TGIF:
A Foreign Policy by and for Knaves
by Sheldon Richman October 10, 2014
David Hume (1711-1776) was no hardcore libertarian, but he was a provocative thinker and a key figure in the development of liberalism. Hume helped make the Scottish Enlightenment the important period it was. He also can be fun to read. Observe this from his essay “Of the Independency of Parliament”:
- Political writers have established it as a maxim, that, in contriving
any system of government, and fixing the several checks and controuls of
the constitution, every man ought to be supposed a knave, and to have no
other end, in all his actions, than private interest. By this interest we
must govern him, and, by means of it, make him, notwithstanding his
insatiable avarice and ambition, co-operate to public good. Without this,
say they, we shall in vain boast of the advantages of any constitution,
and shall find, in the end, that we have no security for our liberties or
possessions, except the good-will of our rulers; that is, we shall have
no security at all.
We need not accept Hume’s definition of knave – someone who has no other end than his private interest to take his point. In fact, Hume himself may not to regard the mere pursuit of private interest as the main problem. Here’s what he says next:
- It is, therefore, a just political maxim, that every man must be
supposed a knave: Though at the same time, it appears somewhat strange,
that a maxim should be true in politics, which is false in fact. But to
satisfy us on this head, we may consider, that men are generally more
honest in their private than in their public capacity, and will go
greater lengths to serve a party, than when their own private interest is
alone concerned. Honour is a great check upon mankind: But where a
considerable body of men act together, this check is, in a great measure,
removed; since a man is sure to be approved of by his own party, for what
promotes the common interest; and he soon learns to despise the clamours
of adversaries. To which we may add, that every court or senate is
determined by the greater number of voices; so that, if self-interest
influences only the majority, (as it will always do) the whole senate
follows the allurements of this separate interest, and acts as if it
contained not one member, who had any regard to public interest and
liberty.
In contrast, politicians and bureaucrats spend other people’s money (obtained by force), have other people do the heavy lifting (how many personally invaded Iraq?), and hardly ever suffer the consequences of their bad decisions. Even being denied reelection after a major blunder is rare. No was fired after the 9/11 attacks or the Iraq invasion, but some were promoted or awarded Medals of Freedom. (I’ve previously discussed how perverse political incentives encourage voters to act irresponsibly. In politics, it’s irresponsibility all the way down.)
I agree with Robert Higgs (PDF), though, that the difference between private and political actors involves more than the incentives they face. The political system itself selects for vicious persons, as F. A. Hayek discussed in chapter 10 of The Road to Serfdom, “Why the Worst Get on Top.” Higgs quotes Robert Sirico’s amendment of Lord Acton’s famous observation, “The corrupt seek power and use it absolutely.” Acton himself noted that “great men are almost always bad men.”
In Hume’s terms, then, individuals in the political sphere are much better sheltered from the consequences of their “knavery” than they are in the private sphere. So we should expect more of it in the former.
Leonard E. Read, a founder of the modern libertarian movement, understood this too. In his essay “On that Day Lies Began,” he quoted Leo Tolstoy:
- From the day when the first members of council placed exterior
authority higher than interior, that is to say, recognized the decisions
of men united in councils as more important and more sacred than reason
and conscience; on that day began lies that caused the loss of millions
of human beings and which continue their unhappy work to the present
day.
- Persons advocate proposals in association that they would in no
circumstance practice in individual action. Honest men, by any of the
common standards of honesty, will, in a board or a committee, sponsor,
for instance, legal thievery that is, they will urge the use of the
political means to exact the fruits of the labor of others for the
purpose of benefiting themselves, their group, or their community.
- These leaders, for they have been elected or appointed to a board or a committee, do not think of themselves as having sponsored legal thievery. They think of the board, the committee, the council or the association as having taken the action. The onus of the act, to their way of thinking, is put on an abstraction which is what a board or an association is without persons.
- These leaders, for they have been elected or appointed to a board or a committee, do not think of themselves as having sponsored legal thievery. They think of the board, the committee, the council or the association as having taken the action. The onus of the act, to their way of thinking, is put on an abstraction which is what a board or an association is without persons.
This is what came to mind as I read The American Conservative editor Daniel McCarthy’s response to my comment on his original article in defense of “liberal empire.” McCarthy argues the development of liberalism in practice and thought (roughly in the classical sense) requires security, and only a global empire (as exemplified by Great Britain and then the United States) can provide that security. Insecurity, in contrast, breeds illiberalism, he writes. So if we want an enduring liberal society, we must have empire, which will necessitate judicious and limited global intervention.
I don’t think things are quite so simple intervention breeds illiberalism, and insecurity could stimulate liberal institutional responses. At any rate, this is where Hume’s concern arises. McCarthy writes:
- Preventing a hostile power from dominating Europe and keeping a
balance in East Asia is “empire” enough. Beyond that, prosperity and
industrial strength, along with our nuclear arsenal, are the keys to our
security. This is a historically realistic vision, one that solves the
great problems of the pastwhat to do about Nazi Germany or the USSRand
the otherwise insoluble problems of the present, such as what to do about
the Middle East: namely, minimize our exposure to crises that we cannot
fix and that do not affect the top-tier distribution of power. Today what
is most ethical and what is politically and strategically realistic
coincide reasonably well: we should not seek to enlarge our commitments;
we should preserve our naval power; we should use diplomacy and economics
to advance our interests and contain disruptive powers.
- This is not a strategy of hard-heartedness toward the oppressed peoples of the world. A secure and prosperous U.S. is in a position to be an ideological counterweight to any illiberal state or insurgency, and it can act when necessary only because it does not act when not necessary.
- This is not a strategy of hard-heartedness toward the oppressed peoples of the world. A secure and prosperous U.S. is in a position to be an ideological counterweight to any illiberal state or insurgency, and it can act when necessary only because it does not act when not necessary.
McCarthy’s good intentions notwithstanding, I’m fairly certain he won’t be the one making foreign policy.
But the problem of private interest is not the only problem for a McCarthy-style foreign policy. The “knowledge problem” is equally devastating. Even with the best intentions, the administrators of the world hegemon must suffer a critical and insurmountable ignorance. In responding to Richard Epstein’s “faulty case for intervention,” economist David R. Henderson writes:
- The simple fact is that when a government thousands of miles away
decides to intervene, it must figure out which faction to support and has
little assurance that it will support the right one. Indeed, it has
little assurance that there is a right one. Thus my point above: whatever
else libertarian non-interventionists believe, few of us have what
Professor Epstein calls an “illusion of certainty.” It is the exact
opposite: we are positive that there is great uncertainty. It is this
uncertainty that should, in general, cause us to pressure our government
to stay out of other countries’ affairs. There are many “monsters to
destroy,” to use John Quincy Adams’s famous phrase. It is generally a bad
idea to go abroad to destroy them. It is even worse if one does so by
allying with other monsters.
http://fff.org/explore-freedom/article/tgif-a-foreign-policy-for-knaves/ --
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