tariffs and, later,
import quotas. Virtually the first act of the Lincoln administration
was to pass the Morrill protective tariff act, doubling existing
tariff rates, and creating the highest tariff rates in American
history. |
|
In his First Inaugural, Lincoln was conciliatory about
maintaining slavery; what he was hard-line about toward the South was
insistence on collecting all the customs tariffs in that region. As
Lincoln put it, the federal government would “collect the duties and
imposts, but beyond what may be necessary for these objects, there
will be no invasion, no using of force against . . . people anywhere.”
The significance of the federal forts is that they provided the
soldiers to enforce the customs tariffs; thus, Fort Sumter was at the
entrance to Charleston Harbor, the major port, apart from New Orleans,
in the entire South. The federal troops at Sumter were needed to
enforce the tariffs that were supposed to be levied at Charleston
Harbor. |
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Of course, Abraham Lincoln's conciliatory words on
slavery cannot be taken at face value. Lincoln was a master
politician, which means that he was a consummate conniver,
manipulator, and liar. The federal forts were the key to his
successful prosecution of the war. Lying to South Carolina, Abraham
Lincoln managed to do what Franklin D. Roosevelt and Henry Stimson did
at Pearl Harbor 80 years later — maneuvered the Southerners into
firing the first shot. In this way, by manipulating the South into
firing first against a federal fort, Lincoln made the South appear to
be “aggressors” in the eyes of the numerous waverers and moderates
in the North. |
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Outside of New England and territories populated by
transplanted New Englanders, the idea of forcing the South to stay in
the Union was highly unpopular. In many middle-tier states, including
Maryland, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, there was a considerable
sentiment to mimic the South by forming a middle Confederacy to
isolate the pesky and fanatical Yankees. Even after the war began, the
Mayor of New York City and many other dignitaries of the city proposed
that the city secede from the Union and make peace and engage in free
trade with the South. Indeed, Jefferson Davis's lawyer after the war
was what we would now call the “paleo-libertarian” leader of the
New York City bar, Irish-Catholic Charles O'Conor, who ran for
President in 1878 on the Straight Democrat ticket, in protest that his
beloved Democratic Party's nominee for President was the abolitionist,
protectionist, socialist, and fool Horace Greeley. |
|
The Lincoln Administration and the Republican Party
took advantage of the overwhelmingly Republican Congress after the
secession of the South to push through almost the entire Whig economic
program. Lincoln signed no less than ten tariff-raising bills during
his administration. Heavy “sin” taxes were levied on alcohol and
tobacco, the income tax was levied for the first time in American
history, huge land grants and monetary subsidies were handed out to
transcontinental railroads (accompanied by a vast amount of attendant
corruption), and the government went off the gold standard and
virtually nationalized the banking system to establish a machine for
printing new money and to provide cheap credit for the business elite.
And furthermore, the New Model Army and the war effort rested on a
vast and unprecedented amount of federal coercion against Northerners
as well as the South; a huge army was conscripted, dissenters and
advocates of a negotiated peace with the South were jailed, and the
precious Anglo-Saxon right of habeas corpus was abolished for the
duration. |
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While it is true that Lincoln himself was not
particularly religious, that did not really matter because he adopted
all the attitudes and temperament of his evangelical allies. He was
stern and sober, he was personally opposed to alcohol and tobacco, and
he was opposed to the private carrying of guns. An ambitious seeker of
the main chance from early adulthood, Lincoln acted viciously toward
his own humble frontier family in Kentucky. He abandoned his fiance in
order to marry a wealthier Mary Todd, whose family were friends of the
eminent Henry Clay, he repudiated his brother, and he refused to
attend his dying father or his father's funeral, monstrously declaring
that such an experience “would be more painful than pleasant.” No
doubt! |
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Lincoln, too, was a typical example of a humanitarian
with the guillotine in another dimension: a familiar modern “reform
liberal” type whose heart bleeds for and yearns to “uplift”
remote mankind, while he lies to and treats abominably actual people
whom he knew. And so Abraham Lincoln, in a phrase prefiguring our own
beloved Mario Cuomo, declared that the Union was really “a family,
bound indissolubly together by the most intimate organic bonds.”
Kick your own family, and then transmute familial spiritual feelings
toward a hypostatized and mythical entity, “The Union,” which then
must be kept intact regardless of concrete human cost or sacrifice. |
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Indeed, there is a vital critical difference between
the two unjust causes we have described: the British and the North.
The British, at least, were fighting on behalf of a cause which, even
if wrong and unjust, was coherent and intelligible: that is, the
sovereignty of a hereditary monarch. What was the North's excuse for
their monstrous war of plunder and mass murder against their fellow
Americans? Not allegiance to an actual, real person, the king, but
allegiance to a non-existent, mystical, quasi-divine alleged entity,
“the Union.” The King was at least a real person, and the merits
or demerits of a particular king or the monarchy in general can be
argued. But where is “the Union” located? How are we to gauge the
Union's deeds? To whom is this Union accountable? |
|
The Union was taken, by its Northern worshipers, from
a contractual institution that can either be cleaved to or scrapped,
and turned into a divinized entity, which must be worshipped, and
which must be permanent, unquestioned, all-powerful. There is no
heresy greater, nor political theory more pernicious, than sacralizing
the secular. But this monstrous process is precisely what happened
when Abraham Lincoln and his northern colleagues made a god out of the
Union. If the British forces fought for bad King George, the Union
armies pillaged and murdered on behalf of this
pagan idol, this “Union,” this Moloch that demanded
terrible human sacrifice to sustain its power and its glory. |
Not just this
particular "Union," but the very concept of "the
State" itself is an
idol. It is a false
Savior. |
For in this War Between the States, the South may have
fought for its sacred honor, but the Northern war was the very
opposite of honorable. We remember the care with which the civilized
nations had developed classical international law. Above all,
civilians must not be targeted; wars must be limited. But the North
insisted on creating a conscript army, a nation in arms, and broke the
19th-century rules of war by specifically plundering and slaughtering
civilians, by destroying civilian life and institutions so as to
reduce the South to submission. Sherman's infamous March through
Georgia was one of the great war crimes, and crimes against humanity,
of the past century-and-a-half. Because
by targeting and butchering civilians, Lincoln and Grant and Sherman
paved the way for all the genocidal honors of the monstrous 20th
century. There has been a lot of talk in recent years about
memory, about never forgetting about history as retroactive punishment
for crimes of war and mass murder. As Lord Acton, the great
libertarian historian, put it, the historian, in the last analysis,
must be a moral judge. The muse of the historian, he wrote, is not
Clio, but Rhadamanthus, the legendary avenger of innocent blood. In
that spirit, we must always remember, we must never forget, we must
put in the dock and hang higher than Haman, those who, in modern
times, opened the Pandora's Box of genocide and the extermination of
civilians: Sherman, Grant, and Lincoln. |
The North's war crimes preceded 20th century genocides, but I wish
Rothbard would elaborate on how the North "paved the way"
for them. Did any 20th century mass-murdering tyrants actually study
Lincoln and Sherman? I'm not saying they didn't, I just wish there
were some footnotes to that proposition.
|
Perhaps, some day, their statues, like Lenin's in
Russia, will be toppled and melted down; their insignias and battle
flags will be desecrated, their war songs tossed into the fire. And
then Davis and Lee and Jackson and Forrest, and all the heroes of the
South, “Dixie” and the Stars and Bars, will once again be truly
honored and remembered. The classic comment on that meretricious TV
series The Civil War was made by that marvelous and feisty Southern
writer Florence King. Asked her views on the series, she replied: “I
didn't have time to watch The Civil War. I'm too busy getting ready
for the next one.” In that spirit, I am sure that one day, aided and
abetted by Northerners like myself in the glorious “copperhead”
tradition, the South shall rise again. |
Over 700,000 human beings died in the Civil War. To speak of that
slaughter as a "Just War" is abominable. Would that number
have been greater if the South had followed Christ literally, and
offered no resistance to Northern tarrifs and taxes? How could it have
been?
And of course Rothbard never asks about the Providence of God: do
we only blame Northern abolitionists without addressing clear
violations of Biblical Law by the South. For example:
Thou shalt not deliver unto his master the servant which is escaped
from his master unto thee. Deuteronomy 23:15
The South objected to the "Underground Railroad" because
they objected to Jesus:
“The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me, Because He has anointed Me To
preach the gospel to the poor; He has sent Me to heal the
brokenhearted, To proclaim liberty to the captives And
recovery of sight to the blind, To set at liberty those who are
oppressed; 19 To proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord.” Luke
4:18-19
The Acceptable Year of the Lord is described on the famous
"Liberty Bell":
10 And you shall consecrate the fiftieth year, and proclaim liberty
throughout all the land to all its inhabitants. It shall be a
Jubilee for you; and each of you shall return to his possession, and
each of you shall return to his family. Leviticus 25:10
Biblical Law incentivizes men to move from slavery to responsible
freedom. The South made no provision for this. It participated in
organized kidnapping, a capital offense.
When God sent a nation to punish Israel, He told Israel to take it,
and even pray for the invading armies that would take Israel captive (Jeremiah
27:9; 27). "Southern Civilization" deserved to die, and
Northern aggressors sinned by carrying out the punishment which they
were sent by the Lord
to inflict.
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Murray N. Rothbard (1926-1995), the
founder of modern libertarianism and the dean of the Austrian School
of economics, was the author of The
Ethics of Liberty and For
a New Liberty and many
other books and articles. He was also academic vice president of
the Ludwig von Mises Institute and the Center for Libertarian Studies,
and the editor — with Lew Rockwell — of The
Rothbard-Rockwell Report. |
|
Murray
Rothbard Archives |
|
Murray N. Rothbard (1926-1995) was
dean of the Austrian School, founder of modern libertarianism, and
chief academic officer of the Mises
Institute. He was also editor — with Lew Rockwell — of The
Rothbard-Rockwell Report, and appointed Lew as his executor. See
Murray's books.. |
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next: Foreign
Policy: Overview
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