
I wish some one
would offer a prize for a good, simple, and intelligent definition of the word
"Government."
What an immense
service it would confer on society!
The Government! what is it? where is it? what does it do? what ought it to
do? All we know is, that it is a mysterious personage;
and, assuredly, it is the most solicited, the most tormented, the most
overwhelmed, the most admired, the most accused, the most invoked, and the most
provoked of any personage in the world.
I have not the
pleasure of knowing my reader but I would stake ten to one that for six months
he has been making Utopias, and if so, that he is looking to Government for the
realization of them.
And should the
reader happen to be a lady: I have no doubt that she is sincerely desirous of
seeing all the evils of suffering humanity remedied, and that she thinks this
might easily be done, if Government would only undertake it.
But, alas! that poor unfortunate personage, like Figaro, knows not to
whom to listen, nor where to turn. The hundred
thousand mouths of the press and of the platform cry out all at once:
"Organize labor and workmen."
"Repress insolence and the tyranny of
capital."
"Make experiments upon manure and
eggs."
"Cover the country with
railways."
"Irrigate the plains."
"Plant the hills."
"Make model farms."
"Found social workshops."
"Nurture children."
"Instruct the youth."
"Assist the aged."
"Send the inhabitants of towns into
the country."
"Equalize the profits of all
trades."
"Lend money without interest to all
who wish to borrow."
"Emmancipate
oppressed people everywhere."
"Rear and perfect the
saddle-horse."
"Encourage the arts, and provide us
musicians, painters, and architects."
"Restrict commerce, and at the same
time create a merchant navy."
"Discover truth, and put a grain of
reason into our heads. The mission of Government is to
enlighten, to develop, to extend, to fortify, to spiritualize, and to sanctify
the soul of the people."
"Do have a
little patience, gentlemen" says Government, in a beseeching tone. "I will do what I can to satisfy you, but for this I
must have resources. I have been preparing plans for
five or six taxes, which are quite new, and not at all oppressive. You will see how willingly people will pay them."
Then comes a
great exclamation: "No! indeed!
where is the merit of doing a thing with resources? Why,
it does not deserve the name of a Government!
So far from loading us with fresh taxes,
we would have you withdraw the old ones.
You ought to suppress:
"The tobacco
tax."
"The tax on
liquors."
"The tax on
letters."
"Custom-house
duties."
"Patents."
In the midst of
this tumult, and now that the country has again and again changed the
administration, for not having satisfied all its demands, I wanted to show that
they were contradictory. But, what could I have been
thinking about? Could I not keep this unfortunate
observation to myself!
I have lost my
character forever! I am looked upon as a man without
heart and without feeling - a dry philosopher, an individualist, a plebeian--in
a word, an economist of the practical school. But,
pardon me, sublime writers, who stop at nothing, not even at contradictions. I am wrong, without a doubt, and I would willingly retract. I should be glad enough, you may be sure, if you had
really discovered a beneficent and inexhaustible being, calling itself the
Government, which has bread for all mouths, work for all hands, capital for all
enterprises, credit for all projects, oil for all wounds, balm for all
sufferings, advice for all perplexities, solutions for all doubts, truths for
all intellects, diversions for all who want them, milk for infancy, and wine
for old age--which can provide for all our wants, satisfy all our curiosity,
correct all our errors, repair all our faults, and exempt us henceforth from
the necessity for foresight, prudence, judgment, sagacity, experience, order,
economy, temperance, and activity.
What reason
could I have for not desiring to see such a discovery made? Indeed,
the more I reflect upon it, the more do I see that nothing could be more
convenient than that we should all of us have within our reach an inexhaustible
source of wealth and enlightenment--a universal physician, an unlimited
treasure, and an infallible counselor, such as you describe Government to be. Therefore it is that I want to have it pointed out and
defined, and that a prize should be offered to the first discoverer of the
phoenix. For no one would think of asserting that this
precious discovery has yet been made, since up to this time everything
presenting itself under the name of the Government has at some time been
overturned by the people, precisely because it does not fulfill the rather
contradictory conditions of the programme.
I will venture
to say that I fear we are, in this respect, the dupes of one of the strangest
illusions which have ever taken possession of the human mind.
Man recoils from
trouble--from suffering; and yet he is condemned by nature to the suffering of
privation, if he does not take the trouble to work. He
has to choose, then, between these two evils. What
means can he adopt to avoid both? There remains now,
and there will remain, only one way, which is, to enjoy the labor of others. Such a course of conduct prevents the trouble and the
satisfaction from preserving their natural proportion, and causes all the
trouble to become the lot of one set of persons, and all the satisfaction that
of another. This is the origin of slavery and of
plunder, whatever its form may be--whether that of wars, imposition, violence,
restrictions, frauds, &c.--monstrous abuses, but consistent with the
thought which has given them birth. Oppression should
be detested and resisted--it can hardly be called absurd.
Slavery is
disappearing, thank heaven! and, on the other hand,
our disposition to defend our property prevents direct and open plunder from
being easy.
One thing,
however, remains--it is the original inclination which exists in all men to
divide the lot of life into two parts, throwing the trouble upon others, and
keeping the satisfaction for themselves. It remains to
be shown under what new form this sad tendency is manifesting itself.
The oppressor no
longer acts directly and with his own powers upon his victim.
No, our conscience has become too sensitive for that. The
tyrant and his victim are still present, but there is an intermediate person
between them, which is the Government--that is, the Law itself. What can be better calculated to silence our scruples,
and, which is perhaps better appreciated, to overcome all resistance? We all therefore, put in our claim, under some pretext or
other, and apply to Government. We say to it, "I
am dissatisfied at the proportion between my labor and my enjoyments. I should like, for the sake of restoring the desired
equilibrium, to take a part of the possessions of others. But
this would be dangerous. Could not you facilitate the
thing for me? Could you not find me a good place? or check the industry of my competitors?
or, perhaps, lend me gratuitously some capital which, you may take from
its possessor? Could you not bring up my children at
the public expense? or grant me some prizes? or secure me a competence when I have attained my fiftieth
year? By this mean I shall gain my end with an easy
conscience, for the law will have acted for me, and I shall have all the
advantages of plunder, without its risk or its disgrace!"
As it is
certain, on the one hand, that we are all making some similar request to the
Government; and as, on the other, it is proved that Government cannot satisfy
one party without adding to the labor of the others, until I can obtain another
definition of the word Government I feel authorized to give it my own. Who knows but it may obtain the prize? Here
it is:
"Government
is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense
of everybody else."
For now, as
formerly, every one is, more or less, for profiting by the labors of others. No one would dare to profess such a sentiment; he even
hides it from himself; and then what is done? A medium
is thought of; Government is applied to, and every class in its turn comes to
it, and says, "You, who can take justifiably and honestly, take from the
public, and we will partake." Alas! Government is only too much disposed to follow this
diabolical advice, for it is composed of ministers and officials--of men, in
short, who, like all other men, desire in their hearts, and always seize every
opportunity with eagerness, to increase their wealth and influence. Government is not slow to perceive the advantages it may
derive from the part which is entrusted to it by the public. It
is glad to be the judge and the master of the destinies of all; it will take
much, for then a large share will remain for itself; it will multiply the
number of its agents; it will enlarge the circle of its privileges; it will end
by appropriating a ruinous proportion.
But the most
remarkable part of it is the astonishing blindnesss
of the public through it all. When successful soldiers
used to reduce the vanquished to slavery, they were barbarous, but they were
not absurd. Their object, like ours, was to live at
other people's expense, and they did not fail to do so. What
are we to think of a people who never seem to suspect that reciprocal plunder
is no less plunder because it is reciprocal; that it is no less criminal
because it is executed legally and with order; that it adds nothing to the
public good; that it diminishes it, just in proportion to the cost of the
expensive medium which we call the Government?
And it is this
great chimera which the French nation, for example, placed in 1848, for the
edification of the people, as a frontispiece to its Constitution. The following is the beginning of the preamble to this
Constitution:--
"
Thus it is
"The French
have constituted themselves a Republic to raise
Now, where is
the value of an axiom where the subject and the attribute could change places
without inconvenience? Everybody understands what is
meant by this: "The mother will feed the child." But
it would be ridiculous to say, "The child will feed the mother."
The Americans
formed another idea of the relations of the citizens with the Government when
they placed these simple words at the head of their constitution:--
"We, the
people of the United States, for the purpose of forming a more perfect union,
of establishing justice, of securing interior tranquillity,
of providing for our common defense, of increasing the general well-being, and
of securing the benefits of liberty to ourselves and to our posterity,
decree," &c.
Here there is no
chimerical creation, no abstraction, from which the citizens may demand
everything. They expect nothing except from themselves
and their own energy.
If I may be
permitted to criticise the first words of the French
Constitution of 1848, I would remark, that what I complain of is something more
than a mere metaphysical subtilty, as might seem at
first sight.
I contend that
this personification of Goverment has been, in past
times, and will be hereafter, a fertile source of calamities and revolutions.
There is the
public on one side, Government on the other, considered as two distinct beings;
the latter bound to bestow upon the former, and the former having the right to
claim from the latter, all imaginable human benefits. What
will be the consequence?
In fact,
Government is not maimed, and cannot be so. It has two
hands--one to receive and the other to give; in other words, it has a rough
hand and a smooth one. The activity of the second
necessarily subordinate to the activity of the frrst. Strictly, Government may take and not restore. This is evident, and may be explained by the porous and
absorbing nature of its hands, which always retain a part, and sometimes the
whole, of what they touch. But the thing that never
was seen, and never will be seen or conceived, is, that Government can restore
to the public more than it has taken from it. It is
therefore ridiculous for us to appear before it in the humble attitude of
beggars. It is radically impossible for it to confer a
particular benefit upon any one of the individualities which constitute the
community, without inflicting a greater injury upon the community as a whole.
Our
requisitions, therefore, place it in a dilemma. If it
refuses to grant the requests made to it, it is accused of weakness, ill-will,
and incapacity. If it endeavors to grant them, it is
obliged to load the people with fresh taxes--to do more harm than good, and to
bring upon itself from another quarter the general displeasure.
Thus, the public
has two hopes, and Government makes two promises--many benefits and no taxes. Hopes and promises, which, being contradictory, can never
be realized.
Now, is not this
the cause of all our revolutions? For, between the
Government, which lavishes promises which it is impossible to perform, and the
public, which has conceived hopes which can never be realized, two classes of
men interpose--the ambitious and the Utopians. It is
circumstances which give these their cue. It is enough
if these vassals of popularity cry out to the people: "The authorities are
deceiving you; if we were in their place, we would load you with benefits and
exempt you from taxes."
And the people
believe, and the people hope, and the people make a revolution!
No sooner are
their friends at the head of affairs, than they are called upon to redeem their
pledge. "Give us work, bread, assistance, credit,
instruction, more money," say the people; "and
withal deliver us, as you promised, from the demands of the tax-
gatherers."
The new
Government is no less embarrassed than the former one, for it soon finds that
it is much more easy to promise than to perform. It
tries to gain time, for this is necessary for maturing its vast projects. At first, it makes a few timid attempts.
On one hand it institutes a little elementary instruction; on the other,
it makes a little reduction in some taxes. But the
contradiction is forever starting up before it; if it would be philanthropic,
it must attend to its exchequer; if it neglects its exchequer, it must abstain from being philanthropic.
These two
promises are for ever clashing with each other; it cannot be otherwise. To live upon credit, which is the same as exhausting the
future, is certainly a present means of reconciling them: an attempt is made to
do a little good now, at the expense of a great deal of harm in future. But such proceedings call forth the spectre
of bancruptcy, which puts an end to credit. What is to be done then? Why,
then, the new Government takes a bold step; it unites all its forces in order
to maintain itself; it smothers opinion, has recourse to arbitrary measures,
ridicules its former maxims, declares that it is impossible to conduct the
administration except at the risk of being unpopular; in short, it proclaims
itself governmental. And it is here that other
candidates for popularity are waiting for it. They
exhibit the same illusion, pass by the same way, obtain the same success, and
are soon swallowed up in the same gulf.
We had arrived
at this point, in
What could the
Provisional Government do? Alas!
just that which always is done in similar circumstances--make promises,
and gain time.
It did so, of
course; and to give its promises more weight, it announced them publicly thus:
"Increase of prosperity, diminution of labor, assistance, credit,
gratuitous instruction, agricultural colonies, cultivation of waste land, and,
at the same time, reduction of the tax on salt, liquor, letters, meat; all this
shall be granted when the National Assembly meets."
The National
Assembly meets, and, as it is impossible to realize two contradictory things,
its task, its sad task, is to withdraw, as gently as possible, one after the
other, all the decrees of the Provisional Government. However,
in order somewhat to mitigate the cruelty of the deception, it is found
necessary to negotiate a little. Certain engagements
are fulfilled, others are, in a measure, begun, and therefore the new
administration is compelled to contrive some new taxes.
Now, I transport
myself, in thought, to a period a few months hence, and ask myself, with
sorrowful forebodings, what will come to pass when agents of the new Government
go into the country to collect new taxes upon legacies, revenues, and the
profits of agricultural traffic? It is to be hoped
that my presentiments may not be verified, but I foresee a difficult part for
the candidates for popularity to play.
Read the last
manifesto of one of the political parties--which they issued on the occasion of
the election of the President. It is rather long, but
at length it concludes with these words: "Government ought to give a great
deal to the people, and take little from them." It
is always the same tactics, or, rather, the same mistake.
"Government
is bound to give gratuitous instruction and education to all the
citizens."
It is bound to
give "A general and appropriate professional education, as much as
possible adapted to the wants, the callings, and the capacities of each
citizen."
It is bound
"To teach every citizen his duty to God, to man, and to himself; to
develop his sentiments, his tendencies, and his faculties; to teach him, in
short, the scientific part of his labor; to make him understand his own
interests, and to give him a knowledge of his rights."
It is bound
"To place within the reach of all literature and the arts, the patrimony
of thought, the treasures of the mind, and all those intellectual enjoyments
which elevate and strengthen the soul." It is
bound "To give compensation for every accident, from fire, inundation
&c., experienced by a citizen." (The etcetera
means more than it says.)
It is bound
"To attend to the relations of capital with labor, and to become the
regulator of credit."
It is bound
"To afford important encouragement and efficient protection to
agriculture."
It is bound
"To purchase railroads, canals, and mines; and, doubtless, to transact
affairs with that industrial capacity which characterizes it."
It is bound
"To encourage useful experiments, to promote and assist them by every
means likely to make them successful. As a regulator
of credit, it will exercise such extensive influence over industrial and
agricultural associations as shall insure them success."
Government is
bound to do all this, in addition to the services to which it is already
pledged; and further, it is always to maintain a menacing attitude toward
foreigners; for, according to those who sign the programme,
"Bound together by this holy union, and by the precedents of the French
Republic, we carry our wishes and hopes beyond the boundaries which despotism
has placed between nations. The rights which we desire
for ourselves, we desire for all those who are oppressed by the yoke of
tyranny; we desire that our glorious arms should still, if necessary, be the
army of liberty."
You see that the
gentle hand of Government--that good hand which gives and distributes, will be
very busy under the government of the reformers. You
think, perhaps, that it will be the same with the rough hand--that hand which
dives into our pockets. Do not deceive yourselves. The aspirants after popularity would not know their trade,
if they had not the art, when they show the gentle hand, to conceal the rough
one. Their reign will assuredly be the jubilee of the
taxpayers.
"It is
superfluities, not necessaries," they say, "which ought to be
taxed."
Truly, it will
be a good time when the exchequer, for the sake of loading us with benefits,
will content itself with curtailing our superfluities!
This is not all. The reformers intend that "taxation shall lose its
oppressive character, and be only an act of fraternity."
Good heavens! I know it is the fashion to
thrust fraternity in everywhere, but I did not imagine it would ever be put
into the hands of the tax-gatherer.
To come to the
details:-Those who sign the programme say, "We
desire the immediate abolition of those taxes which affect the absolute
necessaries of life, as salt, liquors, &c., &c."
"The reform
of the tax on landed property, customs, and patents."
"Gratuitous
justice--that is, the simplification of its forms, and reduction of its
expenses." (This, no doubt, has reference to
stamps.)
Thus, the tax on
landed property, customs, patents, stamps, salt, liquors, postage, all are
included. These gentlemen have found out the secret of
giving an excessive activity to the gentle hand of Government, while they entirely
paralyze its rough hand.
Well, I ask the
impartial reader, is it not childishness, and more than that, dangerous
childishness? Is it not inevitable that we shall have
revolution after revolution, if there is a determination never to stop till
this contradiction is realized: "To give nothing to government and to
receive much from it?"
If the reformers
were to come to power, would they not become the victims of the means which
they employed to take possession of it?
Citizens! In all times, two political systems have been in
existence, and each may be maintained by good reasons. According
to one of them, Government ought to do much, but then it ought to take much. According to the other, this two-fold activity ought to be
little felt. We have to choose between these two
systems. But as regards the third system, which
partakes of both the others, and which consists in exacting everything from
Government, without giving it anything, it is chimerical, absurd, childish,
contradictory, and dangerous. Those who parade it, for
the sake of the pleasure of accusing all governments of weakness, and thus
exposing them to your attacks, are only flattering and
deceiving you, while they are deceiving themselves.
For ourselves,
we consider that Government is and ought to be nothing whatever but the united
power of the people, organized, not to be an instrument of oppression and
mutual plunder among citizens; but, on the contrary, to secure to every one his
own, and to cause justice and security to reign.
The
End