
The Mises Institute monthly, free with membership
June 1999
Volume 17, Number 6
Modern State's Evil
Prophet
by James Bovard
At the American Revolution, the founders clearly recognized the defects of representative
government. Pamphleteer John
Cartwright in 1776 derided "that poor consolatory word, representation, with the mere sound of
which we have so long
contented ourselves." "Slavery by Parliament" was the phrase commonly used to denounce
British legislative power grabs.
Based on their experience under Britain, Americans came to believe that the power of
representatives was to be strictly
limited by the rights of the governed, a doctrine later enshrined in the Bill of Rights. It prohibited
the federal government
from violating the rights of the people, thus severely restricting the scope of legislation and the
power of the executive, even
when they claimed to act on behalf of the people.
But while the Americans were fighting a revolution against the fraud of representation, the
doctrines of French philosopher
Jean-Jacques Rousseau were sweeping continental Europe. And despite the founders' best efforts,
it was Rousseau's
influence that dominated the assumptions and expectations about democracy over the past two
centuries. As Harvard
professor Irving Babbitt noted in 1924, "The commanding position of Rousseau in the
democratic movement is at all events
beyond question."
Rousseau unleashed the genie of absolute power in the name of popular sovereignty, which
had hitherto been unknown. His
1762 book, The Social Contract, merged contemporary romanticism and mysticism
with eighteenth-century political
thought. Rousseau thereby gave intellectuals an engraved invitation to delude themselves about
the nature of majorities,
government, and freedom.
Rousseau claimed that representative governments are based on the "general will," which
could somehow be different from
the conscious will of the people themselves. "The general will is always right and tends to the
public advantage," he wrote.
"But it does not follow that the deliberations of the people are always equally correct...the people
is never corrupted, but it
is often deceived."
Rousseau provided few hints on how either rulers or the ruled could recognize the general
will. Instead, he waved a
philosophic magic wand over representative government and pretended that his doctrine of the
general will had solved all
its problems. As historian William Dunning noted in 1910, "The common interest and the
general will assumed, through
[Rousseau's] manipulation, a greater definiteness and importance than philosophy had hitherto
ascribed to them. They
became the central features of almost every theory of the State."
Rousseau's doctrine of the general will became the invocation of rulers seeking unlimited
power. In our century, despotism
has been universally defended as the will of the people. The Soviet regime always claimed
communism to be working on
behalf of the masses, while Hitler's Volk was the Teutonic rendition of Rousseau's
doctrine. And when U.S. Congressmen
go on television to announce that the "American people" support their pet government project of
the moment, or when
Clinton invokes popular sentiment in support of his idiosyncratic programs, Rousseau is serving
as their muse.
Rousseau's concept of the general will led him to a concept of freedom that was a parody of
the beliefs accepted by British
and American thinkers of his era. Rousseau wrote that the social contract required that "whoever
refuses to obey the general
will shall be compelled to do so by the whole body. This means nothing less than that he will be
forced to be free." C. E.
Vaughan, in a 1915 study of Rousseau's work, correctly observed that, for Rousseau, "freedom is
no longer conceived as
the independence of the individual. It is rather to be sought in his total surrender to the service of
the State."
Rousseau further muddied political thought with the doctrine that people could gain their
freedom only by surrendering all
their rights to the government: "Each man, in giving himself to all, gives himself to nobody."
This view provided a pretext
for denying that vastly increasing government power posed any threat to the individual. Each
citizen, in return for a nominal
share of sovereignty over everything, accepted a real servitude to the commands of the State.
Rousseau propagated faith in absolute power at the same time he appeared to be preaching
democracy: "The sovereign,
being formed wholly of the individuals who compose it, neither has nor can have any interest
contrary to theirs; and
consequently the sovereign power need give no guarantee to its subjects.... The Sovereign,
merely by virtue of what it is, is
always what it should be."
Rousseau's doctrines have inspired claims that democracies cannot be coercive, since the
people are "doing it" to
themselves. The fact that political aggressors and political victims are usually different became
irrelevant. Rousseau shifted
the focus of political thought from what government is--to what government should be in the best
of all possible worlds.
While Rousseau's glorification of democracy is well-known, his passion for unlimited
government power is less
recognized. In The Social Contract, Rousseau declared, "The citizen is no longer
the judge of the dangers to which the law
desires him to expose himself; and when the prince says to him: 'It is expedient for the State that
you should die,' he ought
to die, because it is only on that condition that he has been living in security up to the present,
and because his life is no
longer a mere bounty of nature, but a gift made conditionally by the State." Rousseau implied
that people should be grateful
that the government had not yet killed them.
In a short essay entitled "On Public Happiness," Rousseau declared in 1767, "Give man
entirely to the State or leave him
entirely to himself." And Rousseau clearly believed that men could not be left to
themselves.
Rousseau also believed government must effectively nullify private property. In an essay on
a proposed constitution for
Corsica, Rousseau declared, "In a word, I want the property of the State to be as great and
powerful, and that of the citizens
as small and weak, as possible.... With private property being so weak and so dependent, the
Government will need to use
very little force, and will lead the people, so to speak, with a movement of the finger."
Rousseau's consecration of government power had vast influence on subsequent
philosophers. German philosophers zeroed
in on some of Rousseau's more absurd ideas and refined them into sufficiently obscure language
that they commanded
respect among academics for generations to follow.
In contrast to Rousseau, the Founders were gravely concerned about the abuses of popular
government. The American
Revolution was sparked by distrust of government; the French Revolution, following Rousseau's
doctrine, was based on the
delusion that the People are infallible and that democratic government automatically pursues the
common good.
While John Adams naively declared in 1775 that "a democratical despotism is a
contradiction in terms," few Americans
held that belief by the mid-1780s. Judge Alexander Hanson declared in 1784, "The acts of almost
every legislature have
uniformly tended to disgust its citizens and to annihilate its credit."
One commentator in the 1780s, noting the early dashed hopes of democratic governments,
declared that the usurpation of
"tyrants at our doors, exceeds that of one at 3,000 miles." Gordon Wood, author of The
Creation of the American Republic,
noted, "Throughout the years of the war and after, Americans in almost all the states mounted
increasing attacks on the
tendencies of the American representational system."
The doctrines of Rousseau have had far more influence on subsequent thinking about
democracy than the insights of the
Founders. Rousseau did more than any other person in the last 250 years to make clear thinking
about democracy almost
impossible. Rousseau keenly perceived some of the injustices of the political systems of his
times. Unfortunately, his
solutions were worse than the status quo.
There is no magic in democracy or in democratic processes that transcends the inherent
defects and limitations of
government itself. A democratic government will still be a government, and this fact is more
important than the mechanism
by which leaders are selected. Idealizing any form of government--as Rousseau encouraged
people to do--is one of the
worst mistakes a free people can make. The idealizing of American democracy is one of the
worst threats to the future of
American liberty.
____________
James Bovard is the author of Freedom
in Chains: The Rise of the State & the Demise of the Citizen (St. Martin's
Press,
1999). Further reading: Charles
Edwyn Vaughan: Studies in the History of Political Philosophy Before and After
Rousseau,
A.G. Little, ed. (New York: Russell and Russell, 1960) and William Dunning, A History
of Political Theories: From Luther
to Montesquieu (New York, London: Macmillan, 1910).
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