The Welfare State of Mind
I was recently advised by my office manager, who was responding to the
building manager's office receipt of complaints, that I could not smoke outside
near a side entrance to our office building, as I had been for years, because it
offended non-smokers who were coming and going and who claimed to be
super-sensitive to smoke, and also that somehow the smoke was also getting
inside the building where the slightest trace of smoke also bothered them. I was
advised to use the designated smoking area on the other side of the building. The
catch was that this area, too, is subject to the same conditions.
I cite this incident because it underscores a phenomenon I have watched grow
over five decades, from the first time I began to observe and evaluate men's
behavior to my current and far more incisive cogitations, which is how quickly
and easily men submit to government authority and the consensus of the
collective, and how inured they can become to being taken care of and
protected. The anti-smoking campaign that has been waged for decades is merely
one facet of the phenomenon. I suspect that much of the anti-smoking stances
adopted by non-smokers is feigned and likely psychosomatic. Having been
patronized and protected and legislated for by way of lobbies and pressure group
warfare, they are amenable to more of the same.
My gut response to the advice could have been any one of the following:
They don't own the air. Shall I wear a Star of David, too, so that non-smokers
can better identify and avoid me? What are they going to do about it? Beat me up?
Call the Green Police? Behave like picture- and video- and insult-maddened Muslims?
Pressure my employer to fire me if I don’t cave in? Ask the police to ticket
me?
But the welfare state is not just laws or legislative acts that encourage
individuals to become dependent on the State. The welfare state is first and
foremost a "state of mind."
A welfare state would not work if it did not inculcate, either by
education, by mandated indoctrination, by incessant propaganda, or by cultural
osmosis, the proper "state of mind" in a population, that is, to
instill in men an individual's alleged duty or obligation to submit to a
consensus propagated by a variety of authorities, especially government
authorities. A welfare state would evaporate almost immediately without first having
pulled a fraud on the electorate. However, a welfare state could not establish
itself without the overt or tacit approval of a large component of a country's
population. This consensus requires as well the consensual sanction or silence
of the targets of a welfare state and its vanquished, ill-informed, or willing
population and electorate. And if the opponents do not consent, they are simply
ignored.
The process of securing such a sanction is stealthy and incremental, with
the aim, conscious or otherwise, of eradicating that which the government has
deemed as wrong and not in the public interest, together with the steady
promotion of what a government has deemed to be in the public interest. It is
interesting to note that a government that legislates against, say, smoking, or
eating certain foods, or speaking truthfully about certain subjects (such asIslam), knows, as well as do the advocates of such restrictions and
prohibitions, that it can legislate "for free," that is, at the
victim's or taxpayer's expense, but to combat those restrictions and
prohibitions, it will cost the victim or taxpayer his time, money and effort,
with no guarantee of success.
Welfare state laws have a tendency to become inert and immovable. So have
welfare states of mind, which become proof against facts, statistics, logic, and
reason. Welfare state law becomes a boulder which only dynamite, or revolution,
can remove.
There was a time, a freer time, when today's non-smokers would have not
noticed the smoke around them, nor complained about it, nor feigned
"sensitivity," nor frowned with maniacal disapproval of smokers, nor
made faces or uttered insults and deprecations or cautions not to smoke. These are
the same mentalities who now check the mandated calorie counts on restaurant
menus, or automatically read nutritional information on packaged food, or
otherwise conform to the safeguards and wisdom of the moment, most of which is
sheer, unadulterated hokum advanced by government scientists and their partners
in the civilian world, the tax-exempt reformers for the public good.
If its propaganda campaign is successful – or if it thinks it is and puts
out the word that it has been, even if it wasn’t and most people have ignored its
imprecations – a government can pass a law without having to present much of an
argument for its alleged necessity, or no argument at all. As with the
assertions of Al Gore and his global warming friends, "The science is
settled," and there's nothing else to discuss. Look at how ObamaCare was
passed. Those countering the law must argue it in court or in books or columns,
and, most daunting of all, against the "conditioned" prejudices of their
next door neighbors, office mates, and random strangers who accost them with angry
and often unsolicited disapproval of their behavior or opinions.
Which brings us to this point: That most Americans have developed a welfare
state of mind. Whether or not it is European in color is irrelevant. They have
been "conditioned," or have allowed themselves to be
"conditioned," to become tolerant of totalitarianism, to become
tolerant of the intolerable.
Daniel Greenfield had
this to observe in his October 26th column, "Muslim Violence is Our New Law":
Laws are decided by many things,
but sweep away all the law books, the pleas from tearful mothers, the timed
publicity campaigns, the novel legal theories and the greedy bureaucrats
expanding their turf, and under the table you will find a gun. The first and
final law is still the law of force. The law begins with the power to impose
its will on others. It ends with the enforcement of that power.
Law either has force behind it or
it does not, and if it has no force behind it then it is an optional thing that
is subject to custom. And every now and then the law is challenged, not with
novel legal theories or with petitions, but with force, and it either responds
with force or submits to a new law. That is what we call revolution.
But law is not merely "force" or a gun under the table. It is
also a "state of mind" that can work to an individual's benefit, or
to his enslavement. It is unwritten law that employs the threat of social ostracism
and unspoken prejudice. The welfare state is merely soft totalitarianism, which
ultimately leads to the hard kind. It is the freshet of scalding water and rocks
that precedes the onrush of lava and pyroclastic
gases that can extinguish smokers and non-smokers alike. For a
concrete lesson in the progress of totalitarianism, read the fate of the West Indian
city of St. Pierre
during the eruption of Mt.
Pelée in 1902.
As the politicians
and "experts" of St. Pierre wished to assure the citizens that the ominous
rumblings and intrusions of Mt. Pelée were nothing to worry about, let's get on
with this election, politicians and "experts" have been assuring
Americans for decades that there's nothing to worry about, as well, so let's
get on with the business of life, except that you can't do this, that, and the
other anymore. St. Pierre was obliterated, and 28,000 people perished who
adopted a particular "state of mind" that their routines and
prejudices and customs and the urgency of an election were far more important.
Proper law in a civil society sanctions the use of retaliatory force in
answer to the initiation of force, against individuals and against a nation. On
this premise, 90% of the laws passed in this country since about the time of
the Civil War are illegitimate (read unconstitutional), because they sanction
the initiation of force against individuals or groups of individuals targeted
for regulation or just plain looting in the name of a populist "public
good." This trend has resulted in the establishment of an implicit
looting-by-principle welfare state. It takes time for the regulators and do-gooders
and social reformers to accustom people to it, to get them to accept their
wishes and laws as the norm and as how they believe men ought to behave in
private and to each other.
America has been governed by Progressive politics for nigh on a century. Progressivism
is merely a euphemism for socialism. Socialism is not Communism, it is not the
wholesale nationalization of everyone and everything. It is the conscription of
individuals to serve a "higher" purpose than their own existence
while leaving them a modicum of property and freedom to act and produce, so
long as their property and actions and production serve the government's purposes.
National Socialism is Nazism, or fascism. Men wearing jackboots and armbands
and kepis carrying banners with odd-looking symbols are optional.
The Progressives of the 1930's, for example, detested the German American
Bund, not because they disagreed with the Bund's national socialist ambitions,
but because the Bund was too blatant a tip-off to their own ambitions. When your
ambition is to draft a whole population into a campaign for eventual total
power, you don’t go around crudely parading your intentions. You don business suits
and flaunt your degrees in sociology and political science and economics and
apply for a seat with the Brain Trust and wail constantly that "something must
be done" about whatever it is that someone else is wailing about.
By way of coincidence, and to tie this essay back to the smoking incident,
on October 24th an interesting academic paper was published by Basil
Aboul-Enein of San Jacinto College in Pasadena, Texas, "The Anti-TobaccoMovement of Nazi Germany: A Historiographical Re-Examination." In it,
Aboul-Enein recounts the anti-smoking and anti-tobacco research conducted under
the aegis of Nazi science and research. After detailing the various programs
instigated by a régime determined to fashion a healthy, smoke- and alcohol-free
"master race" that would rule the world, astonishingly the author
approves of those programs. He naturally notes with disapproval the
"research" conducted on Jews and other "inferior" races,
but gives the anti-tobacco programs and propaganda a free pass.
Today, the case of smoking has
been partially solved by the discovery of the deleterious effects of passive
smoking. The fact that second-hand smoke can kill non-smokers has provided a
prevailing argument to interfere with smokers’ behavior. However, considering
the American Public Health Association 'code of ethics' regarding the rights of
the individuals to achieve community health, health education programs and
priorities should be thoroughly evaluated using courses of action and
strategies that ensure opportunities for input from the community.
No, let us not observe the deleterious effects of "passive"
smoking, or even of smoking itself. There are no credible studies or statistics
about especially "passive" smoking killing anyone, and those studies
and statistics are government generated or government-grant subsidized. Give a
"scientist" an a priori conclusion
to reach, and he'll "prove" anything to keep the money rolling in.
Aboul-Enein wanted his academic colleagues to be certain he wasn’t condemning
Nazi science:
The Nazis were primarily
interested in preventive medicine and public health to the end effect of
serving the National Socialist ideals of advancing a healthy and vigorous
German public. The promotion of these lifestyles only fitted the grand scale of
racial hygiene movement. Since Nazi wishes were to encourage its citizens to
live a healthy life, it seemed only logical that such a State sought to
discourage or ban what was seen as harmful to its cultural health.
Nevertheless, tobacco remained a legal product even under state funded anti-tobacco
propaganda and legislation. The level of ambivalence observed in Nazi
anti-smoking policies indicate the necessity for a clear and consistent body of
federal and state laws that present a clear message regarding smoking and
tobacco use.
German Nazis never had a monopoly on "grand-scale" hygiene
movements. The decades-old anti-smoking movement in America has branched out
into all sorts of realms, to food and soft drinks and exercise and even sex. That
was only to be expected. If you allow your mother-in-law to decide on the kinds
of curtains you'll hang, she'll wind up refurnishing your whole home.
Anti-smoking zealots in and out of government smirk at accusations that
they're behaving like Nazis or fascists. Robert Proctor, writing for TheAnti-Defamation League, however, puts an interesting context on Aboul-Enein's
findings, without having read Aboul-Enein's paper. There was something
inherently evil about all aspects of
Nazi science, including tobacco research:
The problem with the
"science vs. fascism" thesis is that it fails to take into account
the eagerness with which many scientists and physicians embraced the Reich, and
the many scientific disciplines which actually flourished under the Nazis.
Anyone who has ever examined a V-2 engine will have few doubts about this, and
there are numerous other examples. During the Nazi era, German scientists and
engineers either developed or greatly improved television, jet-propelled
aircraft (including the ejection seat), guided missiles, electronic computers,
the electron microscope, atomic fission, data-processing technologies,
pesticides, and, of course, the world's first industrial murder complexes. The
first magnetic tape recording was of a speech by Hitler, and the nerve gases
Sarin and Tabun were Nazi inventions.
The men who conducted the anti-tobacco research and vetted Nazi efforts to
eliminate it especially in women and employing the Trojan Horse excuse that it
was for "the children," were not paragons of moral esteem.
How can we explain the fact that
Nazi Germany was home to the world's foremost tobacco-cancer epidemiology and
the world's strongest cancer prevention policy? Do we say that "pockets of
innovation" existed in Nazi Germany, resistant to ideological influence?8
What if we find, on closer inspection, that Germany's anti-tobacco research
flourished not in spite of the Nazis, but in large part because of the
Nazis? And would it then be appropriate, from a moral point of view, to cite
such research in scientific studies today?
I ask this last question partly because the two tobacco studies I have just
discussed have, in fact, been repeatedly cited by postwar scientific
researchers, though rarely with any mention of the social context within which
they were carried out. There is never any mention, for example, of the fact
that the founding director of Schöniger and Schairer's Institute was Karl
Astel, Rector of the University of Jena, a vicious racial hygienist, and an SS
officer. One never hears that the grant application for the Institute was
written by Gauleiter Fritz Sauckel, chief organizer of Germany's system of
forced labor and a man hanged after the war for crimes against humanity (most
leaders of Nazi Germany's anti-tobacco movement were silenced in one way or
another after 1945).
Far be it from today's researchers to be so fastidious and honest as to
cite their illustrious predecessors. Proctor cites many more of these creatures.
Proctor, however, is also torn between placing any value on Nazi anti-tobacco
research and treating any tobacco research today as a valid field that can
exist without government encouragement (or without the example of a
health-conscious Führer or Surgeon
General).
I raise the questions I do about
Nazism and science because it is poor scholarship and perhaps even dangerous to
caricature the Nazis as irrational or anti-science. What we have to look at
more carefully is the relationship between science and ideology at this time.
It is not the case, for example, that the papers on tobacco epidemiology I have
mentioned were uninfluenced by Nazi ideology.
This is indecisive hand-wringing. Proctor logically asks:
The complicity of German
physicians in the Nazis' crimes against humanity is a well-established
historical fact. Explaining that fact is far more difficult. Why were German
doctors such avid fans of fascism? Why did nearly half of all German physicians
join the Nazi party?
It is not difficult to explain. So many German doctors were of a welfare
state of mind. German philosophy, German culture, and that culturally inbred
deference to "authority" unique to Germany prepared them for it. Just
as so many American doctors are of a welfare state of mind, and are registered
Democrats, ready to submit to the intricate, ten thousand dictats of ObamaCare,
and who welcomed its passage because it guarantees them a release from independence
and allows them to work for a "higher" cause. One may say the same
thing about American insurance companies, pharmaceutical companies, and the
makers of medical and surgical supplies, not to mention middle-aged patients
and the "elderly," that pathetic generation of "boomers." My
"generation," by the way, which I've disowned.
Oh! Someone may cry: What about all those people who are really sensitive
to smoke? Well, it shouldn’t be anyone else's problem. You don’t advocate
putting shackles on everyone for the sake of a minority. Living doesn’t mean a guaranteed
existence. Living doesn’t mean nationalizing homes and restaurants and parks
and appropriating private property to placate and coddle minorities based on
their likes, dislikes, or "sensitivities." Those likes, dislikes, and
"sensitivities" can include the ingredients of food or the nuclear
composition of wall paint to accessibility of the wheelchair-bound to a 7-11.You
leave people alone to sort out their own business.
So, it's just not a matter of laws and legislation to force Americans in
the preferred statist direction. The British tried that in the 1760's and
1770's, and lost a continent. The generation that made the Revolution possible
was the "greatest generation." It did not have a welfare state of
mind. It isn't' even just about smoking or health, either.
It's about rejecting the notion that one owes allegiance and deference to
the collective, to the State, and to anyone who has "sensitivity"
problems with freedom.
building manager's office receipt of complaints, that I could not smoke outside
near a side entrance to our office building, as I had been for years, because it
offended non-smokers who were coming and going and who claimed to be
super-sensitive to smoke, and also that somehow the smoke was also getting
inside the building where the slightest trace of smoke also bothered them. I was
advised to use the designated smoking area on the other side of the building. The
catch was that this area, too, is subject to the same conditions.
I cite this incident because it underscores a phenomenon I have watched grow
over five decades, from the first time I began to observe and evaluate men's
behavior to my current and far more incisive cogitations, which is how quickly
and easily men submit to government authority and the consensus of the
collective, and how inured they can become to being taken care of and
protected. The anti-smoking campaign that has been waged for decades is merely
one facet of the phenomenon. I suspect that much of the anti-smoking stances
adopted by non-smokers is feigned and likely psychosomatic. Having been
patronized and protected and legislated for by way of lobbies and pressure group
warfare, they are amenable to more of the same.
My gut response to the advice could have been any one of the following:
They don't own the air. Shall I wear a Star of David, too, so that non-smokers
can better identify and avoid me? What are they going to do about it? Beat me up?
Call the Green Police? Behave like picture- and video- and insult-maddened Muslims?
Pressure my employer to fire me if I don’t cave in? Ask the police to ticket
me?
But the welfare state is not just laws or legislative acts that encourage
individuals to become dependent on the State. The welfare state is first and
foremost a "state of mind."
A welfare state would not work if it did not inculcate, either by
education, by mandated indoctrination, by incessant propaganda, or by cultural
osmosis, the proper "state of mind" in a population, that is, to
instill in men an individual's alleged duty or obligation to submit to a
consensus propagated by a variety of authorities, especially government
authorities. A welfare state would evaporate almost immediately without first having
pulled a fraud on the electorate. However, a welfare state could not establish
itself without the overt or tacit approval of a large component of a country's
population. This consensus requires as well the consensual sanction or silence
of the targets of a welfare state and its vanquished, ill-informed, or willing
population and electorate. And if the opponents do not consent, they are simply
ignored.
The process of securing such a sanction is stealthy and incremental, with
the aim, conscious or otherwise, of eradicating that which the government has
deemed as wrong and not in the public interest, together with the steady
promotion of what a government has deemed to be in the public interest. It is
interesting to note that a government that legislates against, say, smoking, or
eating certain foods, or speaking truthfully about certain subjects (such asIslam), knows, as well as do the advocates of such restrictions and
prohibitions, that it can legislate "for free," that is, at the
victim's or taxpayer's expense, but to combat those restrictions and
prohibitions, it will cost the victim or taxpayer his time, money and effort,
with no guarantee of success.
Welfare state laws have a tendency to become inert and immovable. So have
welfare states of mind, which become proof against facts, statistics, logic, and
reason. Welfare state law becomes a boulder which only dynamite, or revolution,
can remove.
There was a time, a freer time, when today's non-smokers would have not
noticed the smoke around them, nor complained about it, nor feigned
"sensitivity," nor frowned with maniacal disapproval of smokers, nor
made faces or uttered insults and deprecations or cautions not to smoke. These are
the same mentalities who now check the mandated calorie counts on restaurant
menus, or automatically read nutritional information on packaged food, or
otherwise conform to the safeguards and wisdom of the moment, most of which is
sheer, unadulterated hokum advanced by government scientists and their partners
in the civilian world, the tax-exempt reformers for the public good.
If its propaganda campaign is successful – or if it thinks it is and puts
out the word that it has been, even if it wasn’t and most people have ignored its
imprecations – a government can pass a law without having to present much of an
argument for its alleged necessity, or no argument at all. As with the
assertions of Al Gore and his global warming friends, "The science is
settled," and there's nothing else to discuss. Look at how ObamaCare was
passed. Those countering the law must argue it in court or in books or columns,
and, most daunting of all, against the "conditioned" prejudices of their
next door neighbors, office mates, and random strangers who accost them with angry
and often unsolicited disapproval of their behavior or opinions.
Which brings us to this point: That most Americans have developed a welfare
state of mind. Whether or not it is European in color is irrelevant. They have
been "conditioned," or have allowed themselves to be
"conditioned," to become tolerant of totalitarianism, to become
tolerant of the intolerable.
Daniel Greenfield had
this to observe in his October 26th column, "Muslim Violence is Our New Law":
Laws are decided by many things,
but sweep away all the law books, the pleas from tearful mothers, the timed
publicity campaigns, the novel legal theories and the greedy bureaucrats
expanding their turf, and under the table you will find a gun. The first and
final law is still the law of force. The law begins with the power to impose
its will on others. It ends with the enforcement of that power.
Law either has force behind it or
it does not, and if it has no force behind it then it is an optional thing that
is subject to custom. And every now and then the law is challenged, not with
novel legal theories or with petitions, but with force, and it either responds
with force or submits to a new law. That is what we call revolution.
But law is not merely "force" or a gun under the table. It is
also a "state of mind" that can work to an individual's benefit, or
to his enslavement. It is unwritten law that employs the threat of social ostracism
and unspoken prejudice. The welfare state is merely soft totalitarianism, which
ultimately leads to the hard kind. It is the freshet of scalding water and rocks
that precedes the onrush of lava and pyroclastic
gases that can extinguish smokers and non-smokers alike. For a
concrete lesson in the progress of totalitarianism, read the fate of the West Indian
city of St. Pierre
during the eruption of Mt.
Pelée in 1902.
As the politicians
and "experts" of St. Pierre wished to assure the citizens that the ominous
rumblings and intrusions of Mt. Pelée were nothing to worry about, let's get on
with this election, politicians and "experts" have been assuring
Americans for decades that there's nothing to worry about, as well, so let's
get on with the business of life, except that you can't do this, that, and the
other anymore. St. Pierre was obliterated, and 28,000 people perished who
adopted a particular "state of mind" that their routines and
prejudices and customs and the urgency of an election were far more important.
Proper law in a civil society sanctions the use of retaliatory force in
answer to the initiation of force, against individuals and against a nation. On
this premise, 90% of the laws passed in this country since about the time of
the Civil War are illegitimate (read unconstitutional), because they sanction
the initiation of force against individuals or groups of individuals targeted
for regulation or just plain looting in the name of a populist "public
good." This trend has resulted in the establishment of an implicit
looting-by-principle welfare state. It takes time for the regulators and do-gooders
and social reformers to accustom people to it, to get them to accept their
wishes and laws as the norm and as how they believe men ought to behave in
private and to each other.
America has been governed by Progressive politics for nigh on a century. Progressivism
is merely a euphemism for socialism. Socialism is not Communism, it is not the
wholesale nationalization of everyone and everything. It is the conscription of
individuals to serve a "higher" purpose than their own existence
while leaving them a modicum of property and freedom to act and produce, so
long as their property and actions and production serve the government's purposes.
National Socialism is Nazism, or fascism. Men wearing jackboots and armbands
and kepis carrying banners with odd-looking symbols are optional.
The Progressives of the 1930's, for example, detested the German American
Bund, not because they disagreed with the Bund's national socialist ambitions,
but because the Bund was too blatant a tip-off to their own ambitions. When your
ambition is to draft a whole population into a campaign for eventual total
power, you don’t go around crudely parading your intentions. You don business suits
and flaunt your degrees in sociology and political science and economics and
apply for a seat with the Brain Trust and wail constantly that "something must
be done" about whatever it is that someone else is wailing about.
By way of coincidence, and to tie this essay back to the smoking incident,
on October 24th an interesting academic paper was published by Basil
Aboul-Enein of San Jacinto College in Pasadena, Texas, "The Anti-TobaccoMovement of Nazi Germany: A Historiographical Re-Examination." In it,
Aboul-Enein recounts the anti-smoking and anti-tobacco research conducted under
the aegis of Nazi science and research. After detailing the various programs
instigated by a régime determined to fashion a healthy, smoke- and alcohol-free
"master race" that would rule the world, astonishingly the author
approves of those programs. He naturally notes with disapproval the
"research" conducted on Jews and other "inferior" races,
but gives the anti-tobacco programs and propaganda a free pass.
Today, the case of smoking has
been partially solved by the discovery of the deleterious effects of passive
smoking. The fact that second-hand smoke can kill non-smokers has provided a
prevailing argument to interfere with smokers’ behavior. However, considering
the American Public Health Association 'code of ethics' regarding the rights of
the individuals to achieve community health, health education programs and
priorities should be thoroughly evaluated using courses of action and
strategies that ensure opportunities for input from the community.
No, let us not observe the deleterious effects of "passive"
smoking, or even of smoking itself. There are no credible studies or statistics
about especially "passive" smoking killing anyone, and those studies
and statistics are government generated or government-grant subsidized. Give a
"scientist" an a priori conclusion
to reach, and he'll "prove" anything to keep the money rolling in.
Aboul-Enein wanted his academic colleagues to be certain he wasn’t condemning
Nazi science:
The Nazis were primarily
interested in preventive medicine and public health to the end effect of
serving the National Socialist ideals of advancing a healthy and vigorous
German public. The promotion of these lifestyles only fitted the grand scale of
racial hygiene movement. Since Nazi wishes were to encourage its citizens to
live a healthy life, it seemed only logical that such a State sought to
discourage or ban what was seen as harmful to its cultural health.
Nevertheless, tobacco remained a legal product even under state funded anti-tobacco
propaganda and legislation. The level of ambivalence observed in Nazi
anti-smoking policies indicate the necessity for a clear and consistent body of
federal and state laws that present a clear message regarding smoking and
tobacco use.
German Nazis never had a monopoly on "grand-scale" hygiene
movements. The decades-old anti-smoking movement in America has branched out
into all sorts of realms, to food and soft drinks and exercise and even sex. That
was only to be expected. If you allow your mother-in-law to decide on the kinds
of curtains you'll hang, she'll wind up refurnishing your whole home.
Anti-smoking zealots in and out of government smirk at accusations that
they're behaving like Nazis or fascists. Robert Proctor, writing for TheAnti-Defamation League, however, puts an interesting context on Aboul-Enein's
findings, without having read Aboul-Enein's paper. There was something
inherently evil about all aspects of
Nazi science, including tobacco research:
The problem with the
"science vs. fascism" thesis is that it fails to take into account
the eagerness with which many scientists and physicians embraced the Reich, and
the many scientific disciplines which actually flourished under the Nazis.
Anyone who has ever examined a V-2 engine will have few doubts about this, and
there are numerous other examples. During the Nazi era, German scientists and
engineers either developed or greatly improved television, jet-propelled
aircraft (including the ejection seat), guided missiles, electronic computers,
the electron microscope, atomic fission, data-processing technologies,
pesticides, and, of course, the world's first industrial murder complexes. The
first magnetic tape recording was of a speech by Hitler, and the nerve gases
Sarin and Tabun were Nazi inventions.
The men who conducted the anti-tobacco research and vetted Nazi efforts to
eliminate it especially in women and employing the Trojan Horse excuse that it
was for "the children," were not paragons of moral esteem.
How can we explain the fact that
Nazi Germany was home to the world's foremost tobacco-cancer epidemiology and
the world's strongest cancer prevention policy? Do we say that "pockets of
innovation" existed in Nazi Germany, resistant to ideological influence?8
What if we find, on closer inspection, that Germany's anti-tobacco research
flourished not in spite of the Nazis, but in large part because of the
Nazis? And would it then be appropriate, from a moral point of view, to cite
such research in scientific studies today?
I ask this last question partly because the two tobacco studies I have just
discussed have, in fact, been repeatedly cited by postwar scientific
researchers, though rarely with any mention of the social context within which
they were carried out. There is never any mention, for example, of the fact
that the founding director of Schöniger and Schairer's Institute was Karl
Astel, Rector of the University of Jena, a vicious racial hygienist, and an SS
officer. One never hears that the grant application for the Institute was
written by Gauleiter Fritz Sauckel, chief organizer of Germany's system of
forced labor and a man hanged after the war for crimes against humanity (most
leaders of Nazi Germany's anti-tobacco movement were silenced in one way or
another after 1945).
Far be it from today's researchers to be so fastidious and honest as to
cite their illustrious predecessors. Proctor cites many more of these creatures.
Proctor, however, is also torn between placing any value on Nazi anti-tobacco
research and treating any tobacco research today as a valid field that can
exist without government encouragement (or without the example of a
health-conscious Führer or Surgeon
General).
I raise the questions I do about
Nazism and science because it is poor scholarship and perhaps even dangerous to
caricature the Nazis as irrational or anti-science. What we have to look at
more carefully is the relationship between science and ideology at this time.
It is not the case, for example, that the papers on tobacco epidemiology I have
mentioned were uninfluenced by Nazi ideology.
This is indecisive hand-wringing. Proctor logically asks:
The complicity of German
physicians in the Nazis' crimes against humanity is a well-established
historical fact. Explaining that fact is far more difficult. Why were German
doctors such avid fans of fascism? Why did nearly half of all German physicians
join the Nazi party?
It is not difficult to explain. So many German doctors were of a welfare
state of mind. German philosophy, German culture, and that culturally inbred
deference to "authority" unique to Germany prepared them for it. Just
as so many American doctors are of a welfare state of mind, and are registered
Democrats, ready to submit to the intricate, ten thousand dictats of ObamaCare,
and who welcomed its passage because it guarantees them a release from independence
and allows them to work for a "higher" cause. One may say the same
thing about American insurance companies, pharmaceutical companies, and the
makers of medical and surgical supplies, not to mention middle-aged patients
and the "elderly," that pathetic generation of "boomers." My
"generation," by the way, which I've disowned.
Oh! Someone may cry: What about all those people who are really sensitive
to smoke? Well, it shouldn’t be anyone else's problem. You don’t advocate
putting shackles on everyone for the sake of a minority. Living doesn’t mean a guaranteed
existence. Living doesn’t mean nationalizing homes and restaurants and parks
and appropriating private property to placate and coddle minorities based on
their likes, dislikes, or "sensitivities." Those likes, dislikes, and
"sensitivities" can include the ingredients of food or the nuclear
composition of wall paint to accessibility of the wheelchair-bound to a 7-11.You
leave people alone to sort out their own business.
So, it's just not a matter of laws and legislation to force Americans in
the preferred statist direction. The British tried that in the 1760's and
1770's, and lost a continent. The generation that made the Revolution possible
was the "greatest generation." It did not have a welfare state of
mind. It isn't' even just about smoking or health, either.
It's about rejecting the notion that one owes allegiance and deference to
the collective, to the State, and to anyone who has "sensitivity"
problems with freedom.
Published on October 27, 2012 11:44
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