Resolve to serve no more, and you are at once freed. I do not
ask that you place hands upon the tyrant to topple him over, but simply that
you support him no longer; then you will behold him, like a great Colossus
whose pedestal has been pulled away, fall of his own weight and break in
pieces.
- The Politics of Obedience: The Discourse of Voluntary
Servitude, Etienne de la Boétie
Guess who this is, regarding the upcoming Brexit vote:
In a passionate plea to Europe’s top conservatives, he accused
the EU elites of living in a fool’s paradise and provoking the eurosceptic
revolt now erupting in a string of countries.
“It is us who today are responsible,” he said, speaking at a
conclave of Christian-Democrat and centre-right leaders in Luxembourg.
“Obsessed with the idea of instant and total integration, we failed to notice
that ordinary people, the citizens of Europe, do not share our
Euro-enthusiasm.”
No, this is not Nigel Farage; it is European Council president Donald Tusk (from
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard). It seems he and others of his ilk are finally
catching on that there is a revolution – for now (fortunately for them) one
only of the ballot box. (They better hope the French don’t get inspired
by their ancestors.)
For the first time in a poll, the Brexit camp is leading the
stay camp. Despite all of the fearmongering (or perhaps because of it),
the Brexit camp has been gaining support as time passes – very Trumpian!
Mr Tusk, alert to the patriotic revival in his native Poland,
lambasted the EU establishment for pushing “a utopia of Europe without nation
states” that goes against the grain of European history and has produced a deep
cultural backlash that cannot be dismissed as illegitimate far-right populism.
And they call libertarians “utopian.” From Murray
Rothbard, For a New Liberty:
The true utopian is one who advocates a system that is contrary
to the natural law of human beings and of the real world. A utopian system is
one that could not work even if everyone were persuaded to try to put it into
practice. The utopian system could not work, i.e., could not sustain
itself in operation.
I guess culture and tribe matters. Who knew? Obviously, the elite who want to
destroy the culture and replace it with the state know this, but they are
finding that destroying it is far more difficult than they expected.
To ignore culture and tribe is rather “contrary to the natural
law of human beings and of the real world.” In other words, to build any
political system without respecting culture and tribe is rather
“utopian.” This is something that some libertarians would do well to keep
in mind.
Rothbard does not just apply this to communists and socialists
of all stripes. In contrast to (unfortunately not all) libertarians…
…it is the seemingly far more realistic conservative believer in
“limited government” who is the truly impractical utopian…. The idea of a
strictly limited constitutional State was a noble experiment that failed, even
under the most favorable and propitious circumstances. If it failed then,
why should a similar experiment fare any better now? No, it is the
conservative laissez-fairist, the man who puts all the guns and all the
decision-making power into the hands of the central government and then says,
“Limit yourself”; it is he who is truly the impractical utopian.
While I am not a fan of nation states (but
fully accept the concept and necessity of nation), I greatly
prefer smaller to larger – even if it means continued nation states. It
seems when pushed far enough, culture and tribe matters to the people of
Europe.
Returning to Ambrose:
There are mounting signs that the Dutch, Scandinavians, and many
Eastern European states may not be willing to back any push by Brussels for a
‘Plan B’ of deeper political union – with an ‘EU army’, and joint foreign,
security, and border policies – once the British are out of the way.
Do they think France and Germany have so much in common that all
it will take is to get Britain out of the way?
“There would undoubtedly be a Franco-German declaration the day
after Brexit, but the truth is that the differences between France and Germany
over the way forward for the eurozone have never been greater,” said Charles
Grant from the Centre for European Reform.
Nope.
They don’t even want to put any new EU initiatives or treaty
changes in front of the voters – anywhere in Europe:
“The Dutch say they never want another EU treaty ever again
because that would require a referendum and they know they would lose it. The
French don’t want any treaty changes either,” he said.
We know with certainty that central planning cannot sustainably
work. This applies to politics just as well as to economics (not that politics
and economics are two distinct spheres). We know that the plans of empire
always come to an end. Every page of history shows us a cycle of
decentralizing and centralizing.
The promises cannot be kept in Europe – they aren’t being kept
today. Unemployment remains high, immigration is a disaster, war with
Russia is threatened daily. The people are wondering why they should
continue to serve when they get so little in return – in fact, they find they
are receiving the exact opposite in return of what they have been promised.
The people throughout the west are concluding there is little
reason to support the pedestal under the great Colossus. He may not fall
today or tomorrow, but he cannot withstand the weight of an ever more
disgruntled population due to ever-increasing failure to deliver. This is
certain.
What comes once Colossus falls? I wish was as
certain. I say put Gorbachev in charge, he has a track record of
peacefully dismantling empire.
Conclusion
Turning
and turning in the widening gyre
|
The
falcon cannot hear the falconer;
|
Things
fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
|
Mere
anarchy is loosed upon the world
|
- The Second Coming, W.B Yeats
|
.
|
Unlike Yeats’ mood in his poem, I do not lament that this center cannot hold; decentralization is
libertarian theory applied in the real world. I cheer on every attempt
and hope for every success – even if the smaller entity shows no better
libertarian tendencies than did the larger. Every successful act of
decentralization increases choice.
The people are withdrawing their consent. The center
cannot hold. Let the decentralizing continue until we have a few thousand
(maybe 1.5 billion) centers. With
enough choice, even a Rothbardian anarchist can find someplace to call home!