The Cross-Eyed Dogma of Anarchism
Wednesday, April 28th, 2010An encounter with some anarchists at the recent ARI-sponsored lecture in La Jolla, California confirms for me two inferences: [1] ARI more and more is engaging directly with the public, especially with libertarian-leaning organizations—a reversal, which is great to see. And [2] anarchists aren’t freedom lovers. On the latter, here is why:
Interlocutor: Do you think government is a necessary evil, or an unnecessary evil?
Speaker: I think government is a necessary—what’s the opposite?—good.
Interlocutor: Really!
anarchism: the political doctrine that government is inherently oppressive and should be abolished for the sake of political liberty.
This is beyond false; it defies logic. The error is precisely the same as French anarchist Pierre Joseph Proudhon saying blatantly, “Property is theft.” The stolen concept here is “property.” The stolen concept there is “government.”
Just as there are entities that cannot be property (e.g., slaves), so there are governments that don’t deserve to exist (e.g., dictatorships). But these improper instances of each does not negate the respective proper concepts; rather, they reaffirm the causal identity for why property should exist (as the product of a man’s judgment and effort) or for why governments should exist (as instituted by men to protect their rights to life, liberty, and property). Only because each concept is legitimately grounded to man’s nature, giving rise to an objective standard, that we are able to distinguish some instances as improper.
Proudhon wanted to negate the concept “property” altogether; so too his modern aftchildren want to steal the concept “government” totally. But if so, “theft” is robbed of its core meaning, and “liberty” is forced out of society.
An intention without the proper means is worse than useless; it’s outright dangerous. Of an avowed socialist, Ayn Rand once wrote: “Feeling an enormous, incoherent benevolence, he was impatiently eager to abolish any form of human suffering, and he proclaimed ends, without thinking of means: he wanted to abolish poverty, with no idea of the source of wealth; he wanted the people to be free, with no idea of what is necessary to secure political freedom; he wanted to establish universal brotherhood, with no idea that force and terror will not establish it.” [TRM 159c]
Thus anarchists no way can claim to be defenders of liberty, for they don’t know its philosophical roots. Not knowing but still acting, is to act blindly on the basis of emotion. The anarchists’ refusal to know, places them beyond the realm of rational discourse. Theirs is a cause from unexamined whim, from sheer emotionalism. By agitating for a governmentless (i.e., stateless) society, they stupidly agitate to destroy political liberty. Unwittingly and foolishly, they become liberty’s enemies.
If there were a logo to brand anarchism, a most appropriate image would be a cross-eyed snake with half its body self-swallowed. Why a cross-eyed ouroboros? Because anarchists can’t see straight; worse, they see the loss of liberty as liberty. They believe their non-A as A.

