Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The political futility of moral and economic arguments today
The political futility of moral and economic arguments today
May 1, 2026 10:11 AM

Few things are more abundant – and durable — than human stupidity. In the universe of the feelings that govern the behavior of men and women only fear has a greater rootedness in the collective psyche. Seeing so many engaged in the debate on confiscatory tax rates proposed by leftists to finance the latest liberal programs that they believe will save the world, what strikes me most are those on the right trying to refute this policy according to economic and moral arguments. In other words, the first thing that the right does is understate human stupidity.

American society has been sliding toward collectivism since at least the New Deal, but the trend has accelerated dramatically in the last decade. Nowadays, Americans cheerfully support taxing big fortunes, making the rich pay their fair share. Of course, this is a revanchist policy, but it is not out of touch with reality.

The hatred of others’ wealth is the last manifestation of the democratization of society. The more democratic a society es, the more egalitarian the mindset of people es. The popular clamor, therefore, is to make everyone the same no matter how. The Spanish philosopher Jose Ortega y Gasset wrote much about this phenomenon of the massification of life, the atomization of man and the destruction of everything that sounds aristocratic. No one paid much attention. Likely, we will learn in the hard way that everything that begins with taxation and regulation sooner or later ends with guillotines. Severed heads are the only way to ensure equality between men.

Many American thinkers understood this issue. Fighting the egalitarian mentality was the Old Right’s priority. H. L. Mencken, Albert Jay Nock, Frank Chodorov, Isabel Paterson, John T. Flynn, and Garet Garrett fought tirelessly to prevent egalitarianism from ing the new Americanism. Seventy years later, I can say without fear of being wrong that they lost this dispute. And they lost not because of the left, but thanks to the right — or what is called right in modern America.

Before Russell Kirk, as Murray Rothbard observed, the American right identified itself as libertarian or classical liberal. The icon of the right Sen. Robert A. Taft (1889-1953), Republican of Ohio, was a self-declared liberal. After Kirk’s The Conservative Mind was published in 1953, cultural conservatism became part of American right-wing philosophy. Thus, the post- World War II American conservative movement was a fusion of libertarianism, cultural conservatism, and munism.

Everything began to change, paradoxically, with the arrival of Ronald Reagan to the White House. Internationalist liberals, disciples of Woodrow Wilson, disillusioned with Jimmy Carter and attracted by Reagan’s hardline munism, left the Democratic Party and moved to the GOP. Such disillusioned liberals are the so-called neoconservatives who in a matter of years took over of the conservative movement and reshaped it as a Wilsonian liberal movement, concerned with democracy and equality.

As wrote Paul Gottfried, the National Review — a former outlet of cultural conservatives — elevated some of Kirk’s intellectual opponents, such as the Jacobin Harry Jaffa, into conservative icons. Jaffa stressed “equality as a conservative principle” and cruelly mocked Kirk whenever the occasion presented itself. Reagan biographer Steven Hayward went even further and praised Reagan for having saved “conservatism” from a fate worse than death — that is, from “having gone in the direction of Kirk, toward a Burkean tradition-oriented conservatism.”

Since the American political debate has been reduced to a struggle between neoconservatives / neo-liberals on one side and the cultural left on the other — trying to prove which one best represents the legacy of the French Revolution– nothing could be less surprising than seeing the more radical side gain ground. The hysterical rhetoric of Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez are more a logical unfolding of this new political reality than anomalies.

Hysteria, as the Austrian philosopher Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn and the Polish psychiatrist Andrej Lobaczewski taught, is the essence of left-wing thinking. Leftists embrace nihilism and anarchy as a philosophy of life because the ideological content matters little. That is why the cultural left can promise things for free without worrying about where the money to fund their policies e from. Even in countries with a welfare state more generous than the American, politicians are concerned with controlling public debt and balancing the budget. In the United States, these considerations do not seem to be an issue.

Let’s turn to the high tax rates matter. To try to persuade someone based on economic and moral arguments is a waste of time. Nothing is more proven than the unfeasibility of socialism at least since Ludwig von Mises demonstrated the impossibility of economic calculation in socialist economies. This has never been refuted. Not to mention that every time the government intervenes in any area of the economy, everyone loses – just look at the Obamacare. Even so, socialism has never been as popular as it is now in the United States. Moral arguments are also irrelevant. In a democratic and egalitarian society, the measure of morality is the measure of equality.

Needless to say, that this very policy is championed by the very rich. They are the ones that have been funding progressive initiatives across the world. Ralph Nader’s romance Only the Super Rich Can Save Us is a self-fulfilling prophecy about how people like Warren Buffett will turn America in a socialist nation. If this socialist experience did not end up increasing rather than reducing the power of the very rich, I would love to see the moneyed ones putting their wealth where their mouths are.

So, what can be done? Arguments based on reason cannot penetrate a hysterical mind. Human political behavior, as the Italian sociologist Vilfredo Pareto wrote, is based on irrational attitudes that can be more or less articulated in a coherent policy by an elite. Since the American elite embraced collectivism, the only way out is to appeal to a powerful feeling: fear.

Taxation is not about distribution of wealth, but about power. According to the French philosopher Bertrand de Jouvenel, taxes are not a transfer of e from the ones that have to the ones that have not, but a transfer of power from individuals to government bureaucracy. High rate taxes are one of the most efficient means to consolidate once and for all the overwhelming power of the managerial state over the individual. The German theorist Karl Wittfogel gave the perfect explanation of this strategy: Perfect totalitarianism does not need direct control to ensure that the population will adopt certain behaviors; indirect control — like control over money — is much more efficient. Once the managerial state has to deal with a rebellion, the flow of money will be cut off, and the rebel group will starve. “Wherever the government controls the means of production,” wrote Leon Trotsky, “to make opposition means to die of starvation.”

Neither formal law nor high ideals can contain the movement of power concentration; only power can contain power. The only force that counts in this Iron Age we live in is the human ambition for power, on the one hand, and the fear that other humans have of losing power, on the other hand. So far, those who desire power have been winning thanks to the myth of upward mobility and increasing personal freedom propagated by democracy. However, never before in human history has despotism been so efficient and so well accepted by the majority of the population.

Moral and economic arguments will never be useful in convincing the public that high taxes are wrong. In a society that holds to firm beliefs in the superiority of equality and democracy, right and wrong are a matter of quantity and not quality. To prove that someone is wrong amounts to showing intellectual superiority and this is not acceptable. Nonetheless, fear remains the best deterrent of reckless action. In this respect, the logic of Thomas Hobbes is unbeatable. Fear is what pushes the man from barbarism to civilization; once civilization is established, man forgets fear and society degenerates into anarchy until a Bonapartism or a Caesarism rises and reestablishes the lost order.

It seems that Donald J. Trump sensed this little truth. His first victory was driven by a promise to save America from chaos through a wall, and his re-election campaign is likely to have the threat of socialism and infanticide as its central themes. I believe that one’s predominant concern for his own neck mon to humankind. Nobody wants to end his days being beheaded by an Ivy-league student who thinks that Ocasio-Cortez is a new Espinoza.

From my modest perspective, things will get much worse before they start to improve. I hope, that in the end, I can give the same answer that the Marquess of Mirabeau gave when asked about what he had done during the French Revolution: “I survived.”

Homepage picture –Ink drawing on manuscript offered by Thomas Hobbes to Charles II – WikiCommons.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Business as God’s Restorative Work
Katie Nienow worked in youth ministry for four years. After deciding to transition into the world of business, her former boss was not pleased. “You’re leaving the one thing God has best designed you to do,” he said. Throughout her time in ministry, Nienow says that her interest in business and economics felt “ancillary to the call.” In a new video from Nathan Clarke and This Is Our City, she explains how that perspective was fundamentally transformed. As Nienow explains:...
How Did You Know You Wanted An iPhone?
Did you wake up one morning and think, “I wish I had a phone that would not only allow me to text and call, but play games, get directions, read books, allow me access to all social media and take pictures?” Not likely. You wanted an iPhone because Apple put it on the market. Jim Clifton, CEO at Gallup, says this is no small point. Our economy isn’t waiting for consumers to want to start purchasing things again; it’s waiting...
A Nation on Fire: Tragic Losses for Egyptian Christians
Asianews reports the toll from violence in Egypt over a mere three day period. Hundreds have been killed, but there is little doubt that Christian churches, businesses, and organizations have been targeted. Here is what Asianews is calling a “representative” list: Catholic churches and convents 1. Franciscan church and school (road 23) – burned (Suez)2. Monastery of the Holy Shepherd and hospital – burned (Suez)3. Church of the Good Shepherd, Monastery of the Good Shepherd – burned in molotov attack...
Infiltrated Hits NYT Bestseller List, Exposes Dodd-Frank
Former Acton research fellow Jay Richards has another bestseller, as of last night–Infiltrated: How to Stop the Insiders and Activists Who are Exploiting the Financial Crisis to Control Our Lives and Our Fortunes. IF you follow free market writers closely, you known that government interventions in the financial markets, rather than too much economic freedom, fueled the housing bubble and paved the way to the subsequent housing collapse and financial crisis. Infiltrated deftly summarizes this, but it’s in two other...
Do Rights Protect Autonomy or Duties?
Our right to religious freedom is best grounded in the universal duty to seek ultimate truth, says Joshua Schulz, and not in human autonomy. Here e to the fundamental paradox of modern liberalism. On the one hand, liberalism in all its stages has always treated human freedom as sacred. On the other hand, modern liberals also believe that in order to guarantee their freedom, they canin practiceuse the state’s coercive power pel others to do whattheybelieve is wrong. This is...
Does Loving The Poor Mean Keeping Them Poor?
Fr. James V. Schall, S.J., in an essay for The Catholic World Report, offers some points worth pondering regarding Christianity and poverty. Entitled “Do Christians Love Poverty,” Schall insists that we must make the distinction between loving the poor – actual people – and loving “poverty” in some abstract way. For that to happen, we have to be holistic, realistic and concrete in our intentions and actions. It would seem that our love of the poor, in some basic sense,...
Links: Egypt in Flames
Egypt: Coptic church cancels Sunday mass for 1st time in 1,600 years “We did not hold prayers in the monastery on Sunday for the first time in 1,600 years,” Priest Selwanes Lotfy of the Virgin Mary and Priest Ibram Monastery in Degla, just south of Minya, told the al-Masry al-Youm daily. He said supporters of ousted president Mohammed Morsi destroyed the monastery, which includes three churches, one of which is an archaeological site. “One of the extremists wrote on the...
Video: Coptic Orthodox Bishop Pleads for Peace and Reconciliation in Egypt
Sky News talks with Bishop Angaelos, the General Bishop of Coptic Orthodox Church in the United Kingdom, about the ongoing bloodshed in Egypt. (HT: Byzantine, TX) Bishop Angaelos also issued this statement through The Coptic Orthodox Church UK media office today: Comment on the on-going situation in Egypt by His Grace Bishop Angaelos, General Bishop of The Coptic Orthodox Church in the United Kingdom – 16 August 2013 As a clergyman for over twenty years, and a Christian for the...
Detroit, Urban Development, and D.G. Hart
Darryl Hart has a bit of a go at “the hyperventilation that goes on in some neo-Calvinist circles when folks talk about the power of the gospel to redeem all of life,” using the woes of the city of Detroit as a trump card. Hart wonders why he hasn’t “seen too many posts from the transformers about Detroit’s decline and bankruptcy.” I don’t know if The Gospel Coalition is going to have anything say about Detroit’s bankruptcy, but Tim Keller...
Pay without Work: Is the Government Deal a Good One?
It sounds like a late-night tv scam: make tens of thousands of dollars and don’t work at all! And yet, it turns out that the U.S. government is offering just such a deal. For instance, a welfare recipient in the state of Connecticut can make up to $38,761, according to a new Cato Institute study. In Hawaii, the figure is $49,175, over 200 percent above the Federal Poverty Level. As The Heritage Foundation has pointed out, nearly half of Americans...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved