David Theroux of The Independent Institute responded via email to my recent critical post about his organization’s position on the war. I reproduce below, with David’s permission, the text of his email response. (We have since exchanged additional emails, so I am posting his response in case other readers want to join the discussion.)
In reference to your recent comment about the Independent Institute
on the Chicago Boyz blog, you may be interested in the following new
article from our quarterly journal, THE INDEPENDENT REVIEW (Spring
2004). Here incidentally is the table of contents for this issue of
the journal:
http://www.independent.org/tii/content/pubs/review/current.html“The Republican Road Not Taken: The Foreign-Policy Vision of Robert
A. Taft,” by Michael T. Hayes (Professor of Political Science,
Colgate University):
http://www.independent.org/tii/content/pubs/review/tir84_hayes.htmlAlso for clarification, the proper term to describe the proposal we
have been making for U.S. foreign policy reform is
“non-interventionism”, not “isolationism.” “Isolationism” was a smear
term originally coined by Wilsonians (“liberal-progressive”
interventionists) to denigrate their opponents (constitutional and
otherwise). The Wilsonian tradition is one of government
interventionism both domestically and internationally, a position
that Robert Higgs and other scholars have shown is inseparably linked
by foreign interventionism (warfarism) being the central
public-choice engine that drives domestic statism
(http://www.independent.org/tii/catalog/cat_crisis.html).In contrast to “non-interventionism,” “isolationism” properly defined
requires a “Closed Door” (or autarchic) policy severely restricting
the free flow of people and trade internationally.Most nation states in the world today maintain a foreign policy of
general non-interventionism based on the tradition of international
law, and many also remain strictly neutral in world affairs while
simultaneously pursuing very active trade, travel, cultural, and
other exchanges. Meanwhile, almost alone among nations today, the
U.S. government pursues a deliberate policy of preemptive covert and
overt interventionism, and many scholars now consider such policies a
major cause of economic and political instability and hardship,
upheaval, and terrorism.Attempts by the U.S. or any government to centrally plan and impose
rule over people is exactly what classical liberals and libertarians
have historically opposed. Non-interventionism is the traditional
policy of the U.S. as a republic as described by Washington, Madison,
Jefferson, and other Founders, based on the simple ethical and legal
position that aggression against innocent, peaceful people is wrong
and a rule of law should be applied universally to prohibit it. For
your review, here is a web page with references that seriously
discuss non-interventionism:
http://www.onpower.org/foreign_non_inter.htmlFurther information on our program in this regard can be found via
our Center on Peace & Liberty:
http://www.independent.org/copalPlease advise me with any questions.