"Thou Shalt Not Commit Aggression" 
or 
Libertarianism As Morality
By Charles Curley 
[email protected]
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
         Libertarianism is ultimately not an economic philosophy, although 
rigorous economics bears it out.  I would still be a Libertarian if 
Marxian economics were correct.  Nor is Libertarianism a political 
philosophy.  That it coincides with the highest law of the land, the 
Bill of Rights, is nice.  But I would be a Libertarian even if the 
Constitution forbade it. 
         "Thou shalt not commit aggression".
         Libertarianism is a moral philosophy.  It has one ideal, one 
rule.  If Libertarianism had any truck with commandments, it would 
have this one:  "Thou Shalt Not Commit Aggression."  That would be its 
first commandment, its last commandment, and its only commandment.  
All else is an exercise for the student. 
         "Thou shalt not commit aggression".
         That one commandment, so simple yet so ineluctable, can be derived 
from so many sources.  There are Christian Libertarians, atheist 
Libertarians, buddhist Libertarians, Crowleyite Libertarians, taoist 
Libertarians, pagan Libertarians.  So it isn't an axiom, just a 
theorem.  A commandment for people who do not suffer commandments. 
         "Thou shalt not commit aggression".
         Libertarianism does not arrive at drug legalization because the 
cost in constitutional rights is not worth the candle, however true 
that may be.  Libertarianism arrives at drug legalization because the 
alternative, prohibition, is countless thousands of aggressions 
against the rights, the properties and the lives of millions of 
people. 
         "Thou shalt not commit aggression".
         Libertarianism does not excoriate all gun control because it 
contravenes a 200-year-old scrap of paper, however true that may be. 
Libertarianism does not oppose gun control because it concludes that a 
free people, trained to arms, is the best way to stop aggression, 
including governmental aggression, however true that may be. 
Libertarianism opposes gun control because gun control is enforced at 
gunpoint. 
         "Thou shalt not commit aggression".
         It is a universal commandment.  It commands the rich, it commands 
the poor.  It commands individuals, it commands groups.  No 
exceptions.  Even to that institution which is often defined as a 
monopoly on the use of force, government, Libertarianism says ...
         "Thou shalt not commit aggression".
         In an instant in time, one image was graven on the hearts and 
souls of the world.  One man, nameless, weaponless, standing against 
three tanks in a street all others had fled.  In that instant, that 
man, whatever else he has done, whatever else he does in the future, 
stood forth as Libertarianism in all its glory.  That man with his arm 
upraised told those tank crews: 
         "Thou shalt not commit aggression".
         If some group believes that the only way they can do good deeds is 
first to go out on the highways and rob people at gunpoint, 
Libertarianism say, however regretfully ...
         "Thou shalt not commit aggression".
         That is what was wrong with Dr. Murray Sabrin's efforts to 
obtain government funding for his political campaign in New Jersey. 
Government funding is paid for by taxes, and taxes are the fruits of 
aggression against the innocent. 
         "Thou shalt not commit aggression".
         To accept tax moneys in order to decry big government defines 
hypocrisy. 
         "Thou shalt not commit aggression".
         To accept the means of the enemy before you have even begun to 
fight him is not a strategy, it is self-inflicted defeat. 
         "Thou shalt not commit aggression".
         To accept stolen goods in the name of morality -- well, let us 
leave that to the Medici popes, to the Peoples' Commissars, and to the 
Clintons. 
         "Thou shalt not commit aggression".
Charles Curley, a producer of fine software and/or web pages may also 
be reached at http://web.idirect.com/~ccurley