There's
a very interesting article by Art Carden and Steven Horwitz at The Freeman Online
called "Eugenics: Progressivism’s Ultimate Social Engineering"
about Progressive Era legislation and the arguments made in favor
of it by its original supporters, some of whom supported economic
statism not because they didn't understand what its real effects
would be but precisely because they did. As Carden and Horwitz put it
it:
In other words, what we today think of as the unintended consequences of laws supported by today’s well-meaning but economically uninformed Progressives were actually the intended goals of some of their intellectual ancestors a century ago. Early Progressive economists understood the effects of these interventions, but they thought those effects were desirable.
For
instance, one of the principle arguments against minimum
wage laws is that increasing the minimum wage will make workers whose
productivity is not high enough to make them worth hiring at the new
minimum unemployable. Thus, they are deprived of both their
wages and the opportunity to gain skills and experience that might
help them improve their lot. The victims will be
disproportionately found among those who are already at a
disadvantage, which opponents of minimum wage laws regard as a bad thing- but not everyone has agreed.
As you probably already know, many
leading Progressives were eugenicists. (As were as many of their close cousins, such as
Fabian socialists in Great Britain. For the purposes of this post, I'm using "Progressive" in a somewhat broadened sense so that I don't have to write "anti-market, anti-individualist, nominally democratic advocates of extensive government economic planning and social engineering controlled by expert government technocrats" over and over.) They supported government action
to control the gene pool by discouraging or preventing people they
typically considered inferior and thought America and the world could
do with less of- blacks, Chinese, Southern and Eastern
European immigrants, the mentally ill, the psychologically abnormal or socially maladjusted, people with congenital
disabilities or deformities- from reproducing
As
Horwitz and Carden explain it, the problem they faced was that too
many of the people eugenicists considered unfit weren't, and
were doing too well in the relatively free markets in the United
States at that time. They were successfully competing with (the right
kind of) white workers, which lowered the latter's wages through
competition and- even worse- allowed them to survive and raise
families, propagating bloodlines the eugenicists would have preferred
to see die out. Restrictions on immigration, while popular among eugenicists, would
not solve the problem of the millions of immigrants who had already
arrived, the black population, or “defective” persons of more
acceptable racial stock who were able to find employment.
Making
these things a problem that needed to be solved required some rather
extreme liberties to be taken with the English language. This resulted in idiosyncratic definition for
words like “unemployable” and “parasitic,” by which Progressive eugenicists meant something like “Not making enough to singlehandedly support a
family at a standard of living native-born whites would consider
acceptable." (Called, familiarly enough, a “living wage.”) Thus, an itinerant worker with no permanent abode who
supported himself doing odd jobs was
“unemployable” no matter how much work he did, a “parasite”
taking work from the more deserving. If an immigrant family was
completely self-supporting but depended on the wages of more than one family member, it
was a family of unemployable parasites no matter how much work they
were actually doing.
(This
also reflected the disapproval of many Progressives for native-born
white women working outside the home, something
that simultaneously roused conservative- which many Progressives
were, in a paternalist, aristocratic way- fear of weakened traditional roles,
chivalrous horror at the prospect of subjecting women to the cold,
unfeeling world away from hearth and home, and eugenic objections to
having the “Mothers of the Race” distracted from their more vital
task of outbreeding the mercilessly industrious wolf baying at America's
door.)
The
industrious and frugality common among immigrant workers was seen not
as a benefit for the country, but a curse, because these were
seen by eugenicists as inherent racial traits that would allow these
groups- considered morally and intellectually inferior to the
Anglo-Saxon but better-suited to drudgery, subordination, and
squalor- to outbreed their superiors, damaging the gene pool and
eventually bringing about the “race suicide” of the higher races.
Too many of the unfit were working hard and being productive, and
free markets were rewarding that behavior.
It
wasn't just a matter of race or ethnicity, of course. The free market
was also doing too much to support defective members of the white, Western/Northern European-derived population as well. Many "feeble-minded" or otherwise unacceptable people were still capable of working, taking wages away from the sort of workers the eugenicists liked and- in the worst cases- propagating their own kind. People who are self-supporting are people who aren't desperately
crawling into the government's waiting arms, and that was a problem.
Some of the commentary on this issue was amazingly perverse. Consider what Sidney and Beatrice Webb had to say, in their classic Industrial Democracy, on the matter of how "the sick and the crippled, the idiots and lunatics, the epileptic, the blind and the deaf and dumb, the criminals and the incorrigibly idle" and the "deficient in strength, speed, or skill" were best dealt with:
Note, again, the perversion of language: A disabled person who supports himself by working for wages in a competitive market, like any other worker, is being "maintained at the expense of other persons."
And yet, if you accept the premise that the class of workers that eugenicist Progressives and socialist considered "fit" favor ought to have a monopoly on wages, without competition from their inferiors, it actually makes sense. In that case, the wages earned by the defective worker actually rightfully belong to his betters, and archaic individualist quibbling about the fact that he earned them with own productive labor for a willing employer doesn't change that.
(It also makes sense if you hold whoever you've identified as defective in such contempt that their attempts to participate in human society as if they were actual people are an unacceptable affront to you, of course.)
Some of the commentary on this issue was amazingly perverse. Consider what Sidney and Beatrice Webb had to say, in their classic Industrial Democracy, on the matter of how "the sick and the crippled, the idiots and lunatics, the epileptic, the blind and the deaf and dumb, the criminals and the incorrigibly idle" and the "deficient in strength, speed, or skill" were best dealt with:
These physical and moral weaklings and degenerates must somehow be maintained at the expense of other persons. They may be provided for from their own property or savings, by charity or from public funds, with or without being set to work in whatever ways are within their capacity. But of all ways of dealing with these unfortunate parasites the most ruinous to the community is to allow them unrestrainedly to compete as wage-earners for situations in the industrial organisation.
Note, again, the perversion of language: A disabled person who supports himself by working for wages in a competitive market, like any other worker, is being "maintained at the expense of other persons."
And yet, if you accept the premise that the class of workers that eugenicist Progressives and socialist considered "fit" favor ought to have a monopoly on wages, without competition from their inferiors, it actually makes sense. In that case, the wages earned by the defective worker actually rightfully belong to his betters, and archaic individualist quibbling about the fact that he earned them with own productive labor for a willing employer doesn't change that.
(It also makes sense if you hold whoever you've identified as defective in such contempt that their attempts to participate in human society as if they were actual people are an unacceptable affront to you, of course.)
That was the problem. Minimum
wage laws offered a possible solution. Workers from “unfit”
populations were generally less valuable to employers than native
white labor on an hour-to-hour basis ,for various reasons, but since
they were generally willing to work for less there were many
situations where hiring them made economic sense. If working for such
low wages became illegal, they would be stripped of their
advantage, becoming less attractive compared to costlier
higher-skilled workers or, if their value to an employer is less than
the minimum, completely unemployable. They can't work, can't earn a
living, can't support themselves, can't propagate their kind. It
would also, by creating a readily identifiable, economically
dependent class of permanent “unemployables,” make it easier to
single such people out for stricter control, isolation from society
at large, or sterilization.
In
short, if making a living was especially hard for you, the goal
of many Progressives was to make it even harder -ideally, impossible-
until they had forced you out of the labor force entirely and stripped you of whatever income, autonomy, and dignity being able to work had given you. This would raise wages for
the workers who were left, redistributing resources upwards. The
fact that minimum wages are disproportionately harmful to the
employment prospects of the most disadvantaged members of society was
a benefit because it was the most disadvantaged members of
society that eugenicist Progressives wanted to harm.
The “problem” that the minimum wage was supposed to
solve for many of its supporters was that a free market in labor was too good
for the people on the bottom. Even in an only relatively free market operating in a society where racism was rife in both law and culture, there was still too much money being made by
the poor, too much opportunity for outsiders, too much of a tendency to reward people for their productivity instead of irrelevant characteristics, too much acceptance of difference, too many chances to gain experience, skills, or savings that might allow the people so many "reformers" despised to make better lives.
The advocates of this
were not fringe figures. Eugenics was a recurring theme of the
still-extant and eminently respectable American Economic Association, a progressive institution through and which proclaimed at its birth that “the
doctrine of laissez-faire is unsafe in politics and unsound in
morals.” Proponents of the idea included: Richard T. Ely , the Progressive leader and Social Gospel leader who was a founding member of the American Economics Association and the Christian Social Union,
served as AEA president, and actually has a feast day on the
Episcopalian liturgical calender. Henry
Rogers Seager, another president of the American Economics Association and one of the country's most influential
proponents of social insurance- his entire book on the subject is
available at the Social Security Administration's official website, in honor of his memory.
Sidney Webb, pillar of the Fabian Society, Labour MP and author of
the original version of Clause IV of the Labor Party's constitution. And many more.
(If this post seems especially acerbic and unpleasant, I imagine that's why. Spending hours immersing yourself in the thoughts of people who despised you and what you are to the point of making ridding the world of your kind an integral part of a political philosophy to which they dedicated their lives can do that, particularly when the people in question are widely hailed as moral visionaries and their efforts to create a world that nobody would have to share with anyone like you are considered a noble struggle for decency, humanity, and "social justice.")
(If this post seems especially acerbic and unpleasant, I imagine that's why. Spending hours immersing yourself in the thoughts of people who despised you and what you are to the point of making ridding the world of your kind an integral part of a political philosophy to which they dedicated their lives can do that, particularly when the people in question are widely hailed as moral visionaries and their efforts to create a world that nobody would have to share with anyone like you are considered a noble struggle for decency, humanity, and "social justice.")
It's
bitterly amusing to think that Herbert Spencer- a libertarian who
endorsed charity and mutual aid, and believed that a free society
based on voluntary interactions would lead people to develop greater
and greater sympathy for others by making fulfilling the needs and
desires of others essential to your own economic self-interest- is
slandered so often by people on the Left for supposedly believing
that the "unfit" should be abandoned to their fates so that
they would be removed from the gene pool. Slandered, in other words,by people whose own recent ideological forebears would in many cases
have considered even the position falsely attributed to Spencer to be
too kind, and wanted the state to actively prevent the "inferior"
from being able to support themselves out of the fear that they
wouldn't die out if left on their own.
I should note that I
certainly don't think that the typical American left-liberal or
self-identified progressive today would endorse the sort of program that originally
accompanied and animated some of their ideas, or is driven by the same motives. Instead,
it's an example of how incredibly flexible justifications for statism
can be: Liberal/progressives support for the minimum wage is
rock-solid a century later despite the fact that the arguments given
in its support have not merely changed but actually inverted.
Still, the fact that so many early
Progressives were both economic statists and eugenicists was not an aberration or a
fluke or an incidental result of the fact that racism in general was
more acceptable at the time. Why would someone who had a strong
confidence in the desirability of “rational” government
management of society under government-appointed intellectuals,
trusted in the mainstream science of his times as a guide for his
country's technocrats, and rejected
the classical liberal/libertarian conception of rights have been
anything else? The eugenicists were more consistent thinkers than most people are today; they did not declare that
coercive government management of human life was better than the
chaos of laissez-faire, reject individualist objections to using
state coercion to interfere in peaceful people's lives, and then
arbitrarily declare that the gonads were off-limits just because.
Coercive eugenics was simply Progressivism applied directly to the
human body.
What
I hadn't previously appreciated was the way in which Progressive
support for eugenics not only sprang from the same basic
philosophical roots as Progressive economic statism, which is
immediately obvious, but helped motivate it. Makes sense, in
retrospect, but it's still a bit jarring to learn; residue of
public school propaganda about American history that still hadn't
been scraped out, perhaps. (I recall once saying to someone that the
purpose of liberal economic interventions like minimum wages seemed
to be singling out people with almost nothing and taking it away from them, but it was supposed to be a joke.)
Of course, the fact that many of some form of market intervention's biggest intellectual advocates happened to be despicable assholes with appalling motivations who supported the law precisely because they knew that it would serve the appalling motivations that made them despicable assholes in the first place does not, in itself, prove that the intervention is a bad thing. But a huge amount of economic statism's persuasive appeal, at least in the United States, is built less on the arguments for individual policies than it is on the popular mythology of the noble, righteous reformers who fought to create the modern interventionist state and saved us from the horrors of laissez-faire, and one of the most pervasive and pernicious effects of that mythology is that it encourages the presumption that greater government interventionism in the economy is something that favors the weak against the strong.
Of course, the fact that many of some form of market intervention's biggest intellectual advocates happened to be despicable assholes with appalling motivations who supported the law precisely because they knew that it would serve the appalling motivations that made them despicable assholes in the first place does not, in itself, prove that the intervention is a bad thing. But a huge amount of economic statism's persuasive appeal, at least in the United States, is built less on the arguments for individual policies than it is on the popular mythology of the noble, righteous reformers who fought to create the modern interventionist state and saved us from the horrors of laissez-faire, and one of the most pervasive and pernicious effects of that mythology is that it encourages the presumption that greater government interventionism in the economy is something that favors the weak against the strong.
I
strongly encourage you to read the entire article, available at The Freeman. There are several papers written or co-written by Thomas C. Leonard available online, Economics and Eugenics in the Progressive Era, Excluding Unfit Workers: Social Control versus Social Justice in the Age of Economic Reform, and More Merciful and Not Less Effective: Eugenics and American Economics in the Progressive Era, that are also worth checking out.
1 comment:
I've been thinking for some time that the urge to arbitrarily divide human beings between "productive" and "parasitic" classes is the one thing that unites many libertarians with modern conservatives, early Progressives, Marxists, etc. and accounts for a lot of the really nasty (and strikingly similar) commitments that people of these diverse ideologies tend to develop. Of course modern liberals often have this problem as well, with their apparent belief that anyone who isn't a government agent has to find some way to atone for whatever material comfort one enjoys (to "give back to the community", as it is often put). Of course on a straight-up naturalistic interpretation all life is necessarily parasitic, so there's always some kind of background moral premises or tribal sympathies (sometimes naively mistaken for the dictates of Reason/Science or historical forces or natural law or whatever) involved in determining who are the productive "good guys". But it always turns out to just be a circular justification for oppression and cruelty.
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