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ILANA Mercer is a
US-based, classical liberal writer. She pens a
popular weekly column—“Return to Reason”—for
the independent
WorldNetDaily.com.
With a unique audience of 8 million, the site has been rated by
Alexa as the most frequented “conservative” site on the Internet.
Formerly syndicated by Creators Syndicate, Ilana, also contributes to
VDARE.COM, the
foremost authority on immigration policy. She is a fellow at the
Jerusalem Institute for Market Studies, an independent, non-profit economic
policy think tank
Ilana has written for The
Financial Post, The Globe and Mail (Canada's
National Newspaper), The
Vancouver Sun, The Report Newsmagazine,
London's Jewish Chronicle,
The American Spectator, The American Conservative, and The New
Individualist. Her work has appeared in The Ottawa Citizen, The Orange
County Register, The Colorado Gazette,
and in
other
Freedom Communications,
Inc. newspapers
across the United States, including The Valley Morning Star,
The East Valley Tribune,
Jacksonville Daily News,
Washington County News, Holmes County Register.
Ilana's work has also been
published in The Journal of Social, Political and
Economic Studies, Free Life: a Journal of Classical Liberal and Libertarian
Thought, the Foundation for Economic Education's Ideas on Liberty
and in Insight On the News (an affiliate of The
Washington Times), for which she has penned essays in symposia
debating intellectual property.
Ilana
contributes to
other well-known websites, and has written weekly columns for the
conservative Calgary Herald and Vancouver's North Shore News.
She is
also an analyst and commentator for
Free-Market News Network, founded by the late
Harry Browne, one-time libertarian presidential candidate.
Ilana’s commentary has been mentioned in the European edition of
Time (see “Trading Places” by Peter Gumbel, appeared in the print
edition of March 28, 2005), cited in the Boston Globe (The
Downside of Diversity by Michael Jonas, August 5, 2007), and featured on web sites such as the
Ludwig von Mises Institute,
The Hudson Institute, The Association of
American Physicians and Surgeons, Laissez Faire City Times,
Rational Review,
Antiwar.com, VDARE.COM,
FrontPageMagazine.com, and Jewcy.com,
an acclaimed "online ideas-and-culture magazine." Ilana's
Essays are archived conveniently at
IlanaMercer.com,
which was ranked
by the
Intellectual Conservative as
number 61st
out of the top 131 conservative-cum-libertarian political websites of 2007. She is
also the proprietor of the weblog,
Barely a Blog (BAB),
to which prominent thinkers such as Tibor Machan, George Reisman, and Thomas
Szasz have contributed. Mercer contributed a
dust-jacket blurb to Professor Szasz's latest book, Coercion As Cure.
Ilana has been a guest on
radio stations across America,
including
on the legendary
George Putnam's nationally syndicated "Talk Back," and on
Sean
Hannity's nationally syndicated radio show, on which she recently appeared to defend
NFL quarterback,
Michael Vick.
About Ilana's work, Mr. Hannity had this to say:
“Having read your columns throughout the years, I think I know you a
little bit—I know you come from a very intellectual point of view, an
intellectually honest point of view—you have given the most articulate
argument I’ve heard ["In
Defense of Michael Vick" and against animal rights] on the other
side of this, one that is consistent with many of the views you have.”
(August 17, 2007)
In 2003 Ilana appeared on the Public
Network's television series,
"America at War," #434, where she debated the media's
dereliction of duty during the invasion of Iraq. Her analysis of Martha
Stewart’s legal travails, "Convicted
for Fearing Conviction," was voted among the best
Mises.org articles of 2004. In the same
year, she received the "Ron Paul Liberty in Media Awards (LIMA)” for the essay
“Wartime
Socialism.”
Ilana was born in South-Africa, from where her father,
Rabbi Ben Isaacson, was
forced to flee due to his anti-apartheid activism. The family
departed for Israel in the 1960s, where Mercer spent her formative years.
She returned to South-Africa in the 1980s, married and had a daughter. The
family immigrated to Canada in 1995, and then went on to settle in the US.
Described as an engaging, iconoclastic polemicist by
National Post editorial writer Lorne Gunter,
Ilana
typically marshals powerful analytical argumentation in support of her case. “A
mind fiercely in pursuit of analytical truth” is how Peter Brimelow, author of
the best-selling Alien Nation,
put it. In a review titled “The
Passion of Principles,” the Objectivist magazine
The Free Radical
called Ilana’s book,
Broad Sides: One Woman’s Clash With a Corrupt Culture,
“a perfect mix of reason and rhetoric.” (Here are
part 2 &
part 3 of the
review.) Maryland's
Ron Smith of WBAL
Radio has described her as “a refreshingly original writer on the issues of our
time.” Others have
praised Ilana as a particularly strong stylist, with “no less powerful an
intellectual punch as Ayn Rand, only wickedly funny." (Citations are
here and
here).
When she is not expatiating upon
the issues of the day, Ilana
enjoys running outdoors.
Music
is another passion. Chamber music and Bach—any Bach—are her first loves,
but she finds the hard core, intricate and masterful brilliance of progressive
rock outfits like
Symphony X,
Dream Theater,
Magnitude Nine, and
Kamelot (sic) as alluring, to say nothing of neoclassical wizards such as
Sean Mercer and
Tony MacAlpine.
ILANA ON THE ISSUES:
PATRIOTISM
“Patriotism,”
writes
Ilana, “is a very modest thing. Here’s what it’s not: it’s not an
allegiance to the government of the day, or to its invariably un-American
policies. It’s an affinity for your community; it’s an understanding of the
great principles upon which this country was founded—which have been excised by
successive governments, Republican and Democratic alike. And it’s a commitment
to restoring the republic of private-property rights, individual freedoms, and
radical decentralization.”
ISLAM
Ilana, who grew up in the Middle-East, rejects the “religion of peace”
appellation. “Our adventurous foreign policy might be a necessary
precondition for Muslim aggression but it is far from a sufficient one,”
she
argues. The reason why “Muslims today are at the center of practically every
conflict in the world—and were slaughtering innocent, pacifist Jews in Israel
well before the Jewish state was a figment in the fertile mind of Theodor
Herzl”—can be found in the Qur’an, she states.
“The Muslim holy book,” moreover, “doesn’t brook interpretation or reformation,
because, as the Islamic tradition has it, the Qur’an is not Mohammed's word; it
is God’s eternal word, seen as something sent from Heaven, never to be adapted
or altered,” Ilana
explains.
“The Qur’an counsels conquest, not coexistence, especially in its
later edicts, which override the earlier ones,”
she
observes. In an essay for The New Individualist,
Ilana
concludes that, if anything, “Osama bin Laden has heeded, not
hijacked, Islam.” In the same piece she also argues that “[t]he Quran’s
ruthless particularism runs counter to the universal concepts of justice and
love of the Hebrew and Christian bibles.”
Naïve Westerners, who’ve been raised to believe The Other is just like them,
don’t understand Islam and its adherents. Or, for that matter, the meaning of “Taqiyya—the
seldom-discussed Islamic practice of lying to non-Muslims in order to win
political battles and protect Islam.” As Ilana
demonstrates, media “malpractitioners” uphold “this Scheherazade-worthy
charade.”
IMMIGRATION
Ilana opposes mass immigration.
“Immigration policy by definition,” she
notes,
“amounts to top-down, statist, central planning. But the least invasive policy
is one that respects a nation’s historical and cultural complexion and the
property rights of its taxpayers.”
To Ilana, unfettered immigration and the interventionist state cannot coexist.
"The reality is that the American welfare state is accreting, not shrinking,"
she
writes. The reality is that the more libertarians support the importation of
impoverished minorities, with a tradition of aggressively manipulating the
political apparatus to obtain property not theirs—the more intractable the
welfare state will become. How better to diminish property rights and accelerate
wealth distribution and, with it, the death of the republic, than to add to the
'union' each year the equivalent of a New Jersey, powered by identity-politics,
and peopled predominantly by tax consumers seeking to indenture taxpayers? She
further observes that, “It’s especially absurd for libertarians to assert
that the multitudes streaming across the Southwestern border at a rate of one
immigrant every 30 or so seconds are here with the consent of American private
property owners, simply because many find employment once in the US.”
As Ilana sees it, “the sole emphasis of late on border security has helped
open-border advocates immeasurably”—leading to a consensus whereby “the security
risk newcomers pose is the only permissible topic for conversation. Americans
will thus never be allowed to assert their right to determine the nature of the
country they live in and, by extension, the kind of immigrants they welcome,”
she
avers.
Indeed, to Ilana, the debate over immigration is meaningless without
reference to “borders and to the thing they bound—a nation, to wit, the
voluntary bonds that unite members of a civil society in common purpose.” She accuses
George W. Bush of being oblivious to this glue, and
sums up the President’s “borderless” worldview as one that “Invites an
invasion by foreigners and instigates one against them.” These “are two
sides of the same neoconservative coin," she quips.
Ilana is in favor of a barrier along
the U.S.-Mexico border: “If you really want to see an immigration liberationist
rise on his hind legs,” she
taunts, mention such a fence. “Hysterical yelps of ‘tear down this wall’
will ensue. Irrational minds have transformed a defensive wall à la the
Emperor Hadrian’s, intended to keep the ‘barbarians’ out, into the Iron
Curtain or the Berlin Wall, constructed to keep people in.”
IRAQ
Ilana has opposed the invasion of Iraq from
the get-go. Norman Singleton, aid to
the Republican Congressman
Ron Paul, has said this about Ilana’s “Classical
Liberalism and State Schemes”:
"Ilana Mercer
presents one of the best refutations of
liberventionism I have read. Mercer demonstrates how support for global
crusades for ‘human rights’ are fundamentally incompatible with a belief in
small government, individual rights and a skepticism about state power.
Particularly good is Mercer’s argument that war is a giant redistribution
program.”
Indeed, “at bottom, ‘philanthropic’ wars and nation-building are transfer
programs—the quintessential big-government projects,” Ilana
expatiates:
"Smart and
principled conservatives understand, moreover, that top-down central
planning—economic or political—is always doomed to fail. The inverted,
perverse incentive structure that invariably characterizes such endeavors
guarantees failure. To wit, as a government project, the multi-billion
enterprise in Iraq is bankrolled indefinitely by taxpayers and shielded in
perpetuity from bankruptcy. Wrongdoing and incompetence in government are rarely
punished, but are, rather, rewarded with budgetary increases. Government
departments and fiefdoms accrete through inefficiency. Failure translates
into ever-growing budgets, powers and perks—for the top dogs, not for the grunts
on the ground.”
In the ramp-up to war, Ilana
argued that in “mere months” the Bush administration managed to “break down
and even invert certain civilizing precepts, which only a short while ago
united” Americans. As is evident from her
many essays on the topic, she was referring to a respect for the natural law
and the prohibition against unprovoked aggression, the Constitution (it
prohibits the President from declaring war),
Just War Theory, and what “the Founding Fathers provided.” To wit, “a
limited, constitutional republican government, by definition, doesn't, cannot,
and must never pursue what Bush is after, … a sort of ‘21st-century Manifest
Destiny.’"
Ilana has responded to what she terms the “creative
post-hoc arguments … made to justify the unnecessary war, waged on a
sovereign nation that had not attacked us, was no threat to us and was certainly
no match for us,” first with facts. She has
pointed out repeatedly that, “there were many experts—credible ones—who
absolutely rejected the contention that there were WMD in Iraq. They were as
numerous as the loud voices who promoted this lie. However, the media shut us
out.” Next, Ilana has galvanized
analytical arguments to dispel falsities about the invasion: “To say that
Saddam may have had WMD is quite different from advocating war based on those
assumptions,” she reasons. “It’s one thing to assume in error; it’s quite
another to launch a war in which thousands would die based on mere assumptions,
however widely shared.”
Ilana
rejects accusations of pacifism leveled at her: “I supported going after
al-Qaida in Afghanistan,” she ventures. “That was a legitimate act of
retaliation and defense, accommodated within St. Augustine's teachings, whereby
a just war is one ‘that avenges wrongs, when a nation or state has to be
punished, for refusing to make amends for the wrongs inflicted by its
subjects.’”
Finally, Ilana characterizes the stay-the-course prescription as tantamount to
“persisting in what is impossible to accomplish. Faction fighting in Iraq is as
old as the sand dunes, and tyrants as ubiquitous as the Tigris,” she states,
adding that, “Hussein’s reign was one of the more peaceful periods in the
history of this fractious people. What a shame it’s too late to dust Saddam off,
give him a sponge bath, and beg him to restore law and order to Iraq.”
ISRAEL
As both a libertarian and a Zionist (a position for which she has been
attacked), Ilana
argues that Israel does itself no favors by conflating America's unlimited
worldwide war on Islamic terror with its own narrowly delimited and legitimate
battle for survival, conducted since that country’s inception.
The Palestinian Authority, she
notes,
has established itself as an anarcho-terrorist territory. Left-liberal,
root-causes thinking blames the thriving society
(Israel) for the dysfunctions of
the “savage” one adjacent to it (PA). But as Ilana puts it, “human action is the
ultimate adjudicator of moral worth; societies are only as
good as the individuals they comprise.” No amount of words,
maintains
Ilana,
is going to change that Palestinians don’t live under the rule of enlightened
Western law, don’t have a free and ferociously critical media or liberal courts,
canonize suicide murderers, sanction the ‘honor killings’ of women and their
subjugation, and are more likely to approve when their coreligionists strap on
belts of nails and dynamite and blow up innocents.”
By making concessions to such an entity, Ilana
argues, Israeli leaders have abandoned the national interest and their
obligation to ensure the nation endures.
Conversely, Ilana strongly condemned Israel’s recent “leveling of Lebanon” and the
“collective punishment of innocents” during that operation. She
advised, instead, that Israel “consider stationing on the borders the best
of its special-operations units … trained in precision, deep-penetration
operations.”
Ilana categorically
opposes foreign aid handouts to Israel. Israel ought to stop sacrificing its
sovereignty and cease being a US satellite state. Independence, she
observes,
means cutting the Gordian Knot once and for all.
ENVIRONMENTALISM
Ilana
sees the environmental movement as a “philosophical excrescence of Animism,
‘the belief that natural objects, natural phenomena, and the universe itself
possess souls.’ “Primitives worshipped idols and amulets, but also conferred
divine honor on the sun, moon, mountains, rivers, trees, and animals; air, fire,
and water,” she contends. Nature worship is a species of this fetishism. Since
environmentalism is predicated on grand scale central planning, it is quite
obvious that the goal of the movement is “not to ‘save’ man, but to subjugate
him to Goddess Gaia.” And, in particular, the environmentalist ultimately
opposes continued economic progress: be it warming or cooling, the goal is the
same: climate Chicken Littles—who not so long ago clucked about global cooling,
but now claim the sky is falling because of global warming—want to scale back
the market economy that is responsible for the marvelous living standards
enjoyed in industrialized countries.”
In the theory of global warming, avers Ilana, these mutant Marxists have
created a theory that can’t be falsified—the kind of “theory” Karl Popper
condemned as not refutable by any conceivable event, and hence, unscientific.
Ilana describes the method of the climate kooks as follows: “Evidence that
contradicts the global warming theory, they enlist as evidence for the
correctness of their theory; every permutation in weather patterns—warm or
cold—is said to be a consequence of that warming or proof of it.”
ANIMAL RIGHTS
No such
thing! But first, according to syndicated talk-show host Sean Hannity, Ilana
was the only writer he knew of to have offered up a
rights-based defense of NFL quarterback Michael Vick in his
dog fighting suit:
"To PETA, man and beast exist along the same continuum, their faculties and
feelings differing in degree, not in kind...Like PETA, I don’t distinguish between the pig farmer and the
dogfighter. Unlike PETA, I believe all animals are property.
Man is the
only top dog. Although people will go to great lengths to distinguish
their preferred form of animal use from Vick’s, the distinction is
nebulous. One either owns a resource or one doesn’t. Whether one kills
animals for food or for fun, the naturally licit basis for
large-scale pig farming or game hunting is the same: ownership of the
resource....
While animals are still regarded as property under the law, if heavily
circumscribed, the trend in tort law cases is, increasingly, toward
treating them as PETA prescribes. Given the public and popular press’s
sentimental slobbering over Vick’s dogs, this lobby’s power is sure to
increase.
Rights give rise to legal claims. Ultimately, the more rights animals
are granted, the greater the legal lien exercised on their behalf
against the liberty and property of people. As it is, deputized agents
of the Humane Society and the SPCA have the power to turn you into a
felon for 'the crime of a skinny dog.”
The justification for conferring individual rights on humans only is
vested in the a priori truth that a human being is "a rational agent,
with the gift of consciousness and a capacity to scrutinize his deeds and chart
his actions. Man's nature is the source of the responsibility he bears for his
actions. It is also the source of his rights. Or as John Locke put it, animals
have no responsibilities, ergo, no rights.”
Since a right is a legal claim
against another,
explains
Ilana, the consequences of granting rights to animals is to
legalize the use of force against anyone who slaughters, markets, experiments
on, eats, wears, and defends himself against animals. “No libertarian would
argue against man's moral duty to exercise his dominion over the earth wisely
and well,” Ilana emphasizes, “only that a moral duty is not to be confused with
an enforceable legal imperative.”
Ilana has been
especially scathing about the propaganda unleashed in response to the rise
in animal attacks: “The handful of honest experts left admits such attacks are
on the rise because politically correct policies have bred fearless critters. It
has been decades since animals were aggressively repelled
from human habitat, and they now brazenly make themselves at home in manicured
suburbs.” “Men,” Ilana inveighs, “once killed and hunted encroaching creatures.
Thanks to decades of cultural and legal emasculation, they no longer have the
urge or license to protect home and hearth. Instead, they robotically intone the
Sierra Club's subliminal propaganda: animals are the true homesteaders of the
planet.”
Ultimately, “people's safety and survival must always trump that of animals. A
society that reverses this ethical order is philosophically primitive, base, and
ultimately immoral,” Ilana writes.
FEMINISM
Affirmative action, the equal representation of women everywhere (including in
sports), progressive teaching paradigms emphasizing group think; the banishing
of competition (for which boys are hardwired) and moral instruction (which they
generally crave); the demonization of the greatest writers, scientists, and
explorers because they were men, the chemical castration of boys via Ritalin,
the banning of BB guns and ‘bang-bang you’re dead,’
and the ‘Girls Gone Wild’ of North America”—Ilana
credits
the woman’s
movement for all of these.
She has also
pondered whether the discovery of late that testosterone levels in men are
falling might be linked to “the feminization of society over the
past 20 to 30 years.” As she puts it, “Feminists once aimed to unseat
men, now they are actively engaged in queering them.” Ilana observes
that “the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis is a delicate homeostatic feedback
system, intricately involved in regulating hormones and stress.” She then
wonders out loud whether “it [has] become the axis of evil in the war on men.”
Indeed, the
feminization of society, brought about just as well by “Y chromosome carriers,”
is a theme Ilana frequently
returns to: “CNN’s Anderson Cooper is a major culprit in changing the face
of news. Forehead furrowed into a perpetual I-feel-your-pain frown, Cooper’s
broadcasts are an interminable kvetch that elevates feelings above facts.”
“The
Silly Sex?” is how Ilana, controversially, titled an essay explaining
“women’s relatively scant accomplishments in the second half of the 20th
century, as quantified objectively by
Charles Murray.”
THE THERAPEUTIC SOCIETY
In her book,
Broad Sides,
Ilana underscores that “a free society cannot function unless its members
assume or are made to assume full responsibility for their actions.” Indeed, an
abiding theme in her work is individual free-will and the exploration of
causality and culpability vis-à-vis crime, misconduct, and immorality. In
particular, Ilana opposes and exposes the "medicalization of misbehavior."
"In the progressive’s universe, evil actions don’t incriminate, they
mitigate." The pop “experts,”
she says, “work to place bad behavior beyond the strictures of traditional
morality, making it amenable to ‘therapeutic’ interventions. The Drew Pinskys of
the world conjure so-called mental diseases either to control contrarians or
to exculpate criminals.”
In “Mel’s
Malady; Foxman’s Fetish,” Ilana writes this, with reference to Gibson’s
alcoholism:
"The Delphic oracles of the disease theory of delinquency (the
‘experts’) have slapped all manner of misconduct with diagnostic labels. At the
root of this diseasing of behavior is the eradication of good and bad. Placing
bad behavior beyond the strictures of traditional morality, moreover, makes it
amenable to external, ‘therapeutic’ or state interventions.
Liberals first, and conservatives in short succession, have
taken to the idiom of disease like ducks to water. Left and right now insist,
based on wispy pseudoscience, that just about every human excess is an illness
as organic as cancer or diabetes.
A teacher who seduces her underage pupil has to be ‘sick,’ or
else she’d not have indulged her fantasies. The same post hoc illogic is
applied to the morbidly obese: if you overeat, you’re diseased!
Are you a dad who dotes on his kids when they are around, but
fails to mail them child support money when they return to mom? There’s a
Harvard professor by the name of Dr. John Ratey who’ll cheerily diagnose you
with ‘Environmental Dependency Disorder’: you remember your kids only when they
are present.
And so it goes: the arsonist has ‘pyromania,’ the thief is
inflicted with ‘kleptomania,’ and Bill Clinton was not promiscuous, but a
‘sex-addict.'”
No
Szaszian thinker will miss the thread that holds “Rah-Rah
for Rioters” together:
"Whether the mediacrats are applying their cerebral sinew to individual or
group-orchestrated crime; to psychological or sociological ‘causal factors,’ bad
deeds are invariably caused—never committed. And they are caused
by factors outside the perpetrators. …”
And this from “Coddling
Killers”:
"Root causes are the rationalizations liberals give—usually after the fact—for
their immoral actions or for the immoral actions of others. The paradox at the
heart of the root-causes fraud is that causal theoretical explanations are
invoked only after bad deeds have been committed. Good deeds have no need
of mitigating circumstances.”
All is not grim. Ilana does pause to turn the arrows in her epistolary quiver
away from the state—the Thing the inimical Sir Humphrey Applebee of the British
satire “Yes, Prime Minister” called a disorganized criminal organization. She
covers
popular culture,
mainstream media,
Hollywood, and
pseudo-science. From
sex to
music, it's all here, minus the unpalatable pabulum served in said
media.
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