"The human race divides politically into those who
want people to be controlled and those who have no such desire."
~ Robert A. Heinlein (1907–1988)
"The common man, finding himself in a world so excellent,
technically and socially, believes it has been produced by
nature, and never thinks of the personal efforts of highly
endowed individuals which the creation of this new world presupposed.
Still less will he admit the notion that all these facilities
still require the support of certain difficult human virtues,
the least failure of which would cause the rapid disappearance
of the whole magnificent edifice."
~José Ortega y Gasset (1883–1955)
The glory years of Pax Romana can rightly be set as that
period in Roman history from the beginning of Augustus’ reign
in 27 BC to the end of stoic Emperor Marcus Aurelius’ reign
in 180 AD.
The Christian apologist Tertullian (200 AD) gives us an excellent
example for how Rome was viewed during this period: "Surely
a glance at the world shows that it is daily being more cultivated
and better peopled than before. All places are now accessible,
well known, open to commerce. Delightful farms have now blotted
out every trace of the dreadful wastes; cultivated fields
have supplanted woods; flocks and herds have driven out wild
beasts; sandy spots are sown; rocks and stones have been cleared
away; bogs have been drained. Large towns now occupy lands
hardly tenanted before by cottages. Islands are no longer
dreaded [as the abode of pirates]; houses, people, civil rule,
civilization are everywhere."
However, even as the ancient world basked in the glory of
the Roman civilization its very foundation was decaying. The
causes for this decay and the eventual collapse of the Roman
Empire have long been debated by historians and are generally
attributed to one or more of the following:
Lack of Public Health which led to relatively short
lives among the wealthy and debased living conditions among
the lower classes and the poor.
A marked decline in the morals and ethics among all
Roman social classes as witnessed by the gladiatorial
games, rampant prostitution, gluttony of the ruling class
and alcoholism among all classes. Certainly the wealth of
the empire contributed to various forms of social and individual
debauchery. As one author put it: "The Roman Empire
couldn’t stand prosperity."
Excessive government with its accompanying political
corruption which can be demonstrated through the Roman
state’s use of the frumentarii or the Roman secret service.
It was the frumentarii that Emperor Hadrian engaged, to
collect the corn throughout Roman’s provinces. This brought
them in contact with local politics, and as spies for the
emperor they gathered a wealth of intelligence concerning
the people and their thinking throughout the empire. This
in turn earned those who spied for the emperor, the hatred
of the people. The people feared and hated the frumentarii
so much that when in the third century (217 AD) Macrinus
appointed a former head of the frumentarii and prefect of
the Praetorian Guard to the senate, he alienated a large
portion of the Roman establishment against him, in effect
signing his own death warrant which was summarily executed
the next year. This is not to excuse the gangster rulers
of the latter part of the 3rd century nor the
totalitarian, socialist state created by Diocletian, Constantine,
and their successors which not only aided but exacerbated
the destruction of the Roman society.
Excessive military spending with corresponding government
projects and social programs which led, in due course, to
inflation and then hyperinflation.
Inflation, price controls, and the state’s attempt
to completely regulate the Roman economy destroyed manufacturing
along with the empire’s agricultural base. This swelled
the unemployment rolls and sent large numbers of people
to cities looking for either work or to get on the public
dole. Such was the desperation of the empire that in 274
AD Emperor Aurelian extended the relief rolls by making
government subsidy a right of heredity. He also replaced
bread for the traditional wheat and added free pork, olive
oil and salt to the rations, making the Roman state’s war
on wealth even more pronounced.
Inferior Technology is not often thought of as
a reason for the decline and eventual collapse of the Roman
Empire. However, behind all the architectural grandeur that
was Rome there was deadly lack of simple technology needed
to advance, protect and sustain the Roman civilization.
From the early part of the second century there were no
technical improvements in industry. Roman tools were poor
at best: men working in quarries, mines and construction
were required to use brute force to make up for inadequate
tools. The Romans never devised a practical harness or horseshoes
which would have made their draught animals more productive.
The Roman horse collar applied too much pressure to the
animal’s windpipe, causing choking, and greatly reducing
the animal’s ability to haul or do any heavy work. The Roman
military’s inability to develop heavy cavalry to protect
the empire was due to their failure to develop the simple
stirrup, a failure that would haunt them in later years.
Civil war accompanied by external invasions.
Each of these points can be expanded or elaborated on to
show their relationship to the ultimate collapse of the Roman
Empire. Certainly no serious student of history would dare
ignore any of these lines of reasoning in studying the fall
of the Roman Empire. However, there is one further item that
is rarely addressed but which should be of equal importance
to understanding why great empires, like Rome, ultimately
fail.
Whether we are talking about an autocracy, oligarchy, or
democracy we are in the final analysis dealing with a coercive
force which will become violent to attain its ends. As the
state increases its power base and the demands upon its citizens,
it will seek to have a domineering effect upon the human spirit.
The result is the destruction of self-reliance, self-determination
and self-confidence of free citizens and replacing them with
a dutiful, subservient drone totally reliant on the state.
The pressure the state exerts on it subjects was not lost
on Tacitus who bemoaned the servile mood of the Roman Senate
under Tiberius in contrast to the character of the Senate
during the building of the Empire. Even Tiberius is reported
to have said in disgust of the Roman senators: "O men,
ready for slavery!"
Three of the great writers of antiquity Livy, Pliny
the elder, and Tacitus all recognized that the Roman
society was becoming enslaved. Livy felt it was because of
the wealth and Pliny concurred that the lack of intellectual
interests was the result of the worship of wealth.
Tacitus, however, stated that "genius died by the same
blow that ended public liberty" laying the blame directly
at the feet of the rising tyranny of the Roman state.
However, it is the unknown philosopher of Longinus’ On
The Sublime who pinpoints the cause when he says:
"we of to-day, seem to have learnt in our childhood the
lessons of a benignant despotism, to have been cradled in
her habits and customs from the time when our minds were still
tender, and never to have tasted the fairest and most fruitful
fountain of eloquence, I mean liberty. Hence we develop nothing
but a fine genius for flattery. This is the reason why, though
all other faculties are consistent with the servile condition,
no slave ever became an orator; because in him there is a
dumb spirit which will not be kept down: his soul is chained:
he is like one who has learnt to be ever expecting a blow.
For, as Homer says – ‘the day of slavery takes half our manly
worth away.’"
In Catiline's
War Gaius Sallustius Crispus opens his dissertation
with this statement: "Every man who is anxious to surpass
the lower animals should strive with all his power not to
pass his life in obscurity like the brute beasts, which nature
has made the groveling slaves of their bellies. Now our whole
ability resides jointly in our mind and body. In the case
of the mind it is its power of guidance, in the case of the
body its obedient service that we rather use, sharing the
former faculty with the gods, the latter with the brute creation…"
We may say then, without too much contradiction, that the
real war between a free people and the state resides over
who will control the mind: the individual or the state.
If it is the individual, society will continue to grow and
flourish, while if the state wins control, the society rapidly
decays, allowing the points often citied for the fall of the
Roman Empire to occur.
What is reflected by these ancient authors is not merely
loss of liberty but a mood of apathy. This lethargy was prevalent
throughout the empire and it was strictly due to the severe
paternalism of the Roman state; the result being the people
had lost their will to succeed.
Curiosity was discouraged; the history of the Roman Republic
which had been the foundation for the Empire was bastardized,
forgotten or ignored. The accepted leaders of Roman cities
were persecuted to the point they lost all their initiative
and public spirit; their every thought being subject to the
whims of Rome. For the general public the results were to
suppress the entrepreneurial spirit, while in its place every
effort was made, by the Roman citizen, to secure for himself
and his family a docile and inactive life on a safe, if modest,
income.
In short, almost every intellectual endeavor was discouraged,
suppressed, or redirected, reducing the population to "groveling
slaves of their bellies" and to the Roman Empire.
While history will judge when the American spirit of self-reliance,
self-determination and self-confidence was destroyed we have
an indication that its destruction is well advanced.
While most LRC readers will find the quiz easy if not simplistic
I was stunned to see the results when the quiz was issued
to a random sample of Americans. Testing their "knowledge
of America’s founding principles and texts, core history,
and enduring institutions" showed that of the 2,508 respondents
only 21 could pass it with a score 90% or better; 66 with
80 to 89.9%; 185 with 70 to 79.9% and 445 with a "D"
score of 60 to 69.9%. This left an unimaginable number (1,791)
who were not able to pass this basic quiz. What is worse is
that the mean score of all who took the test is 49%.
Now if that wasn’t bad enough the ISI broke the score down
and found that elected officials taking the test scored 5%
BELOW the mean with an average of 44%.
The politicians’
weakest points were the questions dealing with U.S.-Soviet
Tension in 1962, the Declaration of Independence, Sputnik
and not surprisingly the definition of Free Enterprise.
This from those who believe they are supernaturally endowed
to be the sole lord and arbiters of our private actions and
property when they should be the brunt of our jokes and exiled
from our midst.
It is always dangerous to lay current events at the door
of history and say because it happened before under these
circumstances it will happen here and now. But given the recent
presidential campaign and the promise of "change"
trumpeted by the president-elect I suspect that we are doomed
to witness the destructive exploits of another Diocletian
rather than the calming influence of an Augustus.
Given also that the society that elected the president-in-waiting
is dominated by blind nationalism, trendy savior-worship,
an unending ignorance of history, economics and philosophy
and devoid of a critical thought process, I fear history will
say of this moment, "the civilization of the modern world
suffered final collapse."
The American author and revolutionary Thomas Gordon wrote:
"…[I]t is that we everywhere find tyranny and imposture,
ignorance and slavery, joined together…" one then wonders
how long America can last.