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Machan's Musings - Rudy Giuliani vs. Civil Liberties Economically and (even more importantly for many) in the department of civil affairs, the city had been a mess. I recall when I visited there routinely and stayed with the late Ernest van den Haag, a formidable conservative intellectual adversary who had grave doubts about libertarianism, civil or otherwise, although he was a firm supporter of nearly unfettered capitalism. I got many lectures on why Rudy was God’s gift to the city. Van den Haag sounded very much like one provocative paragraph in Cavanaugh’s review: Guiliani’s success, particularly his broad definition of ‘quality of life’ issues and offenses, poses a serious utilitarian challenge to civil libertarians. Why? Well, because the mayor wasn’t all that concerned with whether his policies pleased or displeased ACLU types. His measures, often deemed to be harsh—"[a] campaign against squeegee men and his later efforts against turnstile jumpers, public urinators, and other petty lawbreakers"—pretty much discounted these offenders’ civil liberties and many people’s idea of due process of law. That’s at least what Cavanaugh seems to be saying with his worry above. The idea is that, with the widely perceived and by all accounts objective benefits of Guiliani’s policies and methods, libertarians may have to concede that it is better to forego beefing about the basic rights of citizens than to live in an unruly New York City. Of course, this takes us back to a debate that’s bogged down classical liberals or libertarians for decades, even centuries. It was John Locke who put the classical case for natural individual rights on record, insisting that every human being has these rights in a community by virtue of being part of humanity; the only justification for using force against anyone, then, is to prevent violation of others' rights. Locke suggested that government, especially, is bound by this principle, and so too have more recent Lockeans in the classical liberal, libertarian movement. Against these folks stood the likes of Jeremy Bentham, who considered Lockean rights a myth, not unlike many of today's critics of contemporary libertarianism, such as legal and political theorists Cass Sunstein, Liam Murphy, and Thomas Nagel. As the famous passage from Bentham’s Anarchical Fallacies goes, Rights is the child of law; from real law come real rights; but from imaginary laws, from ‘law of nature,' come imaginary rights.... Natural rights is simple nonsense: natural and imprescriptible rights, rhetorical nonsense—nonsense upon stilts. That is to say, government grants rights; they aren’t ours independently or by virtue of our human nature. And, more specifically, those political theorists who follow Bentham’s lead dispute that there is any good argument for ascribing or granting rights to people apart from when it is useful to do so for obtaining a greater acknowledged benefit than otherwise. In the case of the former mayor, Cavanaugh intimates that no good reason exists to be concerned with some supposed basic rights that New Yorkers have—what counts is that Giuliani's policies yielded important benefits to the city. This is what makes Guiliani a utilitarian, and this is why he poses a challenge to at least those classical liberals and libertarians who insist on protecting individual rights no matter what, and contend that we possess these rights whether or not governments uphold them. Most of those who defend the free society see nearly perfect congruence between a utilitarian and rights-based support for free institutions, believing that, no matter how you come at it, freedom ought to trump whatever would violate it. But while utilitarians see some exceptions, Lockeans rarely do, if ever (only, perhaps, in circumstances Locke himself recognized where "politics is impossible," say, in the midst of a devastating natural catastrophe). Since, however, principles of community life—the foundations of constitutional laws—are to guide policymakers in the long run, and not just momentarily, the utilitarian challenge does not amount to much. Even if one were to grant that Guiliani succeeded despite violating basic civil liberties, "one swallow does not make a spring," as that ancient Greek sage, Aristotle, has observed. What is even more telling is that nearly all of the measures Guiliani took pertain to how people must behave in public spheres. These are severely reduced in size and scope in a libertarian polity. And private owners and operators of subways, parks, buildings, and streets may, according to Lockean libertarians, establish whatever rules they deem are required to manage these realms. Just as I may require you to go barefoot in my house because, well, it is my house, a significantly privatized New York City would have no trouble establishing and maintaining the sort of measures Giuliani favored without violating anyone’s civil liberties at all. The real problem is reconciling civil liberties with the effective management of public realms. This is no challenge to Lockean libertarianism. Discuss this Article (1 message) |