A WIDE VARIETY OF WRITINGS FROM A PROMINENT "OLD RIGHT" MEMBER
Frank Chodorov (1887-1966) was an American member of the "Old Right," a group of libertarian thinkers who were non-interventionist in foreign policy and opposed both the American entry into World War II and the New Deal. In 1937, he became director of the Henry George School of Social Science in New York, until he was terminated in 1942 for his anti-war views.
The essays in this 1980 collection are assembled from his writings in magazines, newpapers, books and pamphlets, and are categorized such as Natural Rights and Unnatural Wrongs; Why We Have Socialism; Communism and America; Taxation is Robbery; The International Scene; When War Comes; It's Fun to Fight, etc.
He argues that "in the long run every state collapses, frequently disappears altogether and becomes an archaeological curio." Society collapsed and drew the state down with it. "There is no way for politics to protect itself from politics." (Pg. 79)
He asserts that "The strike, regardless of all rationalization, is an organized attack on life and property. It is a miniature war." (Pg. 184) Furthermore, "every election is a seizure of power." (Pg. 203) The welfare state "is headed for the mothballs... At this writing, the welfare state can be written off." (Pg. 365) The state he identifies as "a number of persons who are up to no good." (Pg. 389)
He admits that "I am not for saving the country. I am not for saving anybody---but myself. That's as much as I feel able to try, and it's the only job of salvation that a fellow can undertake and expect positive results." (Pg. 193)
Not nearly as witty as Mencken, Chodorov's musings are still interesting reading---particularly for anti-statists.