Fear, Incivility, and
the State
by Butler Shaffer
Fear is an emotion whose
consequences can either protect or destroy us. I have a daughter who
hikes in the mountains and occasionally encounters rattlesnakes. When
she does so, she recognizes the danger and avoids it. She does not,
however, forego future walks in wooded areas. There are dangers in the
world which we must deal with, but to become obsessed by fear is to
turn oneself into a security freak who is easily manipulated by others.
Though economic decision-making is driven by both a desire to avoid
losses - a fear-based purpose - and to promote gain, it is the latter
motivation that predominates. Insurance companies thrive on fear (e.g.,
of death, property losses, etc.), but marketplace activity, generally,
is premised upon the production and exchange of goods and services that
increase our material well-being. A healthy economy is thought of more
in terms of the amount of wealth that is generated than in the
prevention of losses.
Political systems, on the other hand, are mobilized almost entirely by
fear. Our allegedly more "primitive" ancestors were frightened into
obedience by tribal leaders, with warnings about the dreaded "Nine
Bows" who lived on the other side of the river. The "Nine Bows" have
now morphed into "terrorists," and the river has widened into an ocean,
but the logic of the fear-based political racket has not changed.
Fear
causes people to herd together for protection, thus its generation is
essential to the accumulation of state power. The marketplace - which
is premised upon individual autonomy - decentralizes decision-making;
and the profit-seeking benefits of cooperation cause men and women to
freely organize into groups. Those who subject themselves to coercion
as an organizing method do so because of a threat to something they
value. This is what makes individualism and collectivism
irreconcilable. As fear erodes as an influence in our lives, so does
collective power.
The
power of the state, in other words, has its origins in our individual
weakness which, in turn, is generated not simply by our fears of
others, but of our capacities for self-direction. To reinforce such
fears, the state continually reminds us of the hostile nature of our
world, and of our personal inadequacies for dealing with its dangers
and uncertainties. We have been warned of threats ranging from violent
criminals to street-corner gangs to price-gouging retailers, against
which the state promises us protection if only we will submit to more
of its powers and authority. We are told that we are not capable of
raising our children on our own; that "it takes a village" (i.e., the
government) to do so. Those with designs upon our lives then compete
with one another to become president of that "village."
In
this television-age in which the visual has become increasingly
dominant as the basis for learning, the state has provided a meter of
varying colors with which it manipulates our fear level. We need only
check our Crayola box to recall that orange is a more intense
expression than yellow, while red reminds us of war and bloodshed. Blue
and green - colors we associate with peace and life - are never offered
as the hue-of-the-day by the Department of Homeland Security, other
than as an implied promise of a world to be realized only when state
power reaches its zenith.
The
military/police-state purposes behind the state's current
fear-mongering have been unwittingly revealed by the unsubtle George W.
Bush. He has announced plans to place the country under martial law in
the event of another terrorist attack, or a major natural disaster
(such as hurricane Katrina), or an "avian flu" epidemic. His primary
objective is to militarize the nation. The fear-based rationale for
doing so consists of varied options, part of the unfettered
"discretion" that so many herd-oriented Americans are prepared to give
the president.
It
cannot be denied that there are dangerous people in the world, and not
all of them work for the state. Even in the best of societies, there
always have been, and always will be, brutes and thugs with whom we
must occasionally be called upon to deal. This fact confirms the
Jungian insight that whatever degree of order exists in society derives
from the inner lives of people, not from institutional mandates or
systems. It is also true that how we fare against such social misfits
always depends upon our individual strategies and resources, and never
upon how many police officers, squad cars, or prisons the state has
available to it.
It
is in the realm of politically-contrived violence and destruction that
we face the gravest threats to our well-being. As a child, I was warned
that Hitler wanted to take over the world, and my friends and I, in our
innocence, scanned the Nebraska skies watching for German dive-bombers.
Later, communists were held up as threats to my liberty and prosperity.
Now my children are told that Islamic terrorists want to destroy them.
At no time, of course, do the statists acknowledge the symbiotic
relationship they and these specters have with one another; an
association that makes these threats causally connected to state
policies. The photo of a smiling Donald Rumsfeld shaking hands with
Saddam Hussein ought to serve as wallpaper on the conscious minds of
each of us.
Instead, we are told to look to our neighbors as a source of danger. As
we increasingly distrust our own judgments and abilities, we also widen
our distrust of the actions and motives of others. We are encouraged to
"stay alert" - although not aware - and to report to the police any
"suspicious" persons. In my lifetime, Nazi bundists with short-wave
radios were replaced by communist subversives who, in turn, have been
succeeded by crazed terrorists with suitcase bombs. This manipulation
of fear produces a vicious circle of paranoia, as we learn to distrust
all but the puppet-masters.
Such
fear-manipulating practices energize the worst of human emotions and
behavior. As in a lynch mob or a race riot, such conduct brings people
down to the lowest common denominator. Social relationships become
characterized by the most depraved of dark-side impulses: dishonesty,
lies, brutishness, violence, a disregard for the pain and suffering of
others, and a general disrespect for life itself. Paradoxically, such
statist behavior produces the very "war of every man against every man"
that Thomas Hobbes saw as necessitating political systems.
History affords abundant examples of fear eating away at our souls and
destroying our sense of humanity. The increase in lynchings during
economic depressions; the Nazi atrocities that were grounded in German
economic and social instabilities; the post-9/11 willingness of most
Americans to sanction any course of violence against anyone George W.
Bush chose to target, regardless of the factual basis for his doing so.
These are but trifling examples of how fear dehumanizes us and fosters
the incivility that helps to destroy societies.
I
remember a "Twilight Zone" episode in which the residents of a
neighborhood experienced an electrical blackout: save for one homeowner
whose property was not affected. The neighbors gathered in the street
to ask why none of them had power, and why this one man did. The
discussion quickly turned to fear and anger, with the neighbor becoming
accepted as the cause of their problem. Soon, fear of interplanetary
invaders was brought up, with the neighbor being suggested as an agent
for sinister forces.
The
lights in this neighbor's house mysteriously went off at the same time
that another neighbor's lights came on. The crowd quickly turned its
paranoia upon the owner of the now-lighted home. The electricity in
other homes continued to play upon this theme. Then, an unidentified
figure came down the street toward the crowd. Fearing that this was one
of the aliens, someone shot and killed what turned out to be another
property owner from the next block who had come to check on the problem
people on this street were having.
In
the final scene, we see two aliens standing on a hillside with a
machine that can turn electricity off and on in various houses. One
alien tells the other that they need not destroy the earthlings in
order to take over the planet; all that needs to be done is to frighten
them with the loss of some of their attachments and they will destroy
each other.
This
is how the manipulation of fear degrades us both individually and
socially. The torture and death that men and women so eagerly inflicted
upon subdued strangers at Abu Ghraib prison; the videotaped brutalities
visited upon individuals by gangs of police officers; and the surliness
with which airport security people routinely deal with passengers - not
one of whom poses a threat to any airliner - is evidence of how
politics, driven by fear, degrades us by eating away at our souls.
I
was going through a security check at a major American airport
recently, when I observed a plug-ugly TSA agent behaving toward his
conscripts like a demented Marine Corps drill instructor. He was
angrily yelling out "hut-two-three-four" as people worked their ways
through these lines of interminable insanity. He ordered people to
"grab that rope and get up against the wall." He was not trying to be
humorous. When a young man well ahead of me in the line glared back at
him, this storm-trooper shouted "are you looking for
trouble?" If such a slug worked for any private employer, he would
likely have been fired on the spot. But for those who work for the
state, mannerly conduct is rarely exhibited.
Such
unprovoked rudeness is infectious. I have noticed a number of airline
employees emulating this insolent behavior, perhaps unconsciously
absorbing the atmosphere of state-generated hostility around them. They
seem to have forgotten what those who work in the marketplace cannot
afford to disregard, namely, that passengers are their customers, not
their prisoners. I have experienced none of this incivility on the few
airlines I find it more pleasurable to fly; airlines which, to my
knowledge, are not in the bankruptcy courts.
One
of the more vivid examples of how fear brutalizes us was the shooting
of an innocent Brazilian man by police officers in a London subway.
After earlier subway bombings, this man became - for no apparent reason
- a "suspicious" person. When he got into the subway, a number of
police officers tackled and held him down while seven shots were fired
into his head, instantly killing him. Eager to strut his moral collapse
to the American public - and before all of the facts were available -
Fox News' John Gibson praised the London police for being "ruthless."
"Five in the noggin is fine," he reported. A lynch mob mentality is
troublesome enough when standing by itself. It is made all the more
dangerous when celebrated on network television.
We
need to become aware of the dynamics of fear, and how its energies
affect our personal and social behavior. The contrast between the
marketplace and the state is particularly instructive. Most marketplace
activity appeals to our desire for pleasure, material gain, or other
life-enhancing ends. "The Belchfire-8 sedan will make you happy;" or
"Hyper-Scent after-shave will make you attractive to women." I have
never been attracted to the Las Vegas lifestyle, but I think it is
marvelous that a major city exists whose principal purpose is to
promote pleasure.
By
contrast, politically-minded people believe that societies can only be
held together by fear - of punishment, prison, death, or other people.
One need only contrast the language of market advertising - with its
promises of benefits to be enjoyed - with that of legislative statutes
- with threats of "fines, imprisonment or both," as polar opposite
inducements for your response.
It
is interesting to observe the happy, eager, energized behavior of
children at Disneyland, and compare it with the more somber expressions
of students as they slowly and reluctantly make their ways to the
government middle school one block from our home. People want to spend
time at Disneyland or Las Vegas; nobody wants to spend time in
after-school detention or San Quentin.
As I
have stated, there are people and conditions in our world that can harm
us, but we need to confront such dangers with intelligence, not with a
herd-driven frenzy. We need to understand our fears, not repress them
or allow them to be exaggerated into collective energies by which
political engineers despoil and destroy us in their lusts for power.
Our
irrational fears have been a major contributor to the destruction of
Western civilization. But what will arise from the ashes? Will it be a
phoenix that generates a new, vibrant civilization, or only vultures to
feed upon the decaying remnants of what was once a marvelous culture?
The answer to this question will likely depend upon whether we meet the
world with a passion or a fear of life itself. To put the matter in
perspective, we ought to recall the observation of Andre Gide: "There
are very few monsters who warrant the fear we have of them."
October 21, 2005
Butler Shaffer teaches at the Southwestern University School of Law.
Copyright © 2005 LewRockwell.com
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