This year is the
bicentennial of the birth of Alexis de Tocqueville, one of the most famous
political commentators about America. Although not always a consistent
thinker, he stands squarely in the classical liberal tradition of
understanding the capacity of society to self organize in the absence of a
controlling central state. Charles Eliot Norton described his two-volume Democracy
in America (1835;
1840) as "constructive and non-partisan," whose focus on principles made
him "objectively pro-American." The Edinburgh Review in 1865
called it "one of the wisest works of modern thought."
It has been said that
more people have interpreted America through the lens of Democracy
in America than through the work of any other writer.
In part because of
its title, most readers have focused on its analysis of democracy.
However, in many ways, its central focus was liberty. One early American
reviewer stated that "the intelligent American reader can find no better
guide" for understanding and preserving liberty. As de Tocqueville wrote
to Henry Reeve, his English translator, his reviewers "insist on making
me a party man, and I am not . . . the only passions I have are love of
liberty and human dignity." That passion shaped his analysis. As Henry
Steele Commager said, "Liberty must be worked at, must be achieved, and
it has rarely been achieved anywhere in the whole of history. It
requires a most extraordinary self-control, self-denial, wisdom,
sagacity, vision to protect liberty in the face of all the forces that
mitigate and militate against it. And Tocqueville regarded
centralization as the most dangerous of all the threats to liberty."
The bicentennial of
Alexis Charles Henri Maurice Clerel, the Comte de Tocqueville, is an apt
time to revisit the insights on liberty in
Democracy in America.
That is especially true today, since he recognized that liberty
and democracy are not the same thing, despite the common modern
confusion between them. Even more crucial, he recognized that democracy
can be the enemy of liberty, and that of the two, liberty is far more
important.
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. . . everyone
is the best and sole judge of his own private interest . . . society
has no right to control a man's actions unless they are prejudicial
to the common weal or unless the common weal demands his help. This
doctrine is universally admitted in the United
States.
-
The Revolution
of the United States was the result of a mature and reflecting
preference for freedom, and not of a vague or ill-defined craving
for independence.
-
It profits me
but little, after all, that a vigilant authority always protects the
tranquility of my pleasures and constantly averts all dangers from
my path, without my care or concern, if this same authority is the
absolute master of my liberty and my life . . .
-
How can a
populace unaccustomed to freedom in small concerns learn to use it
temperately in great affairs? What resistance can be offered to
tyranny where each individual is weak . . . ?
-
. . . popularity
may be united with hostility to the rights of the people, and the
secret slave of tyranny may be the professed lover of freedom.
-
. . . the
Federal Constitution...disavowed beforehand the habitual use of
compulsion in enforcing the decisions of the majority.
-
The great end of
justice is to substitute the notion of right for that of violence
and to place a legal barrier between the government and the use of
physical force.
-
. . . the
liberty of association has become a necessary guarantee against the
tyranny of the majority. . . . The omnipotence of the majority
appears to me to be so full of peril to the American republics that
the dangerous means used to bridle it seem to be more advantageous
than prejudicial.
-
The most natural
privilege of man, next to the right of acting for himself, is that
of combining his exertions with those of his fellow creatures and of
acting in common with them. The right of association therefore
appears to me almost as inalienable in its nature as the right of
personal liberty. No legislator can attack it without impairing the
foundations of society.
-
. . . there is
nothing more arduous than the apprenticeship of liberty . . .
generally established with difficulty in the midst of storms...
-
Democratic
liberty is far from accomplishing all its projects with the skill of
an adroit despotism.
-
. . . the main
evil of the present democratic institutions of the Unites States
does not arise, as is often asserted . . . from their weakness, but
from their irresistible strength. I am not so much alarmed at the
excessive liberty which reigns in that country as at the inadequate
securities which one finds there against tyranny.
-
The only means
of preventing men from degrading themselves is to invest no one with
that unlimited authority which is the sure method of debasing them.
-
. . . if, after
having established the general principles of government,
[centralized administration] . . . could descend to the circle of
individual interests, freedom would soon be banished from the New
World.
-
The
Anglo-American relies upon personal interest to accomplish his ends
and gives free scope to the unguided strength and common sense of
the people. . . . The principle instrument . . . is freedom . . .
-
If the absolute
power of a majority were to be substituted by democratic nations . .
.[men] would simply have discovered a new physiognomy of servitude .
. . when I feel the hand of power lie heavy on my brow, I care but
little to know who oppresses me; and I am not the more disposed to
pass beneath the yoke because it is held out to me by the arms of a
million men.
-
The taste which
men have for liberty and that which they feel for equality are, in
fact, two different things . . . among democratic nations they are
two unequal things.
-
. . . democratic
communities have a natural taste for freedom; left to themselves,
they will seek it, cherish it, and view any privation of it with
regret. But for equality their passion is ardent, insatiable,
incessant, invincible; they call for equality in freedom; and if
they cannot obtain that, they still call for equality in slavery.
-
. . . in order
to combat the evils which equality may produce, there is only one
effectual remedy: namely, political freedom.
-
No sooner does a
government attempt to go beyond its political sphere . . . than it
exercises, even unintentionally, an insupportable tyranny . . .
-
. . . men who
are possessed by the passion for physical gratification generally
find out that the turmoil of freedom disturbs their welfare before
they discover how freedom itself serves to promote it. If the
slightest rumor of public commotion intrudes into the petty
pleasures of private life, they are aroused and alarmed by it. The
fear of anarchy perpetually haunts them, and they are always ready
to fling away their freedom at the first disturbance.
-
. . . public
tranquility is a great good, but . . . all nations have been
enslaved by being kept in good order.
-
. . . the
despotism of faction is not less to be dreaded than the despotism of
an individual.
-
. . . Americans
believe their freedom to be the best instrument and surest safeguard
of their welfare . . . that their chief business is to secure for
themselves a government which will allow them to acquire the things
they covet and which will not debar them from the peaceful enjoyment
of those possessions which they have already acquired.
-
Any law that . .
. should tend to diminish the spirit of freedom in the nation and to
overshadow the notion of law and right would defeat its object . . .
-
. . . nothing
but the love and the habit of freedom can maintain an advantageous
contest with the love and the habit of physical well-being.
-
. . . the
species of oppression by which democratic nations are menaced is
unlike anything that ever before existed in the world. . . . Above
this race of men stands an immense and tutelary power, which takes
upon itself alone to secure their gratifications and to watch over
their fate. That power is absolute, minute, regular, provident, and
mild. It would be like the authority of a parent if, like that
authority, its object was to prepare men for manhood; but it seeks,
on the contrary, to keep them in perpetual childhood. . . . For
their happiness such a government willingly labors, but it chooses
to be the sole agent and the only arbiter of that happiness; it
provides for their security, foresees and supplies their
necessities, facilitates their pleasures, manages their principal
concerns, directs their industry, regulates the descent of poverty
and subdivides their inheritances: what remains, but to spare them
all the care of thinking and all the trouble of living?
-
After having
thus successively taken each member of the community in its powerful
grasp and fashioned him at will, the supreme power then extends its
arm over the whole community. It covers the surface of society with
a network of small complicated rules, minute and uniform, through
which the most original minds and the most energic characters cannot
penetrate, to rise above the crowd. The will of man is not
shattered, but softened, bent, and guided; men are seldom forced by
it to act, but they are constantly restrained from acting. Such a
power does not destroy, but it prevents existence; it does not
tyrannize, but it compresses, enervates, extinguishes, and stupefies
a people till each nation is reduced to nothing better than a flock
of timid and industrious animals, of which the government is the
shepherd.
-
. . . the people
shake off their state of dependence just long enough to select their
master and then relapse into it again . . . they think they have
done enough for the protection of individual freedom when they have
surrendered it to the power of the nation at large. This does not
satisfy me: the nature of him I am to obey signifies less to me
than the fact of extorted obedience.
-
Despotism,
therefore, appears to me peculiarly to be dreaded in democratic
times. I should have loved freedom, I believe, at all times, but in
the time in which we live I am ready to worship it . . . the
question is . . . how to make liberty proceed out of that democratic
state of society in which God has placed us.
-
. . . defending
[citizens'] rights against the encroachments of the government saves
the common liberties of the country.
-
Another tendency
which is extremely natural to democratic nations and extremely
dangerous is that which leads them to despise and undervalue the
rights of private persons . . . they are often sacrificed without
regret and almost always violated without remorse . . . among the
same nations in which men conceive a natural contempt for the rights
of private persons, the rights of society at large are naturally
extended and consolidated; in other words, men become less and less
attached to private rights just when it is most necessary to retain
and defend what little remains of them. It is therefore most
especially in the present democratic times, that the true friends of
liberty and the greatness of man ought constantly to be on the alert
to prevent the power of government from lightly sacrificing the
private rights of individuals to the general execution of its
designs. At such times no citizen is so obscure that it is not very
dangerous to allow him to be oppressed; no private rights are so
unimportant that they can be surrendered with impunity to the
caprices of a government. The reason is plain: if the private right
of an individual is violated at a time when the human mind is fully
impressed with the importance and the sanctity of such rights, the
injury done is confined to the individual whose right is infringed;
but to violate such a right at the present day is deeply to corrupt
the manners of the nation and to put the whole community in
jeopardy, because the very notion of this kind of right constantly
tends among us to be impaired and lost . . . the principle of public
utility is called in, the doctrine of political necessity is
conjured up, and men accustom themselves to sacrifice private
interest without scruple and to trample on the rights of individuals
in order more speedily to accomplish any public purpose.
-
. . . we are
naturally prone . . . to exaggerate the idea that the interest of a
private individual ought always to bend to the interest of the many.
-
To lay down
extensive but distinct and settled limits to the action of the
government; to confer certain rights on private persons, and to
secure to them the undisputed enjoyment of those rights; to enable
individual man to maintain whatever independence, strength, and
original power he still possesses; to raise him by the side of
society at large, and uphold him in that position; these appear to
me the main objects . . .
-
Let us, then,
look forward to the future with that salutary fear which makes men
keep watch and ward for freedom . . .
It has been said of
Alexis de Tocqueville that "[n]o authority on America has equaled him in
prophetic vision." When we view the accuracy of his insights into the
many clashes between democracy and liberty that have occurred since he
wrote, resolved in favor of political determination because of the
misplaced imagery of democracy as the central, most essential issue, it
is hard to argue with that assessment.
The modern
willingness to sacrifice liberty to democracy is perhaps the most
important reason it is worth commemorating de Tocqueville's bicentennial
with more than a cursory consideration of his insights. Recognizing the
threat that democracy can be to liberty is never more important than
when citizens are willing to routinely let democracy run roughshod over
our individual, inalienable rights against such abuse.
The centrality of
liberty to de Tocqueville's thought, as expressed in
Democracy in America, can be
encapsulated by two statements he makes about our "public interest" in
liberty: "their chief business . . . is to remain their own masters,"
but "to neglect to hold [liberty] fast is to allow it to escape." It
can also be recognized in his other writing. In Journey
to America,
he said, "Another principle of American society, which one must always
keep in mind is this: since every individual is the best judge of his
own interest, society must not protect him too carefully, lest he should
come to rely on it and so saddle society with a task it cannot
perform." Even more directly to the point, in
Correspondence with Gobineau, he
wrote that "To me, human societies, like persons, become something
worthwhile only though their use of liberty." That is a message that
may be "out of the mainstream" today, but it is one Americans
desperately need to hear.
__________________________
Gary M. Galles is a professor
of economics at Pepperdine University. Send him
MAIL, and see his
Mises.org
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