Don't leave Rousseau out of your political philosophy hall of shame:
You Reap What Rousseau Blame French philosophers for Europe's miseries.
BY PETE DU PONT Wednesday, May 16, 2001 12:01 a.m. EDT
In the autumn of 1799 a market-oriented French economist and legislator whose name I share fled from the romantic promise of Robespierre's revolution, correctly fearing that his head was about to be separated from his shoulders in the name of liberté, égalité and fraternité. He was further burdened by President John Adams's belief that "We have had too many French philosophers already." President Jefferson ultimately took a different view and let him into the country, so the story had a happy ending for your columnist.
Two hundred years later the philosophy M. du Pont fled still haunts Europe. French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau believed, and Europe still insists, that the rights and opportunities of the individual must be subordinated to the overall public will as determined by bureaucrats. Thus the nations of the socialist-leaning Continent are fundamentally different from market-based, limited government nations such as the U.S. and Britain, where the rights of the individual are superior to and protected from invasion by the state.
The current edition of American Outlook magazine presents an excellent series on the differences. Irwin Stelzer identifies two crucial ones: the right and freedom of the individual to pursue his own dreams and opportunities, and the requirement the government to obtain the consent of the governed before launching substantial economic or social policy revolutions. The lack of these two principles has brought about disastrous public policies on the Continent.
Holland now allows doctors not only to assist in a suicide, but to kill patients they don't think deserve to live. Even before the new euthanasia law was passed, national health service physicians--yes, physicians--were taking 16 lives a day without the consent of the victims, perhaps the ultimate denial of individual rights for the convenience of the state.
A medical scandal in France involved transfusions of HIV-tainted blood to some 4,000 hemophiliac hospital patients. Hundreds of patients died because the government banned the use of an American blood-screening test that could've detected the incurable disease. The ministers who made the decision weren't held accountable because--well, because they were privileged ministers working for the public good.
Just last week the French government reacted to the layoff of 570 French workers at the Danone SA, a food company, by proposing legislation to double severance pay and require companies to consider "the social consequences" of any restructuring. The Communist Party wants to force companies to get government permission before laying off any worker, and the Greens want the government to have total control of companies. These are more than just the predictable rants of the left, for in France it is the Socialist-Communist-Green alliance that controls the National Assembly.
High government spending and tax rates are a part of "social justice," too. In Sweden the government spends 57% of gross domestic product; the average of European Union nations is 50%. The U.S., including state and local governments, spends 31%. The top marginal tax rate is 50% or more in seven of the 15 European Union member states, which may explain why the underground economy is estimated to be 20% of the economy in Sweden and Denmark and more than 15% in France and Germany.
Even the Brits, the originators of the Magna Carta and the rule of law, have the ruling Labour Party, with its odd egalitarian policies. An April discussion paper on social mobility from the Performance and Innovation Unit discusses measures to assist "downward social mobility for dull middle class children" and policies to level the playing field among middle-class British citizens. Taxes could be raised, especially on investment income, death taxes increased to 100% to end inherited advantage, and education policies changed "to counteract the scope for middle-class families to buy a good education for their children by moving to the right area." One would hope the unit is joking, but apparently it isn't.
But it is the EU's Brussels government that is continually applying Rousseau's philosophy to public policies. Last June it began a round of criticism of the 35 nations that have "harmful tax practices," which means lower taxes than in the EU. European socialists believe they have an inalienable right to tax revenues, and thus they must restrain "mobile investment from one location to another."
In February the EU launched an attack on Ireland's fiscal policies, specifically its decision to cut taxes to increase growth and enhance living standards. Ireland, likely because of its lower taxes, has the highest growth rate and the lowest unemployment rate in the Eurozone, and Irish citizens have more purchasing power than do German citizens. The success of such market policies enrages EU commissioners, for as American economist Arthur Laffer wrote in The Wall Street Journal Europe, "How could the repressive bureaucrats of Europe keep a lid on its citizenry if Ireland keeps fanning the fires of tax revolt?"
Then came the ultimate Rousseau policy, a March decision by the European Court of Justice that the EU can lawfully suppress political criticism of its bureaucracies and their leaders. There is no First Amendment in Europe, but the decision, making criticism of the EU government illegal, runs counter to the fundamental notion of open discussion. Nevertheless, the court held that the European Commission could punish individuals' speech to "protect the rights of others." This is important because the EU government sees "a clear responsibility to regulate the dissemination of ideas, because opinions can bubble up from individuals' selfish personal interests and create social disturbances," as S.T. Karnick explained in American Outlook magazine.
None of this pervasive EU activity has been blessed by the consent of the governed; it has instead been undertaken by governmental bureaucracies in pursuit of the greater good. Rousseau's belief in "the social contract, which serves within the state as the basis of all rights," is still the governing philosophy of Europe.
On this side of the Atlantic we are blessed with a Constitution and a Bill of Rights that elevate individual rights above those of the government. In the words of the Declaration of Independence, we are "endowed by [our] Creator with certain inalienable rights . . . [and] to secure these rights governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers form the consent of the governed."
Two hundred years later, President Adams's suspicion of French philosophers remains well founded. The peoples of Europe would be better off with the individualism of the U.S. Constitution than the statism of Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
Mr. du Pont, a former governor of Delaware, is policy chairman of the Dallas-based National Center for Policy Analysis. His column appears Wednesdays.
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