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Proposed Roads To Freedom
PART II - PROBLEMS OF THE FUTURE   PART II - PROBLEMS OF THE FUTURE - CHAPTER V - GOVERNMENT AND LAW
Bertrand Russell
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       _ CHAPTER V - GOVERNMENT AND LAW
       GOVERNMENT and Law, in their very essence, consist
       of restrictions on freedom, and freedom is the
       greatest of political goods.[46] A hasty reasoner might
       conclude without further ado that Law and government
       are evils which must be abolished if freedom
       is our goal. But this consequence, true or false, cannot
       be proved so simply. In this chapter we shall
       examine the arguments of Anarchists against law and
       the State. We shall proceed on the assumption that
       freedom is the supreme aim of a good social system;
       but on this very basis we shall find the Anarchist
       contentions very questionable.
       [46] I do not say freedom is the greatest of ALL goods: the best
       things come from within--they are such things as creative art,
       and love, and thought. Such things can be helped or hindered
       by political conditions, but not actually produced by them; and
       freedom is, both in itself and in its relation to these other goods
       the best thing that political and economic conditions can secure.
       Respect for the liberty of others is not a natural
       impulse with most men: envy and love of power lead
       ordinary human nature to find pleasure in interferences
       with the lives of others. If all men's actions
       were wholly unchecked by external authority, we
       should not obtain a world in which all men would be
       free. The strong would oppress the weak, or the
       majority would oppress the minority, or the lovers
       of violence would oppress the more peaceable people.
       I fear it cannot be said that these bad impulses are
       WHOLLY due to a bad social system, though it must
       be conceded that the present competitive organization
       of society does a great deal to foster the worst
       elements in human nature. The love of power is an
       impulse which, though innate in very ambitious men,
       is chiefly promoted as a rule by the actual experience
       of power. In a world where none could acquire
       much power, the desire to tyrannize would be much
       less strong than it is at present. Nevertheless, I
       cannot think that it would be wholly absent, and
       those in whom it would exist would often be men of
       unusual energy and executive capacity. Such men,
       if they are not restrained by the organized will of
       the community, may either succeed in establishing
       a despotism, or, at any rate, make such a vigorous
       attempt as can only be defeated through a period
       of prolonged disturbance. And apart from the love
       or political power, there is the love of power over
       individuals. If threats and terrorism were not prevented
       by law, it can hardly be doubted that cruelty would
       be rife in the relations of men and women, and of
       parents and children. It is true that the habits of
       a community can make such cruelty rare, but these
       habits, I fear, are only to be produced through the
       prolonged reign of law. Experience of backwoods
       communities, mining camps and other such places
       seems to show that under new conditions men easily
       revert to a more barbarous attitude and practice.
       It would seem, therefore, that, while human nature
       remains as it is, there will be more liberty for all in a
       community where some acts of tyranny by individuals
       are forbidden, than in a community where the law
       leaves each individual free to follow his every impulse.
       But, although the necessity of some form of government
       and law must for the present be conceded, it is
       important to remember that all law and government
       is in itself in some degree an evil, only justifiable when
       it prevents other and greater evils. Every use of the
       power of the State needs, therefore, to be very closely
       scrutinized, and every possibility of diminishing its
       power is to be welcomed provided it does not lead to
       a reign of private tyranny.
       The power of the State is partly legal, partly
       economic: acts of a kind which the State dislikes can
       be punished by the criminal law, and individuals who
       incur the displeasure of the State may find it hard
       to earn a livelihood.
       The views of Marx on the State are not very
       clear. On the one hand he seems willing,, like the
       modern State Socialists, to allow great power to the
       State, but on the other hand he suggests that when
       the Socialist revolution has been consummated, the
       State, as we know it, will disappear. Among the
       measures which are advocated in the Communist
       Manifesto as immediately desirable, there are several
       which would very greatly increase the power of
       the existing State. For example, "Centralization
       of credit in the hands of the State, by means of a
       national bank with State capital and an exclusive
       monopoly;" and again, "Centralization of the
       means of communication and transport in the hands
       of the State." But the Manifesto goes on to say:
       When, in the course of development, class distinctions
       have disappeared, and all production has been concentrated
       in the hands of a vast association of the whole
       nation, the public power will lose its political character.
       Political power, properly so called, is merely the organised
       power of one class for oppressing another. If the
       proletariat during its contest with the bourgeoisie is
       compelled, by the force of circumstances, to organize
       itself as a class, if, by means of a revolution, it makes
       itself the ruling class, and, as such, sweeps away by
       force the old conditions of production, then it will,
       along with these conditions, have swept away the conditions
       for the existence of class antagonisms, and of
       classes generally, and will thereby have abolished its
       own supremacy as a class.
       In place of the old bourgeois society, with its classes
       and class antagonisms, we shall have an association, in
       which; the free development of each is the condition for
       the free development of all.[47]
       [47] Communist Manifesto, p. 22.
       This attitude Marx preserved in essentials
       throughout his life. Accordingly, it is not to be
       wondered at that his followers, so far as regards their
       immediate aims, have in the main become out-and-out
       State Socialists. On the other hand, the Syndicalists,
       who accept from Marx the doctrine of the class
       war, which they regard as what is really vital in his
       teaching, reject the State with abhorrence and wish
       to abolish it wholly, in which respect they are at one
       with the Anarchists. The Guild Socialists, though
       some persons in this country regard them as extremists,
       really represent the English love of compromise.
       The Syndicalist arguments as to the dangers inherent
       in the power of the State have made them dissatisfied
       with the old State Socialism, but they are
       unable to accept the Anarchist view that society can
       dispense altogether with a central authority.
       Accordingly they propose that there should be two
       co-equal instruments of Government in a community,
       the one geographical, representing the consumers,
       and essentially the continuation of the democratic
       State; the other representing the producers, organized,
       not geographically, but in guilds, after the
       manner of industrial unionism. These two author-
       ities will deal with different classes of questions.
       Guild Socialists do not regard the industrial authority
       as forming part of the State, for they contend
       that it is the essence of the State to be geographical;
       but the industrial authority will resemble the present
       State in the fact that it will have coercive powers,
       and that its decrees will be enforced, when necessary.
       It is to be suspected that Syndicalists also, much as
       they object to the existing State, would not object
       to coercion of individuals in an industry by the
       Trade Union in that industry. Government within
       the Trade Union would probably be quite as strict
       as State government is now. In saying this we are
       assuming that the theoretical Anarchism of Syndicalist
       leaders would not survive accession to power,
       but I am afraid experience shows that this is not a
       very hazardous assumption.
       Among all these different views, the one which
       raises the deepest issue is the Anarchist contention
       that all coercion by the community is unnecessary.
       Like most of the things that Anarchists say, there
       is much more to be urged in support of this view
       than most people would suppose at first sight. Kropotkin,
       who is its ablest exponent, points out how
       much has been achieved already by the method of free
       agreement. He does not wish to abolish government
       in the sense of collective decisions: what he does wish
       to abolish is the system by which a decision is en-
       forced upon those who oppose it.[48] The whole system
       of representative government and majority rule is
       to him a bad thing.[49] He points to such instances
       as the agreements among the different railway systems
       of the Continent for the running of through
       expresses and for co-operation generally. He points
       out that in such cases the different companies or
       authorities concerned each appoint a delegate, and that
       the delegates suggest a basis of agreement, which has
       to be subsequently ratified by each of the bodies ap-
       pointing them. The assembly of delegates has no
       coercive power whatever, and a majority can do
       nothing against a recalcitrant minority. Yet this has
       not prevented the conclusion of very elaborate systems
       of agreements. By such methods, so Anarchists
       contend, the USEFUL functions of government can be
       carried out without any coercion. They maintain
       that the usefulness of agreement is so patent as to
       make co-operation certain if once the predatory
       motives associated with the present system of private
       property were removed.
       [48] "On the other hand, the STATE has also been confused with
       GOVERNMENT. As there can be no State without government, it
       has been sometimes said that it is the absence of government,
       and not the abolition of the State, that should be the aim.
       "It seems to me, however, that State and government represent
       two ideas of a different kind. The State idea implies quite
       another idea to that of government. It not only includes the
       existence of a power placed above society, but also a territorial
       concentration and a concentration of many functions of the life
       of society in the hands of a few or even of all. It implies new
       relations among the members of society.
       "This characteristic distinction, which perhaps escapes
       notice at first sight, appears clearly when the origin of the State
       is studied." Kropotkin, "The State." p. 4.
       [49] Representative government has accomplished its historical
       mission; it has given a mortal blow to Court-rule; and by
       its debates it has awakened public interest in public questions.
       But, to see in it the government of the future Socialist society,
       is to commit a gross error. Each economical phase of life
       implies its own political phase; and it is impossible to touch the
       very basis of the present economical life--private property--
       without a corresponding change in the very basis of the political
       organization. Life already shows in which direction the change
       will be made. Not in increasing the powers of the State, but
       in resorting to free organization and free federation in all those
       branches which are now considered as attributes of the State."
       Kropotkin, "Anarchist Communism," pp. 28-29.
       Attractive as this view is, I cannot resist the
       conclusion that it results from impatience and
       represents the attempt to find a short-cut toward the
       ideal which all humane people desire.
       Let us begin with the question of private crime.[50]
       Anarchists maintain that the criminal is manufactured
       by bad social conditions and would disappear
       in such a world as they aim at creating.[51] No doubt
       there is a great measure of truth in this view. There
       would be little motive to robbery, for example, in an
       Anarchist world, unless it were organized on a large
       scale by a body of men bent on upsetting the Anarchist
       regime. It may also be conceded that impulses
       toward criminal violence could be very largely eliminated
       by a better education. But all such contentions,
       it seems to me, have their limitations. To take
       an extreme case, we cannot suppose that there would
       be no lunatics in an Anarchist community, and some
       of these lunatics would, no doubt, be homicidal.
       Probably no one would argue that they ought to be
       left at liberty. But there are no sharp lines in nature;
       from the homicidal lunatic to the sane man
       of violent passions there is a continuous gradation.
       Even in the most perfect community there will be
       men and women, otherwise sane, who will feel an
       impulse to commit murder from jealousy. These are
       now usually restrained by the fear of punishment,
       but if this fear were removed, such murders would
       probably become much more common, as may be
       seen from the present behavior of certain soldiers
       on leave. Moreover, certain kinds of conduct arouse
       public hostility, and would almost inevitably lead to
       lynching, if no other recognized method of punishment
       existed. There is in most men a certain natural
       vindictiveness, not always directed against the worst
       members of the community. For example, Spinoza
       was very nearly murdered by the mob because he was
       suspected of undue friendliness to France at a time
       when Holland was at war with that country. Apart
       from such cases, there would be the very real danger
       of an organized attempt to destroy Anarchism
       and revive ancient oppressions. Is it to be supposed,
       for example, that Napoleon, if he had been born into
       such a community as Kropotkin advocates, would
       have acquiesced tamely in a world where his genius
       could find no scope? I cannot see what should prevent
       a combination of ambitious men forming themselves
       into a private army, manufacturing their own
       munitions, and at last enslaving the defenseless citizens,
       who had relied upon the inherent attractiveness
       of liberty. It would not be consistent with the principles
       of Anarchism for the community to interfere
       with the drilling of a private army, no matter what
       its objects might be (though, of course, an opposing
       private army might be formed by men with different
       views). Indeed, Kropotkin instances the old volunteers
       in Great Britain as an example of a movement
       on Anarchist lines.[52] Even if a predatory army were
       not formed from within, it might easily come from a
       neighboring nation, or from races on the borderland
       of civilization. So long as the love of power exists,
       I do not see how it can be prevented from finding an
       outlet in oppression except by means of the organized
       force of the community.
       [50] On this subject there is an excellent discussion in the
       before-mentioned work of Monsieur Naquet.
       [51] "As to the third--the chief--objection, which maintains
       the necessity of a government for punishing those who break the
       law of society, there is so much to say about it that it hardly can
       be touched incidentally. The more we study the question, the
       more we are brought to the conclusion that society itself is
       responsible for the anti-social deeds perpetrated in its midst, and
       that no punishment, no prisons, and no hangmen can diminish
       the numbers of such deeds; nothing short of a reorganization of
       society itself. Three-quarters of all the acts which are brought
       every year before our courts have their origin, either directly or
       indirectly, in the present disorganized state of society with
       regard to the production and distribution of wealth--not in the
       perversity of human nature. As to the relatively few anti-social
       deeds which result from anti-social inclinations of separate
       individuals, it is not by prisons, nor even by resorting to the
       hangmen, that we can diminish their numbers. By our prisons,
       we merely multiply them and render them worse. By our detectives,
       our `price of blood,' our executions, and our jails, we
       spread in society such a terrible flow of basest passions and
       habits, that he who should realize the effects of these institutions
       to their full extent, would be frightened by what society is
       doing under the pretext of maintaining morality. We must
       search for other remedies, and the remedies have been indicated
       long since." Kropotkin, "Anarchist Communism," pp. 31-32.
       [52] "Anarchist Communism," p. 27.
       The conclusion, which appears to be forced upon
       us, is that the Anarchist ideal of a community in
       which no acts are forbidden by law is not, at any
       rate for the present, compatible with the stability of
       such a world as the Anarchists desire. In order to
       obtain and preserve a world resembling as closely
       as possible that at which they aim, it will still be
       necessary that some acts should be forbidden by
       law. We may put the chief of these under three
       heads:
       1. Theft.
       2. Crimes of violence.
       3. The creation of organizations intended to subvert
       the Anarchist regime by force.
       We will briefly recapitulate what has been said
       already as to the necessity of these prohibitions.
       1. Theft.--It is true that in an Anarchist world
       there will be no destitution, and therefore no thefts
       motivated by starvation. But such thefts are at present
       by no means the most considerable or the most
       harmful. The system of rationing, which is to be
       applied to luxuries, will leave many men with fewer
       luxuries than they might desire. It will give
       opportunities for peculation by those who are in control
       of the public stores, and it will leave the possibility of
       appropriating such valuable objects of art as would
       naturally be preserved in public museums. It may
       be contended that such forms of theft would be prevented
       by public opinion. But public opinion is not
       greatly operative upon an individual unless it is the
       opinion of his own group. A group of men combined
       for purposes of theft might readily defy the public
       opinion of the majority unless that public opinion
       made itself effective by the use of force against them.
       Probably, in fact, such force would be applied
       through popular indignation, but in that case we
       should revive the evils of the criminal law with the
       added evils of uncertainty, haste and passion, which
       are inseparable from the practice of lynching. If,
       as we have suggested, it were found necessary to provide
       an economic stimulus to work by allowing fewer
       luxuries to idlers, this would afford a new motive for
       theft on their part and a new necessity for some form
       of criminal law.
       2. Crimes of Violence.--Cruelty to children,
       crimes of jealousy, rape, and so forth, are almost
       certain to occur in any society to some extent. The
       prevention of such acts is essential to the existence
       of freedom for the weak. If nothing were done to
       hinder them, it is to be feared that the customs of a
       society would gradually become rougher, and that
       acts which are now rare would cease to be so. If
       Anarchists are right in maintaining that the existence
       of such an economic system as they desire would
       prevent the commission of crimes of this kind, the
       laws forbidding them would no longer come into
       operation, and would do no harm to liberty. If, on
       the other hand, the impulse to such actions persisted,
       it would be necessary that steps should be taken to
       restrain men from indulging it.
       3. The third class of difficulties is much the most
       serious and involves much the most drastic interference
       with liberty. I do not see how a private army
       could be tolerated within an Anarchist community,
       and I do not see how it could be prevented except by
       a general prohibition of carrying arms. If there
       were no such prohibition, rival parties would organize
       rival forces, and civil war would result. Yet, if there
       is such a prohibition, it cannot well be carried out
       without a very considerable interference with individual
       liberty. No doubt, after a time, the idea of
       using violence to achieve a political object might die
       down, as the practice of duelling has done. But such
       changes of habit and outlook are facilitated by legal
       prohibition, and would hardly come about without
       it. I shall not speak yet of the international aspect
       of this same problem, for I propose to deal with that
       in the next chapter, but it is clear that the same
       considerations apply with even greater force to the
       relations between nations.
       If we admit, however reluctantly, that a criminal
       law is necessary and that the force of the community
       must be brought to bear to prevent certain kinds of
       actions, a further question arises: How is crime to be
       treated? What is the greatest measure of humanity
       and respect for freedom that is compatible with the
       recognition of such a thing as crime? The first thing
       to recognize is that the whole conception of guilt or
       sin should be utterly swept away. At present, the
       criminal is visited with the displeasure of the community:
       the sole method applied to prevent the occurrence
       of crime is the infliction of pain upon the
       criminal. Everything possible is done to break his
       spirit and destroy his self-respect. Even those
       pleasures which would be most likely to have a civilizing
       effect are forbidden to him, merely on the ground
       that they are pleasures, while much of the suffering
       inflicted is of a kind which can only brutalize and
       degrade still further. I am not speaking, of course,
       of those few penal institutions which have made a
       serious study of reforming the criminal. Such
       institutions, especially in America, have been proved
       capable of achieving the most remarkable results, but
       they remain everywhere exceptional. The broad rule
       is still that the criminal is made to feel the displeasure
       of society. He must emerge from such a treatment
       either defiant and hostile, or submissive and cringing,
       with a broken spirit and a loss of self-respect.
       Neither of these results is anything but evil. Nor
       can any good result be achieved by a method of treatment
       which embodies reprobation.
       When a man is suffering from an infectious disease
       he is a danger to the community, and it is necessary
       to restrict his liberty of movement. But no one
       associates any idea of guilt with such a situation.
       On the contrary, he is an object of commiseration to
       his friends. Such steps as science recommends are
       taken to cure him of his disease, and he submits as
       a rule without reluctance to the curtailment of liberty
       involved meanwhile. The same method in spirit ought
       to be shown in the treatment of what is called
       "crime." It is supposed, of course, that the criminal
       is actuated by calculations of self-interest, and
       that the fear of punishment, by supplying a contrary
       motive of self-interest affords the best deterrent,
       The dog, to gain some private end,
       Went mad and bit the man.
       This is the popular view of crime; yet no dog goes
       mad from choice, and probably the same is true of the
       great majority of criminals, certainly in the case
       of crimes of passion. Even in cases where self-interest
       is the motive, the important thing is to prevent
       the crime, not to make the criminal suffer. Any
       suffering which may be entailed by the process of
       prevention ought to be regarded as regrettable, like the
       pain involved in a surgical operation. The man who
       commits a crime from an impulse to violence ought
       to be subjected to a scientific psychological treatment,
       designed to elicit more beneficial impulses. The
       man who commits a crime from calculations of self-
       interest ought to be made to feel that self-interest
       itself, when it is fully understood, can be better served
       by a life which is useful to the community than by one
       which is harmful. For this purpose it is chiefly necessary
       to widen his outlook and increase the scope of his
       desires. At present, when a man suffers from insufficient
       love for his fellow-creatures, the method of
       curing him which is commonly adopted seems scarcely
       designed to succeed, being, indeed, in essentials, the
       same as his attitude toward them. The object of
       the prison administration is to save trouble, not to
       study the individual case. He is kept in captivity in
       a cell from which all sight of the earth is shut out: he
       is subjected to harshness by warders, who have too
       often become brutalized by their occupation.[53] He is
       solemnly denounced as an enemy to society. He is
       compelled to perform mechanical tasks, chosen for
       their wearisomeness. He is given no education and no
       incentive to self-improvement. Is it to be wondered
       at if, at the end of such a course of treatment, his
       feelings toward the community are no more friendly
       than they were at the beginning?
       [53] This was written before the author had any personal
       experience of the prison system. He personally met with
       nothing but kindness at the hands of the prison officials.
       Severity of punishment arose through vindictiveness
       and fear in an age when many criminals escaped
       justice altogether, and it was hoped that savage
       sentences would outweigh the chance of escape in the
       mind of the criminal. At present a very large part
       of the criminal law is concerned in safeguarding the
       rights of property, that is to say--as things are
       now--the unjust privileges of the rich. Those whose
       principles lead them into conflict with government,
       like Anarchists, bring a most formidable indictment
       against the law and the authorities for the unjust
       manner in which they support the status quo. Many
       of the actions by which men have become rich are far
       more harmful to the community than the obscure
       crimes of poor men, yet they go unpunished because
       they do not interfere with the existing order. If the
       power of the community is to be brought to bear to
       prevent certain classes of actions through the agency
       of the criminal law, it is as necessary that these
       actions should really be those which are harmful to
       the community, as it is that the treatment of "criminals"
       should be freed from the conception of guilt
       and inspired by the same spirit as is shown in the
       treatment of disease. But, if these two conditions
       were fulfilled, I cannot help thinking that a society
       which preserved the existence of law would be preferable
       to one conducted on the unadulterated principles
       of Anarchism.
       So far we have been considering the power which
       the State derives from the criminal law. We have
       every reason to think that this power cannot be
       entirely abolished, though it can be exercised in a
       wholly different spirit, without the vindictiveness and
       the moral reprobation which now form its essence.
       We come next to the consideration of the economic
       power of the State and the influence which it
       can exert through its bureaucracy. State Socialists
       argue as if there would be no danger to liberty in a
       State not based upon capitalism. This seems to me an
       entire delusion. Given an official caste, however selected,
       there are bound to be a set of men whose whole
       instincts will drive them toward tyranny. Together
       with the natural love of power, they will have a rooted
       conviction (visible now in the higher ranks of the
       Civil Service) that they alone know enough to be able
       to judge what is for the good of the community. Like
       all men who administer a system, they will come to
       feel the system itself sacrosanct. The only changes
       they will desire will be changes in the direction of
       further regulations as to how the people are to
       enjoy the good things kindly granted to them by their
       benevolent despots. Whoever thinks this picture overdrawn
       must have failed to study the influence and
       methods of Civil Servants at present. On every matter
       that arises, they know far more than the general
       public about all the DEFINITE facts involved; the one
       thing they do not know is "where the shoe pinches."
       But those who know this are probably not skilled in
       stating their case, not able to say off-hand exactly
       how many shoes are pinching how many feet, or what
       is the precise remedy required. The answer prepared
       for Ministers by the Civil Service is accepted by the
       "respectable" public as impartial, and is regarded
       as disposing of the case of malcontents except on a
       first-class political question on which elections may
       be won or lost. That at least is the way in which
       things are managed in England. And there is every
       reason to fear that under State Socialism the power
       of officials would be vastly greater than it is at
       present.
       Those who accept the orthodox doctrine of democracy
       contend that, if ever the power of capital were
       removed, representative institutions would suffice to
       undo the evils threatened by bureaucracy. Against
       this view, Anarchists and Syndicalists have directed
       a merciless criticism. French Syndicalists especially,
       living, as they do, in a highly democratized country,
       have had bitter experience of the way in which the
       power of the State can be employed against a
       progressive minority. This experience has led them to
       abandon altogether the belief in the divine right of
       majorities. The Constitution that they would desire
       would be one which allowed scope for vigorous minorities,
       conscious of their aims and prepared to work
       for them. It is undeniable that, to all who care for
       progress, actual experience of democratic representative
       Government is very disillusioning. Admitting--
       as I think we must--that it is preferable to any
       PREVIOUS form of Government, we must yet acknowledge
       that much of the criticism directed against it by
       Anarchists and Syndicalists is thoroughly justified.
       Such criticism would have had more influence if
       any clear idea of an alternative to parliamentary
       democracy had been generally apprehended. But it
       must be confessed that Syndicalists have not presented
       their case in a way which is likely to attract
       the average citizen. Much of what they say amounts
       to this: that a minority, consisting of skilled workers
       in vital industries, can, by a strike, make the economic
       life of the whole community impossible, and can in
       this way force their will upon the nation. The action
       aimed at is compared to the seizure of a power
       station, by which a whole vast system can be paralyzed.
       Such a doctrine is an appeal to force, and
       is naturally met by an appeal to force on the other
       side. It is useless for the Syndicalists to protest that
       they only desire power in order to promote liberty:
       the world which they are seeking to establish does not,
       as yet, appeal to the effective will of the community,
       and cannot be stably inaugurated until it does do so.
       Persuasion is a slow process, and may sometimes
       be accelerated by violent methods; to this extent such
       methods may be justified. But the ultimate goal of
       any reformer who aims at liberty can only be reached
       through persuasion. The attempt to thrust liberty
       by force upon those who do not desire what we consider
       liberty must always prove a failure; and Syndicalists,
       like other reformers, must ultimately rely
       upon persuasion for success.
       But it would be a mistake to confuse aims with
       methods: however little we may agree with the proposal
       to force the millennium on a reluctant community
       by starvation, we may yet agree that much of
       what the Syndicalists desire to achieve is desirable.
       Let us dismiss from our minds such criticisms of
       parliamentary government as are bound up with the
       present system of private property, and consider
       only those which would remain true in a collectivist
       community. Certain defects seem inherent in the
       very nature of representative institutions. There is
       a sense of self-importance, inseparable from success
       in a contest for popular favor. There is an all-but
       unavoidable habit of hypocrisy, since experience
       shows that the democracy does not detect insincerity
       in an orator, and will, on the other hand, be shocked
       by things which even the most sincere men may think
       necessary. Hence arises a tone of cynicism among
       elected representatives, and a feeling that no man
       can retain his position in politics without deceit.
       This is as much the fault of the democracy as of the
       representatives, but it seems unavoidable so long as
       the main thing that all bodies of men demand of their
       champions is flattery. However the blame may be
       apportioned, the evil must be recognized as one which
       is bound to occur in the existing forms of democracy.
       Another evil, which is especially noticeable in large
       States, is the remoteness of the seat of government
       from many of the constituencies--a remoteness which
       is psychological even more than geographical. The
       legislators live in comfort, protected by thick walls
       and innumerable policemen from the voice of the
       mob; as time goes on they remember only dimly the
       passions and promises of their electoral campaign;
       they come to feel it an essential part of statesmanship
       to consider what are called the interests of the community
       as a whole, rather than those of some discontented
       group; but the interests of the community as
       a whole are sufficiently vague to be easily seen to
       coincide with self-interest. All these causes lead
       Parliaments to betray the people, consciously or
       unconsciously; and it is no wonder if they have produced
       a certain aloofness from democratic theory in the
       more vigorous champions of labor.
       Majority rule, as it exists in large States, is
       subject to the fatal defect that, in a very great number
       of questions, only a fraction of the nation have
       any direct interest or knowledge, yet the others have
       an equal voice in their settlement. When people have
       no direct interest in a question they are very apt
       to be influenced by irrelevant considerations; this is
       shown in the extraordinary reluctance to grant autonomy
       to subordinate nations or groups. For this
       reason, it is very dangerous to allow the nation as a
       whole to decide on matters which concern only a small
       section, whether that section be geographical or
       industrial or defined in any other way. The best
       cure for this evil, so far as can be seen at present,
       lies in allowing self-government to every important
       group within a nation in all matters that affect that
       group much more than they affect the rest of the
       community. The government of a group, chosen by
       the group, will be far more in touch with its constituents,
       far more conscious of their interests, than a
       remote Parliament nominally representing the whole
       country. The most original idea in Syndicalism--
       adopted and developed by the Guild Socialists--is the
       idea of making industries self-governing units so far
       as their internal affairs are concerned. By this
       method, extended also to such other groups as have
       clearly separable interests, the evils which have shown
       themselves in representative democracy can, I believe,
       be largely overcome.
       Guild Socialists, as we have seen, have another
       suggestion, growing naturally out of the autonomy
       of industrial guilds, by which they hope to limit the
       power of the State and help to preserve individual
       liberty. They propose that, in addition to Parliament,
       elected (as at present) on a territorial basis
       and representing the community as consumers, there
       shall also be a "Guild Congress," a glorified successor
       of the present Trade Union Congress, which
       shall consist of representatives chosen by the Guilds,
       and shall represent the community as producers.
       This method of diminishing the excessive power
       of the State has been attractively set forth by Mr.
       G. D. H. Cole in his "Self-Government in Industry."[54]
       "Where now," he says, "the State passes a Factory
       Act, or a Coal Mines Regulation Act, the Guild Congress
       of the future will pass such Acts, and its power
       of enforcing them will be the same as that of the
       State" (p. 98). His ultimate ground for advocating
       this system is that, in his opinion, it will tend to preserve
       individual liberty: "The fundamental reason
       for the preservation, in a democratic Society, of both
       the industrial and the political forms of Social organization
       is, it seems to me, that only by dividing the
       vast power now wielded by industrial capitalism can
       the individual hope to be free" (p. 91).
       [54] Bell, 1917.
       Will the system suggested by Mr. Cole have this
       result? I think it is clear that it would, in this
       respect, be an improvement on the existing system.
       Representative government cannot but be improved
       by any method which brings the representatives into
       closer touch with the interests concerned in their
       legislation; and this advantage probably would be
       secured by handing over questions of production to
       the Guild Congress. But if, in spite of the safeguards
       proposed by the Guild Socialists, the Guild Congress
       became all-powerful in such questions, if resistance
       to its will by a Guild which felt ill-used became practically
       hopeless, I fear that the evils now connected
       with the omnipotence of the State would soon reappear.
       Trade Union officials, as soon as they become
       part of the governing forces in the country, tend to
       become autocratic and conservative; they lose touch
       with their constituents and gravitate, by a psychological
       sympathy, into co-operation with the powers
       that be. Their formal installation in authority
       through the Guilds Congress would accelerate this
       process. They would soon tend to combine, in effect
       if not obviously, with those who wield authority in
       Parliament. Apart from occasional conflicts, comparable
       to the rivalry of opposing financiers which
       now sometimes disturbs the harmony of the capitalist
       world, there would, at most times, be agreement
       between the dominant personalities in the two
       Houses. And such harmony would filch away from
       the individual the liberty which he had hoped to
       secure by the quarrels of his masters.
       There is no method, if we are not mistaken, by
       which a body representing the whole community,
       whether as producers or consumers or both, can
       alone be a sufficient guardian of individual liberty.
       The only way of preserving sufficient liberty (and
       even this will be inadequate in the case of very small
       minorities) is the organization of citizens with special
       interests into groups, determined to preserve autonomy
       as regards their internal affairs, willing to
       resist interference by a strike if necessary, and
       sufficiently powerful (either in themselves or through
       their power of appealing to public sympathy) to be
       able to resist the organized forces of government
       successfully when their cause is such as many men
       think just. If this method is to be successful we
       must have not only suitable organizations but also
       a diffused respect for liberty, and an absence of
       submissiveness to government both in theory and practice.
       Some risk of disorder there must be in such a
       society, but this risk is as nothing compared to the
       danger of stagnation which is inseparable from an
       all-powerful central authority.
       We may now sum up our discussion of the powers
       of Government.
       The State, in spite of what Anarchists urge, seems
       a necessary institution for certain purposes. Peace
       and war, tariffs, regulation of sanitary conditions
       and of the sale of noxious drugs, the preservation of
       a just system of distribution: these, among others,
       are functions which could hardly be performed in
       a community in which there was no central government.
       Take, for example, the liquor traffic, or
       the opium traffic in China. If alcohol could be
       obtained at cost price without taxation, still more
       if it could be obtained for nothing, as Anarchists
       presumably desire, can we believe that there would not
       be a great and disastrous increase of drunkenness?
       China was brought to the verge of ruin by opium,
       and every patriotic Chinaman desired to see the traffic
       in opium restricted. In such matters freedom is
       not a panacea, and some degree of legal restriction
       seems imperative for the national health.
       But granting that the State, in some form, must
       continue, we must also grant, I think, that its powers
       ought to be very strictly limited to what is absolutely
       necessary. There is no way of limiting its
       powers except by means of groups which are jealous
       of their privileges and determined to preserve their
       autonomy, even if this should involve resistance to
       laws decreed by the State, when these laws interfere in
       the internal affairs of a group in ways not warranted
       by the public interest. The glorification of the State,
       and the doctrine that it is every citizen's duty to serve
       the State, are radically against progress and against
       liberty. The State, though at present a source of
       much evil, is also a means to certain good things,
       and will be needed so long as violent and destructive
       impulses remain common. But it is MERELY a means,
       and a means which needs to be very carefully and
       sparingly used if it is not to do more harm than good.
       It is not the State, but the community, the worldwide
       community of all human beings present and
       future, that we ought to serve. And a good community
       does not spring from the glory of the State,
       but from the unfettered development of individuals:
       from happiness in daily life, from congenial work
       giving opportunity for whatever constructiveness
       each man or woman may possess, from free personal
       relations embodying love and taking away the roots
       of envy in thwarted capacity from affection, and
       above all from the joy of life and its expression in
       the spontaneous creations of art and science. It is
       these things that make an age or a nation worthy
       of existence, and these things are not to be secured
       by bowing down before the State. It is the individual
       in whom all that is good must be realized, and the
       free growth of the individual must be the supreme end
       of a political system which is to re-fashion the world.
        
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       Content of PART II - PROBLEMS OF THE FUTURE: CHAPTER V - GOVERNMENT AND LAW [Bertrand Russell's book: Proposed Roads To Freedom] _