Remembering Rose Wilder Lane by  Timothy Sandefur | Dec 6, 2022
  It was on this day in 1886 that the journalist and author  Rose Wilder Lane was  born in a little house on the prairie that she and her mother, Laura  Ingalls Wilder, would later make famous. A brilliant, moody, and  independent spirit, Rose was eventually to become one of the most  important voices of American liberty, and in 1943, published  The Discovery of Freedom, a pathbreaking book that helped spark the revival of interest in free markets and individualism in the later 20th century.
   Ironic, then, that she started out as a socialist.
   Lane grew up hating the life on the farm, and decided at an early age  to become a journalist and traveler. In the 1920s, she went to Europe  to report on the Red Cross’s efforts to help refugees in the wake of  World War I, but during her travels, she was horrified by what she  witnessed in the new Soviet Union. Bolshevik chiefs had begun  confiscating food and forcing the people of Armenia and Georgia into  manual labor to get it back. “We intend to redistribute it to the  neediest,” one Soviet soldier told her. “We will see that they are the  most needy by making them work for it.” After witnessing collectivism in  action, Rose returned to the United States prepared to rethink  everything she thought she had known about economics and politics.
   In 1926, she arrived back at her parents’ farm, and dove into works on politics and history. In a letter to the journalist  Dorothy Thompson,  whom she had met in Paris, Lane described how her studies opened her  eyes to the uniqueness of American freedom. America was criticized for  “its lack of form,” she wrote. But now she saw that formlessness—in  other words, its social and economic fluidity—as a great blessing: “It’s  exactly stability which America discards.… Is it possible for  a civilization to be wholly dynamic? Wholly a vibration,  a becoming, a force existing in itself, without direction, without an  object for its verb? A civilization always becoming, never being, never never having the stability, the form, which is the beginning of death?”
   What Lane was describing was the dynamism of a free society, in which  individuals are free to discover their own paths—both metaphorically  and literally. In her book  Give Me Liberty,  published in 1936, Lane would explain how the freedom to choose enabled  people to establish their own rules of social interaction, and  accomplish their own purposes, without being dictated to by the state.  She used a simple illustration, comparing the way people leave a theater  at the end of a show to the way in which a teacher maintains order in  a classroom. “No crowd leaves a theater with any efficiency,” she wrote,  “yet we usually reach the sidewalk without a fight.” By contrast, any  classroom instructor “knows that order cannot be maintained without  regulation, supervision, and discipline.” That distinction underlined  the difference between two kinds of societies: that in which people are  at liberty to pursue their own goals, and that in which an authority  figure controls people’s behavior in order to accomplish some single  collective goal that they themselves might not share. Years later, the  economist F.A. Hayek would label this the difference between  “spontaneous” and “constructed” orders.  Simply put, people don’t need an authority figure to tell them how to  live—or, as Lane liked to put it, the very idea of Authority with  a capital “A,” whether it be in the form of socialism, Nazism, or  anything else, is fallacious: wealth, social harmony, and other  blessings are not created by kings, dictators, or presidents. They are  the result of individual initiative. And if that initiative is stifled  by government intervention, the results can be wasteful, foolhardy, or  even catastrophic.
   As I detail in my new book,  Freedom’s Furies,  this and other discoveries helped make Lane—along with her friend and  mentor Isabel Paterson, and another of Paterson’s admirers, Ayn Rand—one  of a trio of women who would help revolutionize Americans’ conception  of liberty in the age of the Depression and World War II. In 1943, all  three of them published books—Lane’s The Discovery of Freedom, Paterson’s The God of the Machine, and Rand’s The Fountainhead—that  helped spark the modern liberty movement. The journalist William F.  Buckley later called them “the three furies of modern libertarianism.”
   I spoke about Lane and her friends at a book forum at the Cato Institute last week, on a panel that included Reason magazine’s  Elizabeth Nolan Brown, the Libertarian Party’s Carla Howell, and Cato’s  Kat Murti and Paul Meany. You can watch that here: players.brightcove.net
  Along with her own novels, Lane helped incorporate arguments for self-?reliance and freedom into the Little House novels that she co-wrote with her mother. And she always remained an adventurous and rebellious spirit. Months after The Discovery of Freedom appeared,  she wrote an angry postcard to a political commentator in which she  criticized Social Security. In response, the FBI dispatched police  officers to her home to question her about her “subversion.” To one  officer’s questioning, she angrily replied, “I’m as subversive as  hell!”—and demanded an apology from J. Edgar Hoover. (The FBI continued  to surveil her, however.)
   Lane remained a rebel until her death. In 1963, she published  The Woman’s Day Book of American Needlework,  which combined her lifelong interest in textile arts with her love of  America’s culture of liberty. The arts of embroidery, crochet, and  quilting, she argued, revealed how American women had found the freedom  to express themselves and provide for their families, in ways  unprecedented in history. Two years after that, Lane traveled to Vietnam  to report on the war for Woman’s Day magazine. In 1968, she died at her home in Danbury, Connecticut, at the age of 81.
   Lane was a pioneering feminist figure, and a fascinating  personality—as well as being one of the Founding Mothers of our ideas of  individual liberty. We would do well to remember her fascinating life  story, and appreciate the ideas she helped preserve for us.
  This article was originally featured at the  Cato Institute and is republished with permission.
  libertarianinstitute.org |