Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 44/Not quite an anarchist"

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{{tab}}Here then there at first ap&shy;pears to be a clear-<wbr>cut posi&shy;tion. Paine held that many of the activ&shy;it&shy;ies which gov&shy;ern&shy;ments con&shy;cerned them&shy;selves with were super&shy;flu&shy;ous. Not only were they un&shy;neces&shy;sary and a waste of time, but often defin&shy;itely harm&shy;ful. Pur&shy;su&shy;ing this line of argu&shy;ment he writes{{dash}}{{qq|But how often is the na&shy;tural pro&shy;pens&shy;ity to so&shy;ciety dis&shy;turbed or de&shy;stroyed by the oper&shy;a&shy;tions of Gov&shy;ern&shy;ment.}} And again{{dash}}{{qq|&hellip; in&shy;stead of con&shy;solid&shy;at&shy;ing so&shy;ciety it (gov&shy;ern&shy;ment) di&shy;vided it, it de&shy;prived it of its na&shy;tural co&shy;he&shy;sion, and en&shy;gen&shy;dered dis&shy;con&shy;tents and dis&shy;orders which other&shy;wise would not have existed.}}
 
{{tab}}Here then there at first ap&shy;pears to be a clear-<wbr>cut posi&shy;tion. Paine held that many of the activ&shy;it&shy;ies which gov&shy;ern&shy;ments con&shy;cerned them&shy;selves with were super&shy;flu&shy;ous. Not only were they un&shy;neces&shy;sary and a waste of time, but often defin&shy;itely harm&shy;ful. Pur&shy;su&shy;ing this line of argu&shy;ment he writes{{dash}}{{qq|But how often is the na&shy;tural pro&shy;pens&shy;ity to so&shy;ciety dis&shy;turbed or de&shy;stroyed by the oper&shy;a&shy;tions of Gov&shy;ern&shy;ment.}} And again{{dash}}{{qq|&hellip; in&shy;stead of con&shy;solid&shy;at&shy;ing so&shy;ciety it (gov&shy;ern&shy;ment) di&shy;vided it, it de&shy;prived it of its na&shy;tural co&shy;he&shy;sion, and en&shy;gen&shy;dered dis&shy;con&shy;tents and dis&shy;orders which other&shy;wise would not have existed.}}
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{{tab}}How&shy;ever, even ad&shy;mit&shy;ting that the ef&shy;fects of gov&shy;ern&shy;ments in gen&shy;eral were harm&shy;ful or ir&shy;relev&shy;ant, Paine could pro&shy;duce no real al&shy;tern&shy;at&shy;ive. In a sar&shy;castic ref&shy;er&shy;ence to {{w|Burke|Edmund_Burke}} he says: {{qq|Mr. Burke has talked of {{w|old|Rockingham_Whigs}} {{p|313}}and {{w|new whigs|Chatham_ministry}}. If he can amuse him&shy;self with child&shy;ish names and dis&shy;tinc&shy;tions, I shall not inter&shy;rupt his pleasure.}} But, hav&shy;ing stated this, Paine then pro&shy;ceeds to dis&shy;tin&shy;guish be&shy;tween good (new) gov&shy;ern&shy;ments and bad (old) ones, even though previ&shy;ously he had been slat&shy;ing the prin&shy;ciple of Gov&shy;ern&shy;ment. This ac&shy;com&shy;mod&shy;a&shy;tion of con&shy;tra&shy;dictory ideas some&shy;times ap&shy;pears in the same sen&shy;tence. For ex&shy;ample:
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{{tab}}{{qq|Gov&shy;ern&shy;ment is no farther neces&shy;sary than to sup&shy;ply the few cases to which so&shy;ciety and civil&shy;iza&shy;tion are not con&shy;ven&shy;iently com&shy;pet&shy;ent; and in&shy;stan&shy;ces are not want&shy;ing to show, that every&shy;thing which Gov&shy;ern&shy;ment can use&shy;fully add there&shy;to, has been per&shy;formed by the com&shy;mon con&shy;sent of so&shy;ciety, with&shy;out Gov&shy;ern&shy;ment.}}
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{{tab}}What is obvi&shy;ously a very im&shy;port&shy;ant aspect of this doc&shy;trine{{dash|{{qq|The few cases to which so&shy;ciety and civil&shy;iza&shy;tion are not con&shy;ven&shy;iently com&shy;pet&shy;ent}}}}is left for us to guess at.
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{{tab}}The good and bad gov&shy;ern&shy;mental sys&shy;tems are out&shy;lined as fol&shy;lows:
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{{tab}}{{qq|&hellip; the old is hered&shy;it&shy;ary, either in whole or in part; and the new is en&shy;tirely re&shy;pre&shy;sent&shy;at&shy;ive.}} {{qq|Gov&shy;ern&shy;ment, on the old sys&shy;tem, is an as&shy;sump&shy;tion of power, for the ag&shy;grand&shy;ize&shy;ment of it&shy;self, on the new a de&shy;leg&shy;a&shy;tion of power for the com&shy;mon bene&shy;fit of so&shy;ciety.}}
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{{tab}}Car&shy;ried away by re&shy;volu&shy;tion&shy;ary fer&shy;vour, Paine eulo&shy;gizes the {{w|French|French_Revolution}} and {{w|Amer&shy;ican|American_Revolution}} pat&shy;terns and sinks into ideal&shy;istic my&shy;opia.
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{{tab}}{{qq|&hellip; the re&shy;pre&shy;sent&shy;at&shy;ive sys&shy;tem dif&shy;fuses such a body of know&shy;ledge through&shy;out a Nation on the sub&shy;ject of Gov&shy;ern&shy;ment, as to ex&shy;pose ignor&shy;ance and pre&shy;clude im&shy;posi&shy;tion &hellip; Those who are not in the re&shy;pre&shy;sent&shy;a&shy;tion know as much of the na&shy;ture and busi&shy;ness as those who are &hellip; Every man is a pro&shy;pri&shy;etor in Gov&shy;ern&shy;ment, and con&shy;siders it a neces&shy;sary part of his busi&shy;ness to under&shy;stand. It con&shy;cerns his inter&shy;est be&shy;cause it af&shy;fects his prop&shy;erty. He ex&shy;am&shy;ines the cost and com&shy;pares it with the ad&shy;van&shy;tages; and above all, he does not adopt the slav&shy;ish cus&shy;tom of fol&shy;low&shy;ing what in other gov&shy;ern&shy;ments are called LEADERS.}}
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{{tab}}The two hun&shy;dred years of histor&shy;ical ex&shy;peri&shy;ence that separ&shy;ates us from Paine en&shy;ables us to see that he was mis&shy;taken. In&shy;stead of {{qq|ex&shy;pos&shy;ing ignor&shy;ance and pre&shy;clud&shy;ing im&shy;posi&shy;tion}}, these still exist to&shy;gether with a ramp&shy;ant apathy. Paine con&shy;sidered that it was one of the sick&shy;nesses of the {{qq|old gov&shy;ern&shy;ments}} that a farmer was in&shy;duced, {{qq|while fol&shy;low&shy;ing the plough, to lay aside his peace&shy;ful pur&shy;suits, and go to war with the farmer of an&shy;other coun&shy;try.}} From our ad&shy;van&shy;tageous posi&shy;tion it is obvi&shy;ous to us that elected gov&shy;ern&shy;ments have been just as suc&shy;cess&shy;ful as hered&shy;it&shy;ary ones in per&shy;suad&shy;ing their pop&shy;ula&shy;tions to wage wars.
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{{tab}}Paine writes else&shy;where that there should be {{qq|no such thing as an idea of a com&shy;pact be&shy;tween the people on one<!-- 'on' in original --> side and the Gov&shy;ern&shy;ment on the other. The com&shy;pact (should be) that of people with each other to pro&shy;duce and con&shy;sti&shy;tute a gov&shy;ern&shy;ment.}} The {{w|Oxford Eng. Dic.|Oxford_English_Dictionary}} gives as a de&shy;fin&shy;i&shy;tion of the verb {{qq|to govern}}{{dash}}to rule with au&shy;thor&shy;ity; {{w|Mala&shy;testa<!-- 'Malatest' in original -->|Errico_Malatesta}} called it the {{qq|coer&shy;cive organ&shy;isa&shy;tion of so&shy;ciety.}}<ref><font size="2">{{w|''Umanita Nova''|Umanità_Nova}}, Septem&shy;ber 16th, 1922.</font></ref> When any body of men be&shy;comes ap&shy;pointed with this func&shy;tion it is in&shy;evit&shy;able that the gulf be&shy;tween gov&shy;ern&shy;ors and gov&shy;erned will be estab&shy;lished. {{w|Proud&shy;hon|Pierre-Joseph_Proudhon}}, born in the year of Paine{{s}} death, summed it up say&shy;ing {{qq|Be&shy;tween gov&shy;ern&shy;ing and gov&shy;erned, &hellip; no<!-- 'not' in original --> matter how the sys&shy;tem of re&shy;pre&shy;sent&shy;a&shy;tion or dele&shy;ga&shy;tion of the gov&shy;ern&shy;mental func&shy;tion is ar&shy;ranged there is neces&shy;sar&shy;ily an {{p|314}}alien&shy;a&shy;tion of part of the lib&shy;erty and means of the citi&shy;zen.}}
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{{tab}}The fourth right of man was that of polit&shy;ical lib&shy;erty. The seven&shy;teenth was that con&shy;cern&shy;ing prop&shy;erty; {{qq|The right to prop&shy;erty being in&shy;viol&shy;able and sacred, no one ought to be de&shy;prived of it.}} Paine could not real&shy;ize that the ac&shy;cum&shy;ula&shy;tion of prop&shy;erty by one man puts him in a domin&shy;ant posi&shy;tion with re&shy;gards to others, whose eco&shy;nomic and politi&shy;cal lib&shy;erty are cor&shy;re&shy;spond&shy;ingly re&shy;stricted. With the further in&shy;sight of the nine&shy;teenth century, Proud&shy;hon again was able to ask him&shy;self the ques&shy;tion {{qq|{{l|What is property?|http://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/pierre-joseph-proudhon-what-is-property-an-inquiry-into-the-principle-of-right-and-of-governmen}}}} In&shy;stead of de&shy;cid&shy;ing that it is an {{qq|in&shy;viol&shy;able and sacred}} right he came up with the answer {{qq|Prop&shy;erty is theft.}} In agree&shy;ment with this de&shy;ci&shy;sion, theor&shy;ists like {{w|Marx|Karl_Marx}} and [[Author:Peter Kropotkin|Kropot&shy;kin]] called for the abol&shy;i&shy;tion of prop&shy;erty, where&shy;as Paine had ad&shy;voc&shy;ated its pro&shy;tec&shy;tion.
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{{tab}}{{qq|Com&shy;mun&shy;ism de&shy;prives no man of the power to ap&shy;propri&shy;ate the pro&shy;ducts of so&shy;ciety: all that it does is to de&shy;prive him of the power to sub&shy;jugate the labour of others by means of such ap&shy;propri&shy;a&shy;tion.}}<ref><font size="2">{{l|''The Com&shy;mun&shy;ist Mani&shy;festo''|https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1848/communist-manifesto/index.htm}}{{dash}}{{w|Marx|Karl_Marx}} and {{w|Engels|Friedrich_Engels}}.</font></ref>
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{{tab}}{{qq|All things are for all men, since all men have need of them, since all men have worked in the measure of their strength to pro&shy;duce them &hellip;}}<ref><font size="2">{{l|''The Con&shy;quest of Bread''|https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/petr-kropotkin-the-conquest-of-bread}}{{dash}}[[Author:Peter Kropotkin|Kropot&shy;kin]].<br>{{tab}}Other quot&shy;a&shy;tions from Paine all come from {{q|{{l|The Rights of Man|https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Rights_of_Man}}}}.</font></ref>
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{{tab}}To wind up, Paine{{s}} main ideas are cer&shy;tainly of im&shy;port&shy;ance in the quest to estab&shy;lish polit&shy;ical just&shy;ice, but they by no means guaran&shy;tee it. Few people would now argue with his opin&shy;ions on hered&shy;itary rulers. His other sug&shy;ges&shy;tions, though often paid lip serv&shy;ice to, are rarely im&shy;ple&shy;mented. He could hardly have ex&shy;pected such an anaemic doc&shy;trine as the {{qq|neces&shy;sary evil}} of gov&shy;ern&shy;ment to be very satis&shy;factory. He could not grasp the na&shy;ture of prop&shy;erty, and he was opti&shy;mistic when estim&shy;at&shy;ing the degree to which re&shy;pre&shy;sent&shy;at&shy;ive gov&shy;ern&shy;ment can re&shy;flect the inter&shy;ests of its citi&shy;zens.
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{{tab}}As a com&shy;mun&shy;ist (not a {{w|bolshe&shy;vik|Bolsheviks}}) I be&shy;lieve that all men must bene&shy;fit when a sys&shy;tem of co-<wbr>oper&shy;a&shy;tion re&shy;places the pres&shy;ent one based on ex&shy;ploit&shy;a&shy;tion. So&shy;ciety spon&shy;tane&shy;ously ar&shy;ranges it&shy;self into basic nuclei{{dash}}the vil&shy;lage and the fac&shy;tory for ex&shy;ample. Each separ&shy;ate unit should be self-<wbr>con&shy;trol&shy;ling{{dash}}the run&shy;ning of it being a di&shy;rect re&shy;pro&shy;duc&shy;tion of the wishes of its mem&shy;bers. Co-<wbr>ordin&shy;a&shy;tion could be achieved on both re&shy;gional, na&shy;tional and inter&shy;na&shy;tional scales by con&shy;gresses of elected re&shy;pre&shy;sent&shy;at&shy;ives. What would dis&shy;tin&shy;guish these de&shy;leg&shy;ates is that they would be merely the mouth&shy;pieces of their elect&shy;ors, and not in&shy;di&shy;viduals given the power to make de&shy;ci&shy;sions for, and thus rule, the pop&shy;ula&shy;tion. I should like to em&shy;phas&shy;ise that this would re&shy;sult in a so&shy;ciety of healthy and free citi&shy;zens, but not in the crea&shy;tion of healthy states, which would in fact cease to exist. We have had suf&shy;fi&shy;cient ex&shy;peri&shy;ence of polit&shy;ic&shy;ally healthy states, often dis&shy;play&shy;ing all the symp&shy;toms of virile power, (thou&shy;sand-<wbr>year Reichs and the like) to real&shy;ize that their flour&shy;ish&shy;ing exist&shy;ence by no means guaran&shy;tees the hap&shy;pi&shy;ness and well-<wbr>being of their in&shy;habit&shy;ants.
 
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Not quite an anarchist}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Not quite an anarchist}}
 
[[Category:Anarchist philosophy]]
 
[[Category:Anarchist philosophy]]
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[[Category:Government]]
 
[[Category:Articles]]
 
[[Category:Articles]]

Latest revision as of 01:34, 30 December 2018


312

Not quite an anarchist

JOHN CRUMP


Thomas paine … was never enough of an opti­mist to let his na­tural anar­chism run its full course.[1] His con­tempor­ary, William Godwin, said in his “En­quiry Con­cern­ing Polit­ical Just­ice” (1793), “With what de­light must every well-in­formed friend of man­kind look for­ward to the dis­solu­tion of polit­ical gov­ern­ment, of that brute engine which has been the only per­en­nial cause of the vices of man­kind … and no other­wise to be re­moved than by its utter an­nihil­a­tion.” Paine takes a more neg­at­ive stance:— “Some writers have so con­founded so­ciety with gov­ern­ment as to leave little or no dis­tinc­tion be­tween them; where­as they are not only dif­fer­ent, but have dif­fer­ent ori­gins. So­ciety is pro­duced by our wants and gov­ern­ment by our wick­ed­ness … So­ciety in every state is a bless­ing, but gov­ern­ment even in its best state is but a neces­sary evil.”[2]

  Thomas Hobbes thought that with­out gov­ern­ment “the life of man (would be) solit­ary, poor, nasty, brut­ish and short.”[3] Paine took an op­pos­ing view; “Great part of that order which reigns among man­kind is not the ef­fect of Gov­ern­ment. It has its ori­gins in the prin­ciples of so­ciety and the na­tural con­sti­tu­tion of man.” In theory then Paine be­lieved that man was es­sen­tially a re­spons­ible being who should be per­fectly free, pro­vid­ing that his lib­erty did not in­fringe on an­other’s free­dom.

  He was scep­tical of the prac­tice of sub­ordin­at­ing the mass of men to the guid­ance of a few. We have seen that he clearly dif­fer­en­ti­ated be­tween so­ciety and gov­ern­ment in “Common Sense”, and he re­turns to this sub­ject in “The Rights of Man”, say­ing here “… so­ciety per­forms for it­self al­most every­thing ascribed to Gov­ern­ment.” He goes on to elabor­ate this theme, de­scrib­ing the state in America when there was no formal gov­ern­ment for more than two years fol­low­ing the out­break of the War of In­de­pend­ence. He main­tains that the dis­ap­pear­ance of gov­ern­ment there caused the flour­ish­ing of so­ciety, “com­mon inter­est pro­ducing com­mon secur­ity.”

  Here then there at first ap­pears to be a clear-cut posi­tion. Paine held that many of the activ­it­ies which gov­ern­ments con­cerned them­selves with were super­flu­ous. Not only were they un­neces­sary and a waste of time, but often defin­itely harm­ful. Pur­su­ing this line of argu­ment he writes—“But how often is the na­tural pro­pens­ity to so­ciety dis­turbed or de­stroyed by the oper­a­tions of Gov­ern­ment.” And again—“… in­stead of con­solid­at­ing so­ciety it (gov­ern­ment) di­vided it, it de­prived it of its na­tural co­he­sion, and en­gen­dered dis­con­tents and dis­orders which other­wise would not have existed.”

  How­ever, even ad­mit­ting that the ef­fects of gov­ern­ments in gen­eral were harm­ful or ir­relev­ant, Paine could pro­duce no real al­tern­at­ive. In a sar­castic ref­er­ence to Burke he says: “Mr. Burke has talked of old
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and new whigs. If he can amuse him­self with child­ish names and dis­tinc­tions, I shall not inter­rupt his pleasure.” But, hav­ing stated this, Paine then pro­ceeds to dis­tin­guish be­tween good (new) gov­ern­ments and bad (old) ones, even though previ­ously he had been slat­ing the prin­ciple of Gov­ern­ment. This ac­com­mod­a­tion of con­tra­dictory ideas some­times ap­pears in the same sen­tence. For ex­ample:

  “Gov­ern­ment is no farther neces­sary than to sup­ply the few cases to which so­ciety and civil­iza­tion are not con­ven­iently com­pet­ent; and in­stan­ces are not want­ing to show, that every­thing which Gov­ern­ment can use­fully add there­to, has been per­formed by the com­mon con­sent of so­ciety, with­out Gov­ern­ment.”

  What is obvi­ously a very im­port­ant aspect of this doc­trine—“The few cases to which so­ciety and civil­iza­tion are not con­ven­iently com­pet­ent”—is left for us to guess at.

  The good and bad gov­ern­mental sys­tems are out­lined as fol­lows:

  “… the old is hered­it­ary, either in whole or in part; and the new is en­tirely re­pre­sent­at­ive.” “Gov­ern­ment, on the old sys­tem, is an as­sump­tion of power, for the ag­grand­ize­ment of it­self, on the new a de­leg­a­tion of power for the com­mon bene­fit of so­ciety.”

  Car­ried away by re­volu­tion­ary fer­vour, Paine eulo­gizes the French and Amer­ican pat­terns and sinks into ideal­istic my­opia.

  “… the re­pre­sent­at­ive sys­tem dif­fuses such a body of know­ledge through­out a Nation on the sub­ject of Gov­ern­ment, as to ex­pose ignor­ance and pre­clude im­posi­tion … Those who are not in the re­pre­sent­a­tion know as much of the na­ture and busi­ness as those who are … Every man is a pro­pri­etor in Gov­ern­ment, and con­siders it a neces­sary part of his busi­ness to under­stand. It con­cerns his inter­est be­cause it af­fects his prop­erty. He ex­am­ines the cost and com­pares it with the ad­van­tages; and above all, he does not adopt the slav­ish cus­tom of fol­low­ing what in other gov­ern­ments are called LEADERS.”

  The two hun­dred years of histor­ical ex­peri­ence that separ­ates us from Paine en­ables us to see that he was mis­taken. In­stead of “ex­pos­ing ignor­ance and pre­clud­ing im­posi­tion”, these still exist to­gether with a ramp­ant apathy. Paine con­sidered that it was one of the sick­nesses of the “old gov­ern­ments” that a farmer was in­duced, “while fol­low­ing the plough, to lay aside his peace­ful pur­suits, and go to war with the farmer of an­other coun­try.” From our ad­van­tageous posi­tion it is obvi­ous to us that elected gov­ern­ments have been just as suc­cess­ful as hered­it­ary ones in per­suad­ing their pop­ula­tions to wage wars.

  Paine writes else­where that there should be “no such thing as an idea of a com­pact be­tween the people on one side and the Gov­ern­ment on the other. The com­pact (should be) that of people with each other to pro­duce and con­sti­tute a gov­ern­ment.” The Oxford Eng. Dic. gives as a de­fin­i­tion of the verb “to govern”—to rule with au­thor­ity; Mala­testa called it the “coer­cive organ­isa­tion of so­ciety.”[4] When any body of men be­comes ap­pointed with this func­tion it is in­evit­able that the gulf be­tween gov­ern­ors and gov­erned will be estab­lished. Proud­hon, born in the year of Paine’s death, summed it up say­ing “Be­tween gov­ern­ing and gov­erned, … no matter how the sys­tem of re­pre­sent­a­tion or dele­ga­tion of the gov­ern­mental func­tion is ar­ranged there is neces­sar­ily an
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alien­a­tion of part of the lib­erty and means of the citi­zen.”

  The fourth right of man was that of polit­ical lib­erty. The seven­teenth was that con­cern­ing prop­erty; “The right to prop­erty being in­viol­able and sacred, no one ought to be de­prived of it.” Paine could not real­ize that the ac­cum­ula­tion of prop­erty by one man puts him in a domin­ant posi­tion with re­gards to others, whose eco­nomic and politi­cal lib­erty are cor­re­spond­ingly re­stricted. With the further in­sight of the nine­teenth century, Proud­hon again was able to ask him­self the ques­tion “What is property?” In­stead of de­cid­ing that it is an “in­viol­able and sacred” right he came up with the answer “Prop­erty is theft.” In agree­ment with this de­ci­sion, theor­ists like Marx and Kropot­kin called for the abol­i­tion of prop­erty, where­as Paine had ad­voc­ated its pro­tec­tion.

  “Com­mun­ism de­prives no man of the power to ap­propri­ate the pro­ducts of so­ciety: all that it does is to de­prive him of the power to sub­jugate the labour of others by means of such ap­propri­a­tion.”[5]

  “All things are for all men, since all men have need of them, since all men have worked in the measure of their strength to pro­duce them …”[6]

  To wind up, Paine’s main ideas are cer­tainly of im­port­ance in the quest to estab­lish polit­ical just­ice, but they by no means guaran­tee it. Few people would now argue with his opin­ions on hered­itary rulers. His other sug­ges­tions, though often paid lip serv­ice to, are rarely im­ple­mented. He could hardly have ex­pected such an anaemic doc­trine as the “neces­sary evil” of gov­ern­ment to be very satis­factory. He could not grasp the na­ture of prop­erty, and he was opti­mistic when estim­at­ing the degree to which re­pre­sent­at­ive gov­ern­ment can re­flect the inter­ests of its citi­zens.

  As a com­mun­ist (not a bolshe­vik) I be­lieve that all men must bene­fit when a sys­tem of co-oper­a­tion re­places the pres­ent one based on ex­ploit­a­tion. So­ciety spon­tane­ously ar­ranges it­self into basic nuclei—the vil­lage and the fac­tory for ex­ample. Each separ­ate unit should be self-con­trol­ling—the run­ning of it being a di­rect re­pro­duc­tion of the wishes of its mem­bers. Co-ordin­a­tion could be achieved on both re­gional, na­tional and inter­na­tional scales by con­gresses of elected re­pre­sent­at­ives. What would dis­tin­guish these de­leg­ates is that they would be merely the mouth­pieces of their elect­ors, and not in­di­viduals given the power to make de­ci­sions for, and thus rule, the pop­ula­tion. I should like to em­phas­ise that this would re­sult in a so­ciety of healthy and free citi­zens, but not in the crea­tion of healthy states, which would in fact cease to exist. We have had suf­fi­cient ex­peri­ence of polit­ic­ally healthy states, often dis­play­ing all the symp­toms of virile power, (thou­sand-year Reichs and the like) to real­ize that their flour­ish­ing exist­ence by no means guaran­tees the hap­pi­ness and well-being of their in­habit­ants.