"The Self Owner" is an original weekly column appearing every
Wednesday at Everything-Voluntary.com, by Spencer W. Morgan. Spencer
is a husband and father, and has studied History and Philosophy at
the University of Utah. Archived columns can be found
here.
OVP-only RSS feed available
here.
I’m going to take a break this week from the systematic,
philosophical discussion and turn to strategy. If you’ve been
following this column, you’ve no doubt anticipated how the concepts
of rights and trade have huge implications on the areas of
government and economics. If individual natural rights is a valid
idea, then the absence of intervention into people’s personal
property and economic decisions is morally obligatory. When we apply
that conclusion universally to the societal level, this brings us to
that dreaded "c" word...
Let’s face it, free market capitalism has gotten a bad rep. Whether
you blame left-wing rhetoric, or big-government partnerships in
using the control of government undertaken in the name of “free
enterprise,” the term has become essentially a dirty word to
generations of Americans. Any mention of "capitalism" tends to
conjure images of greedy men in top hats carrying dollar signs out
to fleece the public. Many self-styled “libertarians”
understandably, therefore, steer clear of the term or even redefine
it to be synonymous with mercantilism or state/corporate partnership
(fascism).
The first challenge in upholding a free-enterprise system, then, is
the challenge of shedding the pervasive baggage which accompanies
this word and the “hands-off”relationship between government and
economics it originally conveyed.
Even for those informed and reasonable enough to reject such
sensationalism, capitalism still tends to be evaluated under the
implicit presumption that it's just another “ism” plan of economics
to be compared against schemes of greater economic control and, like
any plan of managerial control, to then be imposed from the top-down
in the pursuit of some nebulous societal end to which it is presumed
to be the best means. This is due to the generations of academic
specialization and separation that has removed the question of
economics from the more foundational context of ethics and
interpersonal morality at the individual level.
The Missing Moral Context
The most important way to reinvent free market capitalism going
forward centers around the part of the debate that all of the
foregoing drops... the moral and philosophical context at the core
of the question.
What is economic exchange? Economic exchange is not, as most modern
schools of economics tend to imply in their methods, just the cold
materialistic operation of some natural phenomenon to be evaluated
empirically and predicted only on the basis of calculations and
statistical observations on a large scale. It is, in reality, the
aggregation of millions of choices made by individuals for
individual reasons.
Unhindered economic exchange therefore is not just the best and most
dynamic way to accomplish the distribution of resources and services
in any given locality, but more importantly, it is the inevitable
moral mandate arising from natural rights, or the concept that the
individual is rightfully free in the use of his person and property,
and that this individual has value as an end in his or her self. To
presume anything else economically, is to presume the propriety of
brutality and acceptability of aggression at the individual level.
Unfortunately, the early lawmakers of the American republic did not
fully apply this philosophy of natural rights that led to the
greatest amount of economic freedom in history, and the footholds
and holdovers from the mercantilism of Europe which they adopted
have been fully exploited by the enemies of human freedom.
Thus our starting point, and best tactical priority, is to restore
this moral and philosophical context as the foundation of economic
science, and advocate a free economy as an ethically superior
position.
A view espoused by one contributor is not necessarily the view held
by all contributors, nor EVC.
http://www.everything-voluntary.com/2013/05/selling-free-markets-as-ethical-mandate.html
