You may say I’m a dreamer
Imagine no egos
You may say I’m a dreamer
Truth forever on the scaffold, Wrong forever on the throne, Yet that scaffold sways the future, and, behind the dim unknown, Standeth God within the shadow, keeping watch above his own.
You may say I’m a dreamer
Imagine no egos
You may say I’m a dreamer
Lately, in some quarters (like the Natural Law fanboys) there has been a ear worm that has been issuing forth. The complaint they have been ginning up is that Theonomy is inherently Libertarian. Upon making that accusation they then turn a use that accusation as a foundational attack on the whole theonomic movement.
Now, this accusation suffers by being half true and so therefore totally false. It is true that some of those called “theonomists” did indeed embrace what I will call movement Libertarianism. Gary North is the most obvious example. Others, who were originally in Rushdoony’s orbit, include chaps like Andrew Sandlin, likewise had the fault of being more Libertarian than Theonomic. This would include Doug Wilson. We even see some of this in Greg Bahnsen.
However, what might be true of Rushdoony’s Lieutenants was not true of Rush himself. As we will see below by quoting Rush, Rush made distinctions between movement Libertarianism and the Libertarianism that he was championing. Rushdoony, and so Theonomy, is not necessarily Libertarian, though it is true that the 2nd generation Reconstructionists have twisted it to make it so. Because that is true, it is understandable that people would accuse theonomy as being “Libertarian.” Understandable, but still not true.
Part of the problem here is the greater project of Fusionism that occurred in the post WW II conservative movement. The post war conservative movement, in order to build heft, sought to meld together several ideological disciplines into one cohesive whole in order to resist the New Deal Liberal phalanx. One of those ideological disciplines that Fusionism fused into this “Conservative” movement was Libertarianism. What can we observe here except to say that “Politics makes strange bedfellows.”
Anyway Rushdoony agreed with the Libertarian principle of limited, diffuse, and decentralized government but Rush did not agree that the Libertarian idea of the Free Market should govern all. Such a conviction would have completely overturned the idea of theonomy.
Indeed, so opposed to movement Libertarianism was RJR that one of Rush’s main foils when he lectures on movement Libertarianism is a chap named Max Stirner. Stirner was an early opponent of Karl Marx, and that because Stirner took Marx’s principle to their logical conclusions — Libertarian conclusions that contradicted Marx’s unitary state. RJR says that Marx hated Stirner more than any of his opponents. Rush demonstrates how Stirner’s ultra Libertarianism (Anarchy) was correct vis-a-vis Marx given Marx’s presuppositions. For that reason, Rush was opposed to both Marx’s collectivism and Stirner’s Anarchy since both reasoned from shared core principles. In brief Rush was not Libertarian except in a very definite limited sense.
One can go to the pocketcollege.com website and find all this out for themselves by searching for “Max Stirner Libertarianism.”
Having laid this foundation, I will give one RJR quote on Libertarianism that demonstrates that the accusation that theonomy is inherently Libertarian is just a unlearned statement though I do concede that many of the latter day Theonomists are more Libertarian then they are disciples of Rushdoony.
Was RJR a Libertarian? You read this quote from Roots of Reconstruction and tell me.
“Reality, in brief was reduced to a particular institution or discipline of which men were the governors or interpreters.
This same fallacy has marked economics, in that all too many free market advocates under the influence of the philosophy of immanentism, have taken this one sphere of law and absolutized it as the only law. We do agree with classical economics as economics (this is a reference to Libertarian Economics of the Misean school), but not as a religious philosophy. When it is converted into a religious philosophy of immanence, it denies validity to any transcendental law of God and to all other institutions and orders of life unless they pass the test of the free market. Free market economics then becomes totalitarian and absolutist: it becomes idolatry. Some hold that the family and prostitution, and normal and perverted sexuality, must compete on a free market basis. Narcotics and good food are reduced to the same free market test. In brief, anything and everything goes, because there is only one law, the free market. (0ne person contends that there should be no title to property, but only the right of access by everyone who is able to command the power and money to take the property, in other words, a free market to power and violence as well.) Any value derived from any other sphere, or any principled judgment derived from a transcendental order, from God, must compete on a free market basis it is held. This is simply saying that the free market is god, and that it is the absolute and sole value in the universe. It assumes there is no God beyond the market, no other law, no other value, than the free market. Moreover, because the free market has its truth in the economic sphere, they sit back smugly, satisfied that they have the key to life. The Marxists no less than other Totalitarians stress one or two partial “Truths”, which they use to exclude all truth and God, and the same is true of those who reduce the world to matter. The free market religionists are really great enemies of free market economics, in that they pervert an instrument of freedom into a form of totalitarianism. It is not surprising that many free market religionists have in recent years been very congenial to the New Left; both are alike in their strident totalitarianism.”
R. J. Rushdoony
1972
Elsewhere in his lectures Rushdoony could say of Libertarianism;
______________________
(Audience) Now where do you put the Libertarian in? Those that are not Christian-(unintelligible)
(Rushdoony) The libertarians are humanist to the core.
(Audience) (Unintelligible) –they don’t want any government.
(Rushdoony) That’s true, but they are looking to man. In other words, each man is capable, he doesn’t need the state. But the answer Marx said: it’s either this kind of total anarchism, or total statism. And he said, total statism makes more sense. So Marx was ready to agree with these libertarians, only he said it’s not as workable, it leads to all kinds of problems, so why not total statism? And instead of a lot of little gods running around have one big collective god and you’re better off.
In his Institutes of Biblical Law Rushdoony wrote against movement Libertarianism,
This old blog post likewises touches some of these matters;
As of late the idea of “the post-war consensus” has been getting a good deal of air time. This has been a handy phrase but it really failed what it was trying to describe. Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy makes it clear in his book “Out of Revolution” that we are now calling the “Post war consensus” should properly be termed as the “post Enlightenment consensus” or, the “post-French Revolution consensus.” All that we are fighting now in our labeling of the “Post war consensus” was present in and after the French Revolution. This is due to the fact that it’s all the same consensus and that consensus is based on the idea of Revolutionary thinking. It really has been the case that at least since the French Revolution the West has been Trotskyite, inasmuch as we have been living in perpetual Revolution. All of this is what Rosenstock-Huessy labels, “The Autobiography of Western Man.” What we have now with what we label the “Post-war consensus” is merely the Revolution inaugurated in France all growing up into adult maturity.
And the sad news here, is that unless this is reversed the French Revolution consensus will continue to expand its monstrous nature so that 50 years from now we will be calling it the “Post new century consensus,” or something like that. This consensus thing is never going to quit growing until the life is choked out of it.
And the only way that happens is by a return to Biblical Christianity. What we call “the Post War Consensus” might be more properly called “The Anti-Christ consensus.” The French Revolution was all about overthrowing God, King and Church — the Ancien Regime that was based on that. Remember the motto of the French Revolution was “We will not be satisfied until the last King is strangled with the entrails of the last priest.” Their rally cry was “No God … No King.” All that we see now is just the working out of that principle as subsequent to the latest great leap forward in this Revolution — what we call WW II.
The cure to all this is what Kinism is all about. People think Kinism is merely about marriage, adoption, and the proper order of natural love. Kinism is about that but it is about much more than that. Kinism is and always has been about overturning what we call the post-war consensus, and inasmuch as one can’t have consistent Kinism without theonomy so it is the case also that theonomy has always been primarily a counter-revolutionary movement against the post-war consensus and its greater Father, “the post French Revolution consensus.”
This is why the work done against Doug Wilson is so important. Wilson, White, Boot, Sandlin, etc. all would drag us back to continue to live under this Revolutionary autobiography of man. Oh, sure, they would sanctify it and make it “more tolerable” but at the end of the day these chaps want to smoke a peace pipe with the age of Revolution. The work being done by Kinists and others who have not yet the consistency of the Kinist movement is instrumental in overthrowing this 200 plus march of Trotskyite social order revolution. This is not primarily about marriage, nations, Natural law vs. God’s law, etc. This is about whether we will have civilization as defined theocentrically or whether we will have civilization as defined anthropocentrically. The question reduces down to whether we will be governed by our Christian confessions or will we be governed by the Humanist Manifestos.
There are good men out there right now who are being mowed down by other men that people want to think are good. Keep in mind that not all that glitters is gold. Many Christian men atop many Christian organization are pulling an Esau on us and are selling our birthrights as White Anglo Saxon Christians.
This is a time of dividing. As for me and my house, we shall serve the Lord.
And when this kaleidoscope music finally stops
When Heritage Americans need a friendly Cop
When fleeing peril or escaping plight
They better hope their Cop is White