Monday, May 3, 2010

Liberalism continued - a credo subject to correction by better and wiser people!

I'm almost done. The reason why I'm doing this is because - like I said - I just want to get this premature fermentation down on paper, so to speak: so I can look at it better and organize it if I have to, which I probably will.

The ultimate end of a society should be the liberty of its citizens, which leads to the formation of healthy communities. The next question is a psychological one. Why do socialists believe what they do? It’s because they haven’t made the psychological transition from seeing themselves as members absorbed in a community to autonomous individuals that can freely associate themselves in a community.

They don’t - or don’t want to - see themselves as individuals. I want to keep in mind exactly what that means. To true liberalism, being an individual is an arduous task, one of the goals of life, finding out who you are, fulfilling the Socratic maxim to Know Thyself. It takes time, discipline, work, humility, and ultimately Christ. Socialists might be guilty of one or two psychological pathologies. Of course, it’s only a pathology if Socialism isn’t true; but I’m working from the standpoint of it being false.

First, they don’t know about their ability to be an individual. They’ve been brought up to think or they have a bias to believe that the purpose of life is to be insulated in a community. But if you’re insulated in a community, you’re insulated from any challenge to compete for opportunities. Second, they just don’t have the faith to rise up to their calling. Some feelings that the Socialist might have: envy, resentment, self-pity, persecution complex.

It seems to me that a sense of individuality is a key to finding out what you excel at, finding out whatever it is that you do well, and that doing it makes you happy. It’s a way to love yourself. But this key alludes the socialist: the key that lets them through the door of loving self and neighbor. It’s exchanged for a love for a utopian dream, an abstract idea, a community, a state, and not a concrete individual, like your neighbor, Zachary Elvington or Matthew Johnson.

Socialists want a government that is a nanny, a boss, an organizer, someone that gives orders, someone that fairly distributes goods and services to all the citizens, no matter what work is done, how much, or how little. A true liberal merely wants an umpire, someone to call foul if already autonomous individuals, working in a civil association, violate the institution of the rule of law.

The liberal wants to succeed; the socialist doesn’t want to fail. But then socialism would lead to a society with a boss or a nanny that is itself short on being an individual. When they call the shots, it’ll revolve around everyone getting an equal share in a government sponsored economy, rather than individuals competing in a market economy.

The thing responsible for the pathology is sin. That’s not to say that liberals aren’t afflicted with sin as well: it’s just to say that sin in socialism seems to be built into the system, a psychological condition of its getting off the ground, so to speak.

The liberal point, then, is this. Socialism erodes communities as they should be, and one of the communities that is eroding is religion. The community erodes because it’s looked at as an ultimate end; but it’s not. The community is what it is because autonomous individuals who have as their final end liberty voluntarily choose to join that community. When that community is religion, the religion in turn feeds the community ‘spiritual capital’, which strengthens the nation’s culture and morale, and puts in place the proper conditions which allow its citizens to practice their religion authentically in the privacy of their inner lives. Socialism ruins that spiritual capital over time, because it ruins liberty and autonomy (by enlarging the tentacles of government), the conditions for the creation of an authentic community to begin with.

I say all this knowing that a lot is left hanging, and that lots of points are dangling, not sufficiently argued for. But this is my philosophy for the moment and I felt like spilling it all out with all its apparent, latent, or real weaknesses.

1 comment:

  1. You're pretty spot on.

    I had a very hilarious conversation with an economics colleague of mine. He had never heard of this: true capitalism has both a price indicator and a value indicator. He never heard it!

    We live in an age of complete deference. You buy stock in a company which murders infants; no biggie, you're just making money, not supporting their habits.

    Socialists cling to examples like this to prove their point. Ultimately it can be seen that capitalism fails for the same reason communism does: greed trumps virtue. Though, communism bleeds a society of virtue MUCH quicker.

    Now trust me, I don't believe at all in communism, but on a certain level communism is synonymous with capitalism. I can explain this later if needed. Its very interesting.

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