Pragmatists vs. Ideologues
Achieving A Free Society:  Good News and Bad
By George H. Smith 
[email protected]
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
PART ONE
         In recent 
months, at least four major books have appeared by 
libertarian writers.  The first is a brilliant history of the Civil 
War, Emancipating Slaves, Enslaving Free Men, by the economist and 
historian Jeffrey Hummel.  The second, Libertarianism:  A Primer, is 
by David Boaz, vice-president of the Cato Institute.  Boaz also edited 
the third book, The Libertarian Reader, a superb anthology of 
readings from ancient and modern texts.  The fourth book, What It 
Means to be a Libertarian, is by Charles Murray, co-author of the 
controversial best-seller, The Bell Curve.
         To old-timers 
like myself, who began our libertarian careers in 
the 1960s or before, this contiguous publication of four books by 
libertarian writers is at once remarkable and encouraging.  As a 
college student in the late 60s, I recall how difficult it was even to 
find older libertarian books in print, much less new ones.  Since 
then, however, each decade has witnessed a dramatic increase in the 
number of such books, and we may confidently expect this trend to 
continue.  
         My optimism 
is based not merely on the quantity of libertarian 
books, but also on their quality.  Of course, we have long been 
blessed with first rate minds, such as Ludwig von Mises, F.A. Hayek, 
Murray Rothbard, Milton Friedman, Thomas Szasz, and Ayn Rand, but 
their numbers were few, especially when compared to our adversaries.  
During the Sixties and Seventies, the publication of a libertarian 
book was a major event, and it was fairly easy to read everything that 
came out.  
         Today, I 
am happy to say, it is virtually impossible to keep 
abreast of libertarian publications, especially if we include -- in 
addition to books -- magazines, journal articles, newspaper columns, 
and the seemingly omnipresent voice of libertarians on the Internet.  
If we add to these the tremendous growth and influence of libertarian 
organizations and think-tanks, such as the Libertarian Party, the Cato 
Institute, the Institute for Humane Studies, the International Society 
for Individual Liberty, and so forth, then we have incontrovertible 
proof that the libertarian movement has made remarkable progress in 
the last two decades.  
         So much 
for the good news.  The bad news is that America continues 
its accelerated march down the road to serfdom, with both Democrats 
and Republicans leading the way.  I needn't elaborate on our descent 
into democratic despotism for this audience.  Even a brief listing of 
tyrannical trends and political horrors would require far more space 
than I have here.  
         Instead, I 
want to discuss how it is possible for the good news 
and the bad news to coexist simultaneously.  How is it that the 
quantity and quality of our work has improved so dramatically, while 
at the same time the social and political situation is continuing to 
deteriorate at an alarming rate?  
         One explanation 
is that ideas and principles really don't matter 
all that much.  According to this view -- which unfortunately is 
accepted by a sizable percentage of libertarians today -- we should 
descend from the ethereal clouds of abstract arguments and moral 
principles to the solid ground of pragmatism.  Most people, we are 
told, aren't interested in hearing about rights, the proper role of 
government, and the like, so we should stop confusing politics with 
philosophy and adopt a pragmatic strategy instead, based on the wise 
maxim that politics is the art of the possible.  Or, to shift 
metaphors, we must trim our ideological sails if we are to navigate 
successfully through the treacherous waters of politics.  Here we have 
the perennial debate between ideologues and pragmatists.  I say 
"perennial," because this debate, in one form or another, has surfaced 
in every radical movement -- past and present, religious and secular, 
libertarian and socialist.  Throughout history various radical 
movements, which began with purity of principles, have run into a wall 
of indifference and hostility; and, as the frustration builds, some 
activists have invariably called for a strategy that is more pragmatic 
and less ideological.  I don't say that all such pragmatic turns have 
proved unsuccessful in the short run.  But I do say that any successes 
based on pragmatism have tended to be highly vulnerable and 
short-lived.  A political change for the better, when not based on 
general principles, can easily be reversed (and usually is) by its 
political opponents within a relatively short period of time.  
         To understand 
the reasons for this, we need to explore the 
relationship between theory and strategy.  Knowledge in this area is 
essential if we are to understand the current relationship between the 
good news and the bad news, and what we can do to turn our good news 
into even more good news.
THEORY AND STRATEGY
         Some libertarians 
vigorously defend their own strategic vision 
without bothering to reflect on the theoretical implications of 
strategic pronouncements.  This can lead to immense confusion, since 
there is no way, apart from the use of theory, that conflicting 
strategies can be evaluated.  How do we know whether or not a 
particular strategy has been effective in accomplishing its stated 
goals?  Given the immense complexity of social causation, what role, 
if any, can empirical observation play in the validation of a given 
strategy?
         Let's suppose 
for example, that the Libertarian Party presidential 
candidate fares poorly in the next  election, and let us further 
suppose that some libertarian pundits, who work from different 
strategic assumptions, offer various explanations for the 
disappointing results.  Here are some likely possibilities:  
-  The LP radical:  "I told you so; our campaign was too 
conservative."
-   The LP conservative:  "I told you so; our campaign was too 
radical."
-   The LP ideologue:  "I told you so; we don't talk enough about 
ideas."
-   The LP pragmatist:  "I told you so; we talk about ideas too 
much."  
-   The LP sore loser:  "We would have done better if my candidate 
had been nominated."  
-   The LP sore winner:  "We would have done better if everyone had 
united behind our candidate."  
-   The LP opponent:  "We will never do much better, because freedom 
cannot be won by political means."  
-   The LP Jesuit:  "We did far better than we should have, if you 
consider the demographics."  
         Two implications 
of these conflicting accounts are worth 
mentioning.  First, the empirical fact (the vote total) has no 
intrinsic meaning or significance apart from a strategic theory 
through which it is interpreted.  Second, the strategic theory can 
neither be proved nor disproved by referring solely to the empirical 
facts, because a different vote total, whether higher or lower, can 
always be attributed to other social variables, whether known or 
unknown.  
         The vote 
total, like all historical data, must be viewed through 
theoretical lenses before we can understand its relevance.  As Mises 
and Hayek have argued, no historical fact can refute or confirm a 
social theory, because that fact itself must be interpreted with the 
aid of theory before its significance can be determined.  Quoting 
Mises:  
         "The 
epistemological and logical considerations which determine 
the correctness or incorrectness of a theory are logically and 
temporally antecedent to the elucidation of the historical problem 
involved.  The historical facts as such neither prove nor disprove any 
theory.  They need to be interpreted in the light of theoretical 
insight."  (Human Action, 3rd ed., p.622.)
         All knowledge 
of particular social facts is necessarily 
historical; such knowledge refers to concrete events that have already 
occurred at a determinate time and location.  If we follow Mises and 
Hayek, therefore, social data can neither verify nor falsify the 
theories on which we base our view of long-term strategy.  This 
relationship between social theory and empirical data marks a 
fundamental difference between the social sciences and the physical 
sciences (where empirical data can be used to test theories).  
         Methodological 
issues should be kept in mind when we formulate 
strategic theories and try to evaluate their successes and failures.  
By this I do not mean that strategy is, or can be, a science.  (At 
best, it is an art.)  But every strategic theory proceeds, implicitly 
or explicitly, from a view of social theory and methodology; and it is 
difficult to assess a particular view of strategy without examining 
its assumptions and presuppositions.  In other words, it always helps 
to know what the hell we're talking about.
PRAGMATISTS VERSUS IDEOLOGUES
         Perhaps the 
most dramatic difference in libertarian thinking about 
strategy is that between pragmatists and ideologues.  I offer these 
categories as "ideal types" or "pure forms" (to use the sociological 
terms of  Max Weber and Georg Simmel).  In other words, I have 
constructed these ideal types for the purpose of analysis, without 
suggesting that real libertarians fall exclusively into one category 
or the other.  Most of us probably embody some features of both types, 
with a disposition to favor one over the other.  Moreover, 
"pragmatist" and "ideologue" are relative terms; even the most 
practical of libertarian pragmatists is regarded as an impractical 
ideologue by the general public.  
         Pragmatists 
typically pride themselves on their "common sense" and 
on their "realistic" view of the political world.  Although they do 
not altogether deny the importance of theory and ideology, pragmatists 
believe that these have little application outside the immediate 
circle of hard-core libertarians.  Libertarians may enjoy debating the 
fine points of theory among themselves, but this intellectual 
recreation cannot help us in the rough and tumble world of politics.  
The pragmatist sees himself as a problem-solver; he is going to roll 
up his sleeves and get something done.  
         The pragmatist 
is especially fond of talking about "the real 
world" -- a place, he thinks, that ideologues rarely visit and know 
little about.  The real world is the world of flesh-and-blood human 
beings, the domicile of the proverbial "average person," in contrast 
to the abstract world of the libertarian theorist.  The pragmatist, 
however much he may disparage theory, often has a rather elaborate 
theory about how to change the world.  If he has a background in 
business (which he often does), the pragmatist will wax eloquent on 
how libertarian ideas can be "packaged" and "sold."  The average 
person, he tells us, doesn't want to hear about rights and the proper 
role of government; he is interested only in his family, his job, and 
his bank account.  It is the pragmatist who likes to write and read 
books with titles like, How You Can Profit from the Coming Extinction 
of the Human Race.  
[To Be Continued]
For six years, George H. Smith was general editor for Knowledge 
Products, a company that produces audio tapes on various aspects of 
libertarian theory and history.  Among his 28 scripts were four on the 
US Constitution, narrated by Walter Cronkite, and four on the American 
Revolution, narrated by George C. Scott.  
This article was first delivered as the keynote address at the 
Libertarian Party of California's state convention in Sacramento 
February 15, 1997 and is reprinted from the International Society for 
Individual Liberty's Freedom Network News No. 48 (March 1997).