Wendy McElroy on Equality vs. Freedom

Wendy McElroy recently wrote one of the more lucid defenses of the way in which free markets fosters political liberalism. Originally given as a speech at a conference about the European Commission, McElroy’s piece was published in January on the Mises Institute web site as Equality vs. Freedom.

McElroy goes back to Voltaire’s observations — made while living in exile in England — that France’s efforts to impose homogeneous values from the top had resulted in nothing but social conflict, while England’s generally laissez-faire attitude toward differences of religion and philosophy allowed for people holding many different views to peacefully co-exist.

McElroy writes,

The “Philosophical Letters” reversed a traditionally accepted argument in Voltaire’s Europe on how to create a harmonious society. traditionally, France had attempted to enforce a homogeneous system of values upon its people in the belief that common values were necessary to ensure peace and harmony. Common values were seen to be the social glue that held together the social fabric. Thus, those in authority needed to centrally planned and to rigorously enforce the values that should be practiced by the common people. After all, if people were allowed to choose and practice their own values, especially religious ones, then civil chaos and conflict would ensue.

Voltaire argued that the opposite was true. The imposition of homogeneous values — the denial of the right to personally discriminate — was what led to conflict and religious wars. Instead of common values and governmental control, it was diversity and personal freedom that created a thriving and peaceful society. Voltaire commented, “If there were only one religion in England, there would be danger of tyranny; if there were two, they would cut each other’s throats; but there are thirty, and they live happily together in peace.”

The truth of this is seen in the gradual turn toward statism within the United States. As government officials of every stripe attempt to dictate values from on high, inevitably the result is ever-fractious battles between competing interest groups to determine which values become official policy.

Taken to its logical conclusion, the only result of such disputes must in the end be tyranny as one group or another finally wrests control.

As McElroy notes, the only way to avoid this situation is to renounce the notion of highly centralized governments attempting to set specific, narrow outcomes which one group or another considers to be good. Rather, government should concentrate simply on preserving the rights of individuals to enter into contracts free from threats and violence, and let individuals rather than states determine to which values they will subscribe.

Source:

Equality vs. Freedom. Wendy McElroy, Mises Institute, January 22, 2001.

Monthly Logfile Statistics: 1997 to Current

This table gives the number of page views by month that this web site has received
going back to January 1997 along with yearly totals in the last column.

Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec TOT
2004 632,032 627,553 748398 589,271 580,448 491,834 554,934          
4,224,470
2003 420,959
406,673
488,569
495,607
386,859
353,799
420,387
472,931
559,686
613,079
636,251
572,415
5,831,925
2002
363,280
337,824
376,531
410,894
441,161 285,117 230,260 372,582 347,123 486,001 443,483 372,199
4,466,455
2001
189,986
185,577
200,956
203,777
233,063
181,593
239,879
251,823
317,683
343,510
368,943
372,869
3,089,659
2000
239,955
294,116
339,175
301,127
269,902
119,644
40,190
27,101
125,680
203,801
199,977
167,274
2,327,942
1999
88,120
137,402
168,716
190,268
170,277
115,609
111,838
108,722
163,688
259,949
289,355
242,236
2,046,180
1998
26,561
36,815
53,086
62,315
54,866
39,031
37,654
34,313
55,114
79,705
92,761
75,333
647,554
1997
1,680
2,722
3,582
4,270
4,689
4,971
6,891
9,743
20,623
34,282
42,225
35,546
171,545
Total
22,05,730

Nebraska Sheriff Held Liable for Ignoring Rape Claim

In April the Nebraska Supreme Court ruled that a sheriff who ignored a cross-dressing women’s rape report could be held liable in civil court for neglect.

The case, which was the basis for the movie Boys Don’t Cry, involved the rape and murder of 21-year-old Teena Brandon. Brandon was a cross-dresser who posed as a man and called herself Brandon Teena.

In 1993, Brandon went to Sheriff Charles Laux and reported that two friends of hers discovered that she was, in fact, a woman, and had subsequently raped her. She also reported that her acquaintances said they would kill her if she reported the rape.

Laux did not arrest the alleged rapists nor conduct a serious investigation of Brandon’s claims, but he did subject her to a tape-recorded interview that the Nebraska Supreme Court described as “demeaning, accusatory and intimidating,” including referring to the Brandon as “it.”

A week after reporting the alleged rape, Brandon’s two acquaintances — John Lotter and Marvin Nessen — murdered her at a farmhouse. Lotter was sentenced to die for his part in the crime, and Lott was sentenced to life in prison, though neither man was ever charged with rape.

Brandon’s mother, Joan Brandon, sued Laux in civil court, arguing that he acted negligently by not arresting Lotter and Nissen immediately and by not offering Teena Brandon protective custody. She won a $17,360 judgment. Laux appealed the judgment, but the Nebraska Supreme Court found that he had acted negligently and bumped the judgment up to $80,000.

Source:

‘Boys Don’t Cry’ Sheriff Negligent. Kevin O’Hanlon, Associated Press, April 20, 2001.August 3, 1994