Prudence, indeed, shall dictate

Of the several threats to freedom, bureaucracy ranks high on the list. So why do prosperous organizations, including entire nations, inevitably strangle themselves by the tentacles of freedom-crippling bureaucracy? 

 

Bureaucracy stems from a desire to formalize virtue. When a particular habit or policy fails to deliver order, the impulse of leaders, especially in a democracy, is to impose bigger and more comprehensive rules to make sure the mistake does not happen again. 

 

Over time, reliance on virtuous people yields to a misguided dependency on virtuous rules, regulations, policies, checks, balances and systematic accountability. This is the essence of bureaucracy. 

 

In bureaucratic cultures, practical judgment and personal virtues are deemphasized.  Praise and appreciation instead accrue to those who follow the rules and who go by the book.

 

From there, the law itself comes to define public morality.  “If it is legal,” bends the logic in a bureaucratic society, “it must be acceptable.”

 

Freedom, however, thrives by prudence, a virtue predicated upon practical reason.  It entails discernment of the true good surrounding every situation and the moral means of achieving it. 

 

Prudence is antithetic to bureaucracy.  It elevates individual responsibility and secures liberty.
 

St. Thomas Aquinas identified various parts of prudence.  He characterized acquired prudence as perfected through the exercise of acts and lessons. 

 

Also, he wrote of gratuitous prudence which is infused and reinforced by virtuous habits, for example, those modeled by good parenting, religion, perhaps schooling.

 

The Founding Fathers believed every man should share in the governing of America according to the free choice of his reason, and that it is proper for all self-governing citizens to possess the virtue of prudence.  Abraham Lincoln spoke persistently about the necessity of prudence.

 

It is a core American virtue about which Americans scarcely speak anymore. Yet, prudence is the most powerful and complete remedy for the disease of bureaucracy. 

 

Prudence promotes freedom which is why we rely on it, and speak often of it at LPR.

5 comments (Add your own)

1. Gregory W. MacPherson wrote:
To update the language slightly, when speaking of prudence we might today instead say "restraint". Restraint apparently is not in the lexicon of elected officials. They consistently have proven this fact by their actions in response to such varied events as terrorist attacks and economic collapses. Instead of providing comfort, confidence, and leadership to the masses, instead elected officials seem to react with knee jerk responses designed to give the appearance of action. History reveals in hindsight that these responses almost always are diametrically opposed to the prudent course of action.

As the Mexican General Santayana said, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it". Sadly, America's elected officials appear to be cursed with exactly this affliction.

America and the rest of the globe are destined to experience a severe economic contraction. However, rather than allow the economy to repair the damage done by years of bad policies and over-regulation, our legislators have decided to step in and fund an enormous social bailout. The net effect of the current programs will be to delay the eventual collapse and to dilute the value of the dollar to the point where outstanding debt held by foreign nations will have negligible value. Sadly, the violence and unrest that we see today in Iceland (of all places) is likely to be copied in other developing countries while the policy makers in the United States continue on blissfully printing more money and denying the economic facts.

Virtuous habits indeed...not!

January 30, 2009 @ 3:20 AM

2. Freedom Fighter wrote:
Very excellent column on prudence. One almost needs to look in history books to find statesmen who understand the value of prudence. Nice seeing the topic discussed at LPR. Keep up the good work.

February 9, 2009 @ 9:35 PM

3. '04 LPR Grad wrote:
This article is why I'm so proud to be affiliated with the Leadership Program of the Rockies! Where else can you associate with such devoted patriots and advocates of capitalism? Yes, LPR was the most prudent investment in time and money I've ever made -- and I'm a more prudent person for it. Thank you to the entire LPR family.

February 9, 2009 @ 9:39 PM

4. wii wrote:
Very excellent column on prudence.

February 27, 2009 @ 2:16 AM

5. Hawkeye Tom wrote:
'Practical reasoning' is a better definition for prudence than 'restraint'. Handcuffs and strait jackets are restraints. Those seeking more insight into the term prudence should check out Aristotle's Nicomachean ethics. Also, it was the Spanish philosopher George Santayana who made the statement about those who don't remember the past are condemned to repeat it; not the infamous Mexican General that was at the Alamo...

April 11, 2009 @ 6:18 PM

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