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There is no one force, no group, and no class that is the preserver of liberty. Liberty is preserved by those who are against the existing chief power. Oppositions which do not express genuine social forces are as trivial, in relation to entrenched power, as the old court jesters.
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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He does no dreaming about a “perfect state” or “absolute justice.” In fact, Mosca suggests what I had occasion to mention in connection with Dante: namely, that political doctrines which promise utopias and absolute justice are very likely to lead to much worse social effects than doctrines less entrancing in appearance; that utopian programs may even be the most convenient of cloaks for those whose real aims are most rightly suspect.
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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Independence, the first condition of liberty, can be secured in the last analysis only by the armed strength of the citizenry itself, never by mercenaries or allies or money; consequently arms are the first foundation of liberty. There is no lasting safeguard for liberty in anything but one’s own strength.
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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Political analysis becomes, like other dreams, the expression of human wish or the admission of practical failure.
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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If the political truths stated or approximated by Machiavelli were widely known by men, the success of tyranny and all the other forms of oppressive political rule would become much less likely. A deeper freedom would be possible in society than Machiavelli himself believed attainable.
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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Formally, a new election for an office many be held every year or two. But, in practice, the moere fact that an invidual has held the office in the past is thought by him and by the members to give him a moral claim on it for the future; or, if not on the same office, then on some other leadership post in the organization. It becomes almost unthinkable that those who have served the organization so well, or even not so well, in the past should be thrown aside. If the vagaries of elections by chance turn out wrong, then a niche is found in an embassy or bureau or post-office, or, at the end, in the pension list.
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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for money cannot find good soldiers, but good soldiers will be sure to find money.…
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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Through the Machiavellians I began to understand more thoroughly what I had long felt: that only by renouncing all ideology can we begin to see the world and man. James Burnham
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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We believe we are disputing the merits of a balanced budget and a sound currency when the real conflict is deciding what group shall regulate the distribution of the currency. We imagine we are arguing over the moral and legal status of the principle of the freedom of the seas when the real question is who is to control the seas.
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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The intent of sincere humanitarians is to do good to society, just as the intent of the child who kills a bird by too much fondling is to do good to the bird.
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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Third, the many arguments that Dante uses in favor of his position are, from a purely formal point of view, both good and bad, mostly bad; but, from the point of view of actual political conditions in the actual world of space and time and history, they are almost without exception completely irrelevant
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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After a number of experiments in internal administration, the government of the city, firmly Guelph, gravitated into the hands of the Merchant Guilds, now representing the chief social force in the town. Membership in a Guild became a prerequisite of political office.
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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Nobility, it was said, became a disgrace in the commercially based democracy of the Florentine Republic.
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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Dante, whom commentators willing to judge from surfaces are so fond of calling “the first modern man,” “the precursor of the Renaissance,” was their spokesman. His practical political aims toward his country were traitorous; his sociological allegiance was reactionary, backward-looking. Without his exile, true enough, it may well be that he would never have written his poem.
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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In the first place, we may note that Dante’s ultimate goal (eternal salvation in Heaven) is meaningless since Heaven exists, if at all, outside of space and time, and can therefore have no bearing on political action.
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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Second, the lesser goals derived from the ultimate goal—the development of the full potentialities of all men, universal peace, and a single unified world-state—though they are perhaps not inconceivable, are nevertheless altogether utopian and materially impossible.
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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Gods, whether of Progress or the Old Testament, ghosts of saintly, or revolutionary, ancestors, abstracted moral imperatives, ideals cut wholly off from mere earth and mankind, utopias beckoning from the marshes of their never-never-land—these, and not the facts of social life together with probable generalizations based on those facts, exercise the final controls over arguments and conclusions. Political analysis becomes, like other dreams, the expression of human wish or the admission of practical failure.
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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By examples from Roman and Greek and Carthaginian and Italian and French history, he shows that the “middle way” in such cases almost invariably works out badly; that the enemy should be either completely crushed or completely conciliated, that a mixture of the two simply guarantees both the continuation of a cause for resentment and revenge and the possibility for later translating these into action.
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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social man is not, as he has been defined for so many centuries, a primarily “rational animal.” When the reformers tell us that society can be improved
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)
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There is, he says, a fairly small number of relatively constant factors (or “nuclei”) which change little or not at all from age to age or from culture to culture. These constant factors he calls “residues.” Along with these there are other factors which are variable, change rapidly, and are different from age to age and nation to nation. These variable factors he calls “derivations.
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James Burnham (The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom)