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, by Ludwig von Mises
PDF Download , by Ludwig von Mises
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Publisher: Ludwig von Mises Institute (December 16, 2010)
Publication Date: December 16, 2010
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''It is not true that the masses are vehemently asking for socialism and that there is no means to resist them. The masses favour socialism because they trust the socialist propaganda of the intellectuals. The intellectuals, not the populace, are moulding public opinion. It is a lame excuse of the intellectuals that they must yield to the masses.''Now this is interesting. Why? Since we remember Mises was a prominent member of the ‘intellectuals’. In fact, fellow student with Bukharin, Oscar Lange, and knew and debated Max Weber, Karl Popper, and the famous ‘Vienna Circle’!''They themselves have generated the socialist ideas and indoctrinated the masses with them. No proletarian or son of a proletarian has contributed to the elaboration of the interventionist and socialist programmes. Their authors were all of bourgeois background. The esoteric writings of dialectical materialism, of Hegel, the father both of Marxism and of German aggressive nationalism, the books of Georges Sorel, of Gentile and of Spengler were not read by the average man; they did not move the masses directly.''Mises had read and analyzed these thinkers. He was a scholar, not a critic!''It was the intellectuals who popularized them. The intellectual leaders of the peoples have produced and propagated the fallacies which are on the point of destroying liberty and Western civilization. The intellectuals alone are responsible for the mass slaughters which are the characteristic mark of our century. They alone can reverse the trend and pave the way for a resurrection of freedom.''These are the concluding paragraphs. Helps to remember Mises finished university before WW1. He has been proclaiming this ever since, and more than announcing, he saw his foresight become reality. Gives his opinions weight and his voice confidence.''Not mythical “material productive forces,†but reason and ideas determine the course of human affairs. What is needed to stop the trend towards socialism and despotism is common sense and moral courage.''This short work presents more history than theory. Writing in 1947, Mises uses the recent uncovering of Nazi Germany and the increasing knowledge of Stalinist Russia to add weight to his conclusions.1. The Failure of Interventionism2. The Dictatorial, Anti-Democratic and Socialist Character of Interventionism3. Socialism and Communism4. Russia’s Aggressiveness5. Trotsky’s Heresy6. The Liberation of Demons7. Fascism8. Nazism9. The Teachings of Soviet Experience10. The Alleged Inevitability of SocialismIntroductory Remarks - ''The dogma that the State or the Government is the embodiment of all that is good and beneficial and that the individuals are wretched underlings, exclusively intent upon inflicting harm upon one another and badly in need of a guardian, is almost unchallenged. It is taboo to question it in the slightest way.''Mises suffered for resisting this ‘taboo’.''He who proclaims the godliness of the State and the infallibility of its priests, the bureaucrats, is considered as an impartial student of the social sciences. All those raising objections are branded as biased and narrow-minded. The supporters of the new religion of statolatry are no less fanatical and intolerant than were the Mohammedan conquerors of Africa and Spain.''‘New religion of statolatry’! How serious? As Muslims!''History will call our age the age of the dictators and tyrants. We have witnessed in the last years the fall of two of these inflated supermen [Hitler and Mussolini]. But the spirit which raised these knaves to autocratic power survives. It permeates textbooks and periodicals, it speaks through the mouths of teachers and politicians, it manifests itself in party programmes and in plays and novels. As long as this spirit prevails there cannot be any hope of durable peace, of democracy, of the preservation of freedom or of a steady improvement in the nation’s economic well-being.'' (11)This cry against - 'statolatry' - is the plea of a man of moral courage and integrity. Who will listen?Mises explains the motives of interventionists - ''The interventionists do not approach the study of economic matters with scientific disinterestedness. Most of them are driven by an envious resentment against those whose incomes are larger than their own. This bias makes it impossible for them to see things as they really are. For them the main thing is not to improve the conditions of the masses, but to harm the entrepreneurs and capitalists even if this policy victimizes the immense majority of the people.'' (110)‘Envious resentment’! Who can doubt it?''There is no harm in the economists’ description of the operation of the market as automatic and in their custom of speaking of the anonymous forces operating on the market. They could not anticipate that anybody would be so stupid as to take these metaphors literally. No “automatic†and “anonymous†forces actuate the “mechanism†of the market.''‘Anonymous forces’ don’t exist!''The only factors directing the market and determining prices are purposive acts of men. There is no automatism; there are men consciously aiming at ends chosen and deliberately resorting to definite means for the attainment of these ends. There are no mysterious mechanical forces; there is only the will of every individual to satisfy his demand for various goods. There is no anonymity; there are you and I and Bill and Joe and all the rest. And each of us is engaged both in production and consumption. Each contributes his share to the determination of prices.'' (203)On Marx . . .''Marx did not believe that interventionism could benefit the masses. He violently rejected the idea that such measures as minimum wage rates, price ceilings, restriction of interest rates, social security and so on are preliminary steps in bringing about socialism.''''But the Russian Marxians did not want to wait. They resorted to a new modification of Marxism according to which it was possible for a nation to skip one of the stages of historical evolution. They shut their eyes to the fact that this new doctrine was not a modification of Marxism, but rather the denial of the last remnant which was left of it. It was an undisguised return to the pre-Marxian and anti-Marxian socialist teachings according to which men are free to adopt socialism at any time if they consider it as a system more beneficial to the commonweal than capitalism. It utterly exploded all the mysticism inwrought into dialectical materialism and in the alleged Marxian discovery of the inexorable laws of mankind’s economic evolution.''On Trotsky . . .''He was, on the contrary, a fanatical supporter of dictatorial oppression of all “saboteurs.†It is true, he did not anticipate that the dictator could consider him, Trotsky, author of Marxian tracts and veteran of the glorious extermination of the Romanovs, as the most wicked saboteur. Like all other advocates of dictatorship, he assumed that he himself or one of his intimate friends would be the dictator. Trotsky was a critic of bureaucratism. But he did not suggest any other method for the conduct of affairs in a socialist system. There is no other alternative to profit-seeking private business than bureaucratic management.''''The truth is that Trotsky found only one fault with Stalin: that he, Stalin, was the dictator and not himself, Trotsky. In their feud they both were right. Stalin was right in maintaining that his regime was the embodiment of socialist principles. Trotsky was right in asserting that Stalin’s regime had made Russia a hell.''
Part Cold War commentary, part economic primer, a very timely book based on the premise that socialist expansion is based on the failure of the previous expansions.Governmental "experts" force specific outcomes on society by their own interventions on the market and the interaction of free individuals,which always results in a worse state of affairs. Here is where cronyism comes in, which is destroying the ability of "little people" to not only get ahead but even survive. Governmental control is NOT the answer. Very enlightening!
I find this to be one of the greatest and most enlightening books I have ever read on the subject of Socialism versus Capitalism. Von Mises is a genius with few piers. His analysis of the dangers and threat of Socialist ideology and it's grip and subjugation of people is astounding, both in its simplicity and ability to convince even the most hard core totalitarian of the dangers of government overreach and mass oppression. Every lover of freedom and constitutional democracy should read this timeless piece of literary excellence. They will never regret it!
A must read by the rarest of rare persons; an economist who saw the disaster coming for the Russian Soviet economy. Literally every mainstream economist made fun of Mises of university presses actually sabotaged the printing of his work. Who's laughing now?
Ludwig von Mises gets right down to the nuts and bolts of why Nazi, Communist, and Brand X socialism are all the bastard offspring of Totalitarianism. He also points out, with the vision of foresight, why Europe and much of the rest of the world will always be a family politically weak sisters who are looking for a panacea (or a club) to solve their head-in-the-sand problems.
A serious person needing or wanting to understand where WE - USA are and how did we get there. Excellent, if not necessary required, to be an intellectual of money and economics. The understanding of the five steps to get to FIAT oney. "Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value - ZERO" Voltaire. Other authors needed are Milton Freedman, Adam Smith, Lock, Bastiat [sic], . . .
Wonderful insight into the pernicious nonsense that is socialism. I offered my daughter $100 to read it.
This is your go to book for explanations of socialism and its variations. Written in 1947, Mises explains the continuum from interventionism, socialism, Lenin's variation called communism, i.e., international socialism. He also covers fascism and Nazism,i.e, national socialism. He delves into Russia's aggressiveness driven by Western wealth exposing the problem of socialism's creation of poverty.
I think supporters of socialism easily dismiss critics because the refutations of socialism seem so simple in their reasoning. Ludwig addresses that I think and he provides some historical context to the history of socialism I was not aware of before. Good read
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