.
. . We have said that man is not only the most individualistic being
on earth -- he is also the most social. It was a great mistake on the
part of Jean Jacques Rousseau to have thought that primitive society
was established through a free agreement among savages. But Jean Jacques
is not the only one to have said this. The majority of jurists and modern
publicists, either of the school of Kant or any other individualist
and liberal school, those who do not accept the idea of a society founded
upon the divine right of the theologians nor of a society determined
by the Hegelian school as a more or less mystical realisation of objective
morality, nor of the naturalists' concept of a primitive animal society,
all accept, nolens volens, and for lack of any other basis, the tacit
agreement or contract as their starting point.
According
to the theory of the social contract primitive men enjoying absolute
liberty only in isolation are antisocial by nature. When forced to associate
they destroy each other's freedom. If this struggle is unchecked it
can lead to mutual extermination. In order not to destroy each other
completely, they conclude a contract, formal or tacit, whereby they
surrender some of their freedom to assure the rest. This contract becomes
the foundation of society, or rather of the State, for we must point
out that in this theory there is no place for society; only the State
exists, or rather society is completely absorbed by the State.
Society
is the natural mode of existence of the human collectivity, independent
of any contract. It governs itself through the customs or the traditional
habits, but never by laws. It progresses slowly, under the impulsion
it receives from individual initiatives and not through the thinking
or the will of the law-giver. There are a good many laws which govern
it without its being aware of them, but these are natural laws, inherent
in the body social, just as physical laws are inherent in material bodies.
Most of these laws remain unknown to this day; nevertheless, they have
governed human society ever since its birth, independent of the thinking
and the will of the men composing the society. Hence they should not
be confused with the political and juridical laws proclaimed by some
legislative power, laws that are supposed to be the logical sequelae
of the first contract consciously formed by men.
The state
is in no wise an immediate product of nature. Unlike society, it does
not precede the awakening of reason in men. The liberals say that the
first state was created by the free and rational will of men; the men
of the right consider it the work of God. In either case it dominates
society and tends to absorb it completely.
One might
rejoin that the State, representing as it does the public welfare or
the common interest of all, curtails a part of the liberty of each only
for the sake of assuring to him all the remainder. But this remainder
may be a form of security; it is never liberty. Liberty is indivisible;
one cannot curtail a part of it without killing all of it. This little
part you are curtailing is the very essence of my liberty; it is all
of it. Through a natural, necessary, and irresistible movement, all
of my liberty is concentrated precisely in the part, small as it may
be, which you curtail. It is the story of Bluebeard's wife, who had
an entire palace at her disposal, with full and complete liberty to
enter everywhere, to see and to touch everything, except for one dreadful
little chamber which her terrible husband's sovereign will had forbidden
her to open on pain of death. Well, she turned away from all the splendours
of the palace, and her entire being concentrated on the dreadful little
chamber. She opened that forbidden door, for good reason, since her
liberty depended on her doing so, while the prohibition to enter was
a flagrant violation of precisely that liberty. It is also the story
of Adam and Eve's fall. The prohibition to taste the fruit from the
tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for no other reason than that
such was the will of the Lord, was an act of atrocious despotism on
the part of the good Lord. Had our first parents obeyed it, the entire
human race would have remained plunged in the most humiliating slavery.
Their disobedience has emancipated and saved us. Theirs, in the language
of mythology, was the first act of human liberty.
But, one
might say, could the State, the democratic State, based upon the free
suffrage of all its citizens, be the negation of their liberty? And
why not? That would depend entirely on the mission and the power that
the citizens surrendered to the State. A republican State, based upon
universal suffrage, could be very despotic, more despotic even than
the monarchical State, if, under the pretext of representing everybody's
will, it were to bring down the weight of its collective power upon
the will and the free movement of each of its members.
However,
suppose one were to say that the State does not restrain the liberty
of its members except when it tends toward injustice or evil. It prevents
its members from killing each other, plundering each other, insulting
each other, and in general from hurting each other, while it leaves
them full liberty to do good. This brings us back to the story of Bluebeard's
wife, or the story of the forbidden fruit: what is good? what is evil?
From the
standpoint of the system we have under examination, the distinction
between good and evil did not exist before the conclusion of the contract,
when each individual stayed deep in the isolation of his liberty or
of his absolute rights, having no consideration for his fellowmen except
those dictated by his relative weakness or strength; that is, his own
prudence and self^^interest. At that time, still following the same
theory, egotism was the supreme law, the only right. The good was determined
by success, failure was the only evil, and justice was merely the consecration
of the fait accompli, no matter how horrible, how cruel or infamous,
exactly as things are now in the political morality which prevails in
Europe today.
The distinction
between good and evil, according to this system, commences only with
the conclusion of the social contract. Thereafter, what was recognised
as constituting the common interest was proclaimed as good, and all
that was contrary to it as evil. The contracting members, on becoming
citizens, and bound by a more or less solemn undertaking, thereby assumed
an obligation: to subordinate their private interests to the common
good, to an interest inseparable from all others. Their own rights were
separated from the public right, the sole representative of which, the
State, was thereby invested with the power to repress all illegal revolts
of the individual, but also with the obligation to protect each of its
members in the exercise of his rights insofar as these were not contrary
to the common right.
We shall
now examine what the State, thus constituted, should be in relation
to other states, its peers, as well as in relation to its own subject
populations. This examination appears to us all the more interesting
and useful because the State, as it is here defined, is precisely the
modern State insofar as it has separated itself from the religious idea
-- the secular or atheist State proclaimed by modern publicists. Let
us see, then: of what does its morality consist? It is the modern State,
we have said, at the moment when it has freed itself from the yoke of
the Church, and when it has, consequently, shaken off the yoke of the
universal or cosmopolitan morality of the Christian religion; at the
moment when it has not yet been penetrated by the humanitarian morality
or idea, which, by the way, it could never do without destroying itself;
for, in its separate existence and isolated concentration, it would
be too narrow to embrace, to contain the interests and therefore the
morality of all mankind.
Modern
states have reached precisely this point. Christianity serves them only
as a pretext or a phrase or as a means of deceiving the idle mob, for
they pursue goals which have nothing to do with religious sentiments.
The great statesmen of our days, the Palmerstons, the Muravievs, the
Cavours, the Bismarcks, the Napoleons, had a good laugh when people
took their religious pronouncements seriously. They laughed harder when
people attributed humanitarian sentiments, considerations, and intentions
to them, but they never made the mistake of treating these ideas in
public as so much nonsense. Just what remains to constitute their morality?
The interest of the State, and nothing else. From this point of view,
which, incidentally, with very few exceptions, has been that of the
statesmen, the strong men of all times and of all countries from this
point of view, I say, whatever conduces to the preservation, the grandeur
and the power of the State, no matter how sacrilegious or morally revolting
it may seem, that is the good. And conversely, whatever opposes the
State's interests, no matter how holy or just otherwise, that is evil.
Such is the secular morality and practice of every State.
It is the
same with the State founded upon the theory of the social contract.
According to this principle, the good and the just commence only with
the contract; they are, in fact, nothing but the very contents and the
purpose of the contract; that is, the common interest and the public
right of all the individuals who have formed the contract among themselves,
with the exclusion of all those who remain outside the contract. It
is; consequently, nothing but the greatest satisfaction given to the
collective egotism of a special and restricted association, which, being
founded upon the partial sacrifice of the individual egotism of each
of its members, rejects from its midst, as strangers and natural enemies,
the immense majority of the human species, whether or not it may be
organised into analogous organisation.
The existence
of one sovereign, exclusionary State necessarily supposes the existence
and, if need be, provokes the formation of other such States, since
it is quite natural that individuals who find themselves outside it
and are threatened by it in their existence and in their liberty, should,
in their turn, associate themselves against it. We thus have humanity
divided into an indefinite number of foreign states, all hostile and
threatened by each other. There is no common right, no social contract
of any kind between them; otherwise they would cease to be independent
states and become the federated members of one great state. But unless
this great state were to embrace all of humanity, it would be confronted
with other great states, each federated within, each maintaining the
same posture of inevitable hostility. War would still remain the supreme
law, an unavoidable condition of human survival.
Every state,
federated or not, would therefore seek to become the most powerful.
It must devour lest it be devoured, conquer lest it be conquered, enslave
lest it be enslaved, since two powers, similar and yet alien to each
other, could not coexist without mutual destruction.
The State,
therefore, is the most flagrant, the most cynical, and the most complete
negation of humanity. It shatters the universal solidarity of all men
on the earth, and brings some of them into association only for the
purpose of destroying, conquering, and enslaving all the rest. It protects
its own citizens only; it recognises human rights, humanity, civilisation
within its own confines alone. Since it recognises no rights outside
itself, it logically arrogates to itself the right to exercise the most
ferocious inhumanity toward all foreign populations, which it can plunder,
exterminate, or enslave at will. If it does show itself generous and
humane toward them, it is never through a sense of duty, for it has
no duties except to itself in the first place, and then to those of
its members who have freely formed it, who freely continue to constitute
it or even, as always happens in the long run, those who have become
its subjects. As there is no international law in existence, and as
it could never exist in a meaningful and realistic way without undermining
to its foundations the very principle of the absolute sovereignty of
the State, the State can have no duties toward foreign populations.
Hence, if it treats a conquered people in a humane fashion, if it plunders
or exterminates it halfway only, if it does not reduce it to the lowest
degree of slavery, this may be a political act inspired by prudence,
or even by pure magnanimity, but it is never done from a sense of duty,
for the State has an absolute right to dispose of a conquered people
at will.
This flagrant
negation of humanity which constitutes the very essence of the State
is, from the standpoint of the State, its supreme duty and its greatest
virtue. It bears the name patriotism, and it constitutes the entire
transcendent morality of the State. We call it transcendent morality
because it usually goes beyond the level of human morality and justice,
either of the community or of the private individual, and by that same
token often finds itself in contradiction with these. Thus, to offend,
to oppress, to despoil, to plunder, to assassinate or enslave one's
fellowman is ordinarily regarded as a crime. In public life, On the
other hand, from the standpoint of patriotism, when these things are
done for the greater glory of the State, for the preservation or the
extension of its power, it is all transformed into duty and virtue.
And this virtue, this duty, are obligatory for each patriotic citizen;
everyone is supposed to exercise them not against foreigners only but
against one's own fellow citizens, members or subjects of the State
like himself, whenever the welfare of the State demands it.
This explains
why, since the birth of the State, the world of politics has always
been and continues to be the stage for unlimited rascality and brigandage,
brigandage and rascality which, by the way, are held in high esteem,
since they are sanctified by patriotism, by the transcendent morality
and the supreme interest of the State. This explains why the entire
history of ancient and modern states is merely a series of revolting
crimes; why kings and ministers, past and present, of all times and
all countries -- statesmen, diplomats, bureaucrats, and warriors --
if judged from the standpoint of simple morality and human justice,
have a hundred, a thousand times over earned their sentence to hard
labour or to the gallows. There is no horror, no cruelty, sacrilege,
or perjury, no imposture, no infamous transaction, no cynical robbery,
no bold plunder or shabby betrayal that has not been or is not daily
being perpetrated by the representatives of the states, under no other
pretext than those elastic words, so convenient and yet so terrible:
"for reasons of state."
These are
truly terrible words, for they have corrupted and dishonoured, within
official ranks and in society's ruling classes, more men than has even
Christianity itself. No sooner are these words uttered than all grows
silent, and everything ceases; honesty, honour, justice, right, compassion
itself ceases, and with it logic and good sense. Black turns white,
and white turns black. The lowest human acts, the basest felonies, the
most atrocious crimes become meritorious acts.
The great
Italian political philosopher Machiavelli was the first to use these
words, or at least the first to give them their true meaning and the
immense popularity they still enjoy among our rulers today. A realistic
and positive thinker if there ever was one, he was the first to understand
that the great and powerful states could be founded and maintained by
crime alone -- by many great crimes, and by a radical contempt for all
that goes under the name of honesty. He has written, explained, and
proven these facts with terrifying frankness. And, since the idea of
humanity was entirely unknown in his time; since the idea of fraternity
-- not human but religious -- as preached by the Catholic Church, was
at that time, as it always has been, nothing but a shocking irony, belied
at every step by the Church's own actions; since in his time no one
even suspected that there was such a thing as popular right, since the
people had always been considered an inert and inept mass, the flesh
of the State to be moulded and exploited at will, pledged to eternal
obedience; since there was absolutely nothing in his time, in Italy
or elsewhere, except for the State -- Machiavelli concluded from these
facts, with a good deal of logic, that the State was the supreme goal
of all human existence, that it must be served at any cost and that,
since the interest of the State prevailed over everything else, a good
patriot should not recoil from any crime in order to serve it. He advocates
crime, he exhorts to crime, and makes it the sine qua non of political
intelligence as well as of true patriotism. Whether the State bear the
name of a monarchy or of a republic, crime will always be necessary
for its preservation and its triumph. The State will doubtless change
its direction and its object, but its nature will remain the same: always
the energetic, permanent violation of justice, compassion, and honesty,
for the welfare of the State.
Yes, Machiavelli
is right. We can no longer doubt it after an experience of three and
a half centuries added to his own experience. Yes, so all history tells
us: while the small states are virtuous only because of their weakness,
the powerful states sustain themselves by crime alone. But our conclusion
will be entirely different from his, for a very simple reason. We are
the children of the Revolution, and from it we have inherited the religion
of humanity, which we must found upon the ruins of the religion of divinity.
We believe in the rights of man, in the dignity and the necessary emancipation
of the human species. We believe in human liberty and human fraternity
founded upon justice. In a word, we believe in the triumph of humanity
upon the earth. But this triumph, which we summon with all our longing,
which we want to hasten with all our united efforts -- since it is by
its very nature the negation of the crime which is intrinsically the
negation of humanity -- this triumph cannot be achieved until crime
ceases to be what it now is more or less everywhere today, the real
basis of the political existence of the nations absorbed and dominated
by the ideas of the State. And since it is now proven that no state
could exist without committing crimes, or at least without contemplating
and planning them, even when its impotence should prevent it from perpetrating
crimes, we today conclude in favour of the absolute need of destroying
the states. Or, if it is so decided, their radical and complete transformation
so that, ceasing to be powers centralised and organised from the top
down, by violence or by authority of some principle, they may recognise
-- with absolute liberty for all the parties to unite or not to unite,
and with liberty for each of these always to leave a union even when
freely entered into -- from the bottom up, according to the real needs
and the natural tendencies of the parties, through the free federation
of individuals, associations, communes, districts, provinces, and nations
within humanity.
Such are
the conclusions to which we are inevitably led by an examination of
the external relations which the so-called free states maintain with
other states. Let us now examine the relations maintained by the State
founded upon the free contract arrived at among its own citizens or
subjects.
We have
already observed that by excluding the immense majority of the human
species from its midst, by keeping this majority outside the reciprocal
engagements and duties of morality, of justice, and of right, the State
denies humanity and, using that sonorous word patriotism, imposes injustice
and cruelty as a supreme duty upon all its subjects. It restricts, it
mutilates, it kills humanity in them, so that by ceasing to be men,
they may be solely citizens -- or rather, and more specifically, that
through the historic connection and succession of facts, they may never
rise above the citizen to the height of being man.
We have
also seen that every state, under pain of destruction and fearing to
be devoured by its neighbour states, must reach out toward omnipotence,
and, having become powerful, must conquer. Who speaks of conquest speaks
of peoples conquered, subjugated, reduced to slavery in whatever form
or denomination. Slavery, therefore, is the necessary consequence of
the very existence of the State.
Slavery
may change its form or its name -- its essence remains the same. Its
essence may be expressed in these words: to be a slave is to be forced
to work for someone else, just as to be a master is to live on someone
else's work. In antiquity, just as in Asia and in Africa today, as well
as even in a part of America, slaves were, in all honesty, called slaves.
In the Middle Ages, they took the name of serfs: nowadays they are called
wage earners. The position of this latter group has a great deal more
dignity attached to it, and it is less hard than that of slaves, but
they are nonetheless forced, by hunger as well as by political and social
institutions, to maintain other people in complete or relative idleness,
through their own exceedingly hard labour. Consequently they are slaves.
And in general, no state, ancient or modern, has ever managed or will
ever manage to get along without the forced labour of the masses, either
wage earners or slaves, as a principal and absolutely necessary foundation
for the leisure, the liberty, and the civilisation of the political
class: the citizens. On this point, not even the United States of North
America can as yet be an exception.
Such are
the internal conditions that necessarily result for the State from its
objective stance, that is, its natural, permanent, and inevitable hostility
toward all the other states. Let us now see the conditions resulting
directly for the State's citizens from that free contract by which they
supposedly constituted themselves into a State.
The State
not only has the mission of guaranteeing the safety of its members against
any attack coming from without; it must also defend them within its
own borders, some of them against the others, and each of them against
himself. For the State -- and this is most deeply characteristic of
it, of every state, as of every theology -- presupposes man to be essentially
evil and wicked. In the State we are now examining, the good, as we
have seen, commences only with the conclusion of the social contract
and, consequently, is merely the product and very content of this contract.
The good is not the product of liberty. On the contrary, so long as
men remain isolated in their absolute individuality, enjoying their
full natural liberty to which they recognise no limits but those of
fact, not of law, they follow one law only, that of their natural egotism.
They offend, maltreat, and rob each other; they obstruct and devour
each other, each to the extent of his intelligence, his cunning, and
his material resources, doing just as the states do to one another.
By this reasoning, human liberty produces not good but evil; man is
by nature evil. How did he become evil? That is for theology to explain.
The fact is that the Church, at its birth, finds man already evil, and
undertakes to make him good, that is, to transform the natural man into
the citizen.
To this
one may rejoin that, since the State is the product of a contract freely
concluded by men, and since the good is the product of the State, it
follows that the good is the product of liberty! Such a conclusion would
not be right at all. The State itself, by this reasoning, is not the
product of liberty; it is, on the contrary, the product of the voluntary
sacrifice and negation of liberty. Natural men, completely free from
the sense of right but exposed, in fact, to all the dangers which threaten
their security at every moment, in order to assure and safeguard this
security, sacrifice, or renounce more or less of their own liberty,
and, to the extent that they have sacrificed liberty for security and
have thus become citizens, they become the slaves of the State. We are
therefore right in affirming that, from the viewpoint of the State,
the good is born not of liberty but rather of the negation of liberty.
Is it not
remarkable to find so close a correspondence between theology, that
science of the Church, and politics, that science of the State; to find
this concurrence of two orders of ideas and of realities, outwardly
so opposed, nevertheless holding the same conviction: that human liberty
must be destroyed if men are to be moral, if they are to be transformed
into saints (for the Church) or into virtuous citizens (for the State)?
Yet we are not at all surprised by this peculiar harmony, since we are
convinced, and shall try to prove, that politics and theology are two
sisters issuing from the same source and pursuing the same ends under
different names; and that every state is a terrestrial church, just
as every church, with its own heaven, the dwelling place of the blessed
and of the immortal God, is but a celestial state.
Thus the
State, like the Church, starts out with this fundamental supposition,
that men are basically evil, and that, if delivered up to their natural
liberty, they would tear each other apart and offer the spectacle of
the most terrifying anarchy, where the stronger would exploit and slaughter
the weaker -- quite the contrary of what goes on in our model states
today, needless to say! The State sets up the principle that in order
to establish public order, there is need of a superior authority; in
order to guide men and repress their evil passions, there is need of
a guide and a curb.
. . . In
order to assure the observance of the principles and the administration
of laws in any human society whatsoever, there has to be a vigilant,
regulating, and, if need be, repressive power at the head of the State.
It remains for us to find out who should and who could exercise such
power.
For the
State founded upon divine right and through the intervention of any
God whatever, the answer is simple enough; the men to exercise such
power would be the priests primarily, and secondarily the temporal authorities
consecrated by the priests. For the State founded on the free social
contract, the answer would be far more difficult. In a pure democracy
of equals -- all of whom are, however, considered incapable of self-restraint
on behalf of the common welfare, their liberty tending naturally toward
evil -- who would be the true guardian and administrator of the laws,
the defender of justice and of public order against everyone's evil
passions? In a word, who would fulfil the functions of the State?
The best
citizens, would be the answer, the most intelligent and the most virtuous,
those who understand better than the others the common interests of
society and the need, the duty, of everyone to subordinate his own interests
to the common good. It is, in fact; necessary for these men to be as
intelligent as they are virtuous; if they were intelligent but lacked
virtue, they might very well use the public welfare to serve their private
interests, and if they were virtuous but lacked intelligence, their
good faith would not be enough to save the public interest from their
errors. It is therefore necessary, in order that a republic may not
perish, that it have available throughout its duration a continuous
succession of many citizens possessing both virtue and intelligence.
But this
condition cannot be easily or always fulfilled. In the history of every
country, the epochs that boast a sizeable group of eminent men are exceptional,
and renowned through the centuries. Ordinarily, within the precincts
of power, it is the insignificant, the mediocre, who predominate, and
often, as we have observed in history, it is vice and bloody violence
that triumph. We may therefore conclude that if it were true, as the
theory of the so-called rational or liberal State clearly postulates,
that the preservation and durability of every political society depend
upon a succession of men as remarkable for their intelligence as for
their virtue, there is not one among the societies now existing that
would not have ceased to exist long ago. If we were to add to this difficulty,
not to say impossibility, those which arise from the peculiar demoralisation
attendant upon power, the extraordinary temptations to which all men
who hold power in their hands are exposed, the ambitions, rivalries,
jealousies, the gigantic cupidities by which particularly those in the
highest positions are assailed by day and night, and against which neither
intelligence nor even virtue can prevail, especially the highly vulnerable
virtue of the isolated man, it is a wonder that so many societies exist
at all. But let us pass on.
Let us
assume that, in an ideal society, in each period, there were a sufficient
number of men both intelligent and virtuous to discharge the principal
functions of the State worthily. Who would seek them out, select them,
and place the reins of power in their hands? Would they themselves,
aware of their intelligence and their virtue, take possession of the
power? This was done by two sages of ancient Greece, Cleobulus and Periander;
notwithstanding their supposed great wisdom, the Greeks applied to them
the odious name of tyrants. But in what manner would such men seize
power? By persuasion, or perhaps by force? If they used persuasion,
we might remark that he can best persuade who is himself persuaded,
and the best men are precisely those who are least persuaded of their
own worth. Even when they are aware of it, they usually find it repugnant
to press their claim upon others, while wicked and mediocre men, always
satisfied with themselves, feel no repugnance in glorifying themselves.
But let us even suppose that the desire to serve their country had overcome
the natural modesty of truly worthy men and induced them to offer themselves
as candidates for the suffrage of their fellow citizens. Would the people
necessarily accept these in preference to ambitious, smooth-tongued,
clever schemers? If, on the other hand, they wanted to use force, they
would, in the first place, have to have available a force capable of
overcoming the resistance of an entire party. They would attain their
power through civil war which would end up with a disgruntled opposition
party, beaten but still hostile. To prevail, the victors would have
to persist in using force. Accordingly the free society would have become
a despotic state, founded upon and maintained by violence, in which
you might possibly find many things worthy of approval -- but never
liberty.
If we are
to maintain the fiction of the free state issuing from a social contract,
we must assume that the majority of its citizens must have had the prudence,
the discernment, and the sense of justice necessary to elect the worthiest
and the most capable men and to place them at the head of their government.
But if a people had exhibited these qualities, not just once and by
mere chance but at all times throughout its existence, in all the elections
it had to make, would it not mean that the people itself, as a mass,
had reached so high a degree of morality and of culture that it no longer
had need of either government or state? Such a people would not drag
out a meaningless existence, giving free rein for all its instincts;
out of its life, justice and public order would rise spontaneously and
naturally. The State, in it, would cease to be the providence, the guardian,
the educator, the regulator of society. As it renounced all its repressive
power and sank to the subordinate position assigned to it by Proudhon,
it would turn into a mere business office, a sort of central accounting
bureau at the service of society.
There is
no doubt that such a political organization, or rather such a reduction
of political action in favour of the liberty of social life, would be
a great benefit to society, but it would in no way satisfy the persistent
champions of the State. To them, the State, as providence, as director
of the social life, dispenser of justice, and regulator of public order,
is a necessity. In other words, whether they admit it or not, whether
they call themselves republicans, democrats, or even socialists, they
always must have available a more or less ignorant, immature, incompetent
people, or, bluntly speaking, a kind of canaille to govern. This would
make them, without doing violence to their lofty altruism and modesty,
keep the highest places for themselves, so as always to devote themselves
to the common good, of course. As the privileged guardians of the human
flock, strong in their virtuous devotion and their superior intelligence,
while prodding the people along and urging it on for its own good and
well-being, they would be in a position to do a little discreet fleecing
of that flock for their own benefit.
Any logical
and straightforward theory of the State is essentially founded upon
the principle of authority, that is, the eminently theological, metaphysical,
and political idea that the masses, always incapable of governing themselves,
must at all times submit to the beneficent yoke of a wisdom and a justice
imposed upon them, in some way or other, from above. Imposed in the
name of what, and by whom? Authority which is recognised and respected
as such by the masses can come from three sources only: force, religion,
or the action of a superior intelligence. As we are discussing the theory
of the State founded upon the free contract, we must postpone discussion
of those states founded on the dual authority of religion and force
and, for the moment, confine our attention to authority based upon a
superior intelligence, which is, as we know, always represented by minorities.
What do
we really see in all states past and present, even those endowed with
the most democratic institutions, such as the United States of North
America and Switzerland? Actual self-government of the masses, despite
the pretence that the people hold all the power, remains a fiction most
of the time. It is always, in fact, minorities that do the governing.
In the United States, up to the recent Civil War and partly even now,
and even within the party of the present incumbent, President Andrew
Johnson, those ruling minorities were the so-called Democrats, who continued
to favour slavery and the ferocious oligarchy of the Southern planters,
demagogues without faith or conscience, capable of sacrificing everything
to their greed, to their malignant ambition. They were those who, through
their detestable actions, and influence, exercised practically without
opposition for almost fifty successive years, have greatly contributed
to the corruption of political morality in North America.
Right now,
a really intelligent, generous minority -- but always a minority --
the Republican party, is successfully challenging their pernicious policy.
Let us hope its triumph may be complete; let us hope so for all humanity's
sake. But no matter how sincere this party of liberty may be, no matter
how great and generous its principles, we cannot hope that upon attaining
power it will renounce its exclusive position of ruling minority and
mingle with the masses, so that popular self-government may at last
become a fact. This would require a revolution, one that would be profound
in fat other ways than all the revolutions that have thus far overwhelmed
the ancient world and the modern.
In Switzerland,
despite all the democratic revolutions that have taken place there,
government is still in the hands of the well-off, the middle class,
those privileged few who are rich, leisured, educated. The sovereignty
of the people -- a term, incidentally, which we detest, since all sovereignty
is to us detestable--the government of the masses by themselves, is
here likewise a fiction. The people are sovereign in law, but not in
fact; since they are necessarily occupied with their daily labour which
leaves them no leisure, and since they are, if not totally ignorant,
at least quite inferior in education to the propertied middle class,
they are constrained to leave their alleged sovereignty in the hands
of the middle class. The only advantage they derive from this situation,
in Switzerland as well as in the United States of North America, is
that the ambitious minorities, the seekers of political power, cannot
attain power except by wooing the people, by pandering to their fleeting
passions, which at times can be quite evil, and, in most cases, by deceiving
them.
Let no
one think that in criticising the democratic government we thereby show
our preference for the monarchy. We are firmly convinced that the most
imperfect republic is a thousand times better than the most enlightened
monarchy. In a republic, there are at least brief periods when the people,
while continually exploited, is not oppressed; in the monarchies, oppression
is constant. The democratic regime also lifts the masses up gradually
to participation in public life--something the monarchy never does.
Nevertheless, while we prefer the republic, we must recognise and proclaim
that whatever the form of government may be, so long as human society
continues to be divided into different classes as a result of the hereditary
inequality of occupations, of wealth, of education, and of rights, there
will always be a class-restricted government and the inevitable exploitation
of the majorities by the minorities.
The State
is nothing but this domination and this exploitation, well regulated
and systematised. We shall try to prove this by examining the consequences
of the government of the masses by a minority, intelligent and dedicated
as you please, in an ideal state founded upon the free contract.
Once the
conditions of the contract have been accepted, it remains only to put
them into effect. Suppose that a people recognised their incapacity
to govern, but still had sufficient judgment to confide the administration
of public affairs to their best citizens. At first these individuals
are esteemed not for their official position but for their good qualities.
They have been elected by the people because they are the most intelligent,
capable, wise, courageous, and dedicated among them. Coming from the
mass of the people, where all are supposedly equal, they do not yet
constitute a separate class, but a group of men privileged only by nature
and for that very reason singled out for election by the people. Their
number is necessarily very limited, for in all times and in all nations
the number of men endowed with qualities so remarkable that they automatically
command the unanimous respect of a nation is, as experience teaches
us, very small. Therefore, on pain of making a bad choice the people
will be forced to choose its rulers from among them.
Here then
is a society already divided into two categories, if not yet two classes.
One is composed of the immense majority of its citizens who freely submit
themselves to a government by those they have elected; the other is
composed of a small number of men endowed with exceptional attributes,
recognised and accepted as exceptional by the people and entrusted by
them with the task of governing. As these men depend on popular election,
they cannot at first be distinguished from the mass of citizens except
by the very qualities which have recommended them for election, and
they are naturally the most useful and the most dedicated citizens of
all. They do not as yet claim any privilege or any special right except
that of carrying out, at the people's will, the special functions with
which they have been entrusted. Besides, they are not in any way different
from other people in their way of living or earning their means of living,
so that a perfect equality still subsists among all. Can this equality
be maintained for any length of time? We claim it cannot, a claim that
is easy enough to prove.
Nothing
is as dangerous for man's personal morality as the habit of commanding.
The best of men, the most intelligent, unselfish, generous, and pure,
will always and inevitably be corrupted in this pursuit. Two feelings
inherent in the exercise of power never fail to produce this demoralisation:
contempt for the masses, and, for the man in power, an exaggerated sense
of his own worth.
"The
masses, on admitting their own incapacity to govern themselves, have
elected me as their head. By doing so, they have clearly proclaimed
their own inferiority and my superiority. In this great crowd of men,
among whom I hardly find any who are my equals, I alone am capable of
administering public affairs. The people need me; they cannot get along
without my services, while I am sufficient unto myself. They must therefore
obey me for their own good, and I, by deigning to command them, create
their happiness and well-being." There is enough here to turn anyone's
head and corrupt the heart and make one swell with pride, isn't there?
That is how power and the habit of commanding become a source of aberration,
both intellectual and moral, even for the most intelligent and most
virtuous of men.
All human
morality--and we shall try, further on, to prove the absolute truth
of this principle, the development, explanation, and widest application
of which constitute the real subject of this essay--all collective and
individual morality rests essentially upon respect for humanity. What
do we mean by respect for humanity? We mean the recognition of human
right and human dignity in every man, of whatever race, colour, degree
of intellectual development, or even morality. But if this man is stupid,
wicked, or contemptible, can I respect him? Of course, if he is all
that, it is impossible for me to respect his villainy, his stupidity,
and his brutality; they are repugnant to me and arouse my indignation.
I shall, if necessary, take the strongest measures against them, even
going so far as to kill him if I have no other way of defending against
him my life, my right, and whatever I hold precious and worthy. But
even in the midst of the most violent and bitter, even mortal, combat
between us, I must respect his human character. My own dignity as a
man depends on it. Nevertheless, if he himself fails to recognise this
dignity in others, must we recognise it in him? If he is a sort of ferocious
beast or, as sometimes happens, worse than a beast, would we not, in
recognising his humanity, be supporting a mere fiction? No, for whatever
his present intellectual and moral degradation may be, if, organically,
he is neither an idiot nor a madman--in which case he should be treated
as a sick man rather than as a criminal--if he is in full possession
of his senses and of such intelligence as nature has granted him, his
humanity, no matter how monstrous his deviations might be, nonetheless
really exists. It exists as a lifelong potential capacity to rise to
the awareness of his humanity, even if there should be little possibility
for a radical change in the social conditions which have made him what
he is.
Take the
most intelligent ape, with the finest disposition; though you place
him in the best, most humane environment, you will never make a man
of him. Take the most hardened criminal or the man with the poorest
mind, provided that t neither has any organic lesion causing idiocy
or insanity; the criminality of the one, and the failure of the other
to develop an awareness of his humanity and his human duties, is not
their fault, nor is it due to their nature; it is solely the result
of the social environment in which they were born and brought up.