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The Vicious Circle of Socialism
We shall never escape from this
circle: the idea of passive mankind, and the power of the law
being used by a great man to propel the people.
Once on this incline, will society
enjoy some liberty? (Certainly.) And what is liberty, Mr. Louis
Blanc?
Once and for all, liberty is not
only a mere granted right; it is also the power granted to a
person to use and to develop his faculties under a reign of
justice and under the protection of the law.
And this is no pointless
distinction; its meaning is deep and its consequences are
difficult to estimate. For once it is agreed that a person, to be
truly free, must have the power to use and develop his faculties,
then it follows that every person has a claim on society for such
education as will permit him to develop himself. It also follows
that every person has a claim on society for tools of production,
without which human activity cannot be fully effective. Now by
what action can society give to every person the necessary
education and the necessary tools of production, if not by the
action of the state?
Thus, again, liberty is power. Of
what does this power consist? (Of being educated and of being
given the tools of production.) Who is to give the education and
the tools of production? (Society, which owes them to everyone.)
By what action is society to give tools of production to those
who do not own them? (Why, by the action of the state.) And from
whom will the state take them?
Let the reader answer that
question. Let him also notice the direction in which this is
taking us.
Clark Simmons, Webmaster
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