The "occupy"
protest movement is thriving off the claim that the 99% are being
exploited by the 1%, and there is truth in what they say. But they
have the identities of the groups wrong. They imagine that it is
the 1% of highest wealth holders who are the problem. In fact, that
1% includes some of the smartest, most innovative people in the
country – the people who invent, market, and distribute material
blessings to the whole population. They also own the capital that
sustains productivity and growth.
But there is
another 1% out there, those who do live parasitically off the population
and exploit the 99%. Moreover, there is a long intellectual tradition,
dating back to the late middle ages that draws attention to the
strange reality that a tiny minority lives off the productive labor
of the overwhelming majority.
I’m speaking
of the State, which even today is made up of a tiny sliver of the
population, but is the direct cause of all the impoverishing wars,
inflation, taxes, regimentation, and social conflict. This 1% is
the direct cause of the violence, the censorship, the unemployment,
and vast amounts of poverty, too.
Look at the
numbers, rounding from latest data. The U.S. population is 307 million.
There are about 20 million government employees at all levels, which
makes 6.5%. But 6.2 million of these people are public school teachers,
whom I think we can say are not really the ruling elite. That takes
us down to 4.4%.
We can knock
of another half million who work for the post office, and probably
the same who work for various service department bureaus. Probably
another million do not work in any enforcement arm of the State,
and there’s also the amazing labor-pool fluff that comes with any
government work. Local governments do not cause nation-wide problems
(usually), and the same might be said of the 50 states. The real
problem is at the federal level (8.5 million), from which we can
subtract fluff, drones, and service workers.
In the end,
we end up with about 3 million people who constitute what is commonly
called the State. For short, we can just call these people the 1%.
The 1% do not
generate any wealth of their own. Everything they have they get
by taking from others under the cover of law. They live at our expense.
Without us, the State as an institution would die.
Here we come
to the core of the issue. What is the State and what does it do?
There is vast confusion about this issue, insofar as it is talked
about at all. For hundreds of years, people have imagined that the
State might be an organic institution that develops naturally out
of some social contract. Or perhaps the State is our benefactor
because it provides services we could not otherwise provide for
ourselves.
In classrooms
and in political discussions, there is very little if any honest
talk about what the State is and what it does. But in the libertarian
tradition, matters are much clearer. From Bastiat to Rothbard, the
answer has been before our eyes. The State is the only institution
in society that is permitted by law to use aggressive force against
person and property.
Let’s understand
through a simple example. Let’s say you go into a restaurant and
hate the wallpaper. You can complain and try to persuade the owner
to change it. If he doesn’t change it, you can decide not to go
back. But if you break in, take money out of the cash register,
buy paint, and cover the wallpaper yourself, you will be charged
with criminal wrongdoing and perhaps go to jail. Everyone in society
agrees that you did the wrong thing.
But the State
is different. If it doesn’t like the wallpaper, it can pass a law
(or maybe even not that) and send a memo. It can mandate a change.
It doesn’t have to do the repainting. The State can make you repaint
the place. If you refuse, you are guilty of criminal wrongdoing.
Same goals,
different means, two very different sets of criminals. The State
is the institution that essentially redefines criminal wrongdoing
to make itself exempt from the law that governs everyone else.
It
is the same with every tax, every regulation, every mandate, and
every single word of the federal code. It all represents coercion.
Even in the area of money and banking, it is the State that created
and sustains the Fed and the dollar because it forcibly limits competition
in money and banking, preventing people from making gold or silver
money, or innovating in other ways. And in some ways, this is the
most dreadful intervention of all, because it allows the State to
destroy our money on a whim.
The State is
everybody’s enemy. Why don’t the protesters get this? Because they
are victims of propaganda by the State, doled out in public school,
that attempts to blame all human suffering on private parties and
free enterprise. They do not comprehend that the real enemy is the
institution that brainwashes them to think the way they do.
They are right
that society is rife with conflicts, and that the contest is wildly
lopsided. It is indeed the 99% vs. the 1%. They’re just wrong about
the identity of the enemy.
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