To be is to be contingent: nothing of which it can be said that "it is" can be alone and independent. But being is a member of paticca-samuppada as arising which contains ignorance. Being is only invertible by ignorance.

Destruction of ignorance destroys the illusion of being. When ignorance is no more, than consciousness no longer can attribute being (pahoti) at all. But that is not all for when consciousness is predicated of one who has no ignorance than it is no more indicatable (as it was indicated in M Sutta 22)

Nanamoli Thera

Sunday, March 8, 2026

Ezra Pound’s Guide to Kulchur

 


Ezra Pound’s Guide to Kulchur (1938) is one of those unfortunate great books (think Spengler’s Decline of the West and any book by Henry Adams) that is often mentioned but seldom read. The book was meant as a guide to the essential philosophy, art, economics, history, and ethics from Confucius to the 20th century as uniquely interpreted by Pound.

This and the ABC of Reading (1934) constituted the core texts of the “Ezra-versity,” the informal seminars that Pound held before World War II for those acolytes who came to visit him in Rapallo, Italy.

The book is dedicated to two of these acolytes and “graduates” of the Ezra-versity: the British poet Basil Bunting (1900–1985), author of Briggflatts; and the American Jewish poet Louis Zukofsky (1904–1978) whose monumental long poem “A” is the only work comparable in scope and complexity to Pound’s own Cantos.

Guide to Kulchur is unique in both its structure and style. Written in Pound’s folksy demotic English that at times seems more akin to Mark Twain or Joel Chandler Harris, the book is arranged in a series of very short chapters that seem to unfold in a haphazard fashion. The book’s form only becomes manifest the longer one reads, and by the end of the book one is amazed at how Pound has managed to weave seamlessly the many strands of Western and ancient Chinese thought.

For Pound, philosophy and ethics begin with Confucius, particularly the Confucian idea that a well-ordered and moral society is based upon the imperative to call things by their correct names. This may seem like a minor point upon which to build a civilizational edifice, but it is, in reality, nothing less than a commitment to truth telling, a commitment that is sorely at odds with our own postmodern age that has abandoned the search for truth as a sine qua non. For Pound, the commitment to truth telling extends not only to philosophy and the arts but also to economics. His unique and highly critical take on the ancient Greek philosophers (especially Aristotle) stems in no little part, as he sees it, from their inability to conceive of money as other than a means of measurement without a basis in morality. Pound viewed the ancient Greeks as “happy men with no moral fervor”[1] who represented a decline from the seriousness of their Homeric era ancestors.

While Pound’s embrace of Social Credit economics and strong denunciation of usury are well known, the Guide to Kulchur reveals how closely Pound linked together economics and aesthetics. In the very remarkable Chapter 50, entitled “Chaucer Was Framed,” Pound states:

Usury is contra naturam. It is not merely opposition to nature’s increase, it is antithetic to discrimination by the senses. Discrimination by the senses is dangerous to avarice. It is dangerous because any perception or any high development of the perceptive faculties may lead to knowledge. The moneychanger only thrives on ignorance.
He thrives on all sorts of insensitivity and non-perception.
An instant sense of proportion imperils financiers.[2]

Pound’s insights are as remarkable as they are prescient. An imperiled aesthetic sense that is incapable of discerning differences of quality and meaning and that cannot sense subtleties of emotion is necessary for a complacent body of fungible consumers who, in the words of Oscar Wilde, “know the price of everything and the value of nothing.”

Pound, who viewed the Medieval Church as the highest expression of Western Civilization, likewise saw Calvinist Protestantism as its lowest expression, one that permitted, indeed glorified, usury and the inability to make aesthetic and moral distinctions:

You can, by contrast, always get financial backing for
debauchery. Any form of “entertainment” that debases perception, that profanes the mysteries or tends to obscure discrimination, goes hand in hand with drives toward money profit. It might not be too much to say that the whole of protestant morals, intertwined with usury-tolerance, has for centuries tended to obscure perception of degrees, to debase the word moral to a single groove, to degrade all moral perceptions outside the relation of the sexes, and to vulgarize the sex relation itself.[3]

What is remarkable here is that Pound was able to see through the practices and goals of the leftist globalists at precisely the time that the right-wing nationalists were at the zenith of their power. These two paragraphs of Pound’s explain why the globalists use pornography as a means to normalize sexual perversions in order to subvert white family formation. They also explain the bread-and-circus nature of the global financiers to keep consumers satiated with cheap toys and gadgets. And finally, Pound was able to ascertain that Calvinist morality has led to an inability of our enemies to be able to make moral distinctions, wherein any disagreement with a leftist, however minor, becomes an example of “hate speech” in which the speaker literally becomes Adolf Hitler. It is also amazing that Pound saw the origin of leftist ideology in Calvinism, and as such, antedates by more than half a century the same conclusion brought by the Neoreactionaries, especially Curtis Yarvin a/k/a Mencius Moldbug.

Pound is a demanding author. He does not suffer fools gladly and he expects his readers to do their homework, but the rewards are many for those readers who are up to the challenge. Guide to Kulchur should be an essential book in the library of every white nationalist. Although written 80 years ago, the book is even more relevant today than it was when it was written, for in the words of its author:

Liberalism is a running sore, and its surviving proponents
are vile beyond printable descriptions. They have betrayed the “Droits de l’homme”, they are more dastardly than Judas . . . . In our time the liberal has asked for almost no freedom save the freedom to commit acts contrary to the general good.[4]

I rest my case.

Quintilian

Notes

[1] Ezra Pound, Guide to Kulchur (New York: New Directions, 1970 [1938]), p. 330.

[2] Ibid., p. 281.

[3] Ibid., pp. 281–82.

[4] Ibid., p. 254.

1 comment
ThreestarsJanuary 16, 2019 at 2:22 am
“is also amazing that Pound saw the origin of leftist ideology in Calvinism, and as such, antedates by more than half a century the same conclusion brought by the Neoreactionaries,”

I wouldn’t call Pound “prescient”, or at least especially so, since he seems to draw pretty heavily from Max Weber’s theory on the origins of capitalism in Protestant morals. Although the latter doesn’t articulate it as clearly, he does decry that material worth came to displace higher, more abstract values in his contemporary, turn of the century society.

“especially Curtis Yarvin a/k/a Mencius Moldbug.”

While I do understand that Moldbug is especially fixated on this, he is far from being the first Reactionary writer (I pause to call him “thinker”) to place the roots of modern American liberalism in the Calvinist ethos. Paul Gottfried comes readily to mind, who did so some 20 years in advance.

I admit, I haven’t read all of Yarvin’s work, but what I did seemed to me derivative, with only an appearance of originality due mostly to his habit of not crediting any of his modern influences (assuming he didn’t re-invent the wheel…). This is a huge no-no for any serious humanities grad student and above, as it can deceitfully give the aura of a “thinker” to a mere popularizer. It’s little surprise his influence almost exclusively extends to poorly read computer programmers…

Again, I have only cursory knowledge of Yarvin’s writings, I’d appreciate a defense of the guy from someone more familiar with him.

https://counter-currents.com/

Ezra Pound Gold & Work



As for monopolizability: no one is such a fool as to let someone else have the run of his own private bank account; yet nations, individuals, industrialists, and businessmen have all been quite prepared—almost eager—to leave the control of their national currencies, and of international money, in the hands of the most stinking dregs of humanity.
*
As for the validity of primitive forms of money such as a promissory note written on leather, we have C. H. Douglas’s memorable comment that it was valid enough as long as the man who promised to pay an ox had an ox.
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At 5:30 p.m. on Monday, 30 January 1933 (Year XI), the author of the following notes submitted a list of eighteen points to a personage of the Italian Government. Ten years later these points were published in the Meridiano di Roma with the result that that newspaper was banned by the United States postal authorities. There are certain ideas that are not welcome in liberal circles.

The Way of Utopia

On the 10th of September last, I walked down the Via Salaria and into the Republic of Utopia, a quiet country lying eighty years east of Fara Sabina. Noticing the cheerful disposition of the inhabitants, I enquired the cause of their contentment, and I was told that it was due both to their laws and to the teaching they received from their earliest school days.

They maintain (and in this they are in agreement with Aristotle and other ancient sages of East and West) that our knowledge of universals derives from our knowledge of particulars, and that thought hinges on the definitions of words.

In order to teach small children to observe particulars they practise a kind of game, in which a number of small objects, e.g., three grains of barley, a small coin, a blue button, a coffee bean, or, say, one grain of barley, three different kinds of buttons, etc., are concealed in the hand. The hand is opened for an instant, then quickly closed again, and the child is asked to say what it has seen. For older children the game is gradually made more elaborate, until finally they all know how their hats and shoes are made. I was also informed that by learning how to define words these people have succeeded in defining their economic terms, with the result that various iniquities of the stock market and financial world have entirely disappeared from their country, for no one allows himself to be fooled any longer.

And they attribute their prosperity to a simple method they have of collecting taxes or, rather, their one tax, which falls on the currency itself. For on every note of 100 monetary units they are obliged, on the first of every month, to affix a stamp worth one unit. And as the government pays its expenses by the issue of new currency, it never needs to impose other taxes. And no one can hoard this currency because after 100 months it would have lost all its value. And this solves the problem of circulation. And because the currency is no more durable than commodities such as potatoes, crops, or fabrics, the people have acquired a much healthier sense of values. They do not worship money as a god, they do not lick the boots of bloated financiers or syphilitics of the market-place. And, of course, they are not menaced by inflation, and they are not compelled to make wars to please the usurers. In fact, this profession—or criminal activity—is extinct in the country of Utopia, where no one is obliged to work more than five hours a day, because their mode of life makes a great deal of bureaucratic activity unnecessary. Trade has few restraints. They exchange their woollen and silk fabrics against coffee and groundnuts from their African possessions, while their cattle are so numerous that the fertilizer problem almost solves itself. But they have a very strict law which excludes every kind of surrogate from the whole of their republic.

Education for these people is almost a joy, and there are no redundant professors. They say that it is impossible to eliminate idiotic books, but that it is easy to distribute the antidote, and they do this by means of a very simple system. Every bookseller is obliged to stock the best books; some of outstanding merit must be displayed in his window for a certain number of months each year. As they become familiar with the very best books, the disgusting messes served up periodically by The Times or the Nouvelle Revue Française gradually disappear from the drawing-rooms of the more empty-headed young ladies–of both sexes.

They attach the importance to skill in agricultural tasks that I attached in my youth to skill at tennis or football. In fact, they have ploughing contests to see who can drive the straightest furrow. As for myself, I felt I was too old for such activities, and recalled the case of a young friend who had also been seized this archaic passion: he wrote that his first acre “looked as if a pig had been rooting about all over it.”

After I had heard these very simple explanations of the happiness of these people, I went to sleep under the Sabine stars, pondering over the astonishing effects of these reforms, apparently so trifling, and marvelling at the great distance separating the twentieth-century world from the world of contentment.

Inscribed over the entrance to their Capitol are the words:

THE TREASURE OF A NATION IS ITS HONESTY.

Particulars of the Crime

It is no use assembling a machine if a part is missing or defective. One must first have all the essential parts. Fully to understand the origins of the present war it will be useful to know that:

The Bank of England, a felonious combination or, more precisely, a gang of usurers taking sixty per cent. interest, was founded in 1694. Paterson, the founder of the bank, clearly stated the advantages of his scheme: “the bank hath benefit of the interest on all moneys which it creates out of nothing.”[1] In 1750 the paper currency of the Colony of Pennsylvania was suppressed. This meant that this confederacy of gombeen-men, not content with their sixty per cent., namely, the interest on the moneys they created out of nothing, had, in the fifty-six intervening years, become powerful enough to induce the British Government to suppress, illegally, a form of competition which had, through a sane monetary system, brought prosperity to the colony.

Twenty-six years later, in 1776, the American colonies rebelled against England. They were thirteen independent organs, divided among themselves, but favoured by geographical factors and European discords. They conquered their perennial enemy, England, but their revolution was betrayed by internal enemies among them. Their difficulties might serve to stimulate Italians today, and the problems of that time might suggest solutions in Italy now.

The imperfections of the American electoral system were at once demonstrated by the scandal of the Congressmen who speculated in the “certificates of owed pay” that had been issued by the various Colonies to the soldiers of the Revolution.

It was an old trick, and a simple one: a question of altering the value of the monetary unit. Twenty-nine Congressmen conspired with their associates and bought up the certificates from veterans and others at twenty per cent. of their face value. The nation, having now established itself as an administrative unit, then “assumed” responsibility for redeeming the certificates at their full face value.

The struggle between the financial interests and the people was continued in the battle between Jefferson and Hamilton, and still more openly when the people were led by Jackson and Van Buren. The decade between 1830 and 1840 has practically disappeared from the school-books. The economic facts behind the American “Civil” War are extremely interesting. After the Napoleonic wars, after the “Civil” one, after Versailles, the same phenomena may be observed.

Usurocracy makes wars in succession. It makes them according to a preestablished plan for the purpose of creating debts.

For every debt incurred when a bushel of grain is worth a certain sum of money, repayment is demanded when it requires five bushels or more to raise the same sum. This is accompanied by much talk of devaluation, inflation, revaluation, deflation, and a return to gold. By returning to gold, Mr. Churchill forced the Indian peasant to pay two bushels of grain in taxes and interest which a short time before he had been able to pay with one only.

C. H. Douglas, Arthur Kitson, Sir Montagu Webb give the details. The United States were sold to the Rothschilds in 1863. The Americans have taken eighty years to discover the facts that are still unknown in Europe. Some of them were made known in Congress by Charles A. Lindbergh, the aviator’s father, and later included by Willis A. Overholser in his History of Money in the United States.

A letter from the London banking firm of Rothschild Bros, dated 25 June, 1863, addressed to the New York bank Ikleheimer, Morton & Vander Gould, contains the following words of fire:

Very few people
will understand this. Those who do will be occupied
getting profits. The general public will probably not
see it’s against their interest.[2]

The favourite tricks of the usurocracy are simple, and the word “money” is not defined in the clerks’ manual issued by the Rothschilds, nor in the official vocabulary “Synonyms and Homonyms of Banking Terminology.” The tricks are simple: taking usury at sixty per cent. and upwards, and altering the value of the integer of account at moments advantageous to themselves.

Ignorance

Ignorance of these tricks is not a natural phenomenon; it is brought about artificially. It has been fostered by the silence of the press, in Italy as much as anywhere else. What is more, it has been patiently and carefully built up. The true basis of credit was already known to the founders of the Monte dei Paschi of Siena at the beginning of the seventeenth century.

This basis was, and is, the abundance, or productivity, of nature together with the responsibility of the whole people.

There are useful and potentially honest functions for banks and bankers. One who provides a measure of prices in the market and at the same time a means of exchange is useful to the nation. But one who falsifies this measure and this means is a criminal.

A sound banking policy aims, and in the past has aimed, as Lord Overstone (Samuel Loyd) has said, “to meet the real wants of commerce, and to discount all commercial bills arising out of legitimate transactions.”[3]

Nevertheless, at a certain moment at about the beginning of the century, Brooks Adams was moved to write:

Perhaps no financier has ever lived abler than Samuel Loyd. Certainly he understood as few men, even of later generations, have understood, the mighty engine of the single Standard. He comprehended that, with expanding trade, an inelastic currency must rise in value; he saw that, with sufficient resources at command, his class might be able to establish such a rise, almost at pleasure; certainly that they could manipulate it when it came, by taking advantage of foreign exchange. He perceived moreover that, once established, a contraction of the currency might be forced to an extreme, and that when money rose beyond price, as in 1825, debtors would have to surrender their property on such terms as creditors might dictate.[4]

So now you understand why the B.B.C., proclaiming the liberation of Europe, and of Italy in particular, never replies to the question: And the liberty of not getting into debt–how about that?

And you will understand why Brooks Adams wrote that after Waterloo no power had been able to resist the force of the usurers.[5]

And you will understand why Mussolini was condemned twenty years ago by the central commitee of the usurocracy. And why wars are made, i.e., in order to create debts which must be paid in appreciated money, or not paid at all, according to circumstances.

War is the highest form of sabotage, the most atrocious form of sabotage. Usurers provoke wars to impose monopolies in their own interests, so that they can get the world by the throat. Usurers provoke wars to create debts, so that they can extort the interest and rake in the profits resulting from changes in the values of monetary units.

If this is not clear to the novice, let him read and meditate the following sentences from the Hazard Circular of the year 1862:

The great debt that (our friends the) capitalists (of Europe) will see to it is made out of the war must he used to control the volume of money. . . . It will not do to allow the greenback, as it is called, to circulate . . . for we cannot control them (i.e., their issue, etc.).[6]

In fact, after the assassination of President Lincoln no serious measures against the usurocracy were attempted until the formation of the Rome-Berlin Axis. Italy’s ambition to achieve economic liberty—the liberty of not getting into debt—provoked the unleashing of the ever-accursed sanctions.

But the great Italian publishing houses, more or less open accomplices of the perfidious Italian press, have not published the works of Brooks Adams and Arthur Kitson in which these facts are given. The press has been perfidious, and the great publishing houses have been more or less conscious accomplices according to their opacity. One cannot hope to prevail against bad faith by making known the facts, but one might against ignorance. The publishers have received their information through certain channels; they have taken their tone from the Times Literary Supplement and from books distributed through Hachette and W. H. Smith & Son, or approved by the Nouvelle Revue Française.

Nothing, or practically nothing, has arrived in Italy that has not been picked over by the international usurers and their blind or shifty-eyed servitors. And the result is to be seen in an artificially created ignorance and snobbery. Neomalthusianism needs looking into. In Italy, as elsewhere, crime fiction has served to distract attention from the great underlying crime, the crime of the usurocratic system itself. If this may seem of no importance to politicians and men of action, it has nonetheless created a vast blockage of passive inertia in the very so-called “literary” or “cultured” circles which set the tone of printed matter. They read, they write, and the public gets the sweepings. And from this dishwashing process derives the CREDULITY that has contaminated a great part of the public with the “English disease,” namely, a pathological disposition to believe the fantastic tales put out from London and disseminated gratis by indigenous simpletons.

Of the liberals (who are not always usurers) we would ask, Why are usurers always liberals?

Of those who demand the dictatorship of the proletariat we would ask, Must the proletariat of one country impose dictatorship on the proletariat of another?

To those who inveigh against the concept of autarchy, saying it costs too much; that grain should be bought in the cheapest market—we would recall that it was precisely the importing of cheap grain from Egypt that ruined Italian agriculture under the Roman Empire. And if this fact appears too remote from our own times, it may be noted that those who speak of this kind of trade usually end up by talking about the export of labour, that is, the export of workers, the export of human beings, in exchange for commodities.

Many are beginning to understand that England, in her sadistic attempt destroy Italy, is destroying herself, though the public still fails to understand the origin of this mania for destruction. Deny, if you like, that the purely and exclusively economic man exists, yet the analysis of economic motives is useful for an understanding of avarice. The greed for monopoly is a fundamental evil. It may be seen in the transgression of the unjust price, condemned by the economic doctrine of the Church throughout the period of its greatest splendour.

It must be understood that the whole of the current taste in literature and entire journalistic system are controlled by the international usurocracy, which aims at preserving intact the public’s ignorance of the usurocratic system and its workings. The details of the military betrayal are known, but the intellectual betrayal has not yet been understood. Ignorance of this system and its mechanisms is not a natural phenomenon; it has been created.

Liberalism and Bolshevism are in intimate agreement in their fundamental contempt for the human personality. Stalin “disposes” of forty truckloads human “material” for work on a canal. We find d1e liberals talking about export of “labour.”

Liberalism conceals its baneful economics under two pretexts: the freedom of the spoken and written word, and the freedom of the individual, protected in theory, by trial in open court, guaranteed by the formula of habeas corpus. Enquire in India, or in England, to what extent these pretexts are respectec. Ask any American journalist what freedom of expression is left him by the advertisers.

Some further items of useful knowledge:
(1) We need a means of exchange and a means of saving, but it does follow that the means must be the same in each case.
(2) The state can LEND. The fleet that was victorious at Salamis was built with money lent to the shipbuilders by the Athenian state.
(3) To simplify both government and private management, a system which can operate at the counter, whether of a government or private office, is preferable.

A NATION
THAT WILL NOT
GET ITSELF INTO DEBT
DRIVES THE USURERS
TO FURY

The Pivot

All trade hinges on money. All industry hinges on money. Money is the pivot. It is the middle term. It stands midway between industry and workers. The pure economic man may not exist, but the economic factor, in the problem of living, exists. If you live on clichés and lose your respect for words, you will lose your “ben dell’ intelletto.”[7]

Trade brought prosperity to Liguria; usury lost it Corsica. But in losing the ability to distinguish between trade and usury one loses all sense of the historical process. There has been some vague talk in recent months about an international power, described as financial, but it would be better to call it “usurocracy,” or the rule of the big usurers combined in conspiracy. Not the gun merchants, but the traffickers in money itself have made this war; they have made wars in succession, for centuries, at their own pleasure, to create debts so that they can enjoy the interest on them, to create debts when money is cheap in order to demand repayment when money is dear.

But as long as the word “money” is not clearly defined, and as long as its definition is not known to all the peoples of the world, they will go blindly to war with each other, never knowing the reason why.

This war was no whim of Mussolini’s, nor of Hitler’s. This war is a chapter in the long and bloody tragedy which began with the foundation of the Bank of England in far-away 1694, with the openly declared intention of Paterson’s now famous prospectus, which contains the words already quoted: “the bank hath benefit of the interest on all moneys which it creates out of nothing.”

To understand what this means it is necessary to understand what money is. Money is not a simple instrument like a spade. It is made up of two elements: one which measures the prices on the market, one which bestows the power to purchase the goods. It is this twofold aspect that the usurers have taken advantage of. You know well enough that a watch contains two principles, a mainspring and a hair-spring, with a train of wheels between the two. But if someone asks you what money is, you don’t know what the ten lire notes and the twenty centesimi pieces, which you have in your pockets, are.

Until the seventh century after Christ, when an Emperor of the T’ang Dynasty issued state notes (state notes, not bank notes, mind you), the world was practically compelled to use as money a determined quantity of some commonly used commodity, such as salt or gold according to the degree of local sophistication. But since A.D. 654, at least, this metal has no longer been necessary for trading between civilized people. The state note of the T’ang Dynasty, of the year 856, which is still in existence, has an inscription almost identical with the one you read on your ten lire notes.

The note measures the price, not the value; or in other words, prices are calculated in monetary units. But who supplies these notes? And, before the present war, who controlled the issue of international money? If you want to discover the causes of the present war, try and find out who controlled international money, and how it came under such control.

For the moment I will give you only one hint from the history of the United States of America:

The great debt that (our friends the) capitalists (of Europe) will see to it is made out of the war must be used to control the volume of money. . . . It will not do to allow the greenback, as it is called, to circulate . . . for we cannot control them.[8]

This is from the Hazard Circular of the year 1862. It seems to me that a similar situation existed in 1939. I would say that Italy, not wanting to get herself into debt, drove the great usurers to fury. Think it over! And think of the nature of money itself, and of the economists’ invariable irresponsibility when we ask them to define such words as money, credit, interest, and usury.

If we are going to talk about monetary policy, monetary reform, or a monetary revolution, we must know first of all exactly what money is.

The Enemy

The enemy is ignorance (our own). At the beginning of the nineteenth century John Adams (Pater Patriae) saw that the defects and errors of the American government derived not so much from the corruption of government officials as from ignorance of coin, credit, and circulation.

The situation is the same today. The subject is considered too dry by those who do not understand its significance. For example, at about the end of last December a banker boasted to me that at a certain period he could remember Italian paper money was worth more than gold. One concludes that in that particular “golden age” the Rothschilds were wanting to purchase gold cheap, in order to send its price rocketing later.

In the same way the Sassoons and their accomplices profited from the slump in silver. At one period, in fact, silver fell to 23 cents per ounce, and was later bought by certain American idiots at 75 cents per ounce, in order to please their masters and to “save India,” where, with the return to gold, Mr. Churchill, as we have remarked, forced the peasants to pay two bushels of grain in taxes and interest which a short time before could have been paid with only one.

To combat this rigging of the gold and silver markets we must know what money is. Today money is a disk of metal or a slip of paper which serves to measure prices and which confers, on its possessor, the right to receive in exchange any goods on sale in the market up to a price equal to the figure indicated on me disk or slip of paper, without any formality other than the transfer of the money from hand to hand. Thus money differs from a special coupon, such as a railway or theatre ticket. This universal quality confers special privileges on money which the special coupon does not possess. Of these I will speak another time.

Besides this tangible money, there is also intangible money, called “money on account,” which is used in accounting and banking transactions. This intangibility belongs to a discussion of credit rather than a treatise on money. Our immediate need is to clarify current conceptions with regard to the so-called “work-money,” and to make clear that money cannot be a “symbol of work” without any other qualification. It could be a “certificate of work done” on condition that the work is done within a system. The validity of the certificate would depend on the honesty of the system, and on the authority of the certifier. And the certificate would have to refer to some work useful—or at least pleasurable—to the community.

An item of work not yet completed would serve as an element of credit rather than as a basis for money properly understood. Speaking metaphorically, one might call credit the “future tense of money.”

The elaborate assay procedure of mints has been developed to guarantee the quality and quantity of the metal in coined money; no less elaborate precautions would be necessary to guarantee the quality, quantity, and appropriateness of me work which will serve as the basis for what is to be called “work money” (meaning “certificate-of-work-done-money”).

The same frauds of accounting practised by the gombeen-men of the past in order to swindle the public under a metallic monetary system will, of course, be attempted by the gombeen-men of the future in their attacks on social justice, irrespective of the kind of monetary system that may be established. And they will be just as likely to succeed unless the nature and workings of these practices have been fully understood by the public—or at least by an alert and efficient minority.

It is only one plague-spot that the creation of work-money would eliminate. I mean that the advantages of the gold-standard system lauded by the bankers are advantages for the bankers only—for some bankers only, in fact. Social justice demands equal advantages for all.

The advantage of work-money mainly derives from one fact alone: work cannot be monopolized. And this is the very reason for the bitter opposition, for the uproar of protest, natural and artificial, which issues from me ranks of the gombeen-men, whether they be exotic or indigenous.

The idea that work might serve as a measure of prices was already current in me eighteenth century, and was clearly expounded by Benjamin Franklin.

As for monopolizability: no one is such a fool as to let someone else have the run of his own private bank account; yet nations, individuals, industrialists, and businessmen have all been quite prepared—almost eager—to leave the control of their national currencies, and of international money, in the hands of the most stinking dregs of humanity.

Work cannot be monopolized. The function of work as a measure is beginning to be understood. The principle has been clearly put before the Italian public as, for example, when me Regime Fascista reports mat the Russian worker must pay 380 working hours for an overcoat which a German worker can procure with only 80.

An article by Fernando Ritter in the Fascio of Milan, 7 January, 1944, refers to money not in generic words and abstract terms such as “capital” and “finance,” but in terms of grain and fertilizers.

As for the validity of primitive forms of money such as a promissory note written on leather, we have C. H. Douglas’s memorable comment that it was valid enough as long as the man who promised to pay an ox had an ox.

In the same way the certificates of work done will be valid provided that the utility of the work done is honestly estimated by some proper authority. It should be remembered that the soil does not require monetary compensation for the wealth extracted from it. With her wonderful efficiency nature sees to it that the circulation of material capital and its fruits is maintained, and that what comes out of the soil goes back into the soil with majestic rhythm, despite human interference.

The Toxicology of Money

Money is not a product of nature but an invention of man. And man has made it into a pernicious instrument through lack of foresight. The nations have forgotten the differences between animal, vegetable, and mineral; or rather, finance has chosen to represent all three of the natural categories by a single means of exchange, and failed to take account of the consequences. Metal is durable, but it does not reproduce itself. If you sow gold you will not be able to reap a harvest many times greater than the gold you sowed. The vegetable leads a more or less autonomous existence, but its natural reproductiveness can be increased by cultivation. The animal gives to and takes from the vegetable world: manure in exchange for food.

Fascinated by the lustre of a metal, men made it into chains. Then he invented something against nature, a false representation in the mineral world of laws which apply only to animals and vegetables.

The nineteenth century, the infamous century of usury, went even further, creating a species of monetary Black Mass. Marx and Mill, in spite of their superficial differences, agreed in endowing money with properties of a quasi-religious nature. There was even the concept of energy being “concentrated in money,” as if one were speaking of the divine quality of consecrated bread. But a half-lira piece has never created the cigarette or the piece of chocolate that used, in pre-war days, to issue from the slot-machine.

The durability of metal gives it certain advantages not possessed by potatoes or tomatoes. Anyone who has a stock of metal can keep it until conditions are most favourable for exchanging it against less durable goods. Hence the earliest forms of speculation on the part of those in possession of metals—especially those metals which arc comparatively rare and do not rust.

But in addition to this potentiality for unjust manipulation inherent in metallic money by virtue of its being metallic, man has invented a document provided with coupons to serve as a more visible representation of usury. And usury is a vice, or a crime, condemned by all religions and by every ancient moralist. For example, in Cato’s De Re Rustica we find the following piece of dialogue:

“And what do you think of usury?”
“What do you think of murder?”

And Shakespeare: “Or is your gold . . . ewes and rams?”

No! it is not money that is the root of the evil. The root is greed, the lust for monopoly. ‘CAPTANS ANNONAM, MALEDICTUS IN PLEBE SIT!’ thundered St Ambrose—“Hoggers of harvest, cursed among the people!”

The opportunity of dishonest dealing was already offered to the possessors of gold at the dawn of history. But what man has made he can unmake. All that is needed is to devise a kind of money that cannot be kept waiting in the safe until such time as it may be most advantageous for its owner to bring it out. The power to swindle the people by means of coined or printed money would thus disappear almost automatically.

The idea is not new. Bishops in the Middle Ages were already issuing money that was recalled to the mint for recoining after a definite period. The German, Gesell, and the Italian, Avigliano, almost contemporaneously, devised a still more interesting means of achieving a greater economic justice. They proposed a paper-money system by which everyone was obliged, on the first of the month, to affix a stamp on every note he possessed equal to one per cent. of the note’s face value.

This system has given such praiseworthy results in certain restricted areas where it has been put into operation, that it is the duty of any far-sighted nation to give it serious consideration. The means is simple. It is not beyond the mental capacity of a peasant. Anyone is capable of sticking a stamp on an envelope, or on a receipted hotel bill.

From the humanitarian point of view, the advantage of this form of taxation over all others is that it can only fall on persons who have, at the moment the tax falls due, money in their pockets worth 100 times the tax itself.

Another advantage is that it doesn’t interfere with trade or discourage building activity; it falls only on superfluous money, namely on the money mat the holder has not been obliged to spend in the course of the preceding month. As a remedy for inflation its advantages will be seen immediately. Inflation consists in a superfluity of money. Under Gesell’s system each issue of notes consumes itself in 100 months—eight years and four months—thus bringing to the treasury a sum equal to the original issue.

(To make this still clearer, imagine a note left in the safe for 100 months. It will be a note on strike which, for 100 months, fails to function as a means of exchange and does not serve its purpose. Well then, the tax on this laziness will equal its face value. On the other hand, a note that passes from hand to hand can play its part in hundreds of transactions each month before it has to be taxed at all.)

The expense of numerous departments whose present function is to squeeze taxes out of the public would be reduced to a minimum and practically vanish. Office workers don’t go to the office to amuse themselves. They could be given the chance of spending their time as they liked, or of raising the cultural level of their social circle, while still receiving their present salaries without the need of diminishing the material wealth of Italy by a single bushel of grain, or by a litre of wine. Those who are not studiously inclined would have time to produce something useful.

A cardinal error of so-called liberal economics has been to forget the difference between food and stuff you can neither cat nor clothe yourself with. A republican[9] realism should call the public’s attention to certain fundamental realities. Philip Gibbs, writing of Italy for Anglo-American readers, cannot see that anything can be done with a product except sell it. The idea of using it does not penetrate the Bolshevik-Liberal psychology.

The Error

The error has been pecuniolatry, or the making of money into a god. This was due to a process of denaturalization, by which our money has been given false attributes and powers that it should never have possessed. Gold is durable, but does not reproduce itself—not even if you put two bits of it together, one shaped like a cock, the other like a hen. It is absurd to speak of it as bearing fruit or yielding interest. Gold does not germinate like grain. To represent gold as doing this is to represent it falsely. It is a falsification. And the term “falsificazione della moneta” (counterfeiting or false-coining) may perhaps be derived from this.

To repeat: we need a means of exchange and a means of saving, but it does not follow that the means must be the same in each case. We are not forced to use a hammer for an awl.

The stamp affixed to the note acts as the hair-spring in the watch. Under the usurocratic system the world has suffered from alternate waves of inflation and deflation, of too much money and too little. Everyone can understand the function of a pendulum or hair-spring. A similar mental grasp should be brought to bear in the field of money.

A sound economic system will be attained when money has neither too much nor too little potential. The distinction between trade and usury has been lost. The distinction between debt and interest-bearing debt has been lost. As long ago as 1878 the idea of non-interest-bearing debt was current—even of non-interest-bearing national debt. The interest that you have received in the past has been largely an illusion: it has functioned on a short-term basis leaving you with a sum of money arithmetically somewhat greater than that which you had “saved,” but expressed in a currency whose units have lost a part of their value in the meantime.

Dexter Kimball collected statistics of American rail bonds issued over a period of half a century, and made interesting discoveries as to the proportion of these obligations that had simply been annulled for one reason or another. If my memory doesn’t betray me, the figure was as high as seventy per cent.

That industrial concerns and plants should pay interest on their borrowed capital is just, because they serve to increase production. But the world has lost the distinction between production and corrosion. Unpardonable imbecility! For this distinction was known in the earliest years of recorded history. To represent something corrosive as something productive is a falsification—a forgery. Only fools believe in false representations. Give money its correct potential; make it last as long as things last in the material world; give it, above all, its due advantage (i.e., that of being exchangeable for any goods at any moment, provided the goods in question exist)—but do not give money, beyond this advantage, powers that correspond neither to justice nor to the nature of the goods it is issued against or used to purchase. This is the way that leads to social justice and economic sanity.

Military Valour

There can be no military valour in a climate of intellectual cowardice.

No individual should get angry if the community refuses to accept his proposals, but it is intellectual cowardice if one is afraid to formulate one’s own concept of society. This is all the more so at a time full of possibilities, at a time when the formulation of a new system of government is announced. Everyone who has some competence as an historian, and is in possession of certain historical facts, should formulate his concepts in relation to that part of the social organism in which his studies have given him authority to act as a judge.

To cultivate this competence in future generations one must begin, in the schools, with the observation of particular objects, as an introduction to the apprehension of particular facts in history. The individual does not need to know everything on an encyclopaedic scale, but everyone with any kind of public responsibility must have knowledge of the essential facts of the problem he has to deal with. It begins with the game of the objects shown to the child for an instant in the hand that is then quickly closed again.

Thought hinges on the definition of words. Aristotle and Confucius bear witness. I would conclude the compulsory studies of every university student with a comparison—even a brief one—between the two major works of Aristotle (the Nicomachean Ethics and the Politics), on the one hand, and, on the other, the Four Books of China (i.e., the three classics of the Confucian tradition—the Ta Hsüeh or “Great Learning,”[10] The Unwobbling Axis,[11] and the Analects—together with the Works of Mencius).

Extra-university education and that of the public in general could be taken care of by means of a simple ordinance relating to bookshops: every bookseller should be obliged to stock and, in the case of certain more important works, display in the window for a determined number of weeks per year certain books of capital importance.

Anyone who is familiar with the masterpieces, especially those of Aristotle, Confucius, Demosthenes, together with Davanati’s “Tacitus,”[12] will not be taken in by the nasty messes now offered to the public. As for money, it will be enough if everyone thinks for himself of the principle of the hair-spring, of the national and social effects, in other words, that would result from the mere application of a stamp in the most appropriate place. Better on the currency note tl1an on the receipted hotel bill.

One used to speak of “Cavalieri di San Giorgio,”[13] never identifying them with due precision. Money can cause injury, and economic knowledge is today about as crude as was medical science when it was realized that a broken leg was damaging but when the effects of germs were unknown. It is not so much the money that buys a Badoglio, but the hidden work of interest that is everywhere gnawing away, corroding. This is not the interest paid to the private individual on his bank account, but interest on money that does not exist, on a mirage of money; interest equivalent to sixty per cent. and over as opposed to money that represents honest work or goods useful to mankind.

To repeat: the distinction between production and corrosion has been lost; and so has the distinction between the sharing-out of the fruits of work done in collaboration (a true and just dividend, called partaggio in the Middle Ages) and the corrosive interest that represents no increase in useful and material production of any sort.

It is, of course, useless to indulge in anti-Semitism, leaving intact the Hebraic monetary system which is their most tremendous instrument of usury. And we would ask the Mazzinians why they never read those pages of the Duties of Man which deal with banks.

Bulletin of Civic Discipline

Arguments are caused by the ignorance of ALL the disputants.

Until you have clarified your own thought within yourself you cannot communicate it to others.

Until you have brought order within yourself you cannot become an element of order in the party.

The fortune of war depends on the honesty of the régime.

Notes

1. Quoted by Christopher Hollis, The Two Nations, chap. III. See also Pound’s Canto XLVI.—Trans.

2. The Italian text follows the author’s own paraphrase in Canto XLVI, which is therefore used here. These particular words are quoted (enthusiastically) from a letter received by the Rothschild firm from “a certain Mr John Sherman,” presumably to be identified with the American statesman who was then Senator for Ohio and later Secretary of the Treasury. Overholser gives the full text in the fourth chapter of his book.—Trans.

3. Quoted by Brooks Adams, The Law of Civilization and Decay (new edition), Knopf, New York, 1943, pp. 307-8.—Trans.

4. Brooks Adams, p. 315.—Trans.

5. Ibid. pp. 306, 310, 326-7, and chap. XI generally.—Trans.

6. Quoted by Overholser, op. cit, chap. IV. Also by H. Jerry Voorhis: Extension of Remarks in the House of Representatives, 6 June, 1938, Congressional Record, Appendix, Vol. 83, Part II, p. 2363.—Trans.

7. Dante, Inferno III, 18. “Homely english wd. get that down to ‘USE OF YOUR WITS’ but I reckon Dante meant something nearer to Mencius’ meaning: . . . sense of EQUITY.”—E. P. in a radio speech, see If This Be Treason, p. 32.—Tr.

8. See note p. 6, above.—Trans.

9. At the time of writing the Fascist Social Republic was established in northern Italy, while “liberated” Italy was still a monarchy.—Trans.

10. “Studio Maturo” in the text.—Trans.

11. i.e., the Chung Yung, or “Doctrine of the Just Mean,” rendered in the text as “L’Asseche non Vacilla” at a time when a more notorious Axis was anything but unwobbling. The author’s latest rendering of this title is “The Unwobbling Pivot.”—Trans.

12. Bernardo Davanzati (1529-1606), celebrated translator of Tacitus.—Trans.

13. Italian nickname for gold sovereigns.—Trans.

3 comments
SandyNovember 6, 2013 at 3:09 am
I wonder if The United States were sold to the Rothschilds in 1863 is the explanation for the queen knighting, from time to time, American citizens, such as Sir Alan Greenspan?


Daniele PaceJune 26, 2015 at 12:05 pm
Prof Giacinto Auriti gave the answer to the 5 question of Ezra Pound theorising the Popular Ownwership of Money. He has a great reputation in Italy. You can find more here or ask for the books !

http://danielepacebloguk.blogspot.co.uk/2015/06/the-importance-of-auriti-and-of-legal.html


SRPNovember 24, 2020 at 8:36 am
As for the strategy of devaluing money in order to encourage spending and discourage hoarding: It seems to me that inflation itself serves this purpose. The stamp-system as described above by Pound, is obviously unworkable as 99% of money today and tomorrow is both earned and spent electronically.

I think that originating money only upon performance of labor is key. And discouraging hoarding by some means (such as by deliberate controlled inflation). But where is big capital obtained if no hoarding allowed? And how is the lending of capital incentivized if interest is prohibited? Would the State be the only lender?

And where does the State get money except by taxation? Does the State own certain profitable industries and obtain revenue from these rather than taxation?

https://counter-currents.com/

Friday, March 6, 2026

From Morality to Mental Health

 


Preface

The therapeutic trend in ethics is the tendency to approach moral matters in terms of mental health, for example by pathologizing vices (alcoholism as a disease), psychologizing virtues (self-respect as self-esteem), and liberalizing attitudes (sex as good, guilt as suspect). The trend unfolded throughout the twentieth-century, although its roots extend to Plato and the Stoics. At its worst, the trend is a confused and dangerous attempt to replace morality with therapy. At its best, the trend integrates moral and therapeutic understanding to yield creative solutions to otherwise intractable problems. In this book I develop an integrated, moral-therapeutic perspective centered on three themes: (1) sound morality is healthy; (2) we are responsible for our health; (3) moral values are embedded in mental health and psychotherapy.

Part I connects Plato’s virtue-oriented ethics with psychiatrists’ definition of mental disorders. It also explores Freud’s and Nietzsche’s therapeutic critiques of sick forms of morality. I show how moral virtues overlap and interweave with the criteria for positive mental health—that is, psychological well-being in addition to the absence of mental disorders. Here, as throughout the book, I reject any general dichotomy between moral and therapeutic attitudes.

Part II develops a conception of responsibility for mental health and applies it both to therapist-client relationships and to moral accountability within society. I take seriously the criticism that the therapeutic trend in ethics fosters evasion of responsibility, but I recast the criticism as a caution rather than a basis for opposing the trend. I also respond to the concern that responsibility for mental health leads to blaming victims of mental illness.

Part III discusses responsibilities for health in connection with alcoholism, pathological gambling, serious crime, unjustified violence, and visceral bigotry.

In each instance, I make sense of how the same pattern of conduct can be both wrongdoing and sickness. The aim is to show why expansive definitions of mental disorders do not provide automatic excuses for harming others.

Part IV shifts the focus to positive health and personal meaning. I explore the confluence of morality and mental health in pursuing meaningful lives.

Topics include depression, self-deception, and philosophical counseling, as well as love, work, and philanthropy.
*******

Self-deception and hope

Ever since Socrates pronounced the unexamined life not worth living, ethicists have linked meaningful life and honesty with oneself.1Similarly, therapists regard honesty with oneself as integral to healing, and they regard contact with reality as a criterion for positive mental health.
Some recent psychologists, however, suggest that self-deception and unrealistic optimism might be good for us. I agree with them that self-deception sometimes contributes to hope and love, and thereby to meaningful life and healthy functioning. It does so in a limited way, however, and not to the extent that justifies abandoning contact with reality as a criterion for mental health. Even when self-deception advances psychological health, there is no fundamental clash between therapy and morality, for all the values involved—hope, love, and honesty—are both moral and therapeutic values that are sometimes in tension.

By reaffirming truthfulness within a moral-therapeutic perspective, morality and mental health once again emerge as interwoven.

Vital Lies

‘‘The life-lie, don’t you see—that’s the animating principle of life,’’ proclaims Dr. Relling in Ibsen’s The Wild Duck.2Life lies, or vital lies, are self-deceiving beliefs based on unfounded optimism, unwarranted hopes, and rationalizations about our failures. We rely on them in order to cope and to maintain happiness and health:

‘‘Deprive the average man of his vital lie, and you’ve robbed him of happiness as well.’’3 Dr. Relling fosters inflated self-images in his patients. In particular, he encourages Hjalmar Ekdal to believe he is on the verge of a revolutionary dis-covery in photographic technology, when actually he is tinkering with a bunch of useless gadgets. Ekdal is a cooperative patient who is already prone to self-deception. He believes he is the sole provider for his family, yet his wife balances their household budget by relying on large subsidies from the former business partner of Ekdal’s father. Ekdal also assumes he is the father of Hedvig, his greatest joy, when in fact she is the offspring of the former business partner.

The son of the former business partner, Gregers Werle, calls for complete honesty and encourages Ekdal to abandon his illusions about work and family. Yet Werle’s moralizing is self-righteous and neurotic, motivated by unconscious hatred of his father and shame at his extramarital affair and illegitimate child. When Ekdal learns that Hedvig is not his biological daughter, he immediately becomes estranged from her. Feeling disowned by the father she adores, the emotionally fragile Hedwig sinks into depression and kills herself. At least in this instance, honesty is apparently self-destructive, undermines love, and has dubious motives.
Most of us do not need a Dr. Relling to prescribe our vital lies. As self-deceivers, we have ample resources within. Like Ekdal, we need reinforcement from family and friends, but usually they are willing to indulge illusions that keep us buoyant with optimism—assuming we reciprocate. Beyond these social dimensions of self-deception, what mental activities and states are involved in deceiving ourselves? The question has generated a substantial literature in philosophy and psychology.4 The central issue is whether the paradigm, gar-den-variety, cases of self-deception involve purposeful evasion of truth. Or do they instead consist entirely of motivated irrationality—biased beliefs that are false and contrary to the evidence? I believe both kinds of self-deception exist and are commonplace.

To begin with motivated irrationality, we are all familiar with how biases, such as self-esteem and happiness, filter what we see and think. Thinking along these lines, Stanley Paluch concludes that ‘‘self-deception’’ is a metaphor for false and unsupported beliefs formed by biased assessments of evidence.5 More recently, Alfred Mele says that self-deception consists in forming false beliefs that go against the evidence, and doing so under the influence of a biasing desire or emotion.6 There is no intention to evade reality or to embrace a falsehood.

Suppose, for example, my physician informs me that I have a fatal and untreatable cancer, giving me six months to live. My doctor is well-qualified, and a second opinion confirms her diagnosis; on balance, I have every reason to believe my chances are slim. Yet, hoping against hope, I believe I will beat the odds. My belief is influenced by a desire to live and a fear of dying, but there are various possibilities. One possibility is honest hope, whereby I struggle to believe I will survive even though I am painfully aware of the evidence to the contrary. The other possibility is motivated irrationality, in which I downplay the contrary evidence (‘‘What do doctors know, anyhow?’’[that's very good question VB]) and highlight positive evidence. Self-deception occurs when I lose my grasp of what the evidence indicates.

I believe there is another possibility, however: purposeful evasion. Paluch and Mele reject this possibility because they believe it involves modeling self-deception on lying to other people, which generates two paradoxes. First, when I lie to another person, I know (or believe) something unpleasant and get the other person to believe the opposite. By analogy, when I lie to myself it seems I know (or believe) one thing and simultaneously get myself to believe the self-deception and hope opposite. But that seems impossible, for my knowledge would prevent me from acquiring the false belief. Freud offers one solution to this paradox: the unpleasant belief is kept unconscious, and the opposing belief is held consciously.

A different solution is that the unpleasant knowledge is held at a less-explicit level of consciousness and ignored.7 I believe self-deception can involve either unconscious beliefs or disregarded beliefs. Most purposeful evasion, however, does not involve self-contradictory beliefs at all, but instead one belief formed by evading unwanted evidence or its implications.

Turning to the second paradox, when I lie to another person I intend to mislead them. By analogy, when I lie to myself it seems I must be aware of an unpleasant truth and use that awareness to form an intention to flee the truth. But that is a psychological impossibility, except perhaps in cases of dissociative identity disorder (multiple personality). Here the solution is to specify that my intention is to evade a reality and its evidence, rather than (a muddled) intention to believe what I know is false. In addition, the intention is formed and acted on spontaneously rather than self-reflectively. As a self-deceiver, typically I have some suspicion of an unpleasant reality and use the suspicion to ignore the reality, discounting evidence contrary to what I want to believe.8 Selective attention, willful ignorance, and distorted use of evidence suffice to explain purposeful self-deception, without postulating a conscious intention to believe what I know is false. As Herbert Fingarette writes: ‘‘The crux of the matter . . . is that we can take account of something without necessarily focusing our attention on it. That is, we can recognize it, and respond to it, without directing our attention to what we are doing, and our response can be intelligently adaptive rather than merely a reflex or habit automatism.’’9 For example, we write on a computer without thinking about the specific motions of our fingers across a keyboard, and we drive a car while taking account of many details in the environment without attending to them, much less attending to our patterns of attention. Similarly, in self-deception we take account of unpleasant truths and evidence without attending to them. We do so as part of ‘‘a purposeful and skillfully pursued policy’’ in which typically we ‘‘secretly do know’’ or suspect the unpleasant truths and evidence.10 To sum up, self-deception includes both purposeful evasion and motivated irrationality. Both kinds might be involved in the same case, and often are. And both kinds are relevant to understanding the interplay of honesty and hope, as well as morality and mental health.

Healthy Self-Deception: Honesty versus Health?

Some recent psychological studies echo Ibsen’s insight that self-deception con-tributes to vitality and happiness.11 For example, an anthology of essays adopts the theme that ‘‘self-deception is a normal and generally positive force in human behavior.’’12 Again, Jonathon Brown cites an extensive body of psychological studies, including his own, showing that healthy, well-adjusted individuals healthy morality and meaningful lives ‘‘possess unrealistically positive views of themselves.’’13 And in Positive Illusions: Creative Self-Deception and the Healthy Mind, Shelley E. Taylor argues that ‘‘unrealistic optimism’’ promotes mental and physical health: ‘‘Normal human thought and perception is marked not by accuracy but by positive self-enhancing illusions about the self, the world, and the future.’’14 I focus on Taylor’s book because, by presenting the experimental literature to a wide audience, it enters into the therapeutic trend. Because she avoids moral language, she does not explicitly affirm mental health over honesty, but clearly she implies as much. Taylor groups healthy ‘‘positive illusions’’ under four headings: egocentricity, illusions of control, illusions of progress, and self-fulfilling beliefs.

Egocentricity. We are heroes in our own dramas, interpreting the world through a subjective lens. In doing so, we cast our actions, talents, achievements, and prospects in a favorable light in order to maintain self-esteem, hope, and happiness. We selectively ignore unpleasant evidence that goes against what we want to believe about ourselves. Failures and setbacks are conveniently forgotten, and painful events are affirmed as positive learning experiences.

Illusions of Control. Typically we exaggerate the control we have in our lives, thereby manifesting unrealistic optimism about the role of chance and external influences. Most gamblers, for example, think they can beat the odds and that they have skills in areas where pure luck dictates the outcome. They roll the dice gently when they want low numbers and more vigorously when want high numbers. Again, most drivers—about 90 percent in one study—believe they are above average in skill, including drivers who have caused major accidents. And we blame victims of all kinds by holding false stereotypes about them, thereby creating the illusion that we are protected against dangers because we are more careful than them.

Illusions of Progress. Most of us are optimistic about progress in our lives (as distinct from progress in the world). For example, in a study of college students enrolled in a special program that promised increased study skills and better grades, students reported dramatic improvements. Even when they failed a test they would reinterpret the failure as progress in learning how to do better next time. In fact, no differences in results were found between students enrolled and not enrolled in the program.

Self-Fulfilling Beliefs. Belief in the prospects of achieving a specific goal tends to bring about favorable results by strengthening motivation and bolstering hope. A familiar example is the placebo effect, which is any positive therapeutic impact due to patients’ beliefs about medical procedures. This includes sugar pills given to patients who believe they are taking an active drug, and it includes beliefs in the effectiveness of health professionals and their institutions. The extent of placebo effects is controversial, but many researchers believe it affects about a third of us. Positive beliefs and attitudes also encourage others to support our efforts.

Citing a wealth of studies in the preceding areas, Taylor concludes that self-deceptive positive illusions are healthy: ‘‘Increasingly, we must view the self-deception and hope  psychologically healthy person not as someone who sees things as they are but as someone who sees things as he or she would like them to be.’’ The mentally healthy person has a positive self-image and abilities to be happy, to care about others, to work productively, and to continue to grow.15

Taylor vastly overstates her case. She does so because she equivocates between two senses of ‘‘positive illusions’’: unproven beliefs and irrational beliefs.16 Unproven beliefs are beliefs not shown to be true by the evidence, and which might be true or false. Using this sense, Taylor defends optimism: unproven positive beliefs in the form of hope, faith, and optimism promote mental health. This is an important insight, but hardly revolutionary. Common sense tells us that positive attitudes promote our ability to maintain self-esteem and to cope with work, personal relationships, and ambitious projects. Irrational beliefs, in contrast, are false beliefs contrary to the available evidence. In using this sense, Taylor successfully defends only some, not most, self-deception as healthy because it promotes hope, coping, and self-esteem. For example, she claims that irrational, self-deceiving beliefs are ‘‘normal’’ because most of us believe we are above average at everyday tasks such as driving.17 In fact, these studies merely show that unproven beliefs are ubiquitous. Drivers who hold unwarranted beliefs are not necessarily evading evidence about their rankings as drivers, for they are not provided with such evidence. The drivers value (affirm) their driving skills, endeavors, and future prospects, without having hard data about how to accurately evaluate (rank) them.

Sometimes Taylor says that positive illusions are false beliefs, but other times she suggests they can simply be unproven beliefs that cast reality in a positive light.18 Now, there is no basis for counting all unproven beliefs illusions— ’’unproven’’ does not mean ‘‘proven false.’’ Why, then, did Taylor count unproven beliefs, whether true or false, as illusions? I suspect she borrowed the deviant usage from Freud’s Future of an Illusion. Freud writes: ‘‘What is characteristic of illusions is that they are derived from human wishes. . . . Illusions need not necessarily be false—that is to say, unrealizable or in contradiction to reality.’’19 Freud’s odd notion that illusions can be true contributed to the polemical tone of his book in denigrating religion. In turn, by conflating unproven and false beliefs, Taylor greatly exaggerates the health benefits of self-deception.

Truthfulness and Mental Health The tendency to perceive accurately and to maintain justified beliefs is a traditional criterion for mental health, as we saw in chapter 2. The criterion is embedded in Freud’s ‘‘reality principle,’’ the norm of living in tune with reality. It is equally central to cognitive psychologists’ emphasis on realistic cognition. And Marie Jahoda assumed that ‘‘as a rule, the perception of reality is called mentally healthy when what the individual sees corresponds to what is actually there.’’20 In explaining the caveat ‘‘as a rule,’’ however, Jahoda emphasized the healthy morality and meaningful lives plurality of reasonable interpretations of the world. Equally important, she said mental health requires only ‘‘relative freedom’’ from distortion by our desires, together with a disposition to test reality to check whether it conforms to our wishes. Likewise, Taylor’s arguments should lead us to qualify, not abandon, truthfulness as a criterion for mental health.

Although Taylor’s main interest is in positive mental health, she devotes a chapter to psychopathology, focusing on pathological depression and mania. Mild depression and low self-esteem involve fewer positive illusions and more accurate beliefs than healthy states, an idea called ‘‘depressive realism.’’ Taylor suggests that therapy should encourage positive illusions.21 Once again, however, her suggestion is marred by ambiguity. Is she saying that the absence of self-deceptive beliefs contributes to depression, so that therapists should encourage self-deception in their clients? Or is she saying that the absence of unproven positive beliefs contributes to depression, so that therapists should encourage hope? The first claim is a Dr. Relling–like prescription for untruthfulness; the second claim is a morally responsible endorsement of honest hope.

Depression involves loss of caring about ourselves and our world. Depression is primarily a diminished valuing of ourselves, other people, relationships, activities, and life itself, regardless of whether it involves unwarranted evaluation. Accordingly, when therapists cure depression they are not encouraging untruthfulness. They are helping patients value themselves and their world by restoring honest hope, faith, and caring.

Taylor discusses mania more briefly, again focusing on mild cases. Mania is rarer than depression, and usually it is connected with bipolar disorder (manic depression). Mania interests Taylor as the exaggeration of normal positive il-lusions. Frequently, it contributes to the work of the creative artist, the daring leader, and the religious innovator. In discussing these ideas, she again fails to distinguish unwarranted evaluations from positive valuing. Either might be involved, of course, but blurring them exaggerates the contribution of self-deception to creativity. And by stipulating that mania is an excessive illusion that differs from ‘‘milder’’ positive illusions, she neglects how self-deception sometimes contributes to psychopathology.

Moving to more serious disorders, a few writers believe self-deception enters into psychosis, but for the most part self-deception is a different phenomenon than involuntary hallucinations, psychotic delusions, and other complete breaks with reality. Even so, there are continuities, not absolute differences, between psychosis and ordinary self-deception. Families immersed in untruthfulness breed pathology.22 Self-deception also plays a role in personality disorders, such as narcissistic and histrionic disorders defined by grandiose views of one’s talents, worth, and entitlement.

Addictions provide a more straightforward example of how self-deception contributes to pathology. Indeed, Alcoholics Anonymous portrays alcoholism as the disease of denial. And addiction specialist Abraham J. Twerski exposes the rationalizations used to maintain optimism about how much one drinks (‘‘I am self-deception and hope a social drinker’’), about the degree of one’s self-control over the addiction (‘‘I can stop at any time’’), and about the desirability of using drugs (‘‘They help me cope and cause minor problems at most’’).23 Addicts might also deceive themselves about their diminished self-respect and gradually lose a sense of who they are.24 Self-deception also enters into the neuroses, understood as the result of psychological defense against anxiety, although defense can also serve healthy ends.25 Thus, defense might undergird an artist’s fanatical devotion to her work, but only in the workaholic might pathology be involved. Psychological defense is often interpreted as self-deception, even though Freud rarely used the term ‘‘self-deception.’’26 Yet, psychological defense can be understood in two ways, paralleling the two varieties of self-deception. Sometimes Freud described repression, denial, projection, and other defense mechanisms as motivated biases that operate unconsciously and without any activity by the person. Other times he described psychological defense as purposeful and intentional activities.

Most likely, he thought defense might involve either or both. Moreover, defense ranges from activities that are partly conscious and preconscious (available to consciousness) to processes below the level of mental contents available to consciousness without special help from a therapist.27 Either way, removing repression can lead to both more realistic cognition and better coping.28 Finally, pathological self-deception is not an automatic excuse for wrong-doing. When we have, or should have, good reason to believe that unconscious motives are distorting moral understanding, we are obligated to take special precautions to ensure that we are meeting our responsibilities.29 Unconscious motivations are not automatically excuses, and they often lead to culpable negligence. The same is true of self-deception involving conscious activities. Here again, the therapeutic trend does not replace morality but instead integrates it with therapeutic understanding.

Moral Values in Tension If self-deception were always dishonest, then Taylor’s psychological studies would support a morality-therapy dichotomy: honesty condemns self-deception; health celebrates self-deception. Some philosophers do in fact condemn all self-deception as dishonest. Kant wrote: ‘‘By a lie a man makes himself contemptible—by an outer lie, in the eyes of others; by an inner lie [i.e., self-deception], in his own eyes, which is still worse—and violates the dignity of humanity in his own person.’’30 Jean-Paul Sartre condemned all self-deceivers as cowards and scum.31 And Daniel A. Putman says that ‘‘self-deception always works to destroy a fundamental virtue, integrity. Self-deception isolates part of the self and prevents that part from being integrated into consciousness.’’32

These absolute condemnations are too extreme, however, for not all self-deception is immoral. Despite its enormous importance, honesty is one virtue and one obligation among others, and it is not paramount in all situations. Thus, an instance of self-deception might be untruthful and yet justified by other moral values that promote meaningful lives—for example, hope and faith, self-esteem and self-respect, and love and friendship. Hence, the therapeutic contributions of some self-deception do not threaten morality in its entirety. To return to an earlier example, suppose I am a self-deceiving cancer patient who distorts the evidence about my condition. Untruthful, yes, but the self-deception might be embedded in a pattern of other virtues. Faced with great danger, including the danger of collapsing from fear, I might be courageous in keeping hope alive.33 Doing so manifests self-respect in trying not to fall apart, in struggling to carry on with dignity, integrity, and self-respect. It also helps my family cope with a difficult situation. Honesty and hope are sometimes in tension, but they are connected within a complex web of virtues.34 Not surprising, the occasional tension between honesty and hope parallels tensions between realistic cognition and coping as criteria for mental health. On the one hand, truthfulness and healthy cognition largely overlap; indeed, truthfulness is the primary moral ideal guiding realistic cognition. By definition, truthful persons care about truth: they try to perceive accurately, reason cogently, respond rationally to evidence, and expand understanding in light of new information. On the other hand, truthful persons need hope and mental health. Hope overlaps with healthy coping, social adaptation, and self-esteem.

Because moral values are embedded in mental health, we might expect wide congruence between healthy and morally permissible self-deception.

Finally, an instance of self-deception might be healthy in one respect, by contributing vitality or happiness, but unhealthy in other respects, by distorting reality. Perhaps that is true of Hjalmar Ekdal. This complexity parallels the moral complexity of self-deception. Hope, in many (though not all) forms, is just as much a moral value as honesty, and the tensions between them are as much moral as therapeutic.
To conclude, I have suggested that moral and therapeutic values are not inherently at loggerheads with regard to honesty, hope, and self-deception. The complexity revealed by therapeutic perspectives parallels and is interwoven with the complexity within morality itself. Self-deception, both motivated irratio-nality and purposeful evasion, does sometimes advance mental health, but it also advances moral values such as hope and love. Even so, self-deception is less beneficial than suggested by Taylor and others who conflate unproven beliefs and irrational beliefs, and frequently it is linked to unhealthy evasions of reality. And the tensions between honesty and hope reveal tensions internal to morality and mental health alike, not a basis for a morality-therapy dichotomy.

From Morality to Mental Health:
Virtue and Vice in a Therapeutic Culture
Mike W. Martin

Thursday, March 5, 2026

The Child Support Scam

 


We interviewed today's most knowledgeable young authority on the child support enforcement system, who confirms a recent report in the Wall Street Journal alleging extensive corruption.
 
Recently, I gave this interview to Bai Macfarlane of Mary’s Advocates, one of the best groups fighting no-fault divorce. We devoted attention to the shocking dereliction of duty by the churches – both Catholic and others – to fulfill their calling and confront the divorce regime.

Please go to this interview, “like” and comment. Both Bai and Mary’s Advocates deserve more attention.

Speaking of people who deserve more attention — and connected with my recent post on corruption in the child support system (below) — the latest interview in our new podcast series features Shah (of the “This is Shah” podcast), a top expert:

Even within the Manosphere, ignorance of the child support enforcement machinery is widespread, and many men (and not even necessarily fathers) do not realize how easily they can be imprisoned and made homeless by it — until it happens.

Child support and the feminist gendarmerie that enforces it is government chicanery at its most cynical and proves my contention that feminism today has become little more — and nothing less — than a massive enterprise for putting as many men as possible in prison.

To better understand the importance of Shah’s points, here is a partial list of the horrors that can be inflicted on you by an order to pay child support. All of the following can happen to you regardless of fault and even if you are legally blameless, if you are divorced involuntarily and your spouse deserts you without legal grounds and takes your children:

You will be forced to pay child support at levels that are generous enough not just to raise children but to entice mothers into divorcing.

Any arrearage in child support immediately incurs interest and fees that can quickly increase the arrearage manyfold: 10x or more.

You can be forced to pay additional child support (“add-ons”) for things that are already calculated in the basic child support formula.

Your child support will not be reduced if you lose your job.

Your child support will not be reduced if you are called up for active duty in the reserves, and upon returning you can immediately be arrested for any arrearages incurred while serving. If you are taken hostage or prisoner, you are required to pay child support for the time you are captive.

You can be forced to pay an amount based not on what you earn but on what a judge says you should be earning.

You can be forced to pay child support for children who live with you full time.

Temporary income such as bonuses, severance pay, and overtime pay can be used to lock you into increased child support payments permanently.

You can be ordered to pay an amount of child support that exceeds your income.

You can be forced to pay for your children after they are adults.

You can be forced to pay for children that are not yours.

In some jurisdictions, you can be jailed for proving that the children are not yours.

You can be forced to pay for children that other men are simultaneously paying for.

You can be forced to pay child support for children that do not exist, and it by law it cannot be refunded to you.

If a third party pays your child support for you, that does not count toward your own “obligation,” and you must still pay it. If they give you the money directly, that becomes “income” and can be used to lock you into increased payments.

The income of your relatives (wife, parents, etc.) can be demanded and assessed in determining your level of child support, and it can be seized.

If you take out a loan to pay child support, that loan counts as increased “income” and can be used to increase your payments permanently.

If you are forced to pay too much child support by mistakes made by the enforcement agency, a law prohibits the money from ever being refunded to you.

Your child support can be increased by orders issued by bureaucrats, as well as judges.

A minor boy who is raped by an adult woman can be forced to pay her child support. The same is true of an elderly man raped by a younger woman.

Your grown children can collect child support from you (and the mother if you are still married).

A man who impregnates your wife and then marries her can collect child support from you.

You can be forced to pay child support for your stepchildren.

Your children’s savings can be counted as your income for assessing your level of child support if your name is on their bank account.

Your name can be published in the newspaper, billboards, pizza boxes, etc., your car can be booted, and your passport, driver’s license, and professional licenses can be confiscated – all without any conviction or proof that you have failed to pay child support.

There are many times more child support enforcement agents than drug enforcement agents.

In the US, if you have an arrearage, it is a federal crime to leave your state, even to find work, or even if the mother takes your children to live in a another state.

Your children’s mother can extort additional payments from you, in addition to the legally required payments, in exchange for letting you see your children.

Your employer can reduce your wages, knowing that if you quit you will be subject to arrest for nonpayment of child support. They will also keep you away from anything you might steal.

Child support levels are designed by private collection agencies and set by courts and enforcement agents, not legislatures (i.e., police making laws).

Higher courts rulings that child support enforcement measures are unconstitutional are simply ignored with impunity by enforcement agencies.

If you are incarcerated for nonpayment of child support, you will not likely go to a prison (where you would have access to a clinic, library, recreational facilities, etc.), but instead to a chain gang or labor camp, with a reduced life expectancy.

Upon release you will be unemployable and homeless.

Please listen to Shah explain this totalitarian system. Then “like”, comment, and subscribe.

These points and more are documented in my book, Taken Into Custody: The War Against Fathers, Marriage, and the Family, chapter 3, and other works.

Who Really Stole Your Children?

Your former wife? Lawyers? A judge? Social workers? Think again. The entire US government and your state government are in on it, making a fast buck by snatching your kids and millions of others.

Stephen Baskerville

February 14, 2026

The Wall Street Journal recently admitted that the child support system is part of a massive corrupt government operation. The Journal details multiple instances of corruption throughout the welfare system (and men should be paying attention to welfare policy, dreary as it is, because it was the first bastion of government misandry). But the most corrupt, cynical, and destructive sector of welfare is Child Support Enforcement. The “slush fund” mentioned in the Journal’s headline is provided by your child support payments, plus dollars from all taxpayers, and it funds numerous government operations. It gives government functionaries a vested interest in seizing your children and millions of others, destroying their lives by keeping them away from their fathers as much as possible, and using them as hostages to force their fathers to pay the child support that funds government operations. The corruption is not limited to the welfare machinery itself (as the WSJ implies) or a few crooked officials; it pervades the entire government, state as well as federal and creates the very problem it claims to solve.

I was the first published author to reveal how this dirty system works 20 years ago in my book, Taken Into Custody, and in a scholarly article, “From Welfare State to Police State”, but others were blowing the whistle before me. Now we are vindicated in the mainstream media.

Incidentally, and even more mind-blowing, this also explains the incessant scolding of the tradcons. When sactimonious conservatives urge young men to “man-up”, get married, and start families, it is not just despite the likelihood of losing your children to the divorce machine — along with your income, savings, home, driver’s and professional licenses, and freedom — it enables the machine to take them. When Senator Josh Hawley publishes a book entitled, Manhood, offering men wholesome advice about the joys of family, he may have other motives than the “family values” he claims. As a state Attorney General (a stepping stone to higher office like his Senate seat), Hawley was the official in charge of maximizing revenue from child support collections. Your children, income, and involuntary divorce all helped Attorney General Hawley and his 49 counterparts fill their states’ coffers. (Precisely how is explained in my previous Substack post, Josh Hawley Scolds Us”, below.)

So add child support enforcement to the smorgasbord of techniques available to governments to surreptitiously conjure up (out of our pockets) money they do not have to pay for programs no one wants and benefit constituencies no one likes: taxation, money-printing, inflation — and now bribing mothers to divorce and rip children from their fathers, so that state officials like Josh Hawley can loot their patrimony.

Thanks to Bruce Eden for bringing the WSJ article to my attention.

Josh Hawley Scolds Us
In the supreme act of treachery, Republicans grandstand over the family while endeavoring to destroy it.

Stephen Baskerville

January 25, 2023

Dissident conservatives see Senator Josh Hawley as one of the good guys.  Not a radical Democrat nor a “RINO” Republican, Hawley objected to the certification of Joe Biden’s election in 2020, which he considered stolen, and voted to acquit Donald Trump in both impeachment proceedings, which he called a kangaroo court. 

But if we really want to understand the depravity of American politics, and why it has succumbed to the control of the far Left – and, moreover, if we want to do something constructive about it – then we cannot ignore the subterfuges of politicians like Hawley.   

In an interview with Tucker Carlson, Hawley takes American men to task, telling them to man up, get married, and start a family.  “We need them to go get married, have families, and be responsible husbands and fathers,” he feels the need to tell them.  “This society is impoverished because too many young men are too despairing, are too checked out on social media or porn to be doing what we need them to be doing.”  Wholesome stuff, no doubt.  

Well, no actually.  Hawley’s moralizing reflects the most destructive trend in America today.

Shocking as it may sound, it is no exaggeration to say that Hawley is part of a devious political machine whose aim, in fact, is nothing less than to destroy American families in huge numbers.  It is two-faced politicians like Hawley, more than anything, that enables the machine to accomplish its aims.

Conspiracy theory?  How many times have we heard that lately?  Do we want to understand why the far Left took control of the United States government, or do we want to wag our fingers at the bad guys?  We either accept incontrovertible facts, or we do not.

Of course, the left attacks Hawley, and Aaron Renn has already criticized him from what might be called the thoughtful conservative perspective.  Renn sees Hawley as well-intentioned but misinformed.  I will be less charitable.  More is going on here than meets the eye.  And Hawley is guilty of more than self-righteous grandstanding.

First, Senator Hawley needs to hold his tongue and see to his own responsibilities.  We do not elect US senators to scold us.  We elect them to run the government, and when that government abuses its power, we expect them to correct it.  This case involves perhaps the most evil government machinery ever devised in the United States, but rather than make any effort to fix it, the Senator tries to divert attention from his own complicity and blame, not his fellows from the political class, but ordinary Americans who cannot defend themselves:

Somebody’s got to be honest and tell the truth to these young men. And the truth is that what the porn industry is selling them is a total lie. And the truth is, American society needs them. We need them to step up. …  It’s time to call…young men, to be something more. …  Somebody needs to tell them the truth.

Somebody needs to tell the truth, all right.  But the Senator prefers to wag his finger.  

The truth is that young men fail – actually, they quite deliberately and predictably refuse – to follow this unrequested advice because getting married and starting a family for men can easily become a one-way ticket to jail, poverty, and homelessness.

The moment a man has a child he loses all his constitutional rights.  Because of unilateral and involuntary divorce laws, his children can be taken from him by state functionaries through literally “no fault” of his own.  Without having committed any legal transgression, he can be prohibited from seeing them – ever – on pain of summary incarceration.  His home, bank accounts, and all other assets can be confiscated, also summarily, and he can be forced to pay unlimited amounts – yes, amounts exceeding his salary – as “child support” to the people who have stolen his children.  If he is unable, he is again liable to indefinite incarceration without trial, in which case he will never have a salary again, and he will never escape from the penal system.  If he is falsely accused of “child abuse” or “domestic violence” (standard scams to rationalize separating fathers from their children), he is further liable to being evicted from his home and incarcerated without any semblance of due process of law.  But he will not be jailed forever.  Eventually he will be released onto the streets, where he will remain.

I have provided overwhelming evidence for all this elsewhere.  But proving it is unnecessary, because no one denies it (and comments under the YouTube video fully bear me out).  Like the Senator, the political class simply ignores it.

It gets worse.  Diabolically, government officials like Hawley themselves have financial incentives to tear as many fathers as possible away from their children and make sure they stay away. 

His state, like all states, fills its coffers by collecting “child support.”  To collect it, the government must first separate as many children as possible from their fathers.  This is done by the welfare agencies and family courts, who share the spoils.  So if pesky legislators cut off the money or reduce taxes, child support will still supply plenty of revenue to sprinkle around.  “If the state needs more highway funding,” writes one commentator, accurately, “all they need to do is raise the state’s level of child support and they can spend their resulting welfare incentive increases on highway projects and remain in perfect compliance with the relevant programs funding requirements.”  

Single-parent homes and fatherless children are enormously lucrative for state governments and politicians like Hawley (including Republican ones), incentivizing them to encourage as much divorce and create as many fatherless children as possible.  Ratcheting up child-support awards to extortionate levels has the double effect of increasing the lucrative revenue stream and offering an irresistible bribe to entice single-mothers-to-be into filing for divorce.  For fathers, it has the added effect of sending them straight to jail when they cannot pay the impossible sums.

Would you marry and have children under these circumstances?  Of course not, which is why the men are refusing, and no amount of scolding will persuade them.

Child support enforcement has repeatedly been exposed as a dishonest and destructive bureaucratic boondoggle that creates the very problem it claims to solve by encouraging more fatherless homes with all the social pathologies that ensue.  The system has been plagued with numerous ethical improprieties, conflicts of interest, and scandals, including criminal fraud, as well as for its unconstitutional and authoritarian practices that violate Americans’ constitutional rights.  Advertised as a program to provide for children whose fathers have “abandoned” them, the reality is a system where “a father is forced to finance the filching of his own children.”

It is inconceivable that Hawley does not know all about this.  Like most politicians, he is a lawyer and judicial entrepreneur.  Most important, he is former attorney general of Missouri.  The office of state attorney general is the highest law enforcement official and a steppingstone to higher office.  Famed reporter John Gizzi of Human Events once wrote a scathing article (since taken down) on how this office corrupts both Democrats and Republicans.

Attorneys general oversee the divorce and child support machineries.  Their job is to use the penal system to maximize the revenue that the state receives from tearing children away from their fathers.  A cynic might suspect the Senator of urging more men to marry and have children so that their subsequent involuntary divorces will supply further bounty for Missouri and its functionaries. 

Tucker Carlson normally shows more discernment than this, though if he did probe this abuse forthrightly he would quickly be shown the door by Fox News.

To rub salt a bit further into our wounds, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis is another engineer of the machine.  DeSantis recently signed a breathtakingly dishonest bill that claimed to “restore fatherhood.”  In fact, the law is a throwback to Clinton-era programs that, far from returning children to their fathers, would make sure they stay apart, while subjecting them to feminist-approved psychotherapy to make them more like mothers and, you guessed it, collect more child-support. 

Florida’s legislature approves this because, like every state house in America, it is controlled by lawyers, with a heavy contingent of divorce lawyers from both parties who have no desire to bring the divorce epidemic under control.  Like Missouri, Florida is filling its coffers off the backs of fatherless children.

A more ruthless family-destruction machinery could hardly be devised – replete with the financial payments that co-opt and corrupt potential opposition groups.  It is why – decade after decade – the fatherhood crisis never abates but only worsens.

As always, government programs create the problem they claim to be solving, enriching and “empowering” welfare apparatchiks.  Yet conservative Republicans readily sign on.

Finally, this also provides the model for today’s bureaucratic takeover of the US government.  The far-left insurrections of 2020 were overwhelmingly driven by rebellious, dysfunctional, and fatherless adolescents, who have been effectively raised by the functionaries of the welfare state.  This is every bit as irrational as Covid lockdowns, lethal injections, and avoidable wars in Ukraine, and it probably accounts for them.

With friends like Hawley and DeSantis, the family hardly needs enemies. 

Stephen Baskerville is Professor of Political Studies at the Collegium Intermarium in Warsaw.  He has served on Virginia’s Child Support Guideline Review Panel and is the author of The New Politics of Sex: The Sexual Revolution, Civil Liberties, and the Growth of Government Power (2017), and Taken Into Custody: The War Against Fathers, Marriage, and the Family (2007), where the points in this article are documented. 

If you want to read more analysis that will push you to think “outside the box,” you will find it in my recent book, Who Lost America? Why the United States Went “Communist” — and What to Do about It — available from Amazon.


Stephen Baskerville is Professor of Politics (retired) at the Collegium Intermarium in Warsaw. His books and recent articles are available at www.StephenBaskerville.com.

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More of my work can be found at www.StephenBaskerville.com.

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