This post from Alan, who cannot be called overly sympathetic to Mises (and Hayek), provides all that we need to know about the "evidence" that Leeson purports to present. Along with Richard Ebeling's later post, a scholar who knows Mises's life as well as anyone alive, these two should be sufficient to dismiss Leeson's chop-shop version of the history of ideas and venomous attack on a man who was hounded by the Nazis (being both a Jew and a liberal) as the nonsense that it is.
Steve
--
Steven Horwitz
Charles A. Dana Professor and Chair
Department of Economics
St. Lawrence University
Canton, NY 13617
TEL (315) 229 5731
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-----Original Message-----
From: Societies for the History of Economics [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Alan G Isaac
Sent: Thursday, May 22, 2014 11:55 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [SHOE] can we please get back to business
On 5/21/2014 6:08 PM, J Kevin Quinn wrote:
> I will say to Alan - I think it was Alan - that it's a little rich to
> invoke Godwin's law when the debate is precisely about the extent of
> Mises' cozying up to fascism!
I do not think so. Here is the quote from Robert's post:
'1927: "It cannot be denied" that "fascists"
- including "Ludendorff and Hitler" - will protect
"civilisation" and "property" (von Mises
_Liberalism_ 1985 [1927]).'
Here is the quote from Mises (p.44) containing the phrase "Ludendorff and Hitler":
"The opponents of democracy champion the right of
a minority to seize control of the state by force
and to rule over the majority. The moral
justification of this procedure consists, it is
thought, precisely in the power actually to seize
the reins of government. One recognizes the best,
those who alone are competent to govern and command,
by virtue of their demonstrated ability to impose
their rule on the majority against its will. Here
the teaching of l'Action Française coincides with
that of the syndicalists, and the doctrine of
Ludendorff and Hitler, with that of Lenin and
Trotzky. Many arguments can be urged for and against
these doctrines, depending on one's religious and
philosophical convictions, about which any agreement
is scarcely to be expected. This is not the place to
present and discuss the arguments pro and con, for
they are not conclusive. The only consideration that
can be decisive is one that bases itself on the
fundamental argument in favor of democracy."
(An argument that Mises then presents.) Furthermore, identifying fascism in the mid-1920s with Nazism of say the mid-1930s (when Mises, anticipating trouble from the Nazis, fled to Switzerland) is simply anachronistic.
As I said before, I consider even the brief and very conditional Mises praise offered to fascism of the 1920s to have been a moral lapse. But we cannot turn that lapse into praise of the German Nazism of a decade later, nor into some kind of pretense that the praise was for anything other than an emergency response to forces that (to Mises) looked even more horrific.
"Fascism was an emergency makeshift. To view it as
something more would be a fatal error. ... As the
liberal sees it, the task of the state consists solely
and exclusively in guaranteeing the protection of life,
health, liberty, and private property against violent
attacks. Everything that goes beyond this is an evil.
A government that, instead of fulfilling its task,
sought to go so far as actually to infringe on personal
security of life and health, freedom, and property
would, of course, be altogether bad." (p.51-52)
I hope that clarifies why I felt justified in invoking Godwin's law.
Cheers,
Alan
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