Editorial, Libertarian Magazine, March 1924
"There
was once indeed a time when Americans plumed themselves on their
individualism; but the fine trait of self-help is not so common now, and
what we hear nowadays is rather the enervating cry, "Let the government
do it."
So
obsessed are the people with politics, so omnipotent in action and so
all-sufficing in providence do they deem the government that to some of
them it seems either that legislative statutes are a substitute for
moral principles, or that virtue can be legislated into persons whether
they want it or not.
This
acceptance of legislation as a species of miracle-performing leads to
remarkable consequences. If legality can be substituted for morality, it
follows that no one need have any character; and, if an individual
could be terrorized into goodness by the penalties of man-made laws, why
should a person put forth any effort to acquire the habits of goodness?
But the law cannot make the people good; it can only make them pretend to be.
Puritanical
blue laws defeat their own object; the futility and perniciousness of
such laws are the evidence of their essential quackery . . . There are
many credulous Americans who can be interested in the League of Nations,
for such a league of governments appears to afford an alternative to
the duty of cultivating intelligence and morality and might work a
miracle by the quick and east way of erecting more political machinery.
Apparently therefore, it is not the saints, not the teachers, but the
politicians who are going to save mankind.
Although
it was the statesmen who did nothing to prevent, but everything they
could to bring about, the World War, yet such is the incurable
gullibility of some Americans that they will doubtless enjoy the brief
but false security when, by entrance into the League, the American
masses are persuaded to imagine that they have succeeded in shifting off
their own shoulders and onto the shoulders of a group of secret
diplomatists, the responsibility of maintaining peace.
Thus
the adoption of a panacea will provide a welcome inducement to abandon
the slow and hard work, [and] only adequate method, which is to go to
the root of a matter and remove all the causes of the trouble."
(Editorial, What Is Wrong With America? The Libertarian Magazine, March 1924)
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