December 24, 2010 Mises Daily
Frank Chodorov, Nonvoter [Transcribed from the Libertarian Tradition podcast episode “Frank Chodorov, Non-Voter”] It was 44 years ago this holiday season, on December 28, 1966, that Frank Chodorov died. Chodorov had been born nearly 80 years earlier, on the day after Valentine’s Day, February 15, 1887, on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. He was the youngest child of a pair of Russian Jewish immigrants, who gave him the name Fishel Chodorowsky. But he was the only one of their eleven children to be born in this country, and he seems to have known early on that he was an American who needed an American name. As a child, he rechristened himself “Frank” and shortened his last name to Chodorov. He also showed an unusual enthusiasm for schooling. After spending the customary eight years in the local grammar school, he became one of only 400 students accepted at the first high school to be established in New York City. When he emerged a few years later as one of the 120 students who successfully completed that high school program — you might say in modern terminology that his graduating class had a dropout rate of 70 percent — he moved right on to another program of classes, this time at Columbia College, the heart of what we know today as Columbia University. While there, he became interested in anarchism but was disillusioned by his discovery that
By the time he graduated from Columbia in 1907, Chodorov was no longer an anarchist. Instead, he had decided, he was a poet, like “Shelley and Keats and Byron.” But “I soon realized that my muse was not up to it. Besides, I acquired a wife who needed regular sustenance. Therefore, I turned to teaching as a career; that promised some regularity of income.” From teaching, Chodorov drifted into advertising. During a stint as a copywriter in Chicago, when he was in his late 20s and Woodrow Wilson was in the White House, a friend recommended a book to him and even lent him a copy of it — Progress & Poverty by someone named Henry George. The book impressed him immensely. He read it several times and decided that what it offered was nothing less than the simple, inescapable truth about political economy. But what was he, Frank Chodorov, supposed to do about that? He had a living to make. He had no time in his life for causes, however worthy they might be. So he put Henry George‘s Progress & Poverty on the bookshelf — by now he had his own copy — and went on with his daily routine. Then, one night in the fall of 1936, when he was just a few months short of his 50th birthday, Chodorov stopped in at the Players Club for dinner. There he fell into conversation with “a dignified elderly gentleman [who was] playing pool” — avid conversation, you might call it, one of the most memorable conversations Chodorov had had in his entire life up to that time. The “dignified elderly gentleman” turned out to be the noted journalist and author Albert Jay Nock, another man who had been swept away in his youth by Henry George and had clung to George’s ideas ever since. The two men rapidly became good friends. In fact, during the last decade of Nock’s life, the period when his libertarianism was at its finest, purest pitch, Frank Chodorov may have been his closest friend. He wound up, in the summer of 1945, as executor of Nock’s modest estate. More important for our present purposes, Nock’s influence led Chodorov to walk away from his career in the world of profit-making business and take up a new one in the world of political journalism and nonprofit advocacy work. He launched his new career in 1937, at the Henry George School of Social Science in New York. The school was at that time five years old, having been founded back in 1932, and it needed help of several different kinds. Chodorov advertised and promoted it, raised money to support it, oversaw its operations, taught many of its classes, and edited its monthly magazine, which he founded and named The Freeman in honor of the Georgist weekly edited by his friend Albert Jay Nock back in the early 1920s. Ultimately, Chodorov was ousted from his editorship of The Freeman and from his position as director of the Henry George School because of his unpopular views on World War II. He had warned his readers as early as the fall of 1938 “that no war is justified; that no war benefits the people; … that war destroys liberty,” and after the war was over, nearly a generation after the war was over, in the early 1960s, at a time when that war was well on its way to being remembered fondly as “The Good War” nobly waged by “The Greatest Generation” to save us from the Most Evil Man in Mankind’s History, Adolf Hitler, and the Most Evil Political Movement in Mankind’s History, Nazism — at that point, Chodorov wrote this:
So Frank Chodorov left the Henry George School and its magazine and became editor-in-chief of another monthly called analysis. It was during his years in that job that he became the first editor to publish a promising newcomer, a 23-year-old Columbia University graduate student named Murray Rothbard. From analysis, in the early 1950s, Chodorov moved on to a weekly called Human Events, and from there back to another monthly called The Freeman, this one published by Leonard Read at the Foundation for Economic Education. When he left The Freeman in 1955, he was 68 years old and ready for a break from the constant deadlines that had defined his life for most of the preceding 20 years. He didn’t stop working, though. He wrote his last two books, The Rise & Fall of Society: An Essay on the Economic Forces That Underlie Social Institutions, which was published in 1959, and Out of Step: The Autobiography of an Individualist, which was published in 1962. And in the summers he taught at Robert LeFevre’s Freedom School in Colorado. What did he say in these books? What did he tell his students? Let him answer in his own words. “I should … like to see society organized so that the individual would be free to carry on his ‘pursuit of happiness’ as he sees fit and in accordance with his own capacities,” Chodorov wrote in Out of Step.
Now, the people who have organized society in this way are known collectively as the state. In The Rise & Fall of Society, Chodorov wrote that
In the beginning, he explains in Out of Step, the “gang of people” who later became the state were
This is the state. These people are the state. And Frank Chodorov was very firm about how these people should be treated by self-respecting members of society.
How should you regard a government building?
Above all, you stay away from elections entirely.
The two evils that confront voters in a typical election, Chodorov pointed out, are not really, as they themselves insist, exemplars of opposing principles. For “with principles — that is, moral or philosophic concepts — politics simply has nothing to do, except as convenient slogans in the promotion of its business, which is the acquisition of power.” No politician stands for any principle. No politician even has an opinion of his or her own. “The politician’s opinion is the opinion of his following, and their opinion is shaped by what they believe to be in their own interest.” This is why, in a typical American election, “there is no difference in the political philosophies of the contending candidates.” The only “difference between the candidates is a matter of personality, or between Tweedledee and Tweedledum.”
But
Don’t vote; it only encourages them — that, in essence, was Frank Chodorov’s message. But if we don’t seek to use the vote to steer American society away from the direction in which it has been moving for all these many decades, what do we do instead? For Chodorov, that was a question very easily answered: we put our efforts into education. Jeff Riggenbach is a journalist, author, editor, broadcaster, and educator. A member of the Organization of American Historians and a Senior Fellow at the Randolph Bourne Institute, he has written for such newspapers as The New York Times, USA Today, the Los Angeles Times, and the San Francisco Chronicle; such magazines as Reason, Inquiry, and Liberty; and such websites as LewRockwell.com, AntiWar.com, and RationalReview.com. Drawing on vocal skills he honed in classical and all-news radio in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Houston, Riggenbach has also narrated the audiobook versions of numerous libertarian works, many of them available in Mises Media. Send him mail. See Jeff Riggenbach’s article archives. This article is transcribed from the Libertarian Tradition podcast episode “Frank Chodorov, Non-Voter.” You can subscribe to future articles by Jeff Riggenbach via this RSS feed. |