March 3, 2026 War Is a Racket - And So Is the
State George F. Smith
In past writings I’ve attempted to show that the majority of the social
problems experienced throughout the world poverty, war, economic
collapse, famine, hyperinflation, genocide, unilaterally broken
agreements can be traced to the dominant form of social organization
under which we live: the State.
As explained by Franz Oppenheimer in his 1922 treatise, (online
here),
"There are two fundamentally
opposed means whereby man, requiring sustenance, is impelled to obtain
the necessary means for satisfying his desires. These are work and
robbery, one’s own labor and the forcible appropriation of the labor of
others."
Oppenheimer calls
:one’s own labor and the equivalent
exchange of one’s own labor for the labor of others, the “economic means”
for the satisfaction of needs, while the unrequited appropriation of the
labor of others will be called the “political means.” . . .
"All world history, from primitive times up to our own civilization,
presents a single phase, a contest namely between the economic and the
political means; and it can present only this phase until we have
achieved free citizenship."
The state, he concludes, is the organization of the
political means.
Simply put, states are bullies that collect their revenue through theft
and manage their populations through threats of punishment. They
use other incentives, such as tax breaks, but their existence depends on
keeping their populations fearful of reprisals. Of course they
don’t want to be seen as thieves or bullies they want our
allegiance. So, to win our favor they manufacture crises through
lawmaking and other interventions, shift blame elsewhere, then use the
crises to justify further interventions, calling on us for support as
they continue meddling in our lives. Meanwhile our natural liberty
gradually erodes as state power expands.
This is not a complex or original idea. Rothbard, Hoppe, Nock,
Spooner and many others have written at length on the nature of
states. Were any of their works required reading in school?
Probably not. Definitely not in mine. What would happen if
Major General Smedley Butler’s
War is a Racket became requisite reading for high school
graduation? Think that might affect enlistments? How many of
today’s teens have even heard of the book? They know nothing about
Butler but they’ve been told that Woodrow Wilson was a great president
for sending over 100,000 young Americans to their death.
War is a racket and so is the state. In Butler’s words, “A racket
is best described, I believe, as something that is not what it seems to
the majority of the people. Only a small ‘inside’ group knows what it is
about. It is conducted for the benefit of the very few, at the expense of
the very many.” He goes on to detail how and why World War I was a
conspiracy instigated by the ruling elite.
Government, however, is a different matter from the state. As
Albert Jay Nock wrote in Our Enemy, The State:
"Based on the idea of natural
rights, government secures those rights to the individual by strictly
negative intervention, making justice costless and easy of access; and
beyond that it does not go. The State, on the other hand, both in its
genesis and by its primary intention, is purely anti-social. It is not
based on the idea of natural rights, but on the idea that the individual
has no rights except those that the State may provisionally grant him. It
has always made justice costly and difficult of access, and has
invariably held itself above justice and common morality whenever it
could advantage itself by so doing.
"So far from encouraging a wholesome development of social power, it
has invariably, as Madison said, turned every contingency into a resource
for depleting social power and enhancing State power. As Dr.
Sigmund Freud has observed, it can not even be said that the State has
ever shown any disposition to suppress crime, but only to safeguard its
own monopoly of crime."
Further in his book Nock explains how the
Constitution came on the heels of a corrupt government in Massachusetts
that instigated a
rebellion which in turn was propagandized by nationalists to gather
support for a more “energetic” document than the Articles of
Confederation at the Constitutional Convention. As Nock
explains,
"The task of the delegates was
precisely analogous to that of the earlier architects who had designed
the structure of the British merchant-State, with its system of
economics, politics and judicial control; they had to contrive something
that could pass muster as showing a good semblance of popular
sovereignty, without the reality."
Later, he adds: “Nowhere [in the Constitution] do we
find a trace of the Declaration’s theory of government; on the contrary,
we find it expressly repudiated.”
Some people can’t deal with the notion that the candidates they elect
become criminals in the state structure. They use government and
state interchangeably, and they’ll tell you there are good people in
government working hard for our welfare. Elect more of them and the
state will serve our needs. But it can’t, not without abandoning
its monopoly control over our lives, at which point it will cease being a
state. If that ever happens we can hope market forces would provide
for the defense of property and life. But abandoning power is not
something to expect from a state. It is far more likely to
self-destruct, as I discuss in my short book
The Fall of Tyranny, the
Rise of Liberty.
If the emperor’s new clothes strike you as ennobling when in fact he’s
buck-naked, you can thank government schools and our pro-state culture
for ceding reality to authority.
portugheis alberto
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Mar 5, 2026, 9:52:05 AM (13 days ago) Mar 5
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War Is a Racket - And So Is the State
Because it cannot be any other way. War and State are one. Only the State has the right to have Armed Forces. Only the state has the right to concoct, negotiate and carry out wars. Even private, mercenary armies are hired by the state. The State owns many war industries or has shares in them. In some countries 100% of the war industry is owned by government. Why do countries have Trade Ministers and in diplomatic representations Trade Attaches?