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Persuasion
vs. Force
by
Mark Skousen
Copyright
1992 by Mark Skousen. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
A
version of this essay originally appeared in the September,
1991, issue of Liberty magazine.
Sometimes
a single book or even a short cogent essay can change an individual's
entire outlook on life. For Christians, it is the New
Testament. For radical socialists, Karl Marx' and
Friedrich Engels' The Communist Manifesto is
revolutionary. For libertarians, Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged
is pivotal. For economists, Ludwig von Mises' Human
Action can be mind-changing.
Recently
I came across a little essay in a book called Adventures
of Ideas, by Alfred North Whitehead, the British philosopher
and Harvard professor. The essay, "From Force to Persuasion,"
had a profound effect upon me. Actually what caught my attention
was a single passage on page 83. This one small excerpt in
a 300-page book changed my entire political philosophy.
Here's
what it says:
"The
creation of the world -- said Plato -- is the victory of persuasion
over force... Civilization is the maintenance of social order,
by its own inherent persuasiveness as embodying the nobler
alternative. The recourse to force, however unavoidable, is
a disclosure of the failure of civilization, either in the
general society or in a remnant of individuals...
"Now
the intercourse between individuals and between social groups
takes one of these two forms: force or persuasion. Commerce
is the great example of intercourse by way of persuasion.
War, slavery, and governmental compulsion exemplify the reign
of force."
Professor
Whitehead's vision of civilized society as the triumph of
persuasion over force should become paramount in the mind
of all civic-minded individuals and government leaders. It
should serve as the guideline for the political ideal.
Let
me suggest, therefore, a new political creed: The triumph
of persuasion over force is the sign of a civilized society.
Surely
this is a fundamental principle to which most citizens, no
matter where they fit on the political spectrum, can agree.
Too
Many Laws
Too
often lawmakers resort to the force of law rather than the
power of persuasion to solve a problem in society. They are
too quick to pass another statute or regulation in an effort
to suppress the effects of a deeprooted problem in society
rather than seeking to recognize and deal with the real cause
of the problem, which may require parents, teachers, pastors,
and community leaders to convince people to change their ways.
Too
often politicians think that new programs requiring new taxes
are the only way to pay for citizens' retirement, health care,
education or other social needs. "People just aren't
willing to pay for these services themselves," they say,
so they force others to pay for them instead.
Supreme
Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes once said, "Taxation
is the price we pay for civilization." But isn't the
opposite really the case? Taxation is the price we pay for
failing to build a civilized society. The higher the tax level,
the greater the failure. A centrally planned totalitarian
state represents a complete defeat for the civilized world,
while a totally voluntary society represents its ultimate
success.
Thus,
legislators, ostensibly concerned about poverty and low wages,
pass a minimum wage law and establish a welfare state as their
way to abolish poverty. Yet poverty persists, not for want
of money, but for want of skills, capital, education, and
the desire to succeed.
The
community demands a complete education for all children, so
the state mandates that all children attend school for at
least ten years. Winter Park High School, which two of our
children attend, is completely fenced in. Students need a
written excuse to leave school grounds and an official explanation
for absences. All the gates except one are closed during school
hours, and there is a permanent guard placed at the only open
gate to monitor students coming and going. Florida recently
passed a law that takes away the driver's license of any student
who drops out of high school. Surely, they say, that will
eliminate the high dropout rate for students.
But
suppressing one problem only creates another. Now students
who don't want to be in school are disrupting the students
who want to learn. The lawmakers forget one thing. Schooling
is not the same as education.
Many
high-minded citizens don't like to see racial, religious or
sexual discrimination in employment, housing, department stores,
restaurants, and clubs. Yet instead of persuading people in
the schools, the churches and the media that discrimination
is inappropriate behavior and morally repugnant, law-makers
simply pass civil rights legislation outlawing discrimination,
as though making hatred illegal can instantly make it go away.
Instead, forced integration often intensifies the already-existing
hostilities. Does anyone wonder why discrimination is still
a serious problem in our society?
Is
competition from the Japanese, the Germans and the Brazilians
too stiff for American industry? We can solve that right away,
says Congress. No use trying to convince industry to invest
in more productive labor and capital, or voting to reduce
the tax burden on business. No, they'll just impose import
quotas or heavy duties on foreign products and force them
to "play fair." Surely that will make us more competitive,
and keep American companies in business.
Drugs,
Guns, and Abortion
Is
the use of mind-altering drugs a problem in America? Then
let's pass legislation prohibiting the use of certain high-powered
drugs. People still want to use them? Then let's hire more
police to crack down on the drug users and drug dealers. Surely
that will solve the problem. Yet such laws never address the
fundamental issue, which would require analyzing why people
misuse drugs and discovering ways they can satisfy their needs
in a nondestructive manner. By out-lawing illicit drugs, we
fail to consider the underlying cause of increased drug or
alcohol misuse among teenagers and adults, and we fail to
accept the beneficial uses of such drugs in medicine and healthcare.
I salute voluntary efforts in communities to deal with these
serious problems, such as "no alcohol" high school
graduation parties and drug-awareness classes. Tobacco is
on the decline as a result of education, and drug use could
abate as well if it were treated as a medical problem rather
than a criminal one.
Abortion
is a troublesome issue, we all agree on that. Whose rights
take precedence, the baby's or the mother's? When does life
begin, at conception or at birth?
Political
conservatives are shocked by the millions of legal killings
that take place every year in America and around the world.
How can we sing "God Bless America" with this epidemic
plaguing our nation? So, for many conservatives the answer
is simple: Ban abortions! Force women to give birth to their
unexpected and unwanted babies. That will solve the problem.
This quick fix will undoubtedly give the appearance that we
have instantly solved our national penchant for genocide.
Wouldn't
it be better if we first tried to answer the all important
questions, "Why is abortion so prevalent today, and how
can we prevent unwanted pregnancies?" Or, once an unwanted
pregnancy occurs, how can we persuade people to examine alternatives,
including adoption?
Crime
is another issue plaguing this country. There are those in
society who want to ban handguns, rifles and other firearms,
or at least have them tightly controlled and registered, in
an attempt to reduce crime. We can solve the murder and crime
problem in this country, they reason, simply by passing a
law taking away the weapons of murder. No guns, no killings.
Simple, right? Yet they only change the outward symptoms,
while showing little interest in finding ways to discourage
a person from becoming criminal or violent in the first place.
Legislators
should be slow to pass laws to protect people against themselves.
While insisting on a woman's "right to choose" in
one area, they deny men and women the right to choose in every
other area. Unfortunately, they are all too quick to act.
Drivers aren't wearing their seatbelts? Let's pass a mandatory
seatbelt law. Motorcyclists aren't wearing helmets? Let's
mandate helmets. We'll force people to be responsible!
More
Than Just Freedom
How
did we get into this situation, where lawmakers feel compelled
to legislate personal behavior "for our own good"?
Often we only have ourselves to blame.
The
lesson is clear: If we are going to preserve what personal
and economic freedom we have left in this country, we had
better act responsibly, or our freedom is going to be taken
away. Too many detractors think that freedom is nothing more
than the right to act irresponsibly. They equate liberty with
libertine behavior: that the freedom to choose whether to
have an abortion means that they should have an abortion,
that the freedom to take drugs means that they should take
drugs, that the legalization of gambling means that they should
play the roulette wheel.
It
is significant that Professor Whitehead chose the word "persuasion,"
not simply "freedom," as the ideal characteristic
of the civilized world. The word "persuasion" embodies
both freedom of choice and responsibility for choice. In order
to persuade, you must have a moral philosophy, a system of
right and wrong, which you govern yourself. You want to persuade
people to do the right thing not because they have to, but
because they want to.
There
is little satisfaction from doing good if individuals are
mandated to do the right thing. Character and responsibility
are built when people voluntarily choose right over wrong,
not when they are forced to do so. A soldier will feel a greater
sense of victory if he enlists in the armed forces instead
of being drafted. And high school students will not comprehend
the joy of service if it is mandated by a community-service
requirement for graduation.
Admittedly,
there will be individuals in a free society who will make
the wrong choices, who will become drug addicts and alcoholics,
who will refuse to wear a safety helmet, who will hurt themselves
playing with firecrackers, and who will drop out of high school.
But that is the price we must pay for having a free society,
where individuals learn from their mistakes and try to build
a better world.
In
this context, let us answer the all- important question, "Liberty
and morality: can we have both?" The answer is, absolutely
yes! Not only can we have both, but we must have both, or
eventually we will have neither. As Sir James Russell Lowell
said, "The ultimate result of protecting fools from their
folly is to fill the planet full of fools."
Our
motto should be, "We teach them correct principles, and
they govern themselves."
Freedom
without responsibility only leads to the destruction of civilization,
as evidenced by Rome and other great civilizations of the
past. As Alexis de Tocqueville said, "Despotism may govern
without faith, but liberty cannot." In a similar vein,
Henry Ward Beecher added, "There is no liberty to men
who know not how to govern themselves." And Edmund Burke
wrote, "What is liberty without wisdom and without virtue?"
Today's
political leaders demonstrate their low opinion of the public
with every social law they pass. They believe that, if given
the right to choose, the citizenry will probably make the
wrong choice. Legislators do not think any more in terms of
persuading people; they feel the need to force their agenda
on the public at the point of a bayonet and the barrel of
a gun, in the name of the IRS, the SEC, the FDA, the DEA,
the EPA, or a multitude of other ABCs of government authority.
A
Challenge to All Lovers of Liberty
My
challenge to all lovers of liberty today is to take the moral
high ground. Our cause is much more compelling when we can
say that we support drug legalization, but do not use mind
altering drugs. That we tolerate legal abortion, but choose
not to abort our own future generations. That we support the
right to bear arms, but do not misuse handguns. That we favor
the right of individuals to meet privately as they please,
but do not ourselves discriminate.
In
the true spirit of liberty, Voltaire once said, "I disapprove
of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right
to say it." If we are to be effective in convincing others
of the benefits of a tolerant world, we must take the moral
high ground by saying, "We may disapprove of what you
do, but we will defend to the death your right to do it."
In
short, my vision of a responsible free society is one in which
we discourage evil, but do not prohibit it. We make our children
and students aware of the consequences of drug abuse and other
forms of irresponsible behavior. But after all our persuading,
if they still want to use harmful drugs, that is their privilege.
In a free society, individuals must have the right to do right
or wrong, as long as they don't threaten or infringe upon
the rights or property of others. They must also suffer the
consequences of their actions, as it is from consequences
that they learn to choose properly.
We
may discourage prostitution or pornography by restricting
it to certain areas and to certain ages, but we will not jail
or fine those who choose to participate in it privately. If
an adult bookstore opens in our neighborhood, we don't run
to the law and pass an ordinance, we picket the store and
discourage customers. If our religion asks us not to shop
on Sunday, we don't pass Sunday "blue" laws forcing
stores to close, we simply don't patronize them on Sunday.
If we don't like excessive violence and gratuitous sex on
TV, we don't write the Federal Communications Commission,
we join boycotts of the advertiser's products. Several years
ago the owners of Seven Eleven stores removed pornographic
magazines from their stores, not because the law required
it, but because a group of concerned citizens persuaded them.
These actions reflect the true spirit of liberty.
Lovers
of liberty should also be strong supporters of the institutions
of persuasion, such as churches, charities, foundations, private
schools and colleges, and private enterprise. They should
engage in many causes of their own free will and choice. They
should not rely on the institutions of force, such as government
agencies, to carry out the cause of education and the works
of charity and welfare. It is not enough simply to pay your
taxes and cast your vote and think you've done your part.
It
is the duty of every advocate of human liberty to convince
the world that we must solve our problems through persuasion
and not coercion. Whether the issue is domestic policy or
foreign policy, we must recognize that passing another regulation
or going to war is not necessarily the only solution to our
problems. Simply to pass laws prohibiting the outward symptoms
of problems is to sweep the real problems under the rug. It
may hide the dirt for a while, but it doesn't dispose of the
dirt properly or permanently.
Liberty
Under Law
This
approach does not mean that laws would not exist. People should
have the freedom to act according to their desires, but only
to the extent that they do not trample on the rights of others.
Rules and regulations, such as traffic laws, need to be established
and enforced by private and public institutions in order for
a free society to exist. There should be stringent laws against
fraud, theft, murder, pollution, and the breaking of contracts,
and those laws should be effectively enforced according to
the classic principle that the punishment should fit the crime.
The full weight of the law should be used to fine and imprison
the perpetrators, to compensate the victims, and to safe-guard
the rights of the innocent. Yet within this legal framework,
we should permit the maximum degree of freedom in allowing
people to choose what they think, act and do to themselves
without harming others.
Convincing
the public of our message, that "persuasion instead of
force is the sign of a civilized society," will require
a lot of hard work, but it can be rewarding. The key is to
make a convincing case for freedom, to present the facts to
the public so that they can see the logic of our arguments,
and to develop a dialogue with those who may be opposed to
our position. Our emphasis must be on educating and persuading,
not on arguing and name-calling. For we shall never change
our political leaders until we change the people who elect
them.
A
Vision of an Ideal Society
Martin
Luther King, Jr., gave a famous sermon at the Lincoln Memorial
in the mid-1960s. In it, King said that he had a dream about
the promised land. Well, I too have a vision of an ideal society.
I
have a vision of world peace, not because the military have
been called in to maintain order, but because we have peace
from within and friendship with every nation.
I
have a vision of universal prosperity and an end to poverty,
not because of foreign aid or government-subsidized welfare,
but because each of us has productive, useful employment where
every trade is honest and beneficial to both buyer and seller,
and where we eagerly help the less fortunate of our own free
will.
I
have a vision of an inflation-free nation, not because of
wage and price controls, but because our nation has an honest
money system.
I
have a vision of a crime-free society, not because there's
a policeman on every corner, but because we respect the rights
and property of others.
I
have a vision of a drug-free America, not because harmful
drugs are illegal, but because we desire to live long, healthy,
self-sustaining lives.
I
have a vision of an abortion-free society, not because abortion
is illegal, but because we firmly believe in the sanctity
of life, sexual responsibility, and family values.
I
have a vision of a pollution-free and environmentally sound
world, not because of costly controls and arbitrary regulations,
but because private enterprise honors its stewardship and
commitment to developing rather than exploiting the earth's
resources.
I
have a vision of a free society, not because of a benevolent
dictator commands it, but because we love freedom and the
responsibility that goes with it.
The
following words, taken from an old Protestant hymn whose author
is fittingly anonymous, express the aspiration of every man
and every woman in a free society.
Know
this, that every soul is free
To
choose his life and what he'll be;
For
this eternal truth is given
That
God will force no man to heaven.
He'll
call, persuade, direct aright,
And
bless with wisdom, love, and light,
In
nameless ways be good and kind,
But
never force the human mind.
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