Anarchy, State, and Market Failure “I admire the Amish lifestyle, though I'd probably choke on their theology. But Lord have mercy, they are not hearkening back to a long distant past. My father grew up with horses and buggies among ordinary Iowa farmers, and he died only 13 years ago (granted, he was pretty old when he died). They do live off the land, (they're farmers), they resist modernity, technology, up to a point, and social media probably entirely. But, you know, they consume modern health care services, and they finance health care as a community responsibility. They like to travel--by train, since that fits into their idea of acceptable technology, to their extended connections among the Amish who have spread out across the northern Middle America States. I've chatted with a number of Amish on the train over the years, and they're pretty down to earth people. It's not like talking to someone who just crawled out from under a rock.”
-Bitter Crank
Decent portrayal. I’m happy to stipulate that the “distant” past is stretching it. I didn’t mean to imply that the Amish (et al) are bedfellows with Cro-magnons; rather, just to say they seriously defer to non-modern approaches and applications in their routine affairs.
Yes, their religiosity is as perplexing as it is suffocating; it wouldn’t be so bad were it intellectually, independently, acquired. I might even accept revelation, some spiritual epiphany-speak if you will, but it’s just that their religiosity, like their education in general, appears Pavlovian. It smells and seems cultish. Their script precedes them.
The good news is, they’re harmless. They ain’t the jihadists in search of a Caliphate. They just want to ride horses and buggies, rest quietly in yesterday’s design, and, perhaps, pray silently that the 21st c. scoundrels amongst them keep the state in working order for them to enjoy their tidy Shangri-la.