-Caveat Lector-

Lifting the Wool: Governments Are Mafias, War Is Their Racket
by Alan Bock

It is unlikely that the veil will be parted long
enough for the great casserole of prejudice,
misinformation, partial information and
(occasionally) accurate perception that
pollsters and political scientists are pleased to
call "public opinion" to process and absorb the
perception completely. But the vaguely
worded Israeli Cabinet decision that the time
might have come to "remove" Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat from the region, or
perhaps from the earth  followed Sunday by
an "unofficial" trial-balloon-type statement
from Israeli Vice Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
that "Expulsion is certainly one of the options;
killing is also one of the options"  offered an
important insight into the essential character
of government.

Palestinian legislator Saeb Erekat got it only
partially right in criticizing Ehud Olmert's
statement, calling it "the behavior and actions
of a mafia and not a government."

Not quite right, Mr. Erekat. It was definitely a
mafia-like comment. But it was also a
quintessentially government-like sentiment
although government leaders are seldom so
open and frank about it, which is one of the
reasons most people don't catch on.

FOUNDED IN FORCE

Perhaps I should make the same
distinction between government and the state
that the distinguished American author and
essayist Albert J. Nock did. Government he
viewed as a rough agreement, rooted in
tradition and custom, about how people in a
given geographical region will get along
together  what rules they will obey (most of
the time) and how they will treat their fellows.

Nock defined the State as the organization of
the political means, as distinguished from the
economic means, of dividing up the fruits of
the productive capacity of the people. Nock
argued that there are basically two ways
people interact  through voluntary
agreement or through the use of force. What
he called the economic means were voluntary
and consensual  trade, mutual agreements
(some explicit and some implicit)  and the
sum of the agreements, transactions and
decisions to tolerate others made up what
Nock called society and what some have called
civil society. The political means involve the
use of force or threats of force.

For those who are willing and able to use
them, the political means are usually a much
more efficient method of acquiring wealth or
control over the means of production than
honest labor, pleasing customers and
confining oneself to mutually voluntary
transactions. So they have been used by
sophisticated thugs and bandits throughout
what we know of human history.

By Nock's definition, of course, almost every
institution we call a government in the
modern world is actually a state  an
institution built around the use of force to
ensure compliance. And his definition is
hardly as off-the-wall as it might seem. Most
political theory classes or political science
texts will define government as the institution
in a given geographic region with a monopoly
on the legitimate use of force. Government, in
other words, is the institution that gets to
define its own use of force as legitimate and
everybody else's use of force as illegitimate.

Standard-issue political scientists almost all
agree that some use of force in society is
unavoidable, and that the least harmful way
to deal with its inevitability is for one
institution to be able to use force legitimately,
so it can protect decent folks from the
freelance perpetrators of force and violence.
The belief (highly dubious in my view) is that
this arrangement is the best way to limit the
amount of force and violence people are
subjected to, and with any luck to tame the
use of force with a web of rules and
regulations.

PROTECTION RACKETS

What it comes down to, then, is that the
essence of government is force. Without the
capacity to coerce citizens into paying taxes
and obeying edicts, government is impossible.
It is hardly a stretch, however, to note that
such an institution is morally virtually
indistinguishable from a criminal gang.
Indeed, a criminal gang generally finds it
more efficient to limit the use of force to those
who resist too actively or to teach a lesson.
The profits are greater when the merchants
simply give in at once to the guys in bulky
suits who come around saying, "Nice store you
have here. Be a shame if anything happened
to it. We can provide protection." But the
racket works best, of course, if the merchants
know the thugs will follow through on the
implied threat, so once in a while an example
has to be made.

A decent argument can be made, then, that a
government is a mafia that's a little more
sophisticated and successful than most
outright criminal gangs are  or, as my
Sicilian wife once put it, "government is just
another gang." But the essence of what
defines both is the willingness to use force
when persuasion fails. The mafia, if the lore is
accurate, even copies government by calling
its enforcers "soldiers."

So the brutal truth is that while consent is
preferred as the more cost-efficient option,
government authority rests on the willingness
to use force when it deems force to be
necessary. Governments like to sell
themselves as the only protection against the
uncontrolled and unbridled use of force that
would characterize society without such a
wielder of "legitimate" force. But their essence
is force. The ultimate expression of the
essential character of the state, of course, is
war, which not only involves killing foreigners
who may or may not be a real threat directly,
but provides multiple justifications for
stepping up the use of force against
inconvenient or obstreperous members of the
society it rules directly.

DISCOURAGING FRANKNESS

It is in the interest of governments that
these truths not be widely known, or at least
not widely acknowledged, which is one reason
governments want to control the education of
children, preferably as directly as possible. So
government spokespeople often get upset
when one of their confreres slips and pulls
back the veil to reveal that the wizard is really
a thug. Consequently plenty of people in
governments around the world were shocked
 deeply shocked  that a member of the
government clan would speak so openly about
intentionally killing somebody without the
attention to judicial details that accompanies
the execution of convicted criminals.

Thus the Bush administration, through
Condoleezza Rice and Colin Powell, was quick
to advise Israel not to do anything so open
and blatant as expulsion or assassination.
Such a step would be  well, of course they
couldn't quite say it was outright wrong
unwise, and counterproductive. It might turn
Arafat into a martyr. So Colin Powell advised
the Israelis to "consider the long-term
consequences of such actions  and are you
creating more Hamas killers in the future by
actions such as this which injure innocent
people."

It is difficult to square this excruciating
delicacy about long-term consequences with
the way the United States began the war in
Iraq  a war not even remotely "forced" upon
the United States by anything remotely
resembling an imminent threat to the United
States or even to any of Iraq's neighbors. The
war began, of course, with bunker-buster
bombs specifically aimed at a place where the
closest thing the U.S. had to reliable
intelligence speculated that Saddam Hussein
might be.

There was no pretense that Saddam might
have been killed in the course of carrying out
a strike against a strictly military target (if
there is such a thing). Our leaders
congratulated themselves on their shrewdness
and perspicacity in trying to take out Saddam
personally, and hoped without apology that
they had been successful. The U.S. war  one
of the first though not the only one in recent
times to be a war of aggression against a
chosen enemy who had not invaded his
neighbors  began with an outright
assassination attempt.

Few people were shocked, and only a few of
those protested openly. Like Yasser Arafat,
Saddam Hussein is a thoroughly detestable
and nasty person whose personal qualities are
magnified by the brutal way he has ruled Iraq.
Few decent people would spend much time
mourning the death of either.

But the Israeli Cabinet and Ehud Olmert
broke the unwritten rule that you don't
announce in advance that you plan to murder
an opponent. Too much of that and too many
people would understand quite clearly the
essential similarities between governments
and criminal gangs. So the Israelis had to be
reprimanded, though it is also possible that
the reprimand was accompanied by winks and
nods, as so many are.

It is highly likely, of course, that just by
talking about eliminating Arafat  even
through the relatively benign method of exile
 the Israeli government has strengthened his
support among some Palestinians who were
starting to grow weary of him (he is, after all,
an object lesson in the wisdom that
revolutionaries should not become rulers).
Just by talking about it, they may have made
it impossible to do it without creating an
explosion of unrest and violence, making him
more powerful in death than in life. Even as
the United States, by committing an act of
aggression and occupation in Iraq, may have
unleashed forces that are, at the very least,
proving most difficult and troublesome to deal
with.

But what other world leaders really objected
to when the Israelis spoke of eliminating
Arafat, was not the idea of elimination  all
government eliminate inconvenient people
routinely  but being so open and blatant in
discussing it. For a moment or two  and for
longer if people reflect and learn the right
lessons  the Israelis came perilously close to
giving away the whole game.

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