Is the American Declaration of Independence Based on a Lie ? Dear Mr Clark,
I disagree entirely.
The principle of hierarchy, as opposed to equality , has existed as long as civilisation itself. Every major domain of human life activity: the family, religion, education, labour, politics and government, interpersonal relationships has traditionally been structured hierarchically. Almost all successful societies, have, for example, been characterised by patriarchy and parental authority.
I believe it is fair to say that hierarchy ( the existence of which presupposes authority) is, in fact intrinsic to human existence ( i.e. humanbeing, as such). The human mode of being is conspicuously shot through entirely with hierarchy...
In my view it is important here to appreciate that the true opposite of equality is not inequality, but quality.. Culture, for instance is ordered intellectual life; it is a maturing and self-perfecting form which calls for an ever higher grade of personality. Human society, as I say, exists on the basis of quality rather than equality of men... strong natures and weak natures, temperaments and personalities born to lead or not to lead, the creative and the talentless, the honourable and the ignoble, the forthright and the passive, the conscientious and industrious and the lazy and idle, the ambitious and the amotivated.
It is precisely through the creation of ordered, organic hierarchies of interdependent higher and lower levels of authority that human( and animal) societies have -over the countless millenia - efficiently addressed and effectively managed the myriad natural differences in the human substance. But it is essential to bear in mind the process of incremental adjustments that are necessary to achieve this end require 100s and sometimes 1000s of years to hone and refine.
This is precisely why the Enlightenment notions of egalitarian utopism espoused by French thinkers like Diderot, Voltaire, Rousseau and Montesquieu in the 18th century proved such a disaster for humanity when they were ultimately used to ground the kind of political ideology that inspired the Jacobin communist insurrection in Paris that began with the storming of the Bastille in 1789. The dreadful "reign of terror" and senseless blood-letting that followed in the years of 1793 and 1794 were without precedent in the modern era.
I think the horrors of the French revolution served well to demonstrate what happens when centuries of carefully cultivated traditional modes of natural hierarchy and authority are suddenly, recklessly and violently destroyed and replaced with an unnatural ,egalitarian, utopist re-ordering of society.
But the lesson was not learned... In the 20th century, Marxist egalitarian ideology gave rise to a series of monstrous totalitarian regimes, for example: dialectical materialism in the former Soviet Union under Stalin, Mao Zedong's equalitarian "Cultural Revolution" in Red China, Pol Pot's primitive attempt to establish a radical, agrarian communist utopia in Cambodia in the 1970, etc; that saw literally 100s of millions of human beings ruthlessly slaughtered by their own governments.
Indeed, the Cold War arms race between the West and Communism came to threaten the very existence of humanity itself. Who could ever forget how the entire world was transfixed in terror by the surreal nightmare of impending apocalypse, as the insane, brinkmanship of total thermonuclear global annihilation played out between Jack Kennedy and his Whitehouse advisors in the US and their Soviet adversaries in Nikita Krushchev's Kremlin at the height of the Cuban Missile Crisis in the October of 1962?
These are some of reasons I am so opposed to socialist/communist political ideologies founded on what I would argue is the demonstrably false egalitarian delusion that "all men are created equal". They are not, and if one tries toforce them to be - disaster, devastation, misery and suffering are always the inevitable consequences.
Regards
Dachshund