Officials II
Clearly, a great crime had been committed against this boy; yet nobody who had had a hand in it--the judge, the jury, the prosecutor, the complaining witness, the policemen and jailers--felt any responsibility about it, because they were not acting as men, but as officials. Clearly, too, the public did not regard them as criminals, but rather as upright and conscientious men.
The idea came to me then, vaguely but unmistakably, that if the primary intention of government was not to abolish crime but merely to monopolize crime, no better device could be found for doing it than the inculcation of precisely this frame of mind in the officials and in the public; for the effect of this was to exempt both from any allegiance to those sanctions of humanity or decency which anyone of either class, acting as an individual, would have felt himself bound to respect--nay, would have wished to respect. This idea was vague at the moment, as I say, and I did not work it out for some years, but I think I never quite lost track of it from that time."
--Albert Jay Nock,
"Anarchist's Progress" in The American Mercury (1927)
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