|
Marching with Molinari towards Liberty |
Wednesday 15 February 2012
January 28, 2012 was the centennial
anniversary of the death of the Belgian/French free market economist Gustave
de Molinari (1819-1912). In an active career which spanned over 50 years he
fought doggedly against protectionism, statism, militarism, colonialism, and
socialism. In one of his last books published in 1899 he quotes from an essay
he wrote at the height of the 1848 Revolution in which he appeals to the socialist
movement of the day to abandon their use of violence to impose an unworkable
system of socialism on the economy, and to join with him and the other liberals
in pursuing what he calls “the utopia of liberty” which could be achieved with
the opposite means - namely peaceful trade and cooperation. </quote/359>
Molinari appeals to socialists to join him in marching down “the broad, well-trodden
highway of liberty” (1848):
We (both) seek … Justice and Plenty! …Your way lies along the obscure and
hitherto unexplored defile of the organisation of labour, ours down the broad,
well-trodden highway of liberty.
|