Copyright 2006 Newspaper Publishing PLC
All Rights Reserved
The Independent (London)
March 23, 2006 Thursday
First Edition
SECTION: FEATURES; Pg. 59
LENGTH: 1153 words
HEADLINE: CHRIS R. TAME;
Founder of the Libertarian Aliance
BYLINE: Sean Gabb
BODY:
Scholar, bibliographer, writer, political strategist, martial artist and fan
of Elvis Presley, Chris R. Tame will be best remembered as the founder of the
Libertarian Alliance. In this capacity, he worked tirelessly for nearly 30
years to recreate a British liberal tradition that had disintegrated, and to
establish clear title for those of his own views to the word "libertarian".
Tame was brought up in Godalming in Surrey, the only child of a war veteran
who had entered the print trade, and a nurse. After attending a Church of
England primary school and the local grammar school, he went up to Hull
University, from where he graduated in 1971 with a degree in American Studies.
He settled in London at a time of great and continuing political excitement.
High inflation, rising unemployment, unsustainable levels of taxation and
state control, had raised doubts over the legitimacy of the mixed-economy/
welfare-state settlement of the 1940s and of the political and social order
that presided over it. Allied with trade-union bosses, a generation of
radicalised students was plotting to replace the old order with some socialist
utopia. They were resisted by various conservative and free market policy
institutes, all more or less funded by big business. The boundaries of debate
had never been so wide.
Though he worked for a number of these policy institutes - mainly the
Institute of Economic Affairs and the National Association for Freedom (now
renamed the Freedom Association) - Tame was concerned that an older and more
traditional voice should be heard again. This was the voice of English
classical liberalism - the liberalism of John Locke and Adam Smith and John
Stuart Mill and Herbert Spencer among others. This was a voice that spoke of
freedom not simply as a set of incentives to raise the gross national product,
nor as some vague call to liberation in all matters but economic. It was a
voice that spoke of freedom in the social, political and economic aspects of
human life. The right to make money as a private landlord rested on the same
grounds as the right to inject heroin or to attend sadomasochistic orgies in
the open air.
The Libertarian Alliance emerged from a series of discussions among friends.
In these, Tame distinguished himself by his speculative boldness and his
organisational ability. When the time came to formalise the structure of the
Libertar-ianAliance-in1979-there was no serious dispute that Tame was to be
its leader.
His strategy as Director - and later, this year, as President - of the
Libertarian Alliance was to avoid the mistakes that had come close to wrecking
the much larger and richer American movement. British libertarianism would not
be sectarian. In all the usual debates - natural rights or utilitarianism as a
foundation, or anarchism or minimal statism as an object - the Libertarian
Alliance would take no corporate position. It would instead provide a forum
within which the debates could be held between friends.
At the same time, British libertarians would not put up candidates for
election. Without huge funding, political parties were a waste of effort. They
encouraged disputes over trifles and between personalities. They almost
demanded a softening of controversial opinions. Above all, they never led to
political success.
Chris Tame saw through the optimism of the late 1970s and early Thatcher
years. Where others saw a rolling back of the state, he saw in privatisation
only a more rational - and thus a more efficient - type of statist control.
"These new markets are never free," he once said, "and they are always
dominated by the ruling class." He believed that the second half of the 20th
century had seen a collapse of the moral and social and intellectual
foundations of English liberty, and that there was no short-term strategy for
its restoration. British libertarianism was not in the same position as
socialism in 1945. It was in the same position as socialism in 1845.
Therefore, it was necessary to work a step at a time towards some future
intellectual hegemony. Rather than propagandise the masses, libertarians had
to win over the intellectuals to the point where they would do the
propagandising. This meant a programme of scholarship and intensive
publication. Radio and television appearances were useful, but were as nothing
compared with a well-referenced pamphlet setting the case against compulsory
seatbelt laws or limited liability laws that turned free markets into
corporatist playgrounds.
And so Tame worked hard and without respite to advance a long-term agenda of
intellectual change. He worked on in the face of personal and professional
disappointments. During the 1980s and 1990s, he gathered around himself a
diverse circle of writers and activists who shared his commitment to putting
the libertarian case. By the end of the 20th century, there was no doubt that
the Libertarian Alliance was part of the furniture of political debate in
Britain. Radio presenters no longer asked its spokesmen, "Tell me, John - what
is the Libertarian Alliance?"
Tame also advanced the cause in a number of separate but similar ventures. As
Manager of the Alternative Bookshop between 1979 and 1985, he provided a
physical base in central London for libertarians from all over the world. This
was particularly important in a world not yet blessed with the internet. He
also managed to sell large numbers of books about liberty - including such
titles of his own as Taxation is Theft (1979). At the time of his death he was
working on a seven-volume Bibliography of Freedom.
As Director of the Freedom Organisation for the Right to Enjoy Smoking Tobacco
(Forest) between 1988 and 1995, he was able to put his ideas about winning the
battle of ideas to memorable effect. In his time, he wore out three directors
of the main anti-smoking pressure group. And he forced the anti-tobacco
movement to stop complaining about the alleged harm of tobacco to those who
smoked it and instead about those exposed to the smoking of others.
In July 2005, Chris Tame was diagnosed with a rare and very aggressive form of
bone cancer. Though only 55 at the time, and though he had avoided all those
vices commonly believed to be dangerous, he took this diagnosis with great
calmness. During the next eight months, he faced his approaching end with a
fortitude and good-humour that was an inspiration to those around him.
To the very end, he retained a keen interest in public affairs and in the
welfare of his friends and loved ones. On his last day, he made sure to check
his e-mails.
Christopher Ronald Tame, bibliographer and political activist: born Enfield,
Middle sex 20 December 1949' Director, Libertarian Alliance 1979-2006,
President 2006' Manager, Alternative Bookshop 1979-85' Director,
Forest1988-95' married 1977 Judy Englander (marriage dissolved 1992), 1994
Maria O'Sullivan (marriage dissolved 1998)'died London 20 March 2006.
GRAPHIC: A voice that spoke of freedom: Tame outside the Alternative Bookshop,
London