Left-liberals do their demented St. Vitus Dance every time Augusto Pinochet is mentioned. Now that the General is dead, Prof. George Reisman puts paid to the myths the left (and the right, increasingly) has propagated about him.
George Reisman is the author of Capitalism: A Treatise on Economics (Ottawa, Illinois: Jameson Books, 1996) and is Pepperdine University Professor Emeritus of Economics. His website is www.capitalism.net. and his blog is at www.georgereisman.com/blog/. Prof. Reisman is also a regular on BAB (see BAB’s A List).
I’m taking this opportunity to let you know that forthcoming on BAB is an exclusive piece by another fabulous and formidable libertarian thinker, Thomas Szasz. Stay tuned.—ILANA
AN OBITUARY FOR PINOCHET BY GEORGE REISMAN
General Augusto Pinochet Is Dead.
On Sunday, December 10, General Augusto Pinochet of Chile died, at the age of 91. General Pinochet deserves to be remembered for having rescued his country from becoming the second Soviet satellite in the Western hemisphere, after Castro’s Cuba, and, like the Soviet Union, and Cuba under Castro, a totalitarian dictatorship.
The General is denounced again and again for the death or disappearance of over 3,000 Chilean citizens and the alleged torture of thousands more. It may well be that some substantial number of innocent Chilean citizens did die or disappear or otherwise suffered brutal treatment as the result of his actions. But in a struggle to avoid the establishment of a Communist dictatorship, it is undoubtedly true that many or most of those who died or suffered were preparing to inflict a far greater number of deaths and a vastly larger scale of suffering on their fellow citizens.
Their deaths and suffering should certainly not be mourned, any more than the deaths of Lenin, Stalin, and Hitler, and their helpers should be mourned. Had there been a General Pinochet in Russia in 1918 or Germany in 1933, the people of those countries and of the rest of the world would have been incomparably better off, precisely by virtue of the death, disappearance, and attendant suffering of vast numbers of Communists and Nazis. Life and liberty are positively helped by the death and disappearance of such mortal enemies. Their absence from the scene means the absence of such things as concentration camps, and is thus ardently to be desired.
As for the innocent victims in Chile, their fate should overwhelmingly be laid at the door of the Communist plotters of totalitarian dictatorship. People have an absolute right to rise up and defend their lives, liberty, and property against a Communist takeover. In the process, they cannot be expected to make the distinctions present in a judicial process. They must act quickly and decisively to remove what threatens them. That is the nature
of war. The fate of innocent bystanders, largely those who cannot be readily distinguished from the enemy, is the responsibility of the Communists. Had they not attempted to impose their totalitarian dictatorship, there would not have been any need to use force and violence to prevent them, and thus the innocent would not have suffered.
Contrary to the attitude of so many of today’s intellectuals, Communists do not have a right to murder tens of millions of innocent people and then to complain when their intended victims prevent their takeover and in the process kill some of them.
General Pinochet was undoubtedly no angel. No soldier can be. But he certainly was also no devil. In fact, if any comparison applies, it may well be one drawn from antiquity, namely, that of Cincinnatus, who saved the Roman Republic by temporarily becoming its dictator. Like Cincinnatus, General Pinochet voluntarily relinquished his dictatorship. He did so after both preventing a Communist takeover and imposing major pro-free-market
reforms, inspired largely by Milton Friedman (who in large part was himself inspired by Ludwig von Mises). The effect of these reforms was to make Chile’s the most prosperous and rapidly progressing economy in Latin America, Thereafter, in the words of his New York Times’ ‘largely hostile’ obituary, he used his remaining power to “set limits, for example, on economic policy debates with frequent warnings that he would not tolerate a return to statist measures.”
General Pinochet was thus one of the most extraordinary dictators in history, a dictator who stood for major limits on the power of the state, who imposed such limits, and who sought to maintain such limits after voluntarily giving up his dictatorship.
When General Pinochet stepped down, he did so with a guarantee of immunity from prosecution for his actions while in power. However, the present and previous regime in Chile violated this agreement and sought to ensnare the General in a web of legal actions and law suits, making the last years of his life a period of turmoil. This was a clear violation of contract, comparable to the seizure of property in violation of contract. Not surprisingly the regimes in question were avowedly socialist. As a result of their breach, it is now considerably less likely that the world will soon see any other dictator voluntarily relinquish his power. The Chilean socialists will have taught him that to be secure, he must remain in power until he dies.
*****
Dictatorship, like war, is always an evil. Like war, it can be justified only when it is necessary to prevent a far greater evil, namely, as in this case, the imposition of the far more comprehensive and severe, permanent totalitarian dictatorship of the Communists.
Despite the fact that General Pinochet was able to use his powers as dictator to enact major pro-free-market reforms, dictatorship should never be seen as justified merely as a means of instituting such reforms, however necessary and desirable they may be. Dictatorship is the most dangerous of political institutions and easily produces catastrophic results. This is because a dictator is not restrained by any need for public discussion and debate and thus can easily leap headlong into disasters that would have been avoided had there been the freedom to criticize his proposed actions and to oppose them. And even when his policies may be right, the fact that they are imposed in defiance of public opinion operates greatly to add to their unpopularity and thus to make permanent change all the more difficult.
On the basis of such considerations, when asked many years ago what he would do if he were appointed dictator, von Mises replied, “I would resign.”
©2006 by George Reisman.
Finally, finally someone having the cojones to say what needs to be said about this tragic man.
We, down here in Turkiye, have been suffering almost the same nonsense about the 1980 coup, and the prime minister of that period (Turgut Ozal) down here for more than two decades. EVERY GODDAMN COMMIE still laments that coup in the name of “interruption of democracy” or “intervention into rule-of-law based social order” or some such obscurely formulated principle to excuse the unspeakable terror and violence before the coup (in which I had to grow up, with people being shot with AK47s at every street corner, being bombed every night in their homes, in every district of every major city. Never minding the de facto state of civil war in parts of the country with sharp “ethnic” divisions.) If you didn’t succumb to the “ideals” (??? !!!) of those demented and power-hungry thugs, your life was worth no more than a bullet, period.
Just before the coup, the country had sunk into such an economic depression — with 200% inflation rates — that we couldn’t borrow credit for importing a single month’s oil.
The coup stopped all that violence, and Ozal’s radical free-market reforms put the country back into a shape that resembled sanity, civility, and stability — at least outwardly speaking.
I salute this tragic man: may he Rest In Peace.
Ilana, I just bumped into your fine site, and read Prof Reisman’s Pinochet obit. It has saved me a lot of trouble, as he put it 100X better than I ever cd.
Best wishes, Ilana!
JO
Very thought provoking piece and one that I think is more in sync with the Objectivist view on foreign policy than the libertarian view. For another perspective, I reccomend Jacob Hornberger’s piece “Augosto Pinochet and the Conservative Threat to America” at http://www.lewrockwell.com/hornberger/hornberger18.html
This paragraph seems to summarize his point the best:
“As harmful and destructive as socialist economic policies are, they pale in comparison to the omnipotent power to kill, torture, and disappear people that comes with military rule. Seeing your wealth taxed and given to others is bad. Seeing your economic activities regulated is bad. But when military officials have the unfettered power to take you into custody, torture you, and execute you, it’s the end of the story for freedom in that society. As Chileans under Pinochet discovered — indeed as Russians under Stalin and Germans under Hitler discovered — there is no peaceful way to change the system once you’re dead.”
Also remember the Founding Fathers’ warning against “entangling alliances” with foreign nations.
[I think Reisman’s analysis is specific to the case. I didn’t read gross generalizations there. I don’t think it’s necessarily Objectivist, rather, it’s plain correct, which is why I published it (with Prof. Reisman’s permission), although it is true that I am Randian in many ways.]
Prof. Reisman’s piece full well recognizes the dangers of dictatorship. He writes: “[d]espite the fact that General Pinochet was able to use his powers as dictator to enact major pro-free-market reforms, dictatorship should never be seen as justified merely as a means of instituting such reforms, however necessary and desirable they may be.”
Yet, the question remains: is it conceivable to institute, and justify, a dictatorship in order to avoid a greater evil? Yes, but two things must be kept in mind.
The first concerns the nature of the greater evil. In case of Communism the evil is its very nature. Virtually everything that Communism stands for, economically and ethically, can be achieved only by evil means. In his follow-up piece, Prof. Reisman shows that the establishment of socialism positively requires the employment of various categories of evil means on a large scale.
Second, a dictatorship is not simply dictatorship. Whether a particular non-socialist-dictatorship is worse than socialism should be assessed on case by case basis. Probably the most important criterion is the personality of the dictator. A lot depends on whether the dictator understands the effects of his actions and whether he cares about the effects.
Ms. Mercer, Thank you for this excellent piece. (I have linked to it.) I had long suspected that there was something to be admired in the much-maligned Pinochet’s life. I had recently read The Economist’s obit on the “Chilean strongman” and they pretty much toed the NYT’s “party line” of “Pinochet…BAADDDD!” — gunjam