Managerial state

The managerial state is a concept used in critiquing modern procedural democracy. The concept is used largely, though not exclusively, in paleolibertarian, paleoconservative, and anarcho-capitalist critiques of late modern state power in Western democracies. The term takes a pejorative context as a manifestation of Western decline. Theorists Samuel T. Francis and Paul Gottfried, developing ideas inspired by the analytical framework of James Burnham,[1] say this is an ongoing regime that remains in power, regardless of what political party holds a majority.

Variations on the concept include the therapeutic managerial state, welfare–warfare state,[2] administrative state,[3] and polite or soft totalitarianism.[4] There is significant overlap between the concepts of the managerial state and the deep state, with theorists of the managerial state additionally drawing from theories of political religion and the secularization of Christian concepts, namely Puritanism,[5] which they contend demand an overweening concern with government intervention in favor of social justice, unaccountable regulation of citizens' private lives, and both informally and formally enforced political correctness.[6] Theorists of the managerial state claim this constellation of factors tends towards the efflux of totalitarianism, which they call soft totalitarianism[7] and engage in criticism of administrative law and rulemaking.[8]

Samuel T. Francis, following James Burnham, said that under this historical process, “law is replaced by administrative decree, federalism is replaced by executive autocracy, and a limited government replaced by an unlimited state.”[9] It acts in the name of abstract goals, such as freedom, equality or positive rights, and uses its claim of moral superiority, power of taxation and wealth redistribution to keep itself in power.

Managerial worldview

Paul Gottfried, in After Liberalism, defines this worldview as a "series of social programs informed by a vague egalitarian spirit, and it maintains its power by pointing its finger accusingly at antiliberals."[10] He calls it a new theocratic religion. In this view, when the managerial regime cannot get democratic support for its policies, it resorts to sanctimony and social engineering, via programs, court decisions and regulations.

This includes mass welfarism, feminism, environmentalism, anti-americanism, affirmative action, multiculturalism, community organizing, social engineering, social justice, non-profit organizations, organized labour, positive rights, political correctness, postmodernism, white guilt, secular humanism, left-wing politics, liberalism, laws punishing racism, sexism and homophobia, and centralized control of public health and public education. (While paleocons often criticize neoconservatism, they still see these opponents as just one of many power blocs that support this managerialism.) He elaborated that:

A regime engaged in behavior modification... [will] begin by appealing to unproved premises, which the reader is nudged into accepting, move on to therapeutic criteria for right reasoning, and finally, as seen in recent hate speech and anti-Holocaust revisionist laws, end by reverting to the Argumentum ad baculum, which may mean arresting those considered criminally insensitive. At stake here is not the idle pastime of scribes. It is an attempt undertaken by prominent intellectuals to elevate pluralism into behavioral coercion.[11]

Francis argued that this system oversees "the managed destruction of such relationships of civil society as property, patterns of association, education, and employment."[12] He elaborated:

The managerial ruling class, lodged primarily in the state and the other massive bureaucratic structures that dominate the economy and mass culture, must undermine such institutions of traditional social life if its power and interests are to prevail. Disparities between races – rebaptized as "prejudice," "discrimination," "white supremacy," and "hate" to which state and local governments and private institutions are indifferent or in which they are allegedly complicit-provide constant targets of convenience for managerial attack on local, private, and social relationships. Seen in this perspective, as a means of subverting traditional society and enhancing the dominance of a new elite and its own social forms, the crusade for racial "liberation" is not distinctly different from other phases of the same conflict that involve attacks on the family, community, class, and religion.[13]

In a more general way, Joseph Sobran argues that technology and false notions of progress give people a false sense of autonomy:

C.S. Lewis remarked that every increase in man's power over nature can turn out to mean an increase in the power of some men over others, with nature as its instrument. Given technological progress, we need to fight hard to retain our clarity about the nature and rights of human beings, or we face what Lewis called "the abolition of man." Abortion and totalitarianism both represent new possibilities of some men's power over others, and both are defended by certain ideologies of "progress." We hear of human "autonomy" and of man's "control of his own destiny." But the autonomy is enjoyed by a select (or self-selected) few, and the control is exercised by a shrinking elite; those who are powerless, whether unborn children or the subjects of a totalist dictatorship, simply don't count.[14]

Thomas Fleming argues that the managerial problem extends to issues of war, peace and international order:

I prefer the old Adam of strife and carnage to the new Prometheus of peace and human rights. Better a world torn apart by Husseins and Qaddafis, better a war to the knife between the PLO and the Likud Party, between Zulus and Afrikaaners, than a world run by George Balls and Dag Hammarskjölds, because a world made safe for democracy is a world in which no one dares to raise his voice for fear that mommy will put you away some place where you can be reeducated."[15]

Anarchy and tyranny

Samuel Francis argued that the problems of managerial state extend to issues of crime and justice. In 1992, he introduced the word “anarcho-tyranny” into the paleocon vocabulary.[16] Francis argued that this situation extends across the U.S. and Europe but especially the UK. While the government functions normally, violent crime remains a constant, creating a climate of fear (anarchy) and the UK has a history of this and it continiues to this day. He says that “laws that are supposed to protect ordinary citizens against ordinary criminals” routinely go unenforced, even though the state is “perfectly capable” of doing so. While this problem rages on, government elites concentrate their interests on law-abiding citizens. In fact, Middle America winds up on the receiving end of both anarchy and tyranny.[16]

Other paleos have expanded upon Francis’ original idea. Paleolibertarian Lew Rockwell extended it to foreign policy, saying that the U.S. military unleashed this condition on the Iraqis.[17] Fleming argues that the breakdown of the American system leaves a "country with a civilized elite class sitting on top of a powder-keg of anarchic welfare-dependents who can defy the government." This gives "encouragement to our own domestic rabble," endangering Middle America:

Does anyone remember the Rodney King riots? Watts? What happens every time a big city wins or loses a Superbowl (sic) or NBA championship? The next time you are in a large crowd – at a downtown pop concert or metro station – look around and imagine how many people on the street, if the lights went out and the cops disappeared, would be pulling the gold fillings out of the teeth in your dead body.[18]

Jerry Pournelle provides his own variation on this theme:

We do not live by rule of law, because no one can possibly go a day without breaking one or another of the goofy laws that have been imposed on us over the years. No one even knows all the laws that apply to almost anything we do now. We live in a time of selective enforcement of law.[19]

Francis argues that anarcho-tyranny is built into the managerial system and cannot be solved simply by fighting corruption or voting out incumbents. In fact, he says that the system generates a false “conservatism” that encourages people to act passively in the face of perpetual revolution. He concludes that only by devolving power back toward law-abiding citizens can sanity be restored.[16]

In addition, Thomas Fleming describes anarcho-tyranny as "law without order: a constant busybodying about behavior that does not at all derive from a shared moral consensus." He suggests stoicism as a survival skill. He wrote,

"the only response to this regime is to follow the boxing referee's advice: protect yourself at all times..... The only freedom we have is the moral freedom that even ancient slaves enjoyed. Read Epictetus."[20]

Criticism of the center-right

Gottfried says paleoconservatives show contempt for the modern state, "not as an energizing force but as a leveling and homogenizing instrument."[21] Conversely, he says mainstream conservatives no longer challenge the managerial system, except at the extremes. For example, decades of activism rolled back neither the New Deal nor the Great Society. He argues that classical conservatives wanted "traditional hierarchical society and a state that assumed the existing social arrangements," both of which today’s center-right rejects and condemns, while reinforcing “Western self-hate and self-indulgence.” [22][23] He writes:

A political and cultural war has been fought and largely won by the social left against gender stereotyping and the nuclear family. Gay/lesbian and abortion rights, together with a powerful centralized administration enforcing them, are taken for granted by most members of Congress. Opposition to quotas and to the media's bashing of white males increasingly has become restricted to the political fringe. Only extremists now call for a debate on further immigration, which Beltway conservatives avoid bringing up lest they seem insensitive.[24]

Gottfried also argues that the democratic center-right, such as the GOP, is not a restraining force against the managerial state. He says that such political leaders espouse a dubious moderation and accommodate the Left, while treating traditional conservative positions as political liabilities.

The center-right has gradually embraced most of the Left’s historical positions but has merely restated them with apparent moderation, for example, by rallying to the original, less radicalized form of feminism, by advocating an extensive welfare state with lower marginal tax rates, and by praising Martin Luther King while lying about his endorsement of racial quotas.... Equally important, if the "conservative movement" were as concerned about small-government as it is about waging global democratic wars, it might be influencing public opinion accordingly. Movement conservative leaders and the Republican Party have opted for big government and leftist missionary wars but not because of public demand. Rather they have worked long and hard to manufacture a demand for their interests.[25]

In addition, Samuel Francis argued that since the center-right and center-left refuse to deal with major civilizational issues, they reduce domestic political debates to narrow economic issues. This preoccupation views human beings as “resources” and treats them like inanimate objects.[26] Using a phrase from Peter Drucker, he says this

reflects the myth of Economic Man – that human beings are mainly or entirely economic in their motivations and that therefore the business of America is business, even if it takes the federal leviathan to conduct it or regulate it.[27]

gollark: =tex 1 - (1 - \frac{P_{covid}}{P})^{N_{gathering}}
gollark: Couldn't this just be done as `1 - ((1 - positives/population) ^ gathering)`?
gollark: Christ is his own antiparticle, so originally just Christ, not sure about the remaining one.
gollark: I would be impressed if they managed to get tracking beacons with reasonable range and battery life to actually fit.
gollark: Yes, it's not really a *significant* issue compared to the bigger ones of spreading disease, but it is there.

See also

References

  1. Burnham, The Managerial Revolution, passim; Burnham, The Machiavellians: defenders of freedom, pp. 41-109),
  2. Matt Barganier, The Welfare-Warfare State, Old West Edition, AntiWar.Blog, June 28, 2005.
  3. Hamburger, The Administrative Threat (Encounter Books): Introduction
  4. Nicholas Strakon, Who we are; what we're up to: Introducing The Last Ditch, Dispatches from "The Last Ditch," at Thornwalker.com, September 1994.
  5. Gottfried, Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt: toward a secular theocracy, 161-163
  6. Francis, Leviathan and its Enemies, 354ff, 602-619; see Gottfried infra
  7. Welchman, ed. Religions of Politics/Politics of Religion (Springer), esp contributions by Champagne (ch 8) and Critchley and Welchman (ch 11); Gottfried, Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt: towards a secular theocracy, passim; Hackett Fischer, Albion's Seed ch 'The Puritan Exodus'
  8. Hamburger, Is Administrative Law Legal?, pp x-xiv, 531-545
  9. Sam Francis.net. Archived June 16, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  10. Gottfried, Paul Edward (1999). After Liberalism: Mass Democracy in the Managerial State. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 5. ISBN 978-1400802944. Retrieved 24 December 2017.
  11. After Liberalism, p. 85.
  12. Chronicles Magazine. Archived December 7, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  13. Chronicles Magazine Archived December 7, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  14. Joseph Sobran, "Foreword" to Single Issues (Human Life Press, 1983), posted at Sobran's: The Real News of the Month website.
  15. Thomas Fleming, "Further Reflections on Violence," Chronicles, November 1990, p. 15.
  16. Chronicles Magazine. Archived September 28, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  17. Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr., Anarcho-Tyranny in Baghdad, LewRockwell.com, April 12, 2003.
  18. Chronicles Magazine. Archived September 27, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  19. Jerry E. Pournelle, Anarcho-Tyranny, JerryPournelle.com, July 28, 2003.
  20. Chronicles Magazine. Archived September 27, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  21. Conservative Movement, p. 153.
  22. “After three decades, has the conservative movement triumphed?” Insight on the News, March 22, 1999.
  23. See, for example, Gottfried’s "Solid Scholarship Undergirds Buchanan's Sober Predictions," Insight on the News, March 11, 2002.
  24. Gottfried, "Solid Scholarship" (see above).
  25. Paul Gottfried, They Have No Choice, LewRockwell.com, February 17, 2006.
  26. “Immigration: The Republican taboo,” The Washington Times, May 30, 1995.
  27. “ Bipartisan loser for GATT,” The Washington Times, December 2, 1994.

Sources

  • "The Cultural War for the Soul of America", by Patrick J. Buchanan, speech dated September 14, 1992.
  • Gottfried, Paul E., After Liberalism: Mass Democracy in the Managerial State, 1999. ISBN 0-691-05983-7
  • Gottfried, Paul E., Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt: Toward a Secular Theocracy, 2003. ISBN 0-8262-1520-3
  • "The Tyranny of Liberalism", by James Kalb. (Originally published as Liberalism, the Transcendent, and Restoration, in Modern Age, Summer, 2000.)
  • "The Origins of Political Correctness" by William S. Lind, Accuracy in Academia, 2000.
  • Lukacs, John, The End of the Twentieth Century and the End of the Modern Age, 1993. ISBN 0-395-58472-8
  • Nisbet, Robert, The Present Age: Progress and Anarchy in Modern America, 2003. ISBN 0-86597-409-8
  • Nisbet, Robert, Twilight of Authority. 2000. ISBN 0-86597-211-7
  • Roberts, Paul Craig and Lawrence Stratton, The New Color Line: How Quotas and Privilege Destroy Democracy, 1997. ISBN 0-89526-423-4
  • "How Tyranny Came to America", by Joseph Sobran, Sobran's, n.d.
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