This article originally appeared in Reason, April 1977, pp.
39–40.
Anytime that a hard-nosed analysis is put forth of who our
rulers are, of how their political and economic interests interlock,
it is invariably denounced by Establishment liberals and conservatives
(and even by many libertarians) as a "conspiracy theory
of history," "paranoid," "economic determinist,"
and even "Marxist." These smear labels are applied
across the board, even though such realistic analyses can be,
and have been, made from any and all parts of the economic spectrum,
from the John Birch Society to the Communist Party. The most
common label is "conspiracy theorist," almost always
leveled as a hostile epithet rather than adopted by the "conspiracy
theorist" himself.
It is no wonder that usually these realistic analyses are spelled
out by various "extremists" who are outside the Establishment
consensus. For it is vital to the continued rule of the State
apparatus that it have legitimacy and even sanctity in the eyes
of the public, and it is vital to that sanctity that our politicians
and bureaucrats be deemed to be disembodied spirits solely devoted
to the "public good." Once let the cat out of the
bag that these spirits are all too often grounded in the solid
earth of advancing a set of economic interests through use of
the State, and the basic mystique of government begins to collapse.
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Let us take an easy example. Suppose we find that Congress
has passed a law raising the steel tariff or imposing import
quotas on steel? Surely only a moron will fail to realize that
the tariff or quota was passed at the behest of lobbyists from
the domestic steel industry, anxious to keep out efficient foreign
competitors. No one would level a charge of "conspiracy
theorist" against such a conclusion. But what the conspiracy
theorist is doing is simply to extend his analysis to more complex
measures of government: say, to public works projects, the establishment
of the ICC, the creation of the Federal Reserve System, or the
entry of the United States into a war. In each of these cases,
the conspiracy theorist asks himself the question cui bono?
Who benefits from this measure? If he finds that Measure A benefits
X and Y, his next step is to investigate the hypothesis: did
X and Y in fact lobby or exert pressure for the passage of Measure
A? In short, did X and Y realize that they would benefit and
act accordingly?
Far from being a paranoid or a determinist, the conspiracy
analyst is a praxeologist; that is, he believes that people
act purposively, that they make conscious choices to employ
means in order to arrive at goals. Hence, if a steel tariff
is passed, he assumes that the steel industry lobbied for it;
if a public works project is created, he hypothesizes that it
was promoted by an alliance of construction firms and unions
who enjoyed public works contracts, and bureaucrats who expanded
their jobs and incomes. It is the opponents of "conspiracy"
analysis who profess to believe that all events – at least
in government – are random and unplanned, and that therefore
people do not engage in purposive choice and planning.
There are, of course, good conspiracy analysts and bad conspiracy
analysts, just as there are good and bad historians or practitioners
of any discipline. The bad conspiracy analyst tends to make
two kinds of mistakes, which indeed leave him open to the Establishment
charge of "paranoia." First, he stops with the cui
bono; if measure A benefits X and Y, he simply concludes that
therefore X and Y were responsible. He fails to realize that
this is just a hypothesis, and must be verified by finding out
whether or not X and Y really did so. (Perhaps the wackiest
example of this was the British journalist Douglas Reed who,
seeing that the result of Hitler's policies was the destruction
of Germany, concluded, without further evidence, that therefore
Hitler was a conscious agent of external forces who deliberately
set out to ruin Germany.) Secondly, the bad conspiracy analyst
seems to have a compulsion to wrap up all the conspiracies,
all the bad guy power blocs, into one giant conspiracy. Instead
of seeing that there are several power blocs trying to gain
control of government, sometimes in conflict and sometimes in
alliance, he has to assume – again without evidence –
that a small group of men controls them all, and only seems
to send them into conflict.
These reflections are prompted by the almost blatant fact –
so blatant as to be remarked on by the major newsweeklies –
that virtually the entire top leadership of the new Carter administration,
from Carter and Mondale on down, are members of the small, semisecret
Trilateral Commission, founded by David Rockefeller in 1973
to propose policies for the United States, Western Europe, and
Japan, and/or members of the board of the Rockefeller Foundation.
The rest are tied in with Atlanta corporate interests, and especially
the Coca-Cola Company, Georgia's major corporation.
Well, how do we look at all this? Do we say that David Rockefeller's
prodigious efforts on behalf of certain statist public policies
are merely a reflection of unfocused altruism? Or is there pursuit
of economic interest involved? Was Jimmy Carter named a member
of the Trilateral Commission as soon as it was founded because
Rockefeller and the others wanted to hear the wisdom of an obscure
Georgia governor? Or was he plucked out of obscurity and made
President by their support? Was J. Paul Austin, head of Coca-Cola,
an early supporter of Jimmy Carter merely out of concern for
the common good? Were all the Trilateralists and Rockefeller
Foundation and Coca-Cola people chosen by Carter simply because
he felt that they were the ablest possible people for the job?
If so, it's a coincidence that boggles the mind. Or are there
more sinister political-economic interests involved? I submit
that the naïfs who stubbornly refuse to examine the interplay
of political and economic interest in government are tossing
away an essential tool for analyzing the world in which we live.