Socialism: The logical conclusion of the
tyranny of the least and the dumbest.
The Editor’s Notes
by Ken Holder
[email protected]
Attribute to L. Neil Smith’s The Libertarian Enterprise
I have been reading. I am, in fact, trying to get myself caught-up on the “classics”—those books which consist of “An Education In Western Civilization And All Of Its Meaning and Value” to coin a phrase. Rather clumsy phrase, yet a phrase nevertheless.
Perhaps it is foolish for an old man to be treading the paths of the young by “getting an education”, but since I went to skool in Amerika, I did not get much there in the way of actual education. No, mostly bullshit and codswollop, even back then. I did try to do as much as I could on my own. Now, the state of educaiton is even worse. I do not know why the Powers That Be, (or Our Masters if you will), think having a bunch of ignorant yahoos populating the world is a good thing, but there you are.
Anyway, I found this in Nietzsche's The Will to Power, which is very interesting:
125 (1885)106
Socialism-as the logical conclusion of the tyranny of the least and the dumbest, i.e., those who are superficial, envious, and three-quarters actors-is indeed entailed by “modern ideas” and their latent anarchism; but in the tepid air of democratic well-being the capacity to reach conclusions, or to finish, weakens. One follows—but one no longer sees what follows. Therefore socialism is on the whole a hopeless and sour affair; and nothing offers a more amusing spectacle than the contrast between the poisonous and desperate faces cut by today’s socialists-and to what wretched and pinched feelings their style bears witness!-and the harmless lambs’ happiness of their hopes and desiderata. Nevertheless, in many places in Europe they may yet bring off occasional coups and attacks: there will be deep “rumblings” in the stomach of the next century, and the Paris commune, which has its apologists and advocates in Germany, too, was perhaps no more than a minor indigestion compared to what is coming. But there will always be too many who have possessions for socialism to signify more than an attack of sickness-and those who have possessions are of one mind on one article of faith: “one must possess something in order to be something.” But this is the oldest and healthiest of all instincts: I should add, “one must want to have more than one has in order to become more.” For this is the doctrine preached by life itself to all that has life: the morality of development. To have and to want to have more-growth, in one word-that is life itself. In the doctrine of socialism there is hidden, rather badly, a “will to negate life”; the human beings or races that think up such a doctrine must be bungled. Indeed, I should wish that a few great experiments might prove that in a socialist society life negates itself, cuts off its own roots. The earth is large enough and man still sufficiently unexhausted; hence such a practical instruction and demonstratio ad absurdum would not strike me as undesirable, even if it were gained and paid for with a tremendous expenditure of human lives. In any case, even as a restless mole under the soil of a society that wallows in stupidity, socialism will be able to be something useful and therapeutic: it delays “peace on earth” and the total mollification of the democratic herd animal; it forces the Europeans to retain spirit, namely cunning and cautious care, not to abjure manly and warlike virtues altogether, and to retain some remnant of spirit, of clarity, sobriety, and coldness of the spirit-it protects Europe for the time being from the marasmus197 femininus that threatens it.
106 The manuscript is not in Nietzsche’s handwriting but was evidently dictated by him-and then corrected and amplified in his hand. See 1911, p.500.
107 Withering: a Greek medical term found in Galen, the second-century (A.D.) physician.
Friedrich Nietzsche. The Will to Power. A New Translation by Walter Kaufmann and R.J. Hollindale, Edited, with commentary by Walter Kaufmann, with Facsimilies of the Original Manuscript. New York: Vintage Books, 1968. pp. 77-78. [paperback at Amazon.com (no Kindle for this edition)]
“[T]he logical conclusion of the tyranny of the least and the dumbest”—that kind of says it all! And there they are, every day, on Tele-for-ghods-sake-Vision. (I don't watch, but I hear tales.) And, you can fool some of the people all of the time! Heh!
In 2018 I only managed to read 189 books. I will try harder this year
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