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Imagining
John Lennon's Utopia
By Byron Matthews
John
Lennon, a famously prolific songwriter, today is most remembered
for his 1971 utopian anthem, "Imagine". The song appeared
as the title track on Lennon's second post-Beatles album, and it
represents the pop icon's deepest musical foray into the realm of
political and economic philosophy. Just how strongly Lennon is identified
with the song is suggested by the title chosen for his 1988 film
portrait, Imagine: John Lennon. Then there was the 2000 release
Gimme Some Truth – The Making of John Lennon's "Imagine",
which included scenes from an earlier film by Lennon and wife Yoko
Ono, entitled – you guessed it – Imagine. The unpopular
War in Viet Nam made the song an immediate hit, and it remains the
best-loved number in the pacifist hymnal more than thirty years
later. It's a good bet that more candles and Bic lighters have been
waved in the air to "Imagine" than to all else combined,
"Kumbaya" included. In the plaintive voice of the since
tragically murdered Lennon, "Imagine" can carry an emotional
punch, especially when experienced as the reverent keening of a
solemn nighttime gathering of believers in the dream. In the midst
of so much hopeful sincerity, even an inveterate cynic could find
himself fumbling for his Bic somewhere in the second verse. But
what, exactly, was Lennon asking us to imagine? The answer leaves
no doubt that Lennon should have stuck to singing about yellow submarines.
A
sort of musical What Is To Be Done?, "Imagine" is Lennon's
prescription for dragging ourselves out of the bloody trenches of
war, at long last to "live as one" in the Brotherhood
of Man. The secret is to get rid of the three things that have been
putting us at each other's throats: religion, countries, and possessions.
(How Lennon missed using "A Modest Proposal" as a prankish
subtitle remains a mystery to this day.) A website devoted to John
Lennon and "Imagine" once asked readers what they thought
the song was about. Not exactly a stumper, the answers were about
what you'd predict, only with worse spelling. But someone posted
this Socratic bucket of cold water: "Are these lyrics not the
promise made by communism?" Hmm. Maybe it's time for a dry-eyed
look at Lennon's program. Do history and everyday experience suggest
that abolishing religion, nations, and private property is the road
to a world of peace and plenty? Or did Lennon actually write a prescription
for political oppression and economic failure, for a society opposite
in every important respect from the enticing vision he intended
to promote?
"Imagine" envisions a world made more peaceful, first,
by the disappearance of religion, an old idea that may have gained
new resonance on September 11, 2001. Besides such excesses of what
Gibbon drolly referred to as "enthusiasm", religion has
frequently shown a willingness to support an unsavory status quo,
often at the side of unappetizing allies. It is seems fair to concede
that if fanaticism and reaction were religion's sole products,
few would hesitate to join Lennon in his wish to see it gone. But
religion may have other effects worth considering before it's
tossed over the side. For example, it's often claimed that
people commonly have a need to invest themselves in some transcendent
purpose, with religion providing a relatively benign outlet. Better
to sing "Amazing Grace" in church than the "Horst
Wessel Song" at a torchlight rally, the argument goes. But
Quakerism does not exhaust the range of religious possibilities,
so without consideration of, say, Jihadist Islam, the argument falls
a bit short. There are other ways, though, that religion may resist
the demise of liberal democracy and the development of oppressive
rule.
For
one thing, religion can present a barrier, or at least a hurdle,
to moral opportunism. Absolute political power requires the flexibility
to redefine good and evil according to the needs of the moment.
Lenin said that "morality for us is subordinated to the interests
of the class struggle", but religion inconveniently resists
the claim that good ends should trump any ethical concern about
means. As hypocritical or servile as religion can be in the short
term, its moral stance, being based in traditional texts and teachings,
can be stretched and twisted only so far. The Vatican of the 1930s
could avert its eyes, but it could never have proclaimed the slaughter
of European Jewry to be a moral act. Quips about eggs and omelets
could not have led religious leaders to support Stalin's starvation
murder of Ukrainian "kulaks".
Religion
may also challenge oppressive government simply by virtue of its
sheer political existence as a competing center of power. A monopoly
of power is prevented when different interests are strong enough
to restrain each other, so that no interest or narrow coalition
can dominate. Its cultural reservoir of traditional authority and
its ability to mobilize the faithful give religion some potent political
resources in the political arena. The Catholic Church's role in
the upheavals in Poland during the 1980s showed how effective those
resources can be against government power. By abolishing religion,
"Imagine" would simply eliminate a potentially critical
source of resistance to the one-party state.
The
possible hazards of eradicating religion may have eluded John Lennon,
but not George Orwell. A nonbeliever known for his low opinion of
the Catholic Church even before the Spanish Civil War, Orwell was
nevertheless critical of intellectuals who had sought, largely successfully
he believed, to debunk religion. The problem was that they had not
thought very hard about what might happen next. Writing in 1940,
with the horrific nature of the Nazi and Soviet regimes no longer
a matter of doubt in most quarters, and nine years before the publication
of his anti-totalitarian novel 1984, Orwell described the enemies
of religion as sawing away at a supporting branch until suddenly
"down we came. But unfortunately there had been a little mistake.
The thing at the bottom was not a bed of roses after all, it was
a cesspool full of barbed wire".
Next, Lennon asked us to set grammar aside and "imagine there's
no countries".
With
religion gone, eliminating nations would leave "nothing to
kill or die for", thus marking the advent of a peaceful world.
This is an astonishingly unrealistic formulation, even for a utopian-pacifist.
Depredation and warfare were a constant condition of tribal and
village life long before nation states existed. Many armed conflicts
occur within nations, not between them, and they are no less brutal
and bloody for that. Our species has always shown remarkable ingenuity
in finding excuses other than religion and nationalism to have at
it. Were those sources of conflict somehow permanently resolved,
the most plausible inference from prehistory onward is that people
would simply find something else to fight about.
But suppose we accept Lennon's invitation to join the dreamers and
imagine that peace would break out once national boundaries were
erased. Who would be running things in this de-nationalized world?
Simpler administrative tasks and responsibilities might devolve
to local communities, but that wouldn't work for administering power
grids and transportation networks. Those functions and many more
would have to be relocated to some overarching political entity.
The image is of a vastly expanded and enhanced European Union, so
exhaustively comprehensive in its planning, coordinating, regulating,
and enforcing that its constituent states, left with nothing important
to do, could be required to wither away. Unavoidably, enormous amounts
of power would be concentrated in distant managerial elites, the
formerly pluralistic and competitive international power structure
replaced by a monolithic one. Historical experience is brutally
clear that such over-centralized power, no matter how well intentioned
to begin with, becomes progressively more oligarchic and oppressive.
"Imagine" is depressingly consistent in its naiveté
about the likely outcomes of its own recommendations.
Finally,
Lennon asked us to imagine a world with no possessions, a world
of sharing where greed has become pointless. Proudhon declared that
property is theft, but "Imagine" never brands ownership
as a criminal act. That's just as well since "Imagine"
was released with the full panoply of copyright protections, and
to this day has not been placed in the public domain to be freely
shared. Lennon might be faulted for missing a perfect opportunity
for the grand gesture, but whether it's fair to brand him a hypocrite
depends on what kinds of possessions he wanted to do away with.
After all, if we take his lyrics literally, having no possessions
would mean not owning your own toothbrush, which we suspect is not
what Lennon was singing about.
By
some coincidence, Lennon's other two targets, religion and countries,
were similarly opposed by Karl Marx, so we could perhaps do worse
than look there for clues about what Lennon had in mind. In their
Manifesto, Marx and Engels wrote that communism "may be summed
up in one sentence: Abolition of private property". But by
"private property" they meant "bourgeois property":
the land, factories, and railroads that were, according to the oxymoron
known as Marxist economics, making a few people rich from other
people's surplus labor. They weren't concerned with personal property
like toothbrushes, things that are simply used or consumed, nor
with the "self-earned" property of an artisan –
like a songwriter's song, which gets Lennon off the hook. Clearly,
the kind of private property "Imagine" wants to abolish
is the bourgeois kind
One
objection to abolishing private property is that economic activity
would become less democratic, less creative, and therefore less
productive. Marx and Engels had nothing but scorn for the claim
that private property is "the groundwork of all personal freedom,
activity, and independence", but they would have a difficult
time maintaining that position today. According to Hernando de Soto
in The Mystery of Capital, the most important source of startup
funds for new U.S. businesses is "a mortgage on the on the
entrepreneur's house", making bourgeois property in the form
of privately owned real estate an independent source of ready credit
for small business projects of every variety. Many of these efforts
are far too risky for an unsecured loan or grant of public funds,
let alone approval by a board of economic planners, yet some prove
to be wildly successful. This source of economic vitality is simply
unavailable where people aren't bourgeois enough to own their homes.
Anyway,
abolishing private property only eliminates certain rights and obligations
with respect to things, not the things themselves. The land, railroads,
and factories would still be sitting there exactly as before. What
would change is where the rights to use, improve, or dispose of
them are held, and Lennon's preference here would almost certainly
be some form of collective ownership. But people today seem no more
eager to turn over their land, for example, than were the peasants
who died by the millions resisting Stalin's collectivization efforts
in the 1930s. The real-world choice always comes down to either
confiscating private property by force or forgetting the whole idea.
"Imagine"
soars safely above devilish details of this sort.
If people could be somehow persuaded to toss their property into
the collective pot, they would find themselves facing questions
of power and control that "Imagine" slides past. Collective
ownership is egalitarian in how title is held, but no organization
can be run successfully by a large group, let alone by the amorphous
general public. As the ownership of an enterprise is diluted, powers
of command and control inevitably must flow to a managerial elite.
When the Soviet Union abolished private property in favor of collective
ownership, the theoretical Dictatorship of the Proletariat, with
its wide and egalitarian distribution of power, never saw the light
of day. Instead, power quickly coalesced in a highly centralized
and oligarchic Dictatorship of the Party, an arrangement Robert
Conquest ironically described as "private ownership of the
state itself", with power concentrated in a ruling bureaucratic
class, or in the case of Stalin, in a single entrepreneur. Meanwhile
the workers, who owned it all in theory, became in practice industrial
serfs, stripped of any hope of organizational independence and even
of their right to strike.
Abolishing
private property has the further effect of eliminating any possibility
of genuine markets. When the state owns everything, it's been pointed
out, any "market” can be no more than an absurd analog
of playing chess against yourself. More than 80 years ago, Ludwig
von Mises persuasively argued that without competitive markets to
establish prices for productive resources, there could be no way
to allocation them rationally among their myriad alternative uses.
Central planning, even in principle, could never be more than sailing
blind without a rudder, with all the inevitability of doom that
implies. Neither Mises nor Lennon lived to see the Soviet system's
final sinking, but we can be sure that one of these two men would
not have been surprised at all.
The unavoidable historical conclusion implied by the events of the
20th Century is that centralizing political and economic power will
culminate in what Max Eastman called "its direct and normal
consequence: the usurpation of power by a tyrant."
Similarly, Martin Malia concludes that the overriding lesson of
the Soviet experiment is that "concentrating both political
and economic power in one set of hand, leads inevitably to monstrous
crimes against the individual and the people at large". As
that was everywhere and without exception the trajectory of what
Hayek disparagingly called "The Great Utopia", it seems
incredible that the events of the last century should have failed
to convey that lesson, at least. Maintaining competing centers of
power at every level, insuring wide participation in the ownership
of private property, and preferring reform to revolutionary destruction
when it comes to traditional institutions all are things that specifically
work against the concentration of government power. None of them,
furthermore, would interfere with any reasonable path to attaining
other progressive or humanitarian goals, including a more peaceful
world. And, unlike what "Imagine" advocates, this approach
does not require us to ignore historical experience, deny everyday
observation, and abandon common sense.
With
"Imagine", John Lennon believed he was showing the way
to a better and more peaceful world. Instead, he succeeded in combining
three supremely bad ideas as main ingredients in a musical recipe
for political and economic disaster. If the goal were to produce
an inexorable destruction of liberal democracy and economic productivity,
it would be hard to improve on Lennon's triple whammy of abolishing
religion, nations, and private property. Compared with the oppressed
and mean existence promised by Lennon's utopia, life in a yellow
submarine seems positively attractive. While we may hope that his
dream of peace will always be widely shared, Lennon's program
for getting there is not one that any thinking person should want
to join.
Communism killed around 100 million people in less than 75 years,
Nazism led to the deaths of another 20 million or so in fewer than
twelve. That grisly record of the wages of absolute power is plain
to see, which makes it the more troubling that so many refuse to
take its lessons seriously, preferring the platitudes and wishful
thinking of utopian reveries like "Imagine" instead. But
good intentions and high ideals can never substitute for thoughtful
skepticism in general and careful analysis of history in particular.
To be fair, John Lennon was, like all of us, a person of his time,
and only 30 years old when "Imagine" was released. Much
has happened and much has been revealed since then, enough that
we should want a better, truer song. Had he lived, perhaps an older,
wiser John Lennon would eventually have provided it. And, who knows,
that new song might even have included the word 'freedom' somewhere
in it.
[Song
lyrics follow below]
"Imagine"
by John Lennon
Imagine
there's no heaven
It's easy if you try
No hell below us
Above us only sky
Imagine all the people
Living for today...
Imagine there's no countries
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion too
Imagine all the people
Living life in peace...
You
may say I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will be as one
Imagine
no possessions
I wonder if you can
No need for greed or hunger
A brotherhood of man
Imagine all the people
Sharing all the world...
You
may say I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will live as one. |