It’s All About Choices, Stupid
Tibor R. Machan
The important point is not to argue about how much people draw from each other as they make their way through life. What is crucial is that in a genuinely free country what they draw from each other they do this of their own free will; they are not lumped together by some philosopher king, like it or not.
Tibor R. Machan
There
is a phony conflict afoot that statists are fond of bringing up when
they try to discredit the free society. It is about the individual
versus the community. Champions of human liberty are often
mischaracterized as denying the significance of human community life.
As if individualists advocated that people live like hermits, apart
from their fellows, in solitude.
Of
course, individualists do not advocate anything of the kind. What they
insist upon is that human beings be understood as choosing their
associations instead of being simply herded into groups that some of
them prefer to be part of.
Nearly
everyone is better off living in the company of others. Hardly any
human activity is carried out isolated from others and even when it
appears like it, others are usually surrounding it, supporting it,
helping it along, and so forth. Solitary existence isn’t the objective
which individualists are promoting.
What
individualists are seeking is a kind of society in which people can
make a choice as to what groups they will join, for how long, where,
etc. And, yes, they also want to be left in peace for a good bit instead
of being dragged into the company of others when they’d rather carry
forth on their own. Writers, composers, painters, and the like are
among these. Again, the bottom line is that one size doesn’t fit all!
There
are animals that naturally exists linked to others of their species,
like ants or termites or many varieties of fish. But with humans what
makes them distinctive is that they make choices about these
matters--will one be part of a choir of sing in a trio or alone? Will
one be a hiker by oneself or with a bunch of friends? You get the
point.
What
the communitarians types want is for them to dictate the kind of groups
everyone must be part of. They detest the possibility of people making
up their own minds about such matters since free choice runs the risk
of noncompliance and to bring others on board for their journey of their
own free will requires successful persuasion, something that cannot be
guaranteed.
The
communitarians want to be in charge of everyone’s destiny. Their
imperialism is contrary to human nature and whenever they try it, all
hell breaks loose and we get gulags and concentration camps instead of
peaceful communities and companionships. Here is a good outline of
their social political philosophy:
"We
need to see society as an extension of ourselves , an invisible part of
our anatomy that assists us every day without dominating us and that,
like our own arms and legs, we tend when injured, and whose welfare
reconsider at all times. The relation resembles that of a violinist to
his instrument--useful but more than something useful, cared for like an
esteemed friend. If such a part of us fails, we do not discard it for a
peg leg, nor are we fired from our job because we cannot play
hopscotch. We may be a disposable member of the symphony, but our
violin is us to us. The relation is somethings--oh dear--called love."
(See, William H. Gass, "Double Vision," Harper's Magazine, Oct. 2012, p.
78.)
This
passage comes from a prominent contemporary public philosopher who I
have heard has been close to some Democratic presidents in recent years.
In any case, his ideas are close to Mr. Obama’s famous quip that we are
all in it together and his repeated blather about how no one achieves
success on his own--remember “You didn’t build that.”
The important point is not to argue about how much people draw from each other as they make their way through life. What is crucial is that in a genuinely free country what they draw from each other they do this of their own free will; they are not lumped together by some philosopher king, like it or not.
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