Nock: 'the State' is a mere perversion of 'the government'
Excerpt from Nock's Our Enemy, the State:
As far back as one can follow the run of civilization, it presents two fundamentally different types of
political organization. This difference is not one of degree, but of kind. It does not do to take the
one type as merely marking a lower order of civilization and the other a higher; they are commonly
so taken, but erroneously. Still less does it do to classify both as species of the same genus -- to
classify both under the generic name of "government," though this also, until very lately, has been
done, and has always led to confusion and misunderstanding.
A good understanding of this error and its effects is supplied by Thomas Paine. At the outset of his
pamphlet called Common Sense, Paine draws a distinction between society and government. While
society in any state is a blessing, he says, "government, even in its best state, is but a necessary
evil; in its worst state, an intolerable one." In another place, he speaks of government as "a mode
rendered necessary by the inability of moral virtue to govern the world." He proceeds then to show
how and why government comes into being. Its origin is in the common understanding and
common agreement of society; and "the design and end of government," he says, is "freedom and
security." Teleologically, government implements the common desire of society, first, for freedom,
and second, for security. Beyond this it does not go; it contemplates no positive intervention upon
the individual, but only a negative intervention. It would seem that in Paine's view the code of
government should be that of the legendary king Pausole, who prescribed but two laws for his
subjects, the first being, Hurt no man, and the second, Then do as you please; and that the whole
business of government should be the purely negative one of seeing that this code is carried out.
So far, Paine is sound as he is simple. He goes on, however, to attack the British political
organization in terms that are logically inconclusive. There should be no complaint of this, for he
was writing as a pamphleteer, a special pleader with an ad captandum argument to make, and as
everyone knows, he did it most successfully. Nevertheless, the point remains that when he talks
about the British system he is talking about a type of political organization essentially different
from the type that he has just been describing; different in origin, in intention, in primary function,
in the order of interest that it reflects. It did not originate in the common understanding and
agreement of society; it originated in conquest and confiscation.
Its intention, far from contemplating "freedom and security," contemplated nothing of the kind. It
contemplated primarily the continuous economic exploitation of one class by another, and it
concerned itself with only so much freedom and security as was consistent with this primary
intention; and this was, in fact, very little. Its primary function or exercise was not by way of
Paine's purely negative interventions upon the individual, but by way of innumerable and most
onerous positive interventions, all of which were for the purpose of maintaining the stratification of
society into an owning and exploiting class, and a property-less dependent class. The order of
interest that it reflected was not social, but purely anti-social; and those who administered it,
judged by the common standard of ethics, or even the common standard of law as applied to
private persons, were indistinguishable from a professional-criminal class. Clearly, then, we have
two distinct types of political organization to take into account; and clearly, too, when their origins
are considered, it is impossible to make out that the one is a mere perversion of the other.
Therefore when we include both types under a general term like government, we get into logical
difficulties; difficulties of which most writers on the subject have been more or less vaguely aware,
but which, until within the last half-century, none of them has tried to resolve.
Mr. Jefferson, for example, remarked that the hunting tribes of Indians, with which he had a good
deal to do in his early days, had a highly organized and admirable social order, but were "without
government." Commenting on this, he wrote Madison that "it is a problem not clear in my mind
that [this] condition is not the best," but he suspected that it was "inconsistent with any great
degree of population." Schoolcraft observes that the Chippewas, though living in a highly-
organized social order, had no "regular" government. Herbert Spencer, speaking of the Bechuanas,
Araucanians and Koranna Hottentots, says they have no "definite" government; while Parkman, in
his introduction to The Conspiracy of Pontiac, reports the same phenomenon, and is frankly puzzled
by its apparent anomalies.
Paine's theory of government agrees exactly with the theory set forth by Mr. Jefferson in the
Declaration of Independence. The doctrine of natural rights, which is explicit in the Declaration, is
implicit in Common Sense; and Paine's view of the "design and end of government" is precisely
the Declaration's view, that "to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men"; and
further, Paine's view of the origin of government is that it "derives its just powers from the consent
of the governed." Now, if we apply Paine's formulas or the Declaration's formulas, it is abundantly
clear that the Virginian Indians had government; Mr. Jefferson's own observations show that they
had it. Their political organization, simple as it was, answered its purpose. Their code-apparatus
sufficed for assuring freedom and security to the individual, and for dealing with such trespasses as
in that state of society the individual might encounter -- fraud, theft, assault, adultery, murder. The
same is clearly true of the various peoples cited by Parkman, Schoolcraft and Spencer. Assuredly, if
the language of the Declaration amounts to anything, all these peoples had government; and all
these reporters make it appear as a government quite competent to its purpose.
Therefore when Mr. Jefferson says his Indians were "without government," he must be taken to
mean that they did not have a type of government like the one he knew; and when Schoolcraft and
Spencer speak of "regular" and "definite" government, their qualifying words must be taken in the
same way. This type of government, nevertheless, has always existed and still exists, answering
perfectly to Paine's formulas and the Declaration's formulas; though it is a type which we also,
most of us, have seldom had the chance to observe. It may not be put down as the mark of an
inferior race, for institutional simplicity is in itself by no means a mark of backwardness or
inferiority; and it has been sufficiently shown that in certain essential respects the peoples who
have this type of government are, by comparison, in a position to say a good deal for themselves
on the score of a civilized character. Mr. Jefferson's own testimony on this point is worth notice, and
so is Parkman's. This type, however, even though documented by the Declaration, is fundamentally
so different from the type that has always prevailed in history, and is still prevailing in the world at
the moment, that for the sake of clearness the two types should be set apart by name, as they are
by nature. They are so different in theory that drawing a sharp distinction between them is now
probably the most important duty that civilization owes to its own safety. Hence it is by no means
either an arbitrary or academic proceeding to give the one type the name of government, and to
call the second type simply the State.