John Singleton with Bob HowardRip Van Australia (Stanmore: Cassell Australia, 1977), pp. 41-42, under the heading “Compromise”.

The true danger is when liberty is nibbled away, for expedients, and by parts. ~ EDMUND BURKE

Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. ~ BENJAMIN FRANKLIN

One of the peculiarities of people is that while they universally admire men and women of great moral courage (such as Sir Thomas More, Jesus Christ, Joan of Arc, Alexander Solzhenitsyn), they nevertheless worship compromise. Thus, if you speak about moral principles, of doing what’s right rather than what’s popular, you are immediately told to grow up, to be “realistic” or “practical”. In other words, become a pragmatist. Compromise. Be expedient.

On the numerous occasions that we have addressed Liberal Party Branch meetings on the subject of the Workers Party, we have almost invariably been met with the Liberal Party slogan, “Politics is the Art of the Possible.” In other words, if you want to win, moral principles are your worst enemy. Well, the Liberals have won, and it is true that they don’t have any principles.

What they haven’t stopped to consider though is what happens now that they have won. They tell us that once they have the power they can begin to do things — that is the justification for ditching the principles in the first place. After all, what’s the use of principles if you never get a chance to implement them? The only problem with this little scheme is that having gained their cherished office under false pretences, the Liberals have to maintain the false pretence in order to keep the office. And worse, any attempt to regain their principles, or to act in accordance with them, is now far more difficult because, in abandoning their principles, the Liberals forfeited the intellectual ground to their opposition. Thus, they find themselves increasingly trapped by their own contradictions and compromises.

There are three basic rules about the relationship of principles to goals:1

  1. In any conflict between two men (or two groups) who hold the same basic principles, it is the more consistent one who wins.
  2. In any collaboration between two men (or two groups) who hold different basic principles, it is the more evil or irrational one who wins.
  3. When the opposite basic principles are clearly and openly defined, it works to the advantage of the rational side; when they are not clearly defined, but are hidden or evaded, it works to the advantage of the irrational side.

Or, as Ayn Rand states in her novel, Atlas Shrugged:

In any compromise between food and poison, it is only death that can win. In any compromise between good and evil, it is only evil that can profit.2

The truth is these rules has been graphically illustrated in our recent political history. The Liberal/N.C., Labor and Communist Parties at base all hold the same principles. They disagree over matters of degree and detail only. They all believe that the function of the State is to regulate the economy and to provide for the welfare of its citizens. In other words, they all accept the principle of government interference in the economy, and the principle of government welfare activity. But obviously, the Communists agree with a far greater degree of both than either the Labor or Liberal/N.C. Parties. Similarly, Labor wants a greater degree of both than the Liberal/N.C. Parties.

The alternative principle of course, is not less government activity in these areas of welfare and deregulation, but no government activity. Less concedes the principle and haggles over the degree. No rejects the principle and all degrees. With this in mind, look at the progress of events in Australia over the past twenty-five years.

The Liberal/N.C. Parties have achieved a steady record of retreat and defeat, even though for most of that time they held their cherished office. Where, indeed, are all those marvelous things they assured us they would do, really, when they were in office? If, in a few years time, their contradictions (Malcolm Fraser notwithstanding) finally sink them, and the State3 is totally supreme, who will say they have acted “realistically”? It is then that, no matter how scrupulously the Liberals may attempt to avoid it, they will finally have to realise that the “idealists” they now so roundly condemn were in fact the true “realists”. But, being realistic, the realisation will probably come too late.

Footnotes
  1. See Ayn Rand, Capitalism. The Unknown Ideal. Signet Book by New American Library, New York, N.Y., 1967, p. 145.
  2. Ibid, p. 149.
  3. It should be pointed out that for the most part none of the Parties — Communist, Labor, or Liberal/N.C. — fully realise exactly what it is they are going to get. In a sense, they are all blind to the implications of their policies, but nature is relentlessly logical and will drive the policies to their final conclusion unless they are changed, in principle, at the base.