mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-18 12:14:33 -05:00
508 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
508 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
|
|
|
IS THIS AN UNTAMPERED FILE?
|
|
|
|
This ASCII-file version of Imprimis, On Line was
|
|
packaged by Applied Foresight, Inc. (AFI hereafter).
|
|
Every AFI-packaged ASCII version of Imprimis is
|
|
distributed in either an "-AV protected" ZIP file
|
|
format or a SDN (Shareware Distributors Network)
|
|
protected SDN file.
|
|
|
|
"AV" is the authenticity verification feature provided
|
|
to registered PKZIP users, which Applied Foresight,
|
|
Inc., is. If you are using the MS-DOS PKUNZIP.EXE
|
|
program written by PKWARE Inc. and do not see the "-AV"
|
|
message after every file is unzipped AND receive the
|
|
message "Authentic files Verified! #JAA646 Applied
|
|
Foresight Inc." when you unzip this file then do not
|
|
trust it's integrity. If your version of PKUNZIP is not
|
|
the PKWARE-authored program (for instance, you are
|
|
running a non-MS-DOS version), then this message may
|
|
not be displayed. (Note: version 2.04g of PKZIP was
|
|
used to create this authentication message.)
|
|
|
|
SDN is the major distributor of Shareware and
|
|
Copyrighted Freeware and users who extract files from
|
|
an SDN file with the current version of the archive
|
|
utility ARJ, should see:
|
|
|
|
*** Valid ARJ-SECURITY envelope signature:
|
|
*** SDN International(sm) SDN#01 R#2417
|
|
|
|
This file is an SDN International(sm) Author-Direct
|
|
Distribution. It should be verified for the SDN
|
|
Security Seal by the FileTest utility available at The
|
|
SDN Project AuthorLine BBS 203-634-0370.
|
|
|
|
(Note: prior to about May, 1993, SDN used PAK to
|
|
archive its distributions and its authenticity message
|
|
differs from the above.)
|
|
|
|
Trust only genuine AFI-packaged archives ... anything
|
|
else may be just that: ANYTHING ELSE.
|
|
|
|
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
|
|
|
Imprimis, On Line
|
|
Special Edition, November 1993
|
|
|
|
IMPRIMIS (im-pri-mis), taking its name from the Latin
|
|
term, "in the first place," is the publication of
|
|
Hillsdale College. Executive Editor, Ronald L.
|
|
Trowbridge; Managing Editor, Lissa Roche; Assistant,
|
|
Patricia A. DuBois. Illustrations by Tom Curtis. The
|
|
opinions expressed in IMPRIMIS may be, but are not
|
|
necessarily, the views of Hillsdale College and its
|
|
External Programs division. Copyright 1993. Permission
|
|
to reprint in whole or part is hereby granted, provided
|
|
a version of the following credit line is used:
|
|
"Reprinted by permission from IMPRIMIS, the monthly
|
|
journal of Hillsdale College." Subscription free upon
|
|
request. ISSN 0277-8432. Circulation 480,000 worldwide,
|
|
established 1972. IMPRIMIS trademark registered in U.S.
|
|
Patent and Trade Office #1563325.
|
|
|
|
---------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Hillsdale College, Hillsdale, Michigan 49242
|
|
Special Edition
|
|
|
|
---------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
A Special Message From_
|
|
Stanley D. Crow
|
|
Attorney at Law
|
|
|
|
---------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
In recent years you and I have participated together in
|
|
campaigns to prevent the establishment of an Idaho
|
|
state lottery (we lost) and casino gambling (we won).
|
|
When we undertook those campaigns, we had many good
|
|
reasons to do so, but among them was our mutual desire
|
|
to uphold and preserve traditional values--the values
|
|
that make the difference between a society that thrives
|
|
and one that wanes, between a society that is blessed
|
|
with honor and one that is cursed with disrespect, and
|
|
between a society that encourages vigorous virtues and
|
|
one that degrades into malaise and dysfunction.
|
|
|
|
The founders of our nation had carefully
|
|
considered the teaching of centuries concerning how man
|
|
should relate to God, how man should relate to man, and
|
|
how government should encourage those right
|
|
relationships. In turn, they created a governmental
|
|
system that both presupposed a moral, upright, and
|
|
self-responsible citizenry and that strived, until
|
|
comparatively recently, to preserve those conditions.
|
|
|
|
As our government has let us down, you and I and
|
|
many others have stepped forward to fill the gap. One
|
|
of the most effective in doing so is Dr. George Roche,
|
|
whom I regard to be a philosopher of and for our times
|
|
and a hero in the truest sense of the word. As
|
|
president since 1971 of Hillsdale College in Hillsdale,
|
|
Michigan, Dr. Roche has led his school to become one of
|
|
the leading, if not the leading, institutional
|
|
proponents and exponents of the interrelated causes of
|
|
freedom for the individual, Judeo-Christian values for
|
|
individuals and society, and a deep understanding of
|
|
and firm commitment to the heritage of Western
|
|
civilization.
|
|
|
|
Through its own determined fight to be completely
|
|
independent of government regulation and funding,
|
|
through its renowned academic and public policy
|
|
seminars both on campus and around the nation, through
|
|
its brilliant exposition of the values that underlie
|
|
free enterprise, through its academic rigor, and
|
|
through its many publications--including the books of
|
|
Dr. Roche and others and this Imprimis you hold in your
|
|
hands--Hillsdale College has provided all of us with an
|
|
inspiring example and the means of victory.
|
|
|
|
I believe this so strongly that I have arranged
|
|
for you to have a free subscription to the monthly
|
|
Imprimis, at no cost or obligation if you so desire.
|
|
Simply return the postpaid business reply envelope
|
|
inside and join me as a faithful and appreciative
|
|
Imprimis reader.
|
|
|
|
Sincerely,
|
|
Stanley D. Crow
|
|
|
|
---------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
"Capitalism and the Future of America"
|
|
By George Roche, President, Hillsdale College
|
|
|
|
---------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The brilliant young economist George Gilder has written
|
|
that the most important event in recent history is "the
|
|
demise of socialist dream." However, he also notes
|
|
"_the failure of capitalism to win a corresponding
|
|
triumph."
|
|
|
|
Why is this so, when capitalism has so obviously
|
|
provided more material benefits for every individual,
|
|
regardless of economic or social condition, than any
|
|
other system in the history of the world? Why, when
|
|
capitalism's intellectual defense has been so ably
|
|
undertaken by some of the greatest minds of our time is
|
|
socialism, thinly disguised, still taught in our
|
|
schools and promoted by our politicians? And why, when
|
|
capitalism's results are so demonstrably humanitarian,
|
|
is it still seen as a symbol for greed and
|
|
exploitation? The perplexing answers to these questions
|
|
share a common root: They all lie in the realm of
|
|
ideas. Ideas, I find myself often saying, rule the
|
|
world--not armies, not economics, not politics, not any
|
|
of the things to which we usually give our allegiance,
|
|
but ideas.
|
|
|
|
"Ideas have consequences"--in just three words
|
|
Richard Weaver encapsulated an entire philosophy of
|
|
life that is also a challenge, a call to action for all
|
|
of us. Throughout history there have been formative
|
|
moments in which particular ideas and particular
|
|
leaders exert a profound impact on the character and
|
|
events of a nation. These special epochs, marked by the
|
|
emergence of a new consensus, can readily be found in
|
|
American history. The first great sea-change in
|
|
American society occurred fully 150 years before the
|
|
American Revolution when our colonial ancestors enjoyed
|
|
a large measure of self-government. From the start, the
|
|
American colonial experience had drawn heavily upon the
|
|
traditional liberties of British subjects and upon
|
|
their rich heritage of individual freedom guaranteed by
|
|
the Magna Carta.
|
|
|
|
By the eighteenth century, however, the British
|
|
were pursuing a different goal. A new economic idea,
|
|
mercantilism, dominated British thinking. Government
|
|
planning and control regulated society and manipulated
|
|
individuals. Eventually, the American colonists ran out
|
|
of patience with this growing governmental interference
|
|
in their affairs. During the summer of 1776, Thomas
|
|
Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence, a
|
|
revolutionary document destined to represent liberty
|
|
for the American republic as long as it should endure.
|
|
|
|
Coincidentally, during that same summer in 1776, a
|
|
book was published thousands of miles away from the
|
|
American colonies, a book destined to have a profound
|
|
effect on America. The author, Adam Smith, was a
|
|
professor of moral philosophy at the University of
|
|
Glasgow, and the book was The Wealth of Nations. As a
|
|
moral philosopher, Smith contended that men must be
|
|
free to make their own decisions because, if they are
|
|
not, a moral paralysis soon sets in. From this basic
|
|
truth, he examined mercantilism and discovered that
|
|
this early form of the planned economy was denying men
|
|
freedom of choice and thus distorting British society.
|
|
Eleven years later, fifty-five men met in Philadelphia
|
|
to draft our Constitution. Motivated primarily by the
|
|
ideas articulated by Jefferson and Smith, our Founding
|
|
Fathers charted our national path toward limited
|
|
government, the dignity of free men, and the marvelous
|
|
prosperity we have enjoyed in this country.
|
|
|
|
The next great sea-change in our nation's history
|
|
occurred around the turn of the twentieth century.
|
|
Unfortunately, these new ideas favored the collective
|
|
over the individual, redirecting America on an
|
|
increasingly hazardous path as the century progressed.
|
|
The setting was ripe. For years, as America's
|
|
industries boomed, immigrants poured in and cities
|
|
mushroomed, it began to seem to some that the scale of
|
|
life itself had so magnified that the common man no
|
|
longer had a fair chance to get ahead in the world. Far
|
|
from what one might expect, the momentum for
|
|
collectivism was imparted not by public figures but by
|
|
little-known men of ideas whose names not one in a
|
|
hundred Americans would recognize.
|
|
|
|
In certain elite circles, some wondered whether
|
|
the answers for America's growing pains might not lie
|
|
elsewhere than in the common sense of the Founding
|
|
Fathers and the time-tested traditions of our Judeo-
|
|
Christian heritage--and whether those answers might not
|
|
instead be found in the work of certain "daring"
|
|
European thinkers like Marx, Darwin, and Freud whose
|
|
ideas had rocked the Old World during the 1800s.
|
|
|
|
So a relative handful of professors and
|
|
intellectuals, writing in the first years of this
|
|
century and drawing on iconoclastic theories already
|
|
well advanced in Europe, brought those ideas to America
|
|
and began a process that remade the face of American
|
|
society within thirty years, roughly between 1900 and
|
|
1930. These collectivist ideas spread from a few
|
|
seminal thinkers, to the second- and third-hand
|
|
purveyors of ideas--teachers, ministers, the working
|
|
press--the word wielders. The collective mentality
|
|
continued to spread, reaching the professions, the
|
|
business community, the courts, the novelists, the
|
|
artists, the general public and last--always last--the
|
|
politicians.
|
|
|
|
Of the first seminal thinkers of the new era, John
|
|
Dewey has had a lasting impact on our philosophy, our
|
|
education, our culture, and, ultimately, our
|
|
government. From his "progressive school" experiment of
|
|
the mid-1890s at the University of Chicago, Dewey
|
|
advocated a system of education which would produce a
|
|
new generation of Americans with a preference for group
|
|
and social activity and who viewed themselves not as
|
|
individuals but as members of a "total democratic
|
|
society." He emphasized the unfinished nature of
|
|
society and the universe and called for "a new kind of
|
|
religion" to be derived from human experience and
|
|
relationships.
|
|
|
|
Dewey's intellectual colleagues were themselves
|
|
busy on other fronts. At Col-umbia, anthropologist Ruth
|
|
Benedict and her mentor Franz Boas were developing the
|
|
ideas that man could be understood only as a social
|
|
animal, since his character was allegedly the exclusive
|
|
creation of his society and environment. Charles
|
|
Beard's An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution
|
|
was another key turning point. He set aside the
|
|
traditional ideas of American society in favor of an
|
|
essentially Marxian philosophy of history in which the
|
|
Founding Fathers were portrayed as having placed the
|
|
economic welfare of a few ahead of the total social
|
|
welfare of all.
|
|
|
|
The flamboyant Thorstein Veblen poured out his
|
|
bitter frustration on the business community in shrill
|
|
anticapitalist diatribes like The Theory of the Leisure
|
|
Class. Meanwhile, Veblen's fellow economists John R.
|
|
Commons and Richard Ely pioneered in charting a vastly
|
|
expanded role for organized labor in the new
|
|
collectivity.
|
|
|
|
Sociologist Lester Frank Ward, one of the true
|
|
patron saints of the modern American collectivist
|
|
ideal, saw politics as a manipulating device designed
|
|
to control all society, stating: "Modern society is
|
|
suffering from the very opposite of paternalism--from
|
|
under-government." In Ward, all those years ago, we
|
|
thus find the original germ of an idea that has been
|
|
central to the social planner's rhetoric from the New
|
|
Deal era to the Clinton era.
|
|
|
|
By 1932, the year the arch-collectivist and
|
|
political pragmatist Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected
|
|
president, the intellectual revolutionaries had already
|
|
done their work, and they rapidly became the new
|
|
political establishment. Under FDR, the new generation
|
|
of intellectuals managed to use the Depression as a
|
|
pretext for a massive collectivization of American
|
|
society throughout the decade of the 1930s. They failed
|
|
to cure the Depression, but a "fortunate" circumstance-
|
|
-World War II--did it for them. After the war, the
|
|
social engineers stood ready with further collectivist
|
|
gimmicks such as the Full Employment Act of 1946.
|
|
|
|
There was steady pressure throughout the Truman
|
|
years for major expansion of the federal role in
|
|
health, in education, and in welfare--pressure that
|
|
finally resulted in new government programs under the
|
|
succeeding Republican president, Dwight D. Eisenhower.
|
|
Thus Eisenhower proved once again that Republican
|
|
administrations usually ratify rather than reverse the
|
|
collectivist inroads of their Democratic predecessors.
|
|
The same pattern of ratification and acceleration was
|
|
repeated two decades later when the Nixon and Ford
|
|
administrations helped consolidate most of Lyndon
|
|
Johnson's Great Society programs, exacerbated the oil
|
|
crisis and other economic woes through an unprecedented
|
|
program of peacetime wage-and-price controls, and
|
|
presided over the regulatory explosion of the early
|
|
1970s.
|
|
|
|
In the last months of the Reagan presidency, we
|
|
wondered if the pattern had been repeated. Many saw
|
|
Reagan's election in 1980 and his subsequent reelection
|
|
in 1984 as genuine evidence of Americans'
|
|
disenchantment with government, a disenchantment that
|
|
cuts across ideological lines and is an inevitable
|
|
reaction to the love affair with statism that has been
|
|
carried on for so long. But whatever one thinks in
|
|
retrospect of Reagan's actual accomplishments, it is
|
|
uncertain whether much has changed. Critics on the left
|
|
have declared that the end of the Reagan era signaled
|
|
the end of conservatism's brief resurgence.
|
|
|
|
Undeniably the idea of capitalism, a central tenet
|
|
of conservatism, remains under constant assault, and
|
|
its detractors comprise a majority in our schools, our
|
|
media, and even our political and cultural leadership
|
|
communities. One faction we may dub the "anti-
|
|
capitalists," those who regard the redistribution of
|
|
wealth in the name of "economic justice" as the proper
|
|
goal of all economic activity. They claim that modern
|
|
capitalism began with the Industrial Revolution and
|
|
heralded child labor, wage slavery, urban squalor and a
|
|
Hobbesian existence for the working class. The late
|
|
20th century, they insist, is still an era of
|
|
exploitation.
|
|
|
|
A second group, however, focuses less on
|
|
capitalism's evils than its supposed inadequacies. It
|
|
is all right to defend free enterprise, so the
|
|
reasoning goes, but today there are simply too many
|
|
demands on the system--too many poor, too many
|
|
problems, too many inequities--for individuals or the
|
|
free market to handle. Government must, therefore, step
|
|
in and act as the problem-solver. Far more people
|
|
belong to this group than the first. They have accepted
|
|
the need for intervention even though they may harbor
|
|
no hostility to capitalism.
|
|
|
|
Both groups are obsessively results-oriented. They
|
|
begin with the premise that the world is perfectible
|
|
and that man possesses the means to perfect it through
|
|
his own reason and through man-made institutions.
|
|
Capitalism simply cannot fulfill their expectations.
|
|
Yet no amount of intellect and no economic system--no
|
|
man-made system at all, for that matter--can cure every
|
|
ill the world produces; it probably can't even cure
|
|
half of them. Sadly, the false notion persists that
|
|
some other system, some other grand vision, can achieve
|
|
the impossible.
|
|
|
|
The central idea of capitalism does not lie in the
|
|
miracle of the market or even the ingenuity of the
|
|
entrepreneur. It rests, rather, on the fundamental
|
|
principle of freedom. One of the great sources of
|
|
strength for America has been our commitment to
|
|
economic, political, and religious freedom. Within our
|
|
open society, individuals are free to provide for
|
|
themselves and their families, to compete with others
|
|
and to join with them in voluntary associations. We
|
|
have been free to support those professions,
|
|
businesses, schools, hospitals, churches, and cultural
|
|
institutions which best meet our individual needs and
|
|
preferences. In other words, we have prospered with
|
|
competition and voluntary association in the private
|
|
sector. The American economy, despite its ups and downs
|
|
and the serious threats it faces from over regulation,
|
|
the deficit, and the other problems of our times, has
|
|
worked beautifully--beyond the wildest dreams of the
|
|
utopian social planners. But it has worked precisely
|
|
because we have allowed individuals to act freely on
|
|
their own.
|
|
|
|
Self-transcendence is the ability to rise above
|
|
the merely animal, merely physical self and freely
|
|
choose the conditions and terms of our own existence,
|
|
to decide what is of ultimate importance and act upon
|
|
it whether or not other people understand, whether or
|
|
not it is dangerous, whether or not it makes us rich.
|
|
Only human beings have that capacity. Only you and I
|
|
do. We have the capacity to rise above our merely
|
|
physical selves.
|
|
|
|
Self-transcendence, based on individual choice,
|
|
touches every aspect of our lives. If economic
|
|
transactions were based on the immediate cave man rip-
|
|
off--the idea that I want to grab all I can get, and I
|
|
want to get it right now, and I will not honor any
|
|
obligation that interferes with this--no long-term
|
|
economic planning would be possible. No investment,
|
|
nothing of what we call a capital structure, could ever
|
|
come into existence, unless legal contracts were
|
|
honored. That necessitates self-transcending people,
|
|
people willing to honor their commitments.
|
|
|
|
That is the leadership commitment we are
|
|
discussing. All civilization is based upon the
|
|
integrity of the self-responsible individual, directed
|
|
by a view of justice, of restraint, and of
|
|
responsibility.
|
|
|
|
There was a time when this country of ours valued
|
|
such an idea. It placed its faith in the responsible
|
|
individual and the institutional structure, giving form
|
|
to our lives. And it is the erosion of that faith which
|
|
today destroys us from within. I submit to you that
|
|
unless we recover it, all the methods in the world to
|
|
do something better economically, technologically, or
|
|
socially are just so much spitting in the wind.
|
|
|
|
We must insist upon a return to a hierarchy of
|
|
values which gives primacy to the dignity of the
|
|
individual and to the instructional forms which
|
|
guarantee that dignity.
|
|
|
|
It is here that the free market, private property,
|
|
private institutions--that whole private sector idea--
|
|
has special validity, because it does leave people free
|
|
to build their own voluntary associations, to be
|
|
uniquely self-transcending, to get on with the dignity
|
|
of leading their own lives.
|
|
|
|
Remember, then, when we as leaders are talking
|
|
about the private sector, that we are committed to it
|
|
not because it works, though it works very well. All
|
|
kinds of economic arguments demonstrate that the free
|
|
market provides prosperity. It solves social problems.
|
|
It works. But that is not the argument that we should
|
|
advance. People are not inspired by the argument that
|
|
they will have more refrigerators if they are free men.
|
|
Our message must not be that the free market is good
|
|
because it works, but rather that it works because it
|
|
is good--because it has the fundamentally proper view
|
|
of human nature.
|
|
|
|
This is what capitalism offers for our American
|
|
future. Together we can invest our resources and
|
|
energies in a system which provides a level of
|
|
prosperity and personal dignity unheralded in the
|
|
history of the world. Its legacy of freedom, passed
|
|
from one generation to the next, is now ours to defend
|
|
for our children, and for all who will follow.
|
|
|
|
|
|
---------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
George Roche has served as president of Hillsdale
|
|
College since 1971 and in the last two decades has
|
|
attracted international attention for his battle to
|
|
protect the school from federal intrusion. (Despite the
|
|
fact that Hillsdale has never accepted federal funds,
|
|
the Supreme Court has challenged Hillsdale's
|
|
independence.) Firing Line, the MacNeil-Lehrer News
|
|
Hour, News-week, the New York Times, Reader's Digest,
|
|
Time, Today, the Wall Street Journal, and scores of
|
|
other television, radio, magazine, and newspaper
|
|
sources have chronicled his efforts.
|
|
|
|
Formerly the presidentially-appointed chairman of
|
|
the National Council on Educational Research, the
|
|
director of seminars at the Foundation of Economical
|
|
Education in New York, a professor of history at the
|
|
Colorado School of Mines, and a U.S. Marine, George
|
|
Roche is also the author of 10 books on education,
|
|
history, philosophy, and government, including America
|
|
by the Throat: The Stranglehold of Federal Bureaucracy
|
|
(1985), Going Home (1986), A World Without Heroes: The
|
|
Modern Tragedy (1987), A Reason for Living (1989), and
|
|
One by One: Preserving Values and Freedom in Heartland
|
|
America (1990).
|
|
###
|
|
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
|
End of this special edition of Imprimis, On Line;
|
|
Information about the electronic publisher,
|
|
Applied Foresight, Inc., is in the file, IMPR_BY.TXT
|
|
|
|
For the November 1993 issue, there is the normal issue
|
|
of Imprimis issued by Hillsdale College.
|
|
See the file, IMPR9311.TXT
|
|
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
|
|