Control is in government’s nature

“If men are good, you don’t need government; if men are evil or ambivalent, you don’t dare have one.”
— Robert LeFevre, libertarian businessman

One common argument for government is that people are evil, greedy, and cruel, so government is necessary to protect people from each other.

Kent McManigal

Kent McManigal

This seems to ignore the fact government is made up of those same people.

How giving some of those evil, greedy, and cruel people authority over the rest is supposed to solve the problem has always mystified me, and asking how this is imagined to work goes unanswered. It’s a justification devoid of reason.

Human qualities run the gamut. Humans are selfish and selfless. We are greedy and generous. We fight and we cooperate. We are cruel and we are loving. We like having leaders and we often fall for rulers.

History shows the negatives tend to be much more addictive than the positives. It is easier to commit evil if you can spread the blame to a group, rather than doing it on your own.

I’m not saying groups can’t do good things — they often do — but true evil on a monumental scale usually takes a political “movement.”

Leaders convince followers to do all sorts of things they’d never dare doing on their own. This can either mean reaching for greatness, which otherwise would never have been accomplished, or it can mean participating in genocide or democide.

Charismatic leaders can convince people to reject their own principles for “patriotism” and for “the common good.”

Since humans do have some negative qualities, the worst thing you can do is give them justifications for putting those qualities into practice.

Some of the negatives aren’t really negative. Selfishness often causes people to do nice things, because it makes them feel good. There’s nothing wrong with that.

Greed inspires people to give customers what they want in order to gain more in the long run. At least it’s how it works in the free market where truly harmful behavior has consequences.

It seems funny that those who distrust human nature the most are under the impression that giving those flawed humans power and authority over others, and shielding them from the consequences of their actions by allowing them to hide within a group, will make them turn from their negative nature and bring out the best in them.

The very nature of political power selects for people who have a desire to control the lives of others — in other words, the very sort of person who should never be permitted to hold power.

Keep doing the same thing, expecting different results. I’m sure it will happen this time.

Farwell’s Kent McManigal champions liberty. Contact him at:
dullhawk@hotmail.com

 

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