Machiavelli is most famous for his book The Prince, which I must admit I have not read yet. But his book Discourses on Livy is an incredibly insightful work. I am only reading it a bit at a time, as I am reading a few things at the moment, but what I have already read is fascinating, insightful and incredibly wise.
For instance, Machiavelli
observes in Discourses that Sparta was able to obtain and then maintain its liberty for centuries, eight centuries in fact, without any serious
disturbances. [i]
This is a remarkable achievement, and something that modern nations like the
United States and Australia are already displaying that they cannot sustain,
because, especially in regards to the United States, no one can say that they
have maintained their liberty for centuries without disturbance. Most astute
observers would note that the US Republic ended in all but name when the Northern
States conquered the Confederate states in the late 1800's. And Australia reverted to a prison colony because of fears about a virus. Whereas Sparta was able to maintain
its liberty for eight hundred years, without a similar disturbance.
How were
they able to maintain this liberty for such an extended period? Well he
explains, in large part, it was because they heavily restricted immigration:
“Sparta, as I have said, being governed by a king and a
limited senate, could maintain itself also for a long time, because there were
but few inhabitants, and strangers were not permitted to come in; besides, the
laws of Lycurgus had obtained such influence that their observance prevented
even the slightest pretext for trouble. It was also the easier for the citizens
to live in union, as Lycurgus had established equality in fortunes and
inequality in conditions; for an equal poverty prevailed there, and the people
were the less ambitious, as the offices of the government were given but to a
few citizens, the people being excluded from them; and the nobles in the exercise
of their functions did not treat the people sufficiently ill to excite in them
the desire of exercising them themselves. This last advantage was due to the
kings of Sparta; for being placed in this government, as it were, between two
orders, and living in the midst of the nobility, they had not better means of
maintaining their authority than to protect the people against all injustice;
when these neither feared nor desired authority, and consequently there was no
motive for any difference between them and the noble, nor any cause for disturbances
between them and the nobles, nor any cause for disturbances’ and this they
could live for a long time united. Two principle causes, however, cemented this
union: first, the inhabitants of Sparta, were few in number, and therefore
could be governed by a few; and the other was, that, by not permitting
strangers to establish themselves in the republic, they had neither opportunity
of becoming corrupt, nor of increasing their population to such a degree that
the burden of government became difficult to the few who were charged with it.”[ii]
By maintaining their original population, their historical laws, and by not allowing strangers or foreigners (which includes other Greeks in this context) a foothold they were able to maintain a stable Spartan society for centuries. Spartans ruled Spartans, and because they had commonly agreed laws and customs, this rule was not resented.
Indeed, Machiavelli notes the Spartan kings ensured their position, by defending their people: "This last advantage was due to the kings of Sparta; for being placed in this government, as it were, between two orders, and living in the midst of the nobility, they had not better means of maintaining their authority than to protect the people against all injustice..." Despite popular assumptions to the contrary, there is a common trend in history of kings being the champions of their people. The Spartan kings are another example of that.
Machiavelli
notes that the modern (in his day in the 15th century) state of
Venice achieved the same kind of stability by granting all of its citizens who were there at its founding the right to participate in government, and by denying
this right to foreigners coming in.[iii]
This protected it from foreign interference which could twist the government to
foreign purposes and against the will of the Venetians, at least in this era.
This is an
incredibly wise rule, and is consistent with the biblical proscription on
allowing foreigners to rule over your nation (Deut. 17:15). It is also consistent with the Biblical laws that forbid recent immigrants from having full rights of citizenship and immigrants from certain places from ever having them (Deut 23:3-8). The Spartans, Venetians, Machiavelli and the Bible all recognised how allowing foreign leadership in your nation undermines its liberty and identity, and made laws to forbid it.
It must be
noted that in this chapter Machiavelli notes that Rome both allowed strangers to
come in, and to have political power, over time, and this helped Rome burn
brighter than either of these other republics. However, this also ensured that Rome
would eventually be lost because foreign immigration, rulership, and influence
meant that Rome turned into something that was not Roman in any meaningful definition of the
term. Indeed, historians call the later stages of the Roman Empire Byzantium
and hardly consider it to be Rome, though the Byzantines referred to themselves
as Roman, and traced their authority back to Rome's legacy.
This being said, history and wise historians have noted that immigration is the death of both liberty and stability. First and foremost, because a people ruled by foreigners is not free, secondly, because foreigners bring their culture and ethnic habits with them, and thirdly, because many people who come from societies which are in many ways more backward than the one they emigrate to still think of their ancestral ways of doing things as superior and begin to agitate for change.
If immigrants become numerous these clamourings will become loud and create divisions in
your society. If they gain political power they will begin to make changes in
keeping with their ancestoral philosophies and as this increases so will divisions and
disturbances increase. We see this occuring across the immigration addicted Western
world today, particularly in the US, but also in other Anglo-Saxon nations.
In fact, the thought provoking show, Yellowstone, weaves this theme into its story line from the perspective of both Native Americans and European Americans in Montana. Both want to live under the rulership of their own people and traditions.
You may not like
hearing this observation from Machiavelli, but history, reason and the current
trajectories of increasingly diverse western nations away from liberty and towards
totalitarianism prove his observation indisputable.
You must choose: immigration or liberty, you can't have both.
List of References
No comments:
Post a Comment