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November
2001
PERSONAL SNAPSHOTS
Forecasts & Strategies
I
LED THREE LIVES
by Mark Skousen
"It
was a time for every man to stir." — Thomas Paine
Westchester
County, New York, where I now reside, is full of American
heroes. Two are buried in Sleepy Hollow cemetery — Carnegie,
the steel magnate (highlighted last month) and Samuel Gompers,
the great labor leader. Another hero is Thomas Paine (1737-1809),
the revolutionary writer, who owned a farm in New Rochelle.
Paine is famous for writing Common Sense, the anonymous
pamphlet that galvanized Americans into revolution in 1776.
I read it as a teenager one summer and was overwhelmed by
the candid, powerful case he made for separation from England.
But there were actually three revolutions in 1776 — political
revolution declared on July 4 by Thomas Jefferson’s Declaration
of Independence; an economic revolution propelled by Adam
Smith’s magnum opus, The Wealth of Nations (published
on March 9,1776); and a cultural/religious revolution as expressed
in Edward Gibbon’s best-seller, The Decline and Fall of
the Roman Empire (the first volume published on February
23,1776). Thus, 1776 was a year of wonders.
The
Age of Paine: A Supporter of Free Enterprise and a Hater of
Taxation
Even
more amazing, Tom Paine spoke out in favor of all three revolutions.
In Common Sense, published on January 9,1776, he made
the greatest case for political independence ever penned.
"Government even in its best state is but a necessary evil;
in its worst state an intolerable one …Nothing can settle
so expeditiously as an open and determined declaration of
independence." He coined the name, "United States of America."
He hated the King and the privileged aristocracy that went
with it. He referred to the idle nobility as "no-ability."
What mattered most to Paine was a man’s productivity, not
his pedigree. Paine was also an unrepented follower of Adam
Smith and laissez faire capitalism.
In
The Rights of Man (1791) he defended individualism,
property, business enterprise and Jeffersonian democracy.
He favored a world in which political and social place would
be determined by talent, merit and hard work — reliant individuals.
He defended the rich and the businessman. His one villain:
government. The invisible hand of merchants, manufacturers
and bankers create a wholesome civil society; but the "greedy
hand of government" oppressed and taxed citizens at home and
waged war abroad. He was obsessed with taxation, a symbol
of tyranny and corruption. Finally, Paine’s social and religious
philosophy was in keeping with Gibbon’s. He favored free thought
and freedom of religion, and was opposed to a state religion.
He was an outspoken critic of slavery. He was cursed as an
atheist and an infidel based on his sharp criticisms of the
Bible in The Age of Reason (1794),but he was in fact
a deist who strongly believed that "the hand of providence
has …accomplished the independence of America."
The
Spirit of Paine Lives On
Some
of the stirring words of Tom Paine seem modern to me. After
the war on terrorism began, I thought of his words: "These
are the times that try men’s souls. The summer soldier and
the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the
service of their country; but he that stands it now, deserves
the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell,
is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with
us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph."
Long live the spirit of Tom Paine. That spirit lives on at
the Foundation for Economic Education (FEE). I urge you to
subscribe to our monthly publication, Ideas on Liberty
.The cost is only $30 a year for 12 issues. To subscribe,
call 914/591-7230,or e-mail kkrupinsky@fee.org. Ideas on
Liberty would also make a great holiday or birthday gift.
UPDATE
Foreign
Affairs, the premier establishment journal, loves AND
hates my new history, just as it goes into a second printing!
The October/September issue of Foreign Affairs calls
The Making of Modern Economics "both fascinating and
infuriating." On the positive side, the book is "engaging,
readable, colorful and entertaining," on the negative side,
it’s "credulous, disingenuous and tendentious." My kind of
review! Love it and hate it! (To see the full review, go to
www.mskousen.com).I ’m also happy to report that the first
printing is sold out and a second printing is now available
from M.E. Sharpe Publishing,800/541-6563. Be sure to mention
you are a subscriber to Forecasts &Strategies,
and you pay only $49.95 for the hardback and $24.95 for the
paperback, plus S&H, a considerable bargain over the retail
prices.
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