Read The Douchebag Bible Online
Authors: TJ Kirk
8. WHY I AM NOT A LIBERTARIAN
Libertarian thought seeks to maximize freedom by
limiting or eliminating authority. Now, something
you should know about me: I have a diagnosed
pathological aversion to authority. I despise cops,
teachers, preachers and politicians. I do not like
being told what to do. That said—I am a student of
human nature and I’ve seen that human beings need
authority. They need it, and will give it readily to
whomever is willing to take it. Don’t believe me?
Then fill up a room with smoke.
If a person is alone in a room and that room
begins to fill with smoke, they immediately react.
They leave the room. If a group of people are in a
room that begins to fill with smoke, they are far
slower to react. Why? Because they are looking to
one another for leadership. They're looking to see
what everyone else does before they act. If one
person reacts, all others follow. In other words: if
you put human beings in a group, they will seek out
a leader.
This is not a terrible burden to the human
animal. Our success as a species is owed, pretty
much entirely, to our ingenuously complex social
structure. Without cooperation there are no bridges,
no skyscrapers, no smart phones, no modern
marvels. There’s just a cluster of humans—or
solitary humans, perhaps—living out short lives
scavenging for fruit and dreading every winter when
the plants begin to die.
The problem I have with Libertarian thought is
this: they believe that market forces can bring us the
material miracles of the 21st century. They believe
that the freer the market, the more humankind will
prosper. The less the government is involved, the
more we will all be happy campers. What most of
them don’t realize is just how unnecessary and
recent the “middle class” that most of them belong
to is. Corporations don’t really need happy, healthy
American workers. They can ship jobs overseas.
They can hire illegal immigrants. They can pay
people less than a human being could live off of.
They could create a country with a small upper class
and a huge lower class. And there are only two things
stopping them: regulations and their consumer base.
However, what do they care if they sell one Xbox for
$2,000 to a fellow rich person or twenty Xboxes to
poor people for $100 a piece? It all amounts to the
same. The wealthy can adapt to exist in any society,
so long as that society recognizes their wealth. They
don't need a middle class—we in the middle class
need a middle class.
Another problem with “free markets” is that
they place all the power into the hands of the
consumer. If we’re ever to have high speed railroads,
it won’t be because of a government mandate—it will
be because someone sees the project as potentially
profitable. This is all well and good until you
consider all the places wherein the profit motive fails
to produce peak results: medicine, the environment
(no one ever got rich cleaning an oil spill), taking
care of the elderly or infirm (no money in that).
Libertarianism, to my mind, is the rich man’s
way of telling us all: wouldn’t life be better if
everyone just paid their own way? And the answer is,
of course, no. It’s much better if we pay some of our
way, because the quality of life we lead now is
actually largely subsidized by tax dollars. When
those tax dollars vanish, life is going to be a lot
harder for people who never even realized just how
much they relied on the government.
Libertarians often make the moral argument
that it's unethical to force people to pay taxes. Force
is a big word among Libertarians, and it’s not a
dishonest one. But let’s look at who’s being forced.
If we nationalize healthcare: taxpayers—
especially those making over $250,000—are being
forced to foot the bill. However, now everyone gets
to choose between state-run healthcare or private
healthcare.
If we nationalize higher education: taxpayers
are being forced to pay more—but now kids from low
income families can afford higher education.
Do you see how a little force goes a long way to
create more opportunities and better choices for
everyone?
Let’s be clear on one point here: people are
dumb and the human race is fucked no matter what
it does. We’ve accomplished some neat things—but
the expiration date probably draweth nigh.
Maybe I’m wrong. I hope I am. I’d hate for
Shakespeare and Einstein to be snuffed out forever.
But here’s the thing: we have a choice. We can be
ruled by the politicians or the money-holders. Right
now, the money-holders pretty much own the
politicians anyway and you see how badly things are
going.
Let’s just stand back for a second and ask
ourselves what a corporation wants from us—two