-Caveat Lector-

December 2000

Anarchism vs. Right-Wing 'Anti-Statism'

By Brian Oliver Sheppard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

It is currently fashionable to claim to hate the government.
One could say it is the general, default position of most
you talk to. But it is not clear why this is so. While you
might think a popular hatred of government would mean the
ranks of anarchists are swelling, it actually isn't the
case.

ANARCHIST RHETORIC GONE MAINSTREAM

Over the past two decades something interesting has occurred
that the anarchist movement has yet to adequately address.
Rhetoric is coming from the mouths of politicians that a
hundred years ago (if not more recently) would have branded
them as "anarchists" or as seditious traitors. Though the
politicians employing this type of rhetoric are most
consistently Republicans, "big government liberals" in the
Democratic Party have also been drawn to this style of
speaking.

The idea they are voicing is a simple one: government is
bad. The bigger it is, the worse it gets. The smaller we
make it, the better for all. We don't want government
butting into our affairs, and we don't want government
regulating us right and left. And, unlike anarchists who in
the 19th century were saying essentially the same thing, the
politicians who endorse this view are not slaughtered en
masse by the National Guard, or framed up on anti-patriotic
conspiracy charges, but are instead elected into that
institution they claim to hate - the government.

Many are the politicians - sitting in the halls of congress
and living a life unknown to many working Americans - that
claim to hate government. They paint opponents as "big
government insiders," and vow to get in office to fight for
you, the commoner, who has a distrust of all those cheating
politicians and of government in general. A huge amount of
politicians ride into office on campaigns with such themes
as "eliminating government" or at least "shrinking" it. "He
wants to increase the size and the scope of the federal
government," George W. Bush said about Al Gore during his
campaign for President in the 2000 election. Vice President
Al Gore countered, "I'm for a smaller, smarter government
that serves people better, but offers real change."

If both sides are honest and are in fact committed to
shrinking government, then this must mean we are
tremendously close to living in a truly free, stateless
society where there is no government at all, right?

Well, no. In fact, just the opposite is occurring.

SELECTIVE SHRINKING, SELECTIVE EXPANSION

Politicians on the Right have co-opted a very long tradition
of anti-government sentiment and are using it, ironically,
to boost themselves into power and eliminate areas of
government that benefit the poor. This is occurring while
they actually increase government in such areas as military
spending, prison spending, corporate welfare, the size of
police forces, and the like. In the twisted Ideology of the
Right, hating that most dastardly of all enemies, the
Federal Government, means hating, in reality, only certain,
selective portions of it: the parts that interfere with the
untrammeled operations of private corporate power, the parts
that provide respite from wage slavery (such as Social
Security or unemployment insurance), the parts that help
underprivileged kids go to college, etc. This is what "big
government" is to them. "Big government" somehow does not
include subsidies to the military industrial complex,
subsidies to the prison industry, bailouts to troubled
mega-corporations, the banking industry, or any of these
things. These are conspicuously off the radar screen of
anyone who rails about the evils of "big government."

Now, historically, when anarchists spoke of eliminating
government, it was not a ploy to get into government and
perpetuate the evil of it, as it seems to be with our
tough-talking Republicans. Hating government meant hating
tyranny and hating the authority of any other human to be
able to tell you what to do. Anarchists literally got killed
for thinking this way. "Hating government" now, however,
seems to be code for hating things like affirmative action
or Medicaid. It doesn't seem to mean hating police officers,
hating war, or hating a defense budget that gets 50% of
every tax dollar. Somehow this extremely substantial part of
government is let off the hook (and is in many cases
venerated). This is what constitutes "hating government" in
this era of doublethink - not hating government really, but
in fact loving its most brutal and violent side in the form
of the military and the police, the courts and the prisons,
and disliking anything that has to do with social spending.


HATE THE GOVERNMENT, LOVE YOUR COUNTRY

"I hate the government, but I love my country," is a
sentiment you will hear a lot amongst the Right these days.
The idea seems to be that the government up in Washington
has become overrun with a politically correct, neo-Socialist
cabal that wants to punish the white man for his natural
success, and reward the failures of ethnic minorities, gays,
radical feminists, etc., through increased taxation upon
him. This has led to many "militias" being established by
bitter people who feel that the USA is dangerously off
course, that it is no longer a land of the free and the
brave, but is in fact a virtual slave state at the beck and
call of the United Nations, wealthy Jews, rich politicians
(usually Democrat), and the like.

The goal of the right wing militias and those who have
similar ideas is not to abolish authority, the tyranny of
capital, or any other oppressive form, but rather to simply
get the USA back on the "right track." The American system
is not fundamentally flawed, they say - it is just that
those at the helm of the ship right now are steering it in
an unpatriotic direction. Hating the government as it exists
now, then, is the best way to express one's true patriotism.

In a 1995 interview conducted not too long after the bombing
of a federal building in Oklahoma City, MIT Professor Noam
Chomsky summed up the situation in these words:

"[T]ake the angry white males who are maybe joining what
they mistakenly call militias, [but which are actually]
paramilitary forces. These people are angry. Most of them
are high school graduates. They're people whose incomes have
dropped maybe 20% over the last fifteen years or so. They
can no longer do what they think is the right thing for them
to do, provide for their families. Maybe their wives have to
go out and work. And maybe they make more money than they
do. Maybe the kids are running crazy because no one's paying
any attention to them. Their lives are falling apart.
They're angry. Who are they supposed to blame? You're not
supposed to blame the Fortune 500, because they're
invisible. They have been taught for 50 years now ... that
all there is around is the government. If there's anything
going wrong, it's the government's fault. The government is
somehow something that is independent of external powers. So
if your life is falling apart, blame the government."

"There's a reason why attention is focused on the government
as the source of problems. It has a defect. It's potentially
democratic. Private corporations are not potentially
democratic.... [The militia movement] is not the kind of
populism that says, 'Fine, let's take over the government
and use it as an instrument to undermine and destroy private
power, which has no right to exist.' Nobody is saying that.
All that you're hearing is that there's something bad about
government, so let's blow up the federal building."

Politicians advance their pro-corporate agenda by
consciously manipulating the popular discontent with the
state of things. Public anger can be channeled into a hatred
of "big government programs" that big business wants to see
dismantled anyway. For example, private insurance
corporations would gladly step in and take over and
administer the Social Security system. It was not until
workers began dying from starvation and holding mass riots
that anything like Social Security ever got established, and
ever since then it has been mercilessly targeted by
corporations who see it as a barrier to their ability to
expand markets. In the logic of people on the Right whose
campaigns are funded by big insurance companies, Social
Security is a "big government program." So, hey, if you hate
the government, elect me, and I'll eliminate government -
I'll hand it over to private power. This is, in effect, all
that anti-government sentiment means to the Right - handing
government functions over to democratically unaccountable
private tyrannies. This isn't eliminating government,
however. It is merely changing its nature.

Now, if a hatred of government were really a hatred of
government, one would expect to see police forces slashed,
jails and prisons torn down, laws that provide for the
establishment of corporations eliminated, and other things.
This never occurs, because this is actually the part of the
State the "anti-government" Right wants strengthened. As of
the year 2000, more than 2 million Americans are in jail. At
least 6.5 million are under some form of correctional
supervision nationwide. This means 1 out of every 32
citizens are under some form of direct government
supervision. And this means that the State is present in our
daily lives to a degree unknown to any previous generation.
Where are the anti-government populists who will rail
against this? Answer: They are busy writing legislation to
get "tough on crime" and make sure even more prisons are
built, even more drugs are outlawed, even more money is
given to law enforcement to increase the power of the State,
and worse. No one seems to see the irony here. Far from
wanting to eliminate the government, the Right wants to
increase the powers of the State and roll back whatever
civil liberties we may have remaining, and to abolish any
sort of social safety nets that previous generations of
workers fought to achieve.

Writer Tim Wise commented, "Amazing isn't it, that the same
folks who view government so cynically when it comes to
taxes, mail delivery, road construction, education, or
health care, and insist the state is incapable of addressing
these issues with equanimity and fairness, somehow find it
possible to believe this same state can dispense justice,
and even the ultimate punishment [of death], without a hint
of impropriety, bias, or error."

The ultimate goal of the Right is a strong police state. A
merciless and unforgiving state that punishes swiftly and
surely. A State that rewards patriotism and nationalism and
punishes failure and disobedience. This isn't eliminating
the State. This is making the State ever more powerful.


THE APOLITICAL, 'SICK-OF-IT-ALL' VOTER WHO VOTES FOR THE
RIGHT

It is hard to observe the profuse cynicism regarding the
government, the immediate skepticism regarding the integrity
and sincerity of politicians, and then watch people head to
the polls to vote for them time and again, and not think
something is terribly amiss. It seems people claim to hate
the government as part of their public front of being
irascible, skeptical, iconoclastic thinkers. No one wants to
feel like they are being "duped" by politicians, apparently,
so they claim that they distrust government officials as a
matter of necessity. They don't, however, want to do much
with their distrust in reality other than trudge back to the
ballot box every two or four years and repeat the same staid
ritual of plugging in their choice for one ruler or the
next. And it seems in practice that those who are teh most
vocally cynical of Washington are in fact the ones who vote
for the most reactionary and extremist right wing
candidates.

British fantasy and science fiction author Michael Moorcock
commented on this phenomenon: "My experience of science
fiction fans at the conventions which are held annually in a
number of countries (mainly the US and England) had taught
me that those who attended were reactionary (claiming to be
'apolitical' but somehow always happy to vote Tory and
believe Colin Jordan to 'have a point')." The Right has
somehow managed to convince people that if you hate
politicians, you should vote for them. Somehow politicians
on the Right are not seen by many as "politicians" in the
sense that "politician" signifies someone who is by nature a
fast-talking crook. No, politicians on the Right are exempt
from a critique of government or politicians in general.
Voting for them is not voting for a "politician" or for
"government."

The Democratic Party, traditionally seen as the party of big
government programs and of "tax and spend liberals," was
compelled by the prevalence of anti-government sentiment in
the 90s to remake its image. And under "New Democrats" like
President Bill Clinton they swung to the right in adopting
the same sort of anti-government rhetoric while continuing
to increase prison populations, military spending, overseas
intervention, and actually build up State power.
Nevertheless, in a 1996 speech to Ohio Democrats, Clinton
could boast, "I want a government that is smaller and less
bureaucratic. We have given you the smallest government, not
the other party ... in thirty years, and the biggest
reduction in regulations."

THE SHAM OF RIGHT WING 'ANTI-STATISM'

It is clear that people are angry and dissatisfied with the
way society operates. The Right has simply succeeded in
capturing this anger, reflected it in their speeches, and
has capitalized on it to boost themselves into office.
'Okay,' they say to their constituents, 'we are in office
now, and, yes, we will eliminate government since it is an
evil thing you have elected us to combat. First up, we'll
hand over increasing chunks of the school system to private
corporations.' This is what 'eliminating' government amounts
to - placing it into the hands of CEOs and wealthy investors
who can run it how they see fit, effectively removing it
from the arena of potential democratic accountability. In
the meantime, the actual power of the State is increased as
the prisons swell and as the law clamps down harder on petty
criminals. With social safety nets eroding and millions more
falling into poverty, an expansion of the prison system
should be expected, as some method of dealing with all these
'superfluous' people has to be found. And the prisons can be
privatized, too.

Anarchists oppose the State because it is one of the
principle expressions of authority of man over man. Property
in the means of production and in the means of subsistence
is likewise another authoritarian institution. States exist
to protect these institutions and thus they largely serve as
a defense mechanism for the rich against the poor. This does
not mean workers might not become so unruly as to force some
form of seemingly charitable concession from the State
(like, say, OSHA), but in the end such concessions are
employed to defuse outright revolutionary fervor. A wealthy
man who owns vast amounts of land and who hates paying
property taxes, and, due to his soreness, comes to have an
intense dislike of the government, is not an anarchist. An
anarchist is someone who recognizes that if it were not for
the State such a man would not be able to exclusively own
land to begin with, and would not be afforded legal
protection (at public expense) for keeping it. He thus would
not be able to exercise despotic rights over a given
territory.

So it is that anarchists ultimately agree with the classical
liberal thinker Adam Smith - ironically held to be a great
classical exponent of laissez faire capitalism - when he
says that 'Civil government, so far as it is instituted for
the security of property, is in reality instituted for the
defence of the rich against the poor, or of those who have
some property against those who have none at all.' The
right-wing 'anti-statists' who might otherwise venerate
Smith cannot bring themselves to admit this fact. While
seeking to enable private power to run government
institutions more openly, they do not undermine the State's
power but merely make sure it fulfills its classical role.

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