PAPER 71
- DEVELOPMENT OF THE STATE
The state is a useful
evolution of civilization; it represents society's net gain
from the ravages and sufferings of war. Even statecraft is
merely the accumulated technique for adjusting the
competitive contest of force between the struggling tribes
and nations.
The modern state is the
institution which survived in the long struggle for group
power. Superior power eventually prevailed, and it produced
a creature of fact--the state--together with the moral myth
of the absolute obligation of the citizen to live and die
for the state. But the state is not of divine genesis; it
was not even produced by volitionally intelligent human
action; it is purely an evolutionary institution and was
wholly automatic in origin.
1. THE EMBRYONIC
STATE
The state is a territorial
social regulative organization, and the strongest, most
efficient, and enduring state is composed of a single nation
whose people have a common language, mores, and
institutions.
The early states were
small and were all the result of conquest. They did not
originate in voluntary associations. Many were founded by
conquering nomads, who would swoop down on peaceful herders
or settled agriculturists to overpower and enslave them.
Such states, resulting from conquest, were, perforce,
stratified; classes were inevitable, and class struggles
have ever been selective.
The northern tribes of the
American red men never attained real statehood. They never
progressed beyond a loose confederation of tribes, a very
primitive form of state. Their nearest approach was the
Iroquois federation, but this group of six nations never
quite functioned as a state and failed to survive because of
the absence of certain essentials to modern national life,
such as:
1. Acquirement and
inheritance of private property.
2. Cities plus agriculture
and industry.
3. Helpful domestic
animals.
4. Practical family
organization. These red men clung to the mother-family and
nephew inheritance.
5. Definite territory.
6. A strong executive
head.
7. Enslavement of
captives--they either adopted or massacred them.
8. Decisive conquests.
The red men were too
democratic; they had a good government, but it failed.
Eventually they would have evolved a state had they not
prematurely encountered
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the more advanced
civilization of the white man, who was pursuing the
governmental methods of the Greeks and the Romans.
The successful Roman state
was based on:
1. The father-family.
2. Agriculture and the
domestication of animals.
3. Condensation of
population--cities.
4. Private property and
land.
5. Slavery--classes of
citizenship.
6. Conquest and
reorganization of weak and backward peoples.
7. Definite territory with
roads.
8. Personal and strong
rulers.
The great weakness in
Roman civilization, and a factor in the ultimate collapse of
the empire, was the supposed liberal and advanced provision
for the emancipation of the boy at twenty-one and the
unconditional release of the girl so that she was at liberty
to marry a man of her own choosing or to go abroad in the
land to become immoral. The harm to society consisted not in
these reforms themselves but rather in the sudden and
extensive manner of their adoption. The collapse of Rome
indicates what may be expected when a state undergoes too
rapid extension associated with internal degeneration.
The embryonic state was
made possible by the decline of the blood bond in favor of
the territorial, and such tribal federations were usually
firmly cemented by conquest. While a sovereignty that
transcends all minor struggles and group differences is the
characteristic of the true state, still, many classes and
castes persist in the later state organizations as remnants
of the clans and tribes of former days. The later and larger
territorial states had a long and bitter struggle with these
smaller consanguineous clan groups, the tribal government
proving a valuable transition from family to state
authority. During later times many clans grew out of trades
and other industrial associations.
Failure of state
integration results in retrogression to prestate conditions
of governmental techniques, such as the feudalism of the
European Middle Ages. During these dark ages the territorial
state collapsed, and there was a reversion to the small
castle groups, the reappearance of the clan and tribal
stages of development. Similar semistates even now exist in
Asia and Africa, but not all of them are evolutionary
reversions; many are the embryonic nucleuses of states of
the future.
2. THE EVOLUTION
OF REPRESENTATIVE GOVERNMENT
Democracy, while an ideal,
is a product of civilization, not of evolution. Go slowly!
select carefully! for the dangers of democracy are:
1. Glorification of
mediocrity.
2. Choice of base and
ignorant rulers.
3. Failure to recognize
the basic facts of social evolution.
4. Danger of universal
suffrage in the hands of uneducated and indolent majorities.
5. Slavery to public
opinion; the majority is not always right.
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Public opinion, common
opinion, has always delayed society; nevertheless, it is
valuable, for, while retarding social evolution, it does
preserve civilization. Education of public opinion is the
only safe and true method of accelerating civilization;
force is only a temporary expedient, and cultural growth
will increasingly accelerate as bullets give way to ballots.
Public opinion, the mores, is the basic and elemental energy
in social evolution and state development, but to be of
state value it must be nonviolent in expression.
The measure of the advance
of society is directly determined by the degree to which
public opinion can control personal behavior and state
regulation through nonviolent expression. The really
civilized government had arrived when public opinion was
clothed with the powers of personal franchise. Popular
elections may not always decide things rightly, but they
represent the right way even to do a wrong thing. Evolution
does not at once produce superlative perfection but rather
comparative and advancing practical adjustment.
There are ten steps, or
stages, to the evolution of a practical and efficient form
of representative government, and these are:
1. Freedom of the
person. Slavery, serfdom, and all forms of human bondage
must disappear.
2. Freedom of the mind.
Unless a free people are educated--taught to think
intelligently and plan wisely--freedom usually does more
harm than good.
3. The reign of law.
Liberty can be enjoyed only when the will and whims of human
rulers are replaced by legislative enactments in accordance
with accepted fundamental law.
4. Freedom of speech.
Representative government is unthinkable without freedom of
all forms of expression for human aspirations and opinions.
5. Security of
property. No government can long endure if it fails to
provide for the right to enjoy personal property in some
form. Man craves the right to use, control, bestow, sell,
lease, and bequeath his personal property.
6. The right of
petition. Representative government assumes the right of
citizens to be heard. The privilege of petition is inherent
in free citizenship.
7. The right to rule.
It is not enough to be heard; the power of petition must
progress to the actual management of the government.
8. Universal suffrage.
Representative government presupposes an intelligent,
efficient, and universal electorate. The character of such a
government will ever be determined by the character and
caliber of those who compose it. As civilization progresses,
suffrage, while remaining universal for both sexes, will be
effectively modified, regrouped, and otherwise
differentiated.
9. Control of public
servants. No civil government will be serviceable and
effective unless the citizenry possess and use wise
techniques of guiding and controlling officeholders and
public servants.
10. Intelligent and
trained representation. The survival of democracy is
dependent on successful representative government; and that
is conditioned upon the practice of electing to public
offices only those individuals who are technically trained,
intellectually competent, socially loyal, and morally fit.
Only by such provisions can government of the people, by the
people, and for the people be preserved.
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3. THE IDEALS OF
STATEHOOD
The political or
administrative form of a government is of little consequence
provided it affords the essentials of civil
progress--liberty, security, education, and social
co-ordination. It is not what a state is but what it does
that determines the course of social evolution. And after
all, no state can transcend the moral values of its
citizenry as exemplified in their chosen leaders. Ignorance
and selfishness will insure the downfall of even the highest
type of government.
Much as it is to be
regretted, national egotism has been essential to social
survival. The chosen people doctrine has been a prime factor
in tribal welding and nation building right on down to
modern times. But no state can attain ideal levels of
functioning until every form of intolerance is mastered; it
is everlastingly inimical to human progress. And intolerance
is best combated by the co-ordination of science, commerce,
play, and religion.
The ideal state functions
under the impulse of three mighty and co-ordinated drives:
1. Love loyalty derived
from the realization of human brotherhood.
2. Intelligent patriotism
based on wise ideals.
3. Cosmic insight
interpreted in terms of planetary facts, needs, and goals.
The laws of the ideal
state are few in number, and they have passed out of the
negativistic taboo age into the era of the positive progress
of individual liberty consequent upon enhanced self-control.
The exalted state not only compels its citizens to work but
also entices them into profitable and uplifting utilization
of the increasing leisure which results from toil liberation
by the advancing machine age. Leisure must produce as well
as consume.
No society has progressed
very far when it permits idleness or tolerates poverty. But
poverty and dependence can never be eliminated if the
defective and degenerate stocks are freely supported and
permitted to reproduce without restraint.
A moral society should aim
to preserve the self-respect of its citizenry and afford
every normal individual adequate opportunity for
self-realization. Such a plan of social achievement would
yield a cultural society of the highest order. Social
evolution should be encouraged by governmental supervision
which exercises a minimum of regulative control. That state
is best which co-ordinates most while governing least.
The ideals of statehood
must be attained by evolution, by the slow growth of civic
consciousness, the recognition of the obligation and
privilege of social service. At first men assume the burdens
of government as a duty, following the end of the
administration of political spoilsmen, but later on they
seek such ministry as a privilege, as the greatest honor.
The status of any level of civilization is faithfully
portrayed by the caliber of its citizens who volunteer to
accept the responsibilities of statehood.
In a real commonwealth the
business of governing cities and provinces is conducted by
experts and is managed just as are all other forms of
economic and commercial associations of people.
In advanced states,
political service is esteemed as the highest devotion of the
citizenry. The greatest ambition of the wisest and noblest
of citizens is to
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gain civil recognition, to be
elected or appointed to some position of governmental trust,
and such governments confer their highest honors of
recognition for service upon their civil and social
servants. Honors are next bestowed in the order named upon
philosophers, educators, scientists, industrialists, and
militarists. Parents are duly rewarded by the excellency of
their children, and purely religious leaders, being
ambassadors of a spiritual kingdom, receive their real
rewards in another world.
4. PROGRESSIVE
CIVILIZATION
Economics, society, and
government must evolve if they are to remain. Static
conditions on an evolutionary world are indicative of decay;
only those institutions which move forward with the
evolutionary stream persist.
The progressive program of
an expanding civilization embraces:
1. Preservation of
individual liberties.
2. Protection of the home.
3. Promotion of economic
security.
4. Prevention of disease.
5. Compulsory education.
6. Compulsory employment.
7. Profitable utilization
of leisure.
8. Care of the
unfortunate.
9. Race improvement.
10. Promotion of science
and art.
11. Promotion of
philosophy--wisdom.
12. Augmentation of cosmic
insight--spirituality.
And this progress in the
arts of civilization leads directly to the realization of
the highest human and divine goals of mortal endeavor--the
social achievement of the brotherhood of man and the
personal status of God-consciousness, which becomes revealed
in the supreme desire of every individual to do the will of
the Father in heaven.
The appearance of genuine
brotherhood signifies that a social order has arrived in
which all men delight in bearing one another's burdens; they
actually desire to practice the golden rule. But such an
ideal society cannot be realized when either the weak or the
wicked lie in wait to take unfair and unholy advantage of
those who are chiefly actuated by devotion to the service of
truth, beauty, and goodness. In such a situation only one
course is practical: The "golden rulers" may establish a
progressive society in which they live according to their
ideals while maintaining an adequate defense against their
benighted fellows who might seek either to exploit their
pacific predilections or to destroy their advancing
civilization.
Idealism can never survive
on an evolving planet if the idealists in each generation
permit themselves to be exterminated by the baser orders of
humanity. And here is the great test of idealism: Can an
advanced society maintain that military preparedness which
renders it secure from all attack by its war-loving
neighbors without yielding to the temptation to employ this
military
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strength in offensive
operations against other peoples for purposes of selfish
gain or national aggrandizement? National survival demands
preparedness, and religious idealism alone can prevent the
prostitution of preparedness into aggression. Only love,
brotherhood, can prevent the strong from oppressing the
weak.
5. THE EVOLUTION
OF COMPETITION
Competition is essential
to social progress, but competition, unregulated, breeds
violence. In current society, competition is slowly
displacing war in that it determines the individual's place
in industry, as well as decreeing the survival of the
industries themselves. (Murder and war differ in their
status before the mores, murder having been outlawed since
the early days of society, while war has never yet been
outlawed by mankind as a whole.)
The ideal state undertakes
to regulate social conduct only enough to take violence out
of individual competition and to prevent unfairness in
personal initiative. Here is a great problem in statehood:
How can you guarantee peace and quiet in industry, pay the
taxes to support state power, and at the same time prevent
taxation from handicapping industry and keep the state from
becoming parasitical or tyrannical?
Throughout the earlier
ages of any world, competition is essential to progressive
civilization. As the evolution of man progresses,
co-operation becomes increasingly effective. In advanced
civilizations co-operation is more efficient than
competition. Early man is stimulated by competition. Early
evolution is characterized by the survival of the
biologically fit, but later civilizations are the better
promoted by intelligent co-operation, understanding
fraternity, and spiritual brotherhood.
True, competition in
industry is exceedingly wasteful and highly ineffective, but
no attempt to eliminate this economic lost motion should be
countenanced if such adjustments entail even the slightest
abrogation of any of the basic liberties of the individual.
6. THE PROFIT
MOTIVE
Present-day
profit-motivated economics is doomed unless profit motives
can be augmented by service motives. Ruthless competition
based on narrow-minded self-interest is ultimately
destructive of even those things which it seeks to maintain.
Exclusive and self-serving profit motivation is incompatible
with Christian ideals--much more incompatible with the
teachings of Jesus.
In economics, profit
motivation is to service motivation what fear is to love in
religion. But the profit motive must not be suddenly
destroyed or removed; it keeps many otherwise slothful
mortals hard at work. It is not necessary, however, that
this social energy arouser be forever selfish in its
objectives.
The profit motive of
economic activities is altogether base and wholly unworthy
of an advanced order of society; nevertheless, it is an
indispensable factor throughout the earlier phases of
civilization. Profit motivation must not be taken away from
men until they have firmly possessed themselves of superior
types of nonprofit motives for economic striving and social
serving--the transcendent urges of superlative wisdom,
intriguing brotherhood, and excellency of spiritual
attainment.
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7. EDUCATION
The enduring state is
founded on culture, dominated by ideals, and motivated by
service. The purpose of education should be acquirement of
skill, pursuit of wisdom, realization of selfhood, and
attainment of spiritual values.
In the ideal state,
education continues throughout life, and philosophy
sometimes becomes the chief pursuit of its citizens. The
citizens of such a commonwealth pursue wisdom as an
enhancement of insight into the significance of human
relations, the meanings of reality, the nobility of values,
the goals of living, and the glories of cosmic destiny.
Urantians should get a
vision of a new and higher cultural society. Education will
jump to new levels of value with the passing of the purely
profit-motivated system of economics. Education has too long
been localistic, militaristic, ego exalting, and success
seeking; it must eventually become world-wide, idealistic,
self-realizing, and cosmic grasping.
Education recently passed
from the control of the clergy to that of lawyers and
businessmen. Eventually it must be given over to the
philosophers and the scientists. Teachers must be free
beings, real leaders, to the end that philosophy, the search
for wisdom, may become the chief educational pursuit.
Education is the business
of living; it must continue throughout a lifetime so that
mankind may gradually experience the ascending levels of
mortal wisdom, which are:
1. The knowledge of
things.
2. The realization of
meanings.
3. The appreciation of
values.
4. The nobility of
work--duty.
5. The motivation of
goals--morality.
6. The love of
service--character.
7. Cosmic
insight--spiritual discernment.
And then, by means of
these achievements, many will ascend to the mortal ultimate
of mind attainment, God-consciousness.
8. THE CHARACTER
OF STATEHOOD
The only sacred feature of
any human government is the division of statehood into the
three domains of executive, legislative, and judicial
functions. The universe is administered in accordance with
such a plan of segregation of functions and authority. Aside
from this divine concept of effective social regulation or
civil government, it matters little what form of state a
people may elect to have provided the citizenry is ever
progressing toward the goal of augmented self-control and
increased social service. The intellectual keenness,
economic wisdom, social cleverness, and moral stamina of a
people are all faithfully reflected in statehood.
The evolution of statehood
entails progress from level to level, as follows:
1. The creation of a
threefold government of executive, legislative, and judicial
branches.
2. The freedom of social,
political, and religious activities.
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3. The abolition of all forms
of slavery and human bondage.
4. The ability of the
citizenry to control the levying of taxes.
5. The establishment of
universal education--learning extended from the cradle to
the grave.
6. The proper adjustment
between local and national governments.
7. The fostering of
science and the conquest of disease.
8. The due recognition of
sex equality and the co-ordinated functioning of men and
women in the home, school, and church, with specialized
service of women in industry and government.
9. The elimination of
toiling slavery by machine invention and the subsequent
mastery of the machine age.
10. The conquest of
dialects--the triumph of a universal language.
11. The ending of
war--international adjudication of national and racial
differences by continental courts of nations presided over
by a supreme planetary tribunal automatically recruited from
the periodically retiring heads of the continental courts.
The continental courts are authoritative; the world court is
advisory--moral.
12. The world-wide vogue
of the pursuit of wisdom--the exaltation of philosophy. The
evolution of a world religion, which will presage the
entrance of the planet upon the earlier phases of settlement
in light and life.
These are the
prerequisites of progressive government and the earmarks of
ideal statehood. Urantia is far from the realization of
these exalted ideals, but the civilized races have made a
beginning--mankind is on the march toward higher
evolutionary destinies.
[Sponsored by a
Melchizedek of Nebadon.] |