“Consumption,” as
Adam Smith declared in The Wealth of
Nations, “is the sole end and purpose of all production.” This makes sense, for if something has not
been produced, how can it exist to be consumed?
And why produce something if it is not intended for consumption?
"Consumption is the sole end and purpose of all production." |
Apart from
charity, there are only two ways to consume.
Either people produce something for their own consumption or to trade to
others for what others have produced, or they take what they want by force.
And that, in sum,
is the logic of empire.
It has been said
with a great deal of truth that all wars are economic. It has also been said with equal truth that
all wars are religious . . . which is easier to understand than saying all wars
are philosophical.
This, too, makes
sense, for why would anyone willingly go to war except to gain some material
advantage or prevent some material disadvantage? And why would anyone either harm others or
defend himself if his faith or philosophy did not condone or encourage it? All wars are therefore just at the natural
and the supernatural level — to those who engage in them.
If all wars, up
to a point, are economic and religious, so too are all empires. If they were not, they would not be empires.
Webster: "Power naturally and necessarily follows property." |
The term
“empire,” in fact, comes from the Latin verb imperare, “to command.”
“Emperor” comes from imperator,
“commander,” and signified “one worthy to command Romans,” an accolade that
originally could only be bestowed by Roman soldiers on someone who had led them
into battle.
To explain, there
are, in general, three ways in which human society can be arranged,
economically speaking. Confusing
matters, these are endlessly subdivided and often overlap, and go by as many
different terms as human ingenuity can devise.
At the end of the day, however, one of the three ways predominates, and
that — usually — determines the degree to which a society can be termed just.
The first type of
society is the one held as ideal by the major faiths and philosophies of the
world. This form of society is based on
the inherent, natural dignity and sovereignty of the human person under God.
The fundamental
principle in this first type of society is that every person should have the
equal opportunity and access to the means to be productive, for that is the
most effective way of securing the natural rights of life and liberty. Since labor, land, and technology are all
productive, every individual has the natural right to be an owner of labor,
land, and technology.
"Induce as many as possible of the people to become owners." |
Nature itself would urge him to this. We have seen that this great
labor question cannot be solved save by assuming as a principle that private
ownership must be held sacred and inviolable. The law, therefore, should favor
ownership, and its policy should be to induce as many as possible of the people
to become owners.
Some call this
ideal “the Distributist State,” from the vague proposals put forth by Gilbert
Keith Chesterton and Joseph Hilaire
Pierre René Belloc. Another term
is “the Just Third Way,” from the more specific program developed by the Center
for Economic and Social Justice (CESJ).
The second type
of society is one that corrupts, even perverts the natural law principles of
the first type. People may pay lip
service to the fundamental principles of life, liberty, and private property,
but do not (as a rule) consider a society characterized by widespread capital
ownership anything other than an impracticable idea. Capital ownership must be concentrated in
order to make the system work.
This is capitalism. Although the term is relatively new, the
reality has been around from the dawn of civilization.
There are as many
specific justifications for this type of society as there are people. In reality, however, there are only two
justifications.
When human labor
is the predominant factor of production, the rich and powerful justify human
chattel slavery on the grounds that “those people” either are not really human
and therefore do not have natural rights, or they are inferior humans and need
others to take care of them. When land
or technology is the predominant factor of production, the two justifications
are tailored or edited to fit the new circumstances.
The third type of
society is a reaction against the second type.
This type of society does not merely pervert or corrupt the natural law
principles of the first type of society, adherents claim to abolish them
completely.
Rights are no
longer believed to be inherent in each human person by nature. Instead, the theory is that rights are vested
in humanity in general, and delegated to actual people as deemed necessary or
expedient by those in power.
"The Soul of the Hive." |
In socialism, no
individual has a right to life, liberty, or private property, except as
permitted by the collective, whatever form it takes, and whatever it is
called. Ultimately, the State owns
everything and everybody.
True empire is
impossible under the first form of society, one in which capital ownership, and
thus power, is widely distributed and the dignity and sovereignty of the human
person under God is respected.
Consequently, the two forms of empire conform to the capitalist and the
socialist economic models, and thus loosely to the two ways of consumption.
In the capitalist
form of empire, imperium is extended over new territories and peoples to
control production. This form of
imperialism often requires military force, although absorption by more peaceful
means is preferred. It is not profitable
to kill the sheep one expects to sheer.
War is expensive
and, while loot can make it profitable, trade and taxation are much more
profitable in the long run. With
significant lapses, the Roman and the British Empires conformed more or less to
the capitalist imperial model.
In the socialist
form of empire, imperium is extended in order to appropriate what belongs to
others. This form of imperialism always requires military force, for
peaceful means usually leave some measure of wealth in the hands of the
original owners so that they can continue to be productive and be sheered
repeatedly, rather than slaughtered for a one-time meal.
Consequently, the
socialist form of empire is usually stagnant technologically, often relying on
importing or pirating technology from outside, as well as requiring frequent
infusions of cash. This is because
unless a concerted effort is made to encourage innovation (as in the Soviet
Union), production tends to decline.
Even then, the results are often disappointing compared to a capitalist
society or one in which capital is broadly owned.
In consequence,
the socialist form of empire must expand, and it must expand by conquest, not
by trade or treaty. Only by taking what
others have produced can a socialist empire make up for its failure to produce
adequately or, in some cases, at all.
Alexander the Great as a god (Herakles) |
Regardless whether
it is capitalist or socialist, however, the logic of empire is contrary to the
philosophy of the three great Abrahamic religions, Judaism, Christianity, and
Islam. These are Aristotelian. That means there are absolute moral
standards, the natural law written in the hearts of all men.
Being based on
human nature created by God as a reflection of His own Nature, the natural law
can be discerned by reason, and reason is the foundation of faith. As the three great Medieval Aristotelians,
Thomas Aquinas, Moses Maimonides, and Ibn Khaldûn, agreed, right and wrong
depend on what makes sense. In the
Aristotelian framework, law is reason, lex
ratio.
For those who break
with Aristotelian philosophy, however, faith without reason becomes the order
of the day. And that changes everything.
Aristotle, Alexander the Great's tutor. |
For an
anti-Aristotelian (to coin a term), something need only be held with great
faith to be true. Where for the
Aristotelian the content of the natural law discerned by reason determines what
is right and wrong, for the anti-Aristotelian faith in what is right and wrong
determines the content of the natural law.
All things become subject to the will of the strongest. The will (subjective faith) triumphs over the
intellect (objective reason).
With the triumph
of the will, might makes right. Without
any objective standards of right and wrong, whatever someone with enough power
can justify becomes right; pure moral relativism reigns.
Moral relativism
breeds socialism and vice versa, if
for no other reason (as Lord Acton noted) than power tends to corrupt, and
absolute power tends to corrupt absolutely. All other principles, even the doctrines of
religion, are subordinated to personal opinion.
And that changes
the rules of the game.
#30#