Parasitocracy
Tyranny,
being as endemic to the human condition as other similar privations of
the human good such as ignorance, vice, or sickness, is as old as
mankind. What may be new, however, is the uniquely intractable form of
tyranny that is currently metastasizing throughout the world, namely the
rule of an authoritarian plurality of societal parasites. Our next
thousand years of darkness, if such be our fate, will begin under the
governance of a "parasitocracy."
The
modern West has defied ancient wisdom on so many fronts, introducing
new modes of existence and coexistence, spreading prosperity and promise
in hitherto inconceivable measures, and overcoming the practical limits
of time and distance in ways that would be as fantastical to our
ancient ancestors' imaginations as teleportation and hyperspace seem to
ours. Yet it appears that Nature's scales of justice must exact an
equal measure of evil invention to balance our extreme bounty. So it is
that late modern man has unearthed a new political arrangement, one
that might have been impossible among the ancients, as it could have
been born only of a civilization as broadly prosperous, liberal, and
tolerant as ours.
I
am not speaking of mere parasitism, the weakness of individual men who
demand or cajole sustenance from others while contributing nothing in
return. Rather, I am speaking of a systematic elevation of parasitism
to the status of a ruling philosophy.
First,
let us define our terms. By a "parasite" I do not mean merely an
"unproductive" member of society. The two categories often overlap, but
they are not identical. An unproductive person -- i.e., someone whose
activities contribute little of measurable value -- is not necessarily
parasitical. A friend recently reminded me of a lovely observation from
Milan Kundera: "To sit with a dog on a hillside on a glorious afternoon
is to be back in Eden, where doing nothing was not boring -- it was
peace." Sitting with a dog, literally or figuratively, is essentially
unproductive, but it harms no one, and perhaps even benefits others
indirectly as a reminder of the spiritual life, and particularly of the
fact that the value of an action cannot always be measured by its
usefulness to other people -- a lesson individualists would do well to
keep in mind. (Propaganda against the "unproductive" is precisely the
means to the death panels of socialized medicine, as collectivism
assumes that a productive man's value is exhausted when his contribution
to "society" ceases.)
No,
a social parasite is not, strictly speaking, a "loafer" or a "charity
case." Loafing is a man's free choice; charity is yours. A parasite,
on the other hand, is a person who demands -- and what is more, who
believes -- that others must provide for him what he cannot provide, or chooses not to provide, for himself.
This
more precise definition is no mere academic exercise. It reveals the
subtleties of parasitism that have allowed it to evolve into the
parasitocracy that has devoured most of the developed world. For it is
now clear that being unproductive, though often true of parasites, is
not their essence. What is essential is the parasite's presumption that
the productivity of others -- their toil, time, and achievement --
ought to be at his or her disposal.
This
last point is not merely a restatement of old authoritarian dictums
such as "Might makes right," or "Justice is the advantage of the
stronger." In fact, the unstated premise of the parasite's
self-justification is quite the opposite: "Justice is the advantage of
the weaker," if you will. Tyrants in the old style were plunderers, and
they knew they were plunderers. Plunder was their claim to fame, and
their success at plunder all the argument they needed. Their case for
continued dominance, insofar as they offered one, was typically that
supporters would have a share in their master's plunder, and perhaps be
spared themselves. Their case, in other words, was based not on reason,
but on greed and fear.
Two
important implications follow from this. First, reason was left intact
by power, even when excluded from the political process, which means
reason -- the individual mind, the source of understanding -- was
always, in theory, present on the periphery as tyranny's archrival and
greatest threat. Western civilization's two most famous and influential
deaths, those of Socrates and Jesus,
were the unjust executions of men who spoke truth to power. To a very
great extent, our civilization was defined by two men who, in death,
dealt blows for the cause of the individual versus irrational authority
that have resonated through the centuries. The upshot of this is that
tyranny, in the broad sense in which the term was used through the
Enlightenment, entailed oppressing the individual without denying his
bare existence per se, which means without denying the individual mind.
Secondly,
the modus operandi of traditional tyranny, plunder, leaves intact the
principle it is knowingly violating, namely the idea of property. To
plunder is to take by force what belongs to another man, and to do so
knowingly, which presupposes an acceptance, albeit one distorted by
power-lust, of the fact that what a man has earned, grown, or built, is his. To steal is to violate the
principle of property, not to obliterate it. To anticipate slightly,
we might contrast the traditional tyrant with the parasitocrat by
observing that the former declares to his subjects, in effect, "You
built that, and now I'm taking it," while the latter says, literally,
"You didn't build that."
And
here we arrive at the matter of first principles. The elements of
modern liberty -- the deliberate elevation of practical reason in
political philosophy, natural rights theory, the humble premise that all
men are created equal, the rule of law, and so on -- manifested
themselves falteringly throughout the West over centuries. This
unleashing of practical intelligence (of individual minds seeking
preservation and property) initiated an unprecedented revolution in
productive capacity, technological development, and material
abundance. But this relatively sudden blossoming of new freedom and
wealth, and specifically of wealth no longer anchored to ancestral
social strata, opened the doors to a new, far more insidious brand of
parasitism.
Growing
material abundance and the heightened status of private property as a
principle of government made parasitism more viable as a life's pursuit,
rather than a private household matter -- now everyone, in theory, had
something worth stealing. Representative government built on the
premise of equality before the law naturally tended away from previous
political arrangements that favored land owners, which, as Benjamin
Franklin warned, meant that men of few means or fewer scruples now had
the power to "vote themselves money" -- that is, to exploit the naive
sympathy or noble sentiments of an entire community, as their
predecessors had done within a household. The new parasites were
greatly assisted in this endeavor by the freedom of speech and assembly
inherent in modern liberty, and the growing technological capacity to
disseminate ideas broadly and quickly.
So
the modern parasite engenders a mass political movement for parasitism,
citing the newly created material abundance around him as evidence of
injustice (unfairness). And just as the traditional, "private" parasite
requires a rationalization for his behavior, consisting of excuses for
his inactivity and sophistries to support his claim on the efforts of
others, so the new, mass-movement parasite -- modern liberty's
enhancement of the "drones" Socrates says hold sway in a democracy --
requires a rationalization to support parasitism on a mass scale. That
is, he requires a system.
Unlike
the traditional tyrant, who left reason and the idea of property intact
even while violating them, the rise of the parasites as a political
faction gave birth to something quite different. We now face a
systematic effort to unravel reason itself -- to deny the metaphysical
and moral primacy of individual minds -- and to disabuse men of the idea
of private property. The moral strictures against plunder, at least
when it is pursued under the auspices of government, are no longer
acknowledged.
From
this modern parasitocratic need for a theoretical foundation on which
to build the new mass movement of "plunder as justice" began the
spiritual corruption of the modern world, and with it of mankind's great
moment of political liberty. Hence Marxist economic determinism, hence
pragmatism's assault on the efficacy of individual minds, hence Dewey's
advocacy of government schools as collectivist re-education camps.
Tragically,
the various manifestations of the pseudo-philosophy of parasitism
gradually swallowed most of academe, an institution that perhaps
submitted to the rule of the parasitocrats more easily than most others,
due to the inherent character weakness of the traditional scholar. The
quiet, impractical pursuit of "pure knowledge" attracts men of
intellect, but it also attracts men of excessive discomfort with the
demands of the "real world" -- decent men who, as the saying goes,
prefer books to people. These men, who perhaps constituted the majority
of the typical university faculty of the past, tend to harbor an
unnaturally negative attitude about the non-academic forms of productive
life. Distrusting or even fearing "ordinary people," such scholars can
be inordinately disdainful of the struggles and successes of practical
men. When their world was infiltrated by the theoretical parasites --
the socialists, the Marxists, the new advocates of absolute power --
these bookish men remained passive, because all this real-world noise
disturbed their tender equilibrium, because they found it all too
boringly practical, or perhaps because they bore a vague sympathy with
the idea of tearing down those who had succeeded in that noisy outside
world they so disliked, and whose greater affluence they envied.
Thus
the theoreticians of the parasitocracy, who are often the dark
alter-egos of the quietly detached academics they seek to displace --
men whose fear of the practical challenges of the "real world" has
turned them not to bookish aloofness, but to hatred and a desire to
destroy what they fear -- successfully invaded the universities. Weak,
unhappy men, this new breed of intellectuals, along with the careerist
"scholars" who followed their bread crumbs, quickly rededicated
modernity's great benefactor, the humanities, to the task of contriving
justifications for tearing down the successful and suffocating the
individual. Reinterpreting the entire history of rationalism and the
quest for freedom as, in effect, the story of men's injustice towards
those factions judged most likely to be won over by the demagogic charms
of the rising parasitocracy, these new academics reversed the
university's traditional role as the heartland of intellectual
integrity, free thinking, moral reasoning, and distrust of temporal
power. Instead, they set the civilizational wheels in motion in the
opposite direction: towards irrationalism, collectivism, the entitlement
ethic, and submission to the whims of authority.
These
intellectual parasites -- sophists who preserved and promoted
themselves by sucking the life out of a theoretical and moral tradition
to which they lacked the character and skill to contribute positively --
have fostered an ever-growing and increasingly brazen
progeny. Collectively, these intellectuals and their spiritually
deformed offspring constitute the parasitocracy. These are people who
possess the normal human potential to fend for themselves, but who have
willingly squandered that potential due to poor character, or
bastardized their productive accomplishments with authoritarian
overreach.
The
parasitocracy includes the ignorant, idle, and lustful who, given the
opportunity, will always eschew work and responsibility for ease and
amusement. It includes economic titans who, unsatisfied with merely
being social benefactors, dream of establishing a permanent
stratification of society with themselves as the overseers. (Consider
the leading American industrialists who lobbied for stricter compulsory
government school laws, and financially supported Dewey's progressive
collectivist methods of retarding intellectual development. They knew
exactly what they were supporting.) It includes the bureaucratic Iagos
who weasel and flatter themselves into positions of political influence
and then urge the expansion of government, in effect holding nations
for ransom in the name of an indolent ego-gratification bordering on the
criminally insane, in the manner of Woodrow Wilson's closest advisor,
Edward "Colonel" House, who wrote a utopian fantasy novel about a
charismatic revolutionary who instigates a bloody civil war to wipe out
the American republic in favor of a progressive authoritarian
state. And it includes the career politicians, people who have lived a
privileged life at the public's expense for so long that they have lost
all moral qualms about taking Franklin's anticipation of the
parasitocracy, "voting themselves money," to levels inconceivable to any
normal citizen-parasite.
Vainglory,
which even the parasite possesses, leads these people to
seek self-justification, not in their accomplishments and positive goals
(if they ever had any), but in their self-serving belief that they have
"seen through" the society based on skill and achievement, finding it
false and unfair. Hence, they rationalize their plunder, whether of the
idle and "entitled" or the power-mongering variety, as some kind of
principled rebellion or benign paternalism, respectively.
A
subculture of ne'er-do-wells, embittered control freaks, and glorified
thugs, born in an atmosphere of great civilizational promise and
upheaval, has, thanks to the unifying influence of subversive theorists
and conscienceless politicians, transformed itself into today's
"superstructure." This ruling philosophy's defining goal, namely the
overturning of every great victory of Western civilization in favor of
its opposite, is nearly realized. Rationalism and the primacy of the
individual soul have been discredited in favor of the German idealist
dream of collective consciousness, leading to historical determinism and
the belittlement of free will. Liberty based on a right to property
rooted in self-ownership has evaporated in favor of coerced
redistribution of every kind, right down to the redistribution of
physical preservation, in the form of socialized medicine. Moral virtue
as the practical means of living according to our nature has been
laughed out of existence in favor of the subjectivist tyranny of desires
unhinged from rational guidance. Personal effort applied, and success
achieved, without the helping hand of government -- the underlying
premise of all of mankind's attempts to establish practical and
spiritual freedom on Earth -- is so thoroughly antithetical to the
spirit of the times that the leader of the so-called "free world"
casually mocks such effort and success as a foolish delusion: "You
didn't build that."
Perhaps
you know someone who returned from an exotic vacation with a parasite
that proved next to impossible to expunge from his body
entirely. Modern civilization has taken its exotic vacation, in this
case primarily to Germany, where a few tantalizing dishes turned up
contaminated -- the separation of reason from external reality, Prussian
compulsory education, collective consciousness, economic determinism,
nihilism in art, the cult of the "charismatic" personality in politics,
Frankfurt-School poisoning of the humanities and social sciences. All
of these served the interests of the parasites -- the urge to destroy
modern individualism, natural rights, and practical reason -- and the
parasitocracy has taken hold so firmly, and for so long, that its
increasingly predatory mass has almost completely displaced the once
healthy body on which it has slowly fed.
Now
we have reached the penultimate stage of the process, history's
proverbial fork in the road, where modern man must choose his fate,
whether the tentative beginnings of a recovery or the "dust to dust"
moment from which a renewal of rational order would occur only after
many generations of degradation and hardship.
The
parasitocracy is unquestionably dominant. The question is whether the
host's vital organs are yet in a condition from which a recovery of
health -- preceded by an inevitable period of violent purgation --
remains possible.
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