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Critique of Libertarianism

Discussion in 'Something For All' started by The Fat Controller, May 20, 2008.

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  1. The Fat Controller

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    Critique of Libertarianism

    Hi there, this is my rant against what people today like to call Libertarianism. It's influenced mostly by reading up on the subject (Wikipedia ;) ), Noam Chomsky's take on the matter and my own leftist views. It'll probably be a lively debate, since I know Shredderbeam for one will have something to say.

    First I'll say that while I admire the level of rationality right-wing libertarianism adherents exhibit when they make their arguments, I don't think they appreciate the consequences of these doctrines, nor the moral failings. So, here are my points:

    1) Consider that in an anarcho-capitalistic system high concentrations of private power will emerge, which can be as bad or worse than coercive state power. Libertarianism here means extreme advocation of total tyranny, whereby absolute power is handed over to unaccountable corporate entities. Humans rights will be subordinated to the overwhelming, overriding need for profit for investors. There's nothing workers can do and nothing they can say, that will make a difference. Additionally, nonintervention leads to monopolies.

    2) The idea of non-state subsidized Capitalism (i.e. Libertarianism, or any sort of Capitalism without the welfare for the rich, military expenditure driving high technology forward etc) is also something that you never see in developed countries. It has, however, existed in the third world, which is the reason a large part of the third world looks the way it does. All developed societies have developed through the privileged pulling the strings of power to ensure that state power subsidizes them. Thus Libertarianism will never exist in any society in any shape or form except when people have it shoved down their throats.

    3) Adam Smith advocated markets only on the grounds that under perfect liberty you would get perfect equality. He pointed out that in any civilized society, something had to be done to prevent division of labor to avoid society degrading. Thomas Jefferson was also very much anti-Capitalist.

    Libertarians seem to worship these guys, but their message is the polar opposite of what most Libertarians seem to believe in.

    4) Specific examples of the failings of systems which adapted to a more Libertarian economic approach (I'm quoting from Wikipedia here, it's all sourced, check the original page here if you want to find the sources):

     
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    Critique of Libertarianism

    I'll reply to this when I get home to work.

    For now I'll say:

    1. Monopolies generally dont form in the free market.
    2. The system we have is NOT capitalism, but merchantalism.
    3. Everyone in market anarchism is accountable for acts of aggression.
    4. Human rights cannot exist without property rights.
     
  3. The Fat Controller

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    Critique of Libertarianism

    Hi Sythe, Shredderbeam warned me about you ;). Anyway, I've got a statistics exam tomorrow so I'll leave this thread till I'm not busy and you've made your response.
     
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    Critique of Libertarianism

    First I'll say that libertarianism is not right wing. You have incorrectly associated free markets exclusively with the right. Additionally I will point out that 'moral failings' presuppose a morality. Presumably this means your morality, which I assume is altruism. The evils of altruism (and the debate as to which morality is the correct morality) belong in a separate thread, as it is a separate topic.

    People who produce the most accrue the most wealth. The wealth cannot be used to violate other people's property rights. If it is so used then either the system is not anarcho-capitalism, or the offending party is a criminal.

    Political power and wealth are different things. Political power has no place in libertarianism. Economic power is a contradiction in terms.

    Straw man argument.

    Libertarianism anywhere means extreme advocation of freedom. The exact opposite of tyranny. There is no absolute power, and cannot be an absolute power under an anarcho-capitalist system. Absolute power necessarily implies a system other than liberty.

    Further, 'corporate entities' do not exist. There is no entity that you can point to and say "that is a corporation". A corporation is just a group of *INDIVIDUALS*, and in a free society each of those individuals is wholly responsible for his own actions. Any act of aggression by any man against any other man, or his justly acquired property, is a criminal offense.

    Firstly human rights necessarily cannot exist without property rights. How can you have the freedom to do anything if you don't first own your own body. Given that you own yourself, now you need to own food in order to feed yourself. If you want free speech, then you need to own media on which to publish your ideas. There is no such thing as human rights without property rights. Property rights ARE human rights. Humans survive by manipulating the natural environment. And therefore it is necessary to be able to own parts of it; I.e. those parts you have changed and which did not previously belong to someone else (except in the case of voluntary exchange.)

    Secondly, nonintervention leads to competition; which leads to lower prices, higher wages, and better products. The precise opposite of monopoly. It is absurd to think that monopolies would form without intervention. How would they? What is to stop me forming a company in competition with a current monopoly? No one. So I form my company and now the monopoly is broken.

    Some people will comment that the larger company could buy me out or undercut me. This is true, but only to an extent. The larger company has limited coffers, which will quickly run dry if they engage in these business tactics without any government assistance. This is because everyone can form a company in competition. A company can only run at a loss for so long. Larger companies have higher expenses than smaller companies too, which makes it easier for small competition to stay afloat during these tactics than one might think.

    Two kinds of monopolies can exist in the market place. The monopoly which is based on government granted privilege. And the monopoly which is a natural monopoly. Very few of the latter exist, and as technology improves their number shrink ever smaller. Of the former, it may be said that these monopoly corporations do the most damage of any agency in the world, except perhaps the government itself. You know these corporations by name of public private partnerships. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public-private_partnership

    These are monopolies created by the state, to ensure revenue to the state. The system that advocates these entities is Merchantalism, which we are presently under.

    What a load of bullocks. To begin with, there is no such thing as 'state subsidized capitalism'. It is a contradiction in terms. How can a free market be free... if it is 'subsidized' by a power monopoly, whatever that means in that context?

    Third world countries have had despotic feudalistic rule by an elite group. The very reason that a distinction existed for a time between first and third world countries (although that distinction is quickly disappearing) is precisely because first world countries adopted libertarian economic models. That is: they allowed free, or moderately unhampered trade, ownership, and business. Everywhere this has occurred anywhere in the world, in any time in history, it has lead to wealth creation and better standards of living for most (if not all) involved.

    Indeed, see what divergence from a classical-liberal economic model did for the USSR. They had high military expenditure, and high technology. And yet the peasents were starving to the point of cannibalism. In fact the population got so sick of being forced to slave away for the state, at subsistence, that they eventually gave up. And the whole system collapsed.

    Look at China. Completely feudalistic until only recently. What changed? The implementation of liberal economic theory. When given a little bit of freedom people build, create, invent, and trade. All natural rational human activities, which they are normally forbidden or hampered from doing by the state.

    How do you 'shove' freedom down someone's throat? Say we were liberating slaves (which is what libertarians are doing in essence), would you exclaim that I should not shoot the slave owner and free the slaves because it would be 'shoving freedom down their throats'. 'But they may not want to be free' you cry. Then let them live in a commune, as communists, if that is their choice. But let them make it voluntarily. Surely no one wants to be, or deserves to be, owned as property, be it by the state or the hands of just one man.


    If he actually said this then he was an idiot. But I daresay this is a misquote and he really said "equality under the law". In which case the statement would be true.

    No libertarian wants, or advocates equality. People are not equal, they are unique. Unique entities can necessarily not be equal. Every man is equal in death, so let him live his life how he pleases, while he still has it.

    Thomas Jefferson was a capitalist in every sense. What sort of blatant lie are you attempting to impose here? Perhaps your definition of capitalism is WRONG? Allow me to enlighten your left-washed mind. Capitalism is the economic system of the free market. All it means, quite literally, is that people are free to save and spend their own capital. It is not statism. It is not merchantalism. It is not feudalism. It *is* synonymous with 'free market'.

    Maybe you are again confusing yourself. Liberalism of the day was what we now refer to as Libertarianism; because you lefties stole the term from us. Liberal means free (as in freedom). Liberal economics means 'free economics'.

    Libertarians believe in fundamental inalienable human rights; all of which stem from the self ownership principle. Because I own myself, and no one else can legitimately own another human being, the initiation of force against another human being is illegitimate, regardless of who initiated it. Government, soldier, bank manager -- we don't care. Each human has the right to self ownership. You cannot steal my justly acquired property, and call it taxation, it is still theft. You cannot enslave me, and call it conscription, because it is still slavery. You cannot murder me, and call it war, because it is still murder. Each man has free-will and owns his own body, and therefore is also RESPONSIBLE for his own actions. There is 100% accountability in a free society.

    I don't know much about the particular case but:

    It seems to me that they had come out of a high inflationary period into the liberal reforms. Which, by the way, kept the fiat currency AND fixed its price against other currencies. They also failed to allow private ownership of copper, which is no doubt one of chille's main export industries. And, while I have no checked, it seems quite likely the redistribution of government assets, such as mines and infrastructure, was arbitrary -- Ie given out at random, or to favourites.

    By all accounts those 'liberal reforms' were highly lacking. And, having had only 20 years, with the existing unfree distribution of land and resources maintained, the plan was unlikely to succeed in any big way anyway.



    Again, I don't know much about the specific case, but:

    The introduction of a sales tax can hardly be said to be a liberal reform. Deregulating the financial market is meaningless when the banks engage in fractional reserve banking, and are licensed by the government, and ultimately controlled by the reserve bank of NZ. (This is still merchantalistic.) The printing of new money -- inflation -- is a form of fraud and taxation. A free market needs a free money supply, such as gold.

    Further, no doubt the bulk of restrictive land and property ownership regulations and taxes remained. Thus the changes to the economic model were virtually meaningless.

    Are you yet to realize that a system in which the state controls ownership of land and money, and who can be a bank, and what land can be built on in what manner, is already so far removed from capitalism that liberal tweaking is only going to get you so far?
     
  5. The Fat Controller

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    Critique of Libertarianism

    I have only used the term 'right-wing' libertarianism to try to differentiate between the contemporary US definition of libertarianism with the original meaning used in other parts of the world, where it is synonymous with anarchism/libertarian socialism. The best way I could describe typical US libertarianism is as:

    an offshoot of individualistic anarchism.

    Sounds weird, I know.

    Granted, sometime we could make a separate thread on that.

    Economic power certainly isn't a contradiction in terms, people from all parts of the political spectrum recognize it (take Ayn Rand for one). Otherwise I agree with your statement - there is no political power in a libertarian system.

    Thus there is power vacuum, and that space is filled by coercive economic power. Inequality in terms of any sort of power always end up with restriction of liberty. The traditional libertarian argument is that economic power can only be applied if the subject submits to it voluntarily e.g. chooses to work for an employer. However, this completely ignores restraints on action, such as the need for food and shelter.
    The end result is that the majority of people ultimately end up as order-takers rather than free producers. In summary, once a certain level of economic inequality is reached, property actually conflicts with the ends which make private property legitimate.

    Giving libertarianism and big business the benefit of the doubt, and assuming that everything the employees of a corporation do is above board and perfectly 'legal' in your terms, there are still countless examples of how they will be unaccountable for their actions. For example:

    When my toilet paper manufacturing corporation :D pollutes a river with toxic waste, which in turn ruins the fishing business you and your dog run, I won't be punished for it. Same goes when toxic waste ends up on the farmland you and your dog own, stunting your vegetables.

    So let's say your property has been damaged indirectly like above - how do you propose a libertarian system will police or otherwise in order to stop stuff like this occurring? How do you track down the culprit responsible for the criminal action? Or are we back to treating corporations like entities again, and filing charges against them? Wait - do we still have law courts? :rolleyes: Oh yes - perhaps we do, the private kind, that are guaranteers of justice (for those who can afford it) :rolleyes:

    I used one adjective too many there, "absolute" was inappropriate. The point is that in a libertarian society, wealth is synonymous to power.

    There's a subtle difference between property rights and other kinds of rights which a lot of modern political/economic theory ignores. For example, if I have the right to free speech, I'm not interfering with your right to free speech. However, if I own property, then I'm interfering with your right to own that property. In this way there is a fundamental difference between property rights and other rights.

    That's not to say there's no such thing as a right to property, that's perfectly debatable.

    What evidence do you base that statement on?

    You can form a company, but whether that company is a successful competitor is another matter.

    You're ignoring the economy of scale side of the argument which applies to virtually all industry nowadays. The problem with the libertarian free market is that it doesn't stay free for long - removing all regulation simply creates a free-for-all where the economically powerful swiftly shut out the less powerful.

    I was after a more appropriate word than capitalism really, but I couldn't think of one.

    The point I was making is that if you look at the US economy as it is now, you'll see that trade is highly subsidized. The most obvious are like how all forms of transport are heavily subsidized (since transport costs enter into the calculation for efficiency of trade). A lot of costs are shouldered by the taxpayer. If you were to adopt real libertarian values, there would be huge shifts in efficiencies. Currently the state organizes welfare for the rich: costs are socialized and profits are privatized. What will happen under a libertarian system? Privately owned firms will have to shoulder the costs between themselves somehow, or allow the infrastructure to crumble.

    See above. The difference is that, in the third world, the centralized infrastructure system simply isn't there because it hasn't been put there by the state.

    You could never make a true libertarian system out of any country in the developed world. The powerful and the wealthy would never allow it. It only exists in countries where it is rammed down people's throats - in the third world.

    --

    Damn, I did misquote Adam Smith there :( . In any case, he has his own section in the Wikipedia article on wage slavery, there you can see how staunchly he would be opposed to today's standard libertarian values, [1]

    I'm going to have to quote Chomsky on this :p

    "Thomas Jefferson, the leading Enlightenment figure in the United States, along with Benjamin Franklin, who took exactly the same view, argued that dependence will lead to "subservience and venality", and will "suffocate the germs of virtue". And remember, by dependence he meant wage labor, which was considered an abomination under classical liberal principles. There's a modern perversion of conservatism and libertarianism, which has changed the meanings of words, pretty much the way Orwell discussed. So nowadays, dependence refers to something else. When you listen to what's going in Congress, and people talk about dependence, what they mean by dependence is public support for hungry children, not wage labor..."

    So there you go.

    I imagine pure capitalism would be synonymous with a "real" free market. It's still pretty much an untested idea, isn't it?

    No - as the Chomsky quote above also highlighted, traditional definitions have been distorted. What I said is consistent with the facts. Libertarianism as a term, was first coined (I believe) in the mid 1800s by some French anarcho-communist.

    --

    Phew, that's all I can handle for now. But as a final point, I find it amusing how frequently the word "freedom" pops up in posts made by libertarians, and how little, in contrast, the real agenda of "complete deregulation of business" and "entrenching the domination of the weak by the strong" comes out.
     
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    Critique of Libertarianism

    Just call it by its proper name. Anarcho-capitalism, or market anarchism.

    Economic power, in the sense you wish to use it, is a contradiction in terms. The magnitude of wealth collected by an individual or group of individuals does not change their rights over others. Others may work voluntarily for the wealthy, or they may boycott the wealthy. It is not of the same kind or nature as political (I.e. state) power. So I advise against mixing such terms in future.

    To begin with, this is a mixed analogy. Like I stated above, the use of the term 'power' is ill-defined in your statement. You use it to mean two things, when it can only mean one in the context.

    "[SIZE=-1]A power vacuum is an expression for a political situation that can occur when a government has no identifiable central authority. ..."

    The very point of an anarchistic society is to create and maintain a power-vacuum indefinately. We don't want government.

    You then go on to say:
    [/SIZE]
    Now you are talking about 'economic power', and not political power. So we've shifted from forced to voluntary paid labour

    Everyone needs food and shelter, even the wealthy. And they obtain it more easily on the market than if they were left to fend for themselves.

    You seem to have the impression that land distribution, and therefore the means of production, would be unfairly distributed in a free society. This couldn't be further from the case. Far from keep the existing property titles, we go back to original ownership and ask "what is it that makes owned land different from unowned land". The answer is that owned land has been mixed with the owner's labour, and is therefore his. He has taken it from nature, mixed it with his labour and thus appropriated it to his person.

    Thus, under a natural law free society any unused land is unowned land. Meaning that you can only legitimately claim ownership of land you are using or have used in the past.

    Additionally, any land that has been used in the past, but is no longer being used, and who's owner has disappeared or perished becomes once more unowned. The homesteading principle applies here too.

    So your argument falls to pieces when it is pointed out that:
    a) Perpetual monopolies don't form in the truly free market. and,
    b) Anarcho-capitalism, if ever implemented, will result in a fair and objectively principled division of land, resulting in a widely distributed means of production, making it nearly impossible to become 'super wealthy' unless you actually produce so much that you deserve to be. And even then, it would be impossible to buy all the land, because land holders raise their prices when they see you coming, until you run out of money.

    Liberty is not power and power is not liberty. You have the power to drive down the street with no number plates. But you do not have the freedom to do so. The difference is obvious. There is nothing objectively wrong with driving your automobile without plates, but if you do so then the state will crush you for disobedience. That is the fundamental difference.

    It is possible to have 100% liberty whilst being the poorest man on earth. You may be poor, but at least you'll be free to improve your life.

    Economic inequality that will naturally exist is not a problem. If person A has an IQ of 80 points, and person B has an IQ of 140 points. Would you sit there and force the human beings who employ these people to pay them the same wage. What a gross injustice this would be. The intellectual services of someone with an IQ 140 are much more valuable than that of a person with only 80.

    Further, a free producer is only different to a labourer in that he has saved enough capital to start an enterprise. The labourer has a different time preference, he simply desires to spend all his money now, rather than save it. In other words, the labourer is free to consume 100% of what he earns only because capitalists exist. He is only free to do so because he can find employment with someone who has saved capital and started an enterprise.
    The labourer is actually free to forego the risk of enterprise, and get paid weekly and in advance, rather than after-the-fact and depending on the enterprise's success. It must be understood that the capitalist entrepreneur pays for everything in advance usually out of his own pocket.

    Further, the labourers are free to invest their spare earnings in an enterprise and get a percentage of its returns. Thus they are not 'enslaved' to their wages. They have many options, but they choose not to exercise them.

    Your argument may be further discredited by considering it's relation to reality.

    A man must eat and have shelter to survive. Reality does not provide these things for him. Thus he must create his food, and his shelter with his own bare hands. But is this not a coerced set of options? He does not want to do these things, but he is forced to, if he wishes to survive.

    Your solution to this problem of 'needing to survive' is to enslave capitalists to the labourers and force the capitalists to make the labourer's lives easier. Of course you fail to realize that the capitalist and the labourer are exchanging in mutually beneficial trade. I.e. the capitalist's goods (indirectly) for the labourer's labour. If you force the capitalist to expend more of his capital than he would have otherwise, on the labourers then you will find that he has gone out of business. And no work exists for the labourers to take up. But no jobs is considered a bad thing, even by your crowd. So make up your mind, do you want the ability to work or not?

    See my above discussion of land distribution for details on property rights.


    This argument is a dead horse. You keep beating it, oblivious to the fact it has been refuted ad nauseum.

    Look at your rivers and your air now. Government and government privileged monopolies (privatized infrastructure companies) are the biggest contributers to pollution, in air, water, soil and noise. Everything from sewage in your rivers, to acid rain, to nuclear contamination. It is all the state's fault. By comparison, the vast majority of private land is very clean and pollutes little if at all.

    It was the government courts which ruled against class action lawsuits to have airports and factories shut down due to noise and air pollution. It is the courts who dismiss similar law suits for river pollution.

    It is your bias government courts which allow the injustice of damage to private property (pollution) to go unchecked. In a free society these factory owners, or sewage plant owners, or airport owners would be wholly responsible for any damage they did to other people's property. Including damage to lungs, as lungs are part of the property of the owner.

    So to you I say: government allows and causes greater than 90% of the pollution of which you speak. So why are you complaining to me?

    What a stupid argument you persist in. In a libertarian society it would be reasonable to expect people to have cheap 'pollution insurance', as perhaps part of their standard 'damage to property' insurance. Because there is no license and fee structure on insurance companies, because there is no state, this would be perfectly valid.

    Now, say someone decides to put a power plant next to my property. My insurer, to avoid paying out a large sum of money to me, is going to be quite interested in such things as what sort of energy the power plant will use, how high its smoke/steam stacks will be, and its estimated impact on the evironment. It may buy the land before the power plant company can get there, or it may pay the power plant company to make modifications to their designs, or it may pay me my lump sum, in which case I can move house without a problem.

    Now imagine I am stupid enough not to have insurance, and someone starts polluting the water running through my property. I can sue them, if I can find the source of the pollution (which isn't difficult by air) for polluting (damaging) my private property. At this they would either be forced to stop polluting, or to dam the river on their property in order to stop the pollution getting to my property. This is, unless of course, they don't own title to the water on their land, in which case I would sue whomever does own that title.


    How are you interfereing with my right to own property? If you have a piece of land, then I get the piece of land next to you. There is no interference. I believe you are referring to the fact that land is a finite quantity. But again, your ownership does not interfere with or prevent my ownership. It just means I have to buy land off you, if there is no new land to acquire.

    While this may seem unjust at first glance, it is actually completely fair. Just as in the market, the first one in comes out best dressed. If you take the risk to go and colonize new land then you deserve the spoils of your efforts. Just like if you take the risk to start an enterprise in a virgin market then you deserve the spoils of that enterprise.

    Further, to observe the stupidity of your argument, let us apply your implied alternative to private property. If no one can own any land, then what incentive does one have to build something on that land. If I built a house would you tell me the house didn't belong to me? What about if I pulled a gold nugget out of the ground and turned it into coins. Would that also not belong to me? But if not for my ingenuity and labour the resource of the land would be untouched and therefore unproductive. If no one can own, then no one can build or produce on, with security. And if no one can do either of these things then man has quickly perished.

    Or perhaps your alternative is to grant all of the land to the state!? And let them decide who can use what, for what purpose and in what manner. Ask the Chinese and the Russians how this worked out for them. I think you'll find that the only thing produced was starvation.


    Right to private property is inalienable. You own your own body. If you do not then what right do you have to walk around, speak, eat and breathe. This would all be done on someone else's property which would be illegal and immoral. Therefore you must die. You must die the second you are born to be consistent with your own moral and legal philosophy.

    On the other hand if you accept that each man owns his own body and that which he appropriates to himself from nature, by mixing his labour with it, then man has flourished, in the plenty that nature provides.


    Historic and deductive logic.

    There are hundreds of thousands of such examples in history. Ford motor is only one such example.

    Competetion works like it always has. Each enterprise wishes to employ productive skilled labour to produce their products. But in a free market there is always 'too many' enterprises trying to produce too much. The result is competetion. The competetion in the market causes each enterprise to try and undercut the next enterprise, forcing prices lower and making the methods of production more efficient. In addition, the unceasing demand for skilled labour by the enterprises, as they expand, causes wage competetion, in which each enterprise will try to 'steal' skilled workers from the next by offering them better pay and benefits, and safer working conditions, and shorter hours.

    Thus in a free society where, intervention is nonexistent, competition is plentiful and the labourers get more for their money, more money, and more time to spend it.


    This has nothing to do with whether or not the monopoly is broken. If I start a company and it folds, then the monopoly was broken. Someone else can start a company and that too can fold. This may go on indefinitely, in which case there must be a reason consumers are not buying from the competitors. That reason must naturally be that the existing company is so damn good at producing it's products, and its prices and quality are so attractive that the competitors fail to gain market share. In which case the existence of a monopoly is not bad.

    And should the monopoly ever get complacent and increase prices then one of these companies will start up again and steal their market share.





    This is stupid and historically incorrect. Great monolithic companies have many efficiency problems which are unable to rival the cheap innovation of small competitors. You clearly understand nothing of business or economics. The only reason transnational organizations even exist on the scale they do today is government intervention in the market. If they had no corporate welfare and no government contracts and no third world slave labour (as enforced by third world governments) then they'd find themselves unable to compete in the harsh real markets of the world.

    You naturally forget that people gravitate toward the best quality product and the lowest price. Why do you think AMD, a tiny company, was able to gain a huge market share over Intel, a massive company? It was not because of intervention, it was because AMD had a better product, and arguably still does. Indeed, AMD has a loyal customer base, of which I am one, who will continue to buy its products to support it against the giant Intel. People always root for the underdog.



    This isn't even an argument, but a question.

    The answer is, as it so often is with libertarian matters, private property. Private companies should be allowed to own roads and infrastructure, as historically they did, before the government nationalized them. The difference is you would pay for what you use, rather than what other people use. If you wish to drive through new york city during peak hour, then whoever owns the roads on which you drive is probably going to charge you a fee. This can be considered a form of rent. That is: you are renting the road space for a period of time. You would naturally pay a premium during peak hour, because demand for road space is higher.

    Thus we have a free market solution wherein the transport system becomes faster and more efficent the more people use it, rather than slower and more gridlocked.

    The owner of a busy street is going to be raking in the profits. Which, if he has any sense at all, he will invest in upgrading his road, to allow still more people through, which will get him even higher profits. Thus if a single lane road actually needs to be an eight lane highway to supply the demand of road-space consumers, then this will what will happen.

    Now it is typical for statists to proclaim: "Ah ha! but what if the road owner is an evil man who won't let anyone use his road, and that road is the only way to get from one place to another"

    Well it seems unlikely that he would do such a thing, since it is economically not in his best interests (the profit motive is very powerful). But supposing he did, there would very likely be an alternative route. And if there wasn't then weren't you foolish for going out there (wherever you are in the first place) without first securing a contract entitling you to drive back on his road.

    So the answer to your question is when everything is privatized, you pay only for what you use.


    The best infrastructure is put there by private enterprise and nationalized by the state. What is a road but an overland trade route. The trade came first. Then the private merchant courts. The government came later and declared its ownership of all of the above.

    This is fucking stupid. There is no country in the world that has freedom. Third world states have feudalism. About as far from libertarianism as you can get. I think you have simply neglected to do any research on the matter whatever, and you are just throwing arguments writen by someone else at me. Which I deflect with ease.

    I wonder who else you've misquoted...


    Jefferson thought that he who owns his own business is of superior virtue to he who works indefinitely for a living. This is true enough, although I see no reason why it impacts or changes the discussion. Independence from the whims of other men is certainly something to be desired. But if you advocate that the state should replace private enterprise then I fail to understand how you have achieved this desire. If anything you've made the mass of the population entirely dependent on the state. Under freedom dependence is voluntary, as is independence.

    No really. Everywhere its had a chance, free trade has caused much wealth and progress. Take any of the trading city states for example. Singapore, Hong Kong. The US had a good run of almost free markets, to which it owes its short lived prosperity. The greatest the world has ever seen.

    England had free trade for a time, before the government moved in and turned it into an empire.

    Everywhere you see massive wealth and a middle class, they have had moderately free trade for some period of time. This is an historic fact. Please review your own country's history and see for yourself.



    Humorous. You go back to original definitions, which often have no relation to current meanings of words. Liberalism is/was libertarianism. Look up 'classical liberalism' for confirmation.

    "Entrenching domination of the weak by the strong?" What?
    That is not what we want at all. The weak benefit most from freedom. The weak benefit most from the division of labour. What sort of idiotic nonsensical notion do you have of freedom. No one is forced to do anything by any other man. The fact that people have to live by working is a fact of reality, not of other men.

    You would have the strong provide for the weak, against their will. And you would call this freedom? How utterly absurd. Freedom is as freedom is. If, under freedom, you perish because you refuse to work, or are unable to work, then so be it. It is not my responsibility to help people who cannot help themselves. Nor is it anyone else's responsibility to help me.

    A weak man who could not grow his own food would have a good/much better chance of survival in a free society. Say for example, he is a musician. He does not need to be strong in order to play good music. And so he specializes in what he is good at, and uses the profits of his exchange (labour for money) to purchase the goods he would otherwise have to produce himself, on the market. That is, he performs, gains capital then expends capital to buy food and shelter, which allows him to survive.

    It is precisely because of mutual benefit from exchange and the division of labour that the weak and the poor are the best off under freedom. Under your system EVERYONE IS EQUAL IN THAT EVERYONE IS POOR. You would have us go back to feudalism, although you would not know it. With a large powerful state the only system that can possibly end up working is totalitarian feudalism. Why do you think it is that every socialist and communist country in the world -- that is: every country without a market of some kind -- has turned into despotic feudalistic rule by a tiny elite. It is because that is what comes of central planning. It is the opposite of freedom, it is mass slavery.

    You have a very very poor understanding of what it means to be free.
     
  7. The Fat Controller

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    Language is the main barrier here. I am actually using the term "[coercive] economic power" such that it doesn't involve force/aggression. So for the first part of my previous post, I was solely referring to economic power. I'll state definitions from now on to avoid any confusion.

    Actually this is a terrible argument. The same can be said of any democratic state. No one forces a citizen to remain within its borders.

    A defense of capitalist hierarchy in terms of consent automatically lends itself to defending a state by those same terms, particularly since capitalist property can be as much the product of coercion as a functioning democratic state.

    Why is the authority of the state is considered anti-anarchist while that of the property owner is not? Before answering, please consider the following (I quote):

    "By focusing on "government" rather than "authority," they [anarcho-capitalists] hide the basic contradiction within their ideology namely that the "anarcho"-capitalist definition of private property is remarkably close to its definition of the state.

    This is easy to prove. For example, leading "anarcho"-capitalist Murray Rothbard thundered against the evil of the state, stressing that it "arrogates to itself a monopoly of force, of ultimate decision-making power, over a given territorial area." Then, in the chapter's endnote, he quietly admitted that "[o]bviously, in a free society, Smith has the ultimate decision-making power over his own just property, Jones over his, etc.""

    And if you're feeling like rejecting economic power outright again (as some anarcho-capitalists do), then I add this:

    "The idea of "free
    contract" between the potentate and his starving subject is a sick joke". :D

    Right. Jump back onto the Wikipedia article you got that definition from, there's a pretty hilarious detail on it. It mentions the power vacuum in Somalia. Some anarcho-capitalists have actually gone as far as to say that Somalia can be used as an example of their ideology in practice.

    Exactly. I'm saying that it doesn't work. ;) No government means no legislation regarding worker rights. What is to stop corporations etc destroying the pillars that hold labour standards up? With increased economic power and a lack of regulation, the wealthy soon find themselves the virtual masters of the workers.

    This would never work unless redistribution of wealth also took place first. Without redistribution of wealth, (former) state land would go straight into the hands of the rich who would have the money to service it.

    And who are "we" (as you put it) in an anarcho-capitalist society anyway?

    This sounds like a pipe dream to me. With no institutional arrangements governing possession and use of land, how could this system possibly operate without causing chaos?

    Jeffrey Friedman has made a remark about natural law which I think illustrates a fatal flaw:

    "if (as Boaz maintains) the liberty of a human being to own another should be trumped by equal human rights, the liberty to own large amounts of property [at the expense of others] should... also be trumped by equal human rights. This alone would seem definitively to lay to rest the philosophical case for libertarianism... The very idea of ownership contains the relativistic seeds of arbitrary authority: the arbitrary authority of the individual's 'right to do wrong.'"

    There are some basic points to be made here. There are some industries that have high barriers to entry e.g. utilities; you obviously realize that monopolies could well form in these areas. If you disagree, I can only suppose you follow the anarcho-capitalist cardinal rule:

    "Market failures, trusts, and oligopolies are lies spread by the evil economists serving the government." ;)

    And speaking of oligopoly, here are a few examples: [1] - so how has the state been intervening in the film and music industry in order to form that oligopoly? And what would stop these corporations from colluding together in an unregulated market?

    Besides, surely you acknowledge that current antitrust laws exist for good reason.

    I don't see the relevance to my point about inequality in the balance of power resulting in inequality in terms of liberty here. I did not say the liberty and power were the same.
    My point was that highly concentrated wealth (economic power), allows the employer to take advantage of the workers. As a worker, in an extreme case, you might be forced to work extra hours on pain of being fired. The worker has no choice other than to put up with it or be fired, and many workers would choose the former.

    I'm not advocating equal wages for all. I'm saying that if a few elite have a monopoly over the means of production (and they do and will in your society), then workers are coerced into choosing a master and can be walked all over.

    Just what are you trying to say here? Are these great freedoms not also available to us under the current system? :rolleyes:

    The social circumstances of capitalism limit the choices of the many. Workers have little choice but to submit to capitalist hierarchy, where in your free society, the employer may freely subordinate and exploit.

    This isn't a yes or no answer.

    My solution to the problem of 'needing to survive' is in fact to enslave labourers to the capitalists. There's no other practical way to which I can lend much confidence. The difference is that I wouldn't take worker's rights away, dissolve the government and get rid of public services, allow poverty to reign supreme and embrace anarcho-capitalism in all its oxymoronic glory. The status quo is bad enough.

    I'm finding these assertions extremely hard to believe.

    The state upholds environmental legislation. Believe you me, if you make business unaccountable for its actions then it sure as hell won't reduce pollution. Do you not accept that the overriding need for profit is what drives business, not love for the environment? Do you not accept that government legislation (1) does not serve as a crucial limiting factor?

    The noise pollution argument is a pathetic one which I'm glad was thrown out of court. However, air pollution is a problem. What specific cases do you refer to? Air pollution is responsible for over 2.4million deaths annually.

    Please offer some examples of "biased" government courts tossing out cases where private property has been marred by pollution. The actual (legitimate) complaint is that while polluters are smashed, the money is paid to the government rather than the victim of the pollution.
    The factory owners, sewage plant owners, airport owners etc would indeed be responsible for damage they did to people's bodies. The problem is that they would be completely unaccountable, as pretty much anyone who is affected by a respiratory disease cannot say "it was that factory there that was to blame!" :D

    You posted a big chunk of argument here, but it's irrelevant. I asked how you would stop pollution, not how you would compensate the victims. Preventing pollution is far easier than cleaning the mess up afterwards. Also consider that most forms of pollution can't be cleaned up. If you pollute the water table with some substance which ruins soil quality, if you pollute a natural reservoir used for gathering mineral water etc, you can't use your reward money to restore the environment back to its former glory. You might be alright, but the environment suffers. And this would not only be a problem for an unregulated system, but it is an issue worth getting emotional about even when there are environmental protection directives all over the place.

    I'm simply highlighting the fact that the right to property is different from other rights, it was a crap point, I admit. Especially since your point was that human rights are synonymous to property rights. I'll aim to debunk that now:

    James Craig Green, an anarcho-capitalist like yourself, once said this about people who rejected the ideology;

    "Typical excuses are "the common good", "public morality", "traditional family values", "human rights", "environmental protection", "national security", and "equality". Each appeals to the confused hysteria of a segment of the population. Each allows property to be denied its rightful owner. Each denies the concept of self-ownership."

    While Jimmy Carter poses another point of view:

    "From my rural boyhood, when I often spent the night with black neighbors who lived in unheated and dilapidated shacks, to my years in the White House when I saw the plight of the homeless and those trapped in poverty housing worldwide, I have known that shelter matters. And I know, as a Christian, that I have a responsibility to serve where I can, that as I treat "the least of these", I treat my Creator."

    Is that "confused hysteria" coming from Carter? That's the last thing it is. It's common human decency (I say this and I'm a hardline Atheist) and I think you'll find that everyone except the extremists will acknowledge the truth here - I find it difficult to conceive of someone who would adhere to such a brutal and inhuman values system to the extent that they would side with the first quote here.

    Small groups of corporations dominate numerous US industries, and not all of these are in bed with the state. There is a general trend for industry to move towards oligopoly even in a free market. This is especially true of industries which even you and your dog cannot start ventures into because of lack of funds. So while I acknowledge that the state maintains corporate dominance in many areas, I think calling the state the reason monopolies exist is a cop out. There are numerous historical examples of monopolies not brought on by the state, and the list of oligopolies is almost inexhaustible. Consider the natural monopolies AT&T (prior to 1982), the United Aircraft and Transport Corporation, Standard Oil etc held.

    Not necessarily in any meaningful sense though. Bear in mind that the barriers to entry to some sectors is extraordinarily low. I know, for example, that Microsoft's ~90% market share of the desktop OS market has been classed as a monopoly by many.

    See above, and third world slave labour isn't the result of third world governments enforcing this, but rather that the unfortunate inhabitants are willing to work for so much less.

    What? Could you give me some figures and dates on AMD market shares and when? I know their market share is crap at the moment and that their laptop TL-58 processors are horrid. AMD entered the market in 1976 and has been chasing Intel for 30 years. In 1976 market entry was achievable. Today you need to be a multi-billionaire in order to get in on the action.

    So, toll roads. Completely inviable without the infrastructure pre-existing. The federal highway budget for 2004 was over $30bn, that's only federal spending. There's absolutely no way a consortium of companies meant to manage those roads could take that on the chin within charging you a small fortune. Consider that under the current system the public pay the bulk of the tax up front in gasoline tax, such that roads are maintained and new ones are built, and big business doesn't have to pay extra for the infrastructure. Anyway, the current method of taxation actually means the more you drive, the more you pay (which is fair, no?). In short, a transition from the current situation to an anarcho-capitalistic vision would damage the economy.

    Furthermore, as you pointed out, the profit motive is very strong. Why not massively overcharge for use of your road? It's the perfect way to make money. Hell, you might not even need a real business, you could own a road in the middle of nowhere and charge extortionate prices whenever people needed to travel ;)

    That's a good point, though (correct me if I'm wrong) private enterprise didn't lay down the roads you drive on today (unless it was through contract work) and what you're talking about is really too far in the past to be of significance.

    I paraphrased from memory. The misquote is insignificant anyway, as ultimately it becomes apparent (if you properly look at The Wealth of Nations anyway) that Adam Smith would have opposed your ideology.

    I'm simply demonstrating what Jefferson's real views were. One of my original points asserted that anarcho-capitalists have used these key figures of the Enlightenment as icons for their ideologies, while in fact original Enlightenment values would oppose today's system. I'm not saying I know how to solve the problem, simply pointing out a bit of libertarian revisionist history.

    I don't wish the state to replace private enterprise, though personally I am a supporter of the standard institutions such as law enforcement. Also, public healthcare, higher education and - to an extent - the welfare state.
    I generally only oppose state authority when it is used inappropriately, rather than across the board.

    I'm not talking about working anarcho-capitalism in the third world, I'm talking about the shithole the third world has become as a result of a lack of property rights. And no, these aren't copy-pasted arguments, though from the volume of the stuff I'm typing, I'm starting to wish they were.

    I refer you to Hernando de Soto on why capitalism fails in the third world. I'm not a fan, but some of his points illustrate my argument. He argues, for example, that the poor of the Third World don't have the formalized legal system set out for them to register property.

    - Hernando sees the problem of poverty in the Third World as being related to the fact that the poor usually lack clearly defined property rights. That is to say, and I quote my original post, "any sort of Capitalism without the welfare for the rich, military expenditure driving high technology forward etc." What is meant, in essence, is that Third World countries fail because of poorly defined property rights. The state is the body which sets down the rules and thus is essential for proper development.

    Here you explain that anarcho-anarchism has had a chance through the ages.

    I happen to have studied a period of British history around the time a period of limited laissez faire was ending. Laissez faire began after the abolition of the corn law was achieved in 1846, and poverty levels for the end of the period (circa 1906) stood at 30%+ according to surveys (1901) performed by Booth and Rowntree, and this was particularly the case in the cities. Cartels also formed which reduced competition. The humanitarian concern because of poverty was, in fact, a factor which accelerated the development of what is known as "New Liberalism" and led towards the Liberal reforms and foundation of the British welfare state. There was a call for national efficiency in light of the recent performance in the Boer war and the fact that so many potential soldiers had to be turned down on grounds of failing the medical. To glorify the period and system as some functioning utopia is to ignore the obvious failings.

    Let me get this straight.

    Libertarian in the US = anarcho-capitalism
    Libertarian everywhere else = libertarian socialism
    Origin of the word Libertarian = French anarcho-communist
    Classical Liberalism = as the Wikipedia article describes, I suggest you read the article yourself, paying attention to the section here
    Liberal = moderate socialist or left winger, usage varies widely.

    And since Wikipedia is a free encyclopedia, I'll make sure I add to that section of the page once I'm through arguing with you ;)

    An unregulated market will yield disastrous results if you want the poor to benefit. Division of labor is hardly a feature exclusive to anarcho-capitalism. You worry little about the inevitable inequalities between rich and poor which can only be reduced by encroaching on personal liberty and reducing overall prosperity. You seem oblivious to gaping holes in anarcho-capitalism like the fact that business will not regulate itself, leading to inevitable environmental devastation.

    Here we go again with "freedom". Just replace it with deregulated market capitalism or an equivalent of your choice. What you've done here is tell me what my political position is (though I've said little about it) and proceeded to tell me everything that's better about your own ideals.
    I believe that the current system in the UK is acceptable. I would support further socialization in some areas. I've been all about the EU and the standard of living there is top notch. I believe that the human development index, not economic freedom, is a great indicator of how free people really are. As for the US, I think it is in dire need of universal healthcare and a greater focus on preventative healthcare.

    --

    Typing this post out must've taken me in excess of 7 hours. I'm saving the contents in case you decide to take your freedom and expunge me from existence using your admin powers :D

    Here are my political compass results by the way, it'd be interesting to see what yours turn out like:

    [​IMG]

    Economic Left/Right: -7.25
    Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -6.62

    That basically makes me a more extreme version of a Dalai Lama and Nelson Mandela hybrid.

    http://www.politicalcompass.org/
     
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    I can't be bothered to respond again. The last one was 4000 words.

    I suggest you do a little research into the history of the human race and see what you find with respect to free trade and free markets.

    In addition I'd not take anything away from that silly test. I looked at the questions and all of them are yes/no. Which means that you can't give a libertarian answer.
     
  9. The Fat Controller

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    It isn't yes/no. It's how far do you agree with multiple options, and it's not your average quiz either. The creators make a living out of it through seminars and sponsorship, it's a pretty reliable indicator.

    Victory :D

    I recommend you read up on the history behind 'free markets' and 'free trade' yourself. Corporations and the state might be in cahoots all the way, but monopolies form on their own and unbridled capitalism isn't good for the poor. I hope you graduate from the "no government" school of thought and at least take a minarchist view, I think that sort of belief is worthy of a great deal more respect.
     
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    Actually I'll reply to just a couple.

    The difference is that the private property owner has legitimate title over his justly acquired property, while the state does not. The state claims arbitrary ownership over the whole land area without having first transformed it from its natural state-- without having mixed its labour with it.


    Again a silly argument. Land ownership stems from original ownership which is only legitimate when the land is transformed from its natural state. Further, even when someone is on your property it is usually invalid to violate their rights. Especially in the case they did not deliberately trespass.

    Other than the fact they have civil war and tribalism it might be ok.



    There would still be law. Courts existed before governments took them over. Labour standards cannot be held up by legislation and never have been. If you pass a law saying the minimum wage is X then your unemployment rate will rise hugely. Its simple economics. If the business owner can't afford to pay the workers the artificially inflated value of their labour then they go out of business and there is no jobs for anyone.

    Far from being content with the eggs from the chicken you want to roast the chicken and have that too!

    No. Unowned land remains unowned until someone comes and appropriates it by transformation. All state owned land becomes unowned.


    All this indicates is that we need proper distribution of land through an objective means of determining which land is owned and which is unowned.

    Initially they might, yes. But in the long run when there are no real [violent] barriers to competition then this monopoly is not the bad kind of monopoly. If they are constantly under threat of being undercut by a new competitor then they won't be able to get away with charing stupidly high prices or delivering crap service. They can only get away with these practices when people are forced to pay; Ie taxation.

    Further, the quantity of wealth needed to enter a market is virtually arbitrary. If you can find investors then you can enter the market.

    The state has a large number of unfounded and unethical copyright laws relating to films music and movies. There is no reason to want to stop these companies joining together. If they join together and make terrible movies at high prices then no one will watch them. If someone wants good movies then that person will start a movie studio in competition.

    As a countermeasure to the privileges large companies already get from the state. When you have zoning you've already basically restricted who can enter any sort of commercial or industrial market. Thus only large players enter. Thus you setup an artificial environment where it is easy to put together a monopoly because small players physically actually cannot get into the market. Due to the shortage and high price of zoned land -- and in many cases not knowing the right people.

    This is why antitrust laws exist. So that licensed government business environments don't clump together into one huge mass. On the free market however, this is not a danger, because there are not licenses and no zoning. Thus competition is free and more people join the market to undercut the big boys.




    That is up to them. It is their choice to sell their labour to any particular person. It is also their choice to spend 100% of their income on consumables instead of saving and investing in their own business.




    Why would a few elite gain monopoly control? Would they reform every last scrap of land then sit on their mountain top and claim ownership of the entire country. No one would accept that. Land ownership stems from transforming and putting land into production. If anyone tried to cheat this criteria, claiming a huge quantity of land for themselves, then it wouldn't work for them. The criteria would naturally move to whatever land is currently in production and so on, until the ownership and distribution of land was fair.

    Eventually, we will need to move into space to acquire new land. But this will be / is a natural push by people who want free land. And so the problem of limited land is a self solving one.


    Most of these freedoms aren't available, or are limited, under the current system. For example, I currently work full time for a boss I dislike. My working hours are quite long and I have to do uni on the side. I am saving money to buy land. But guess what. When I get to the point of owning some land, the government is going to tax me every year on the land I own. Then they are going to tell me that I can't build this that and the other thing, on my own freaking land. How unjust is that? Zoning laws and government licensing are unfree and unjust laws. Why can't I put a bank on MY land? Why can't I put a shoe factory on my land; or a data center, or a mine? Why not? There is no reason, other than that the state wants all the revenue from these classes of enterprise to itself.


    Thats enough for now. You clearly think I am one of these 'rich monopoly owners'. No. I am just a regular guy trying to build and create a business from nothing. The thing I want to stop is;
    a) the government preventing my entrance into markets by force; and
    b) your lot coming along after I work my ass off to get to a point of business ownership and stealing my capital! Why can't you thieves just leave normal people be?
     
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    This is quite absurd. As with all scientific things, it is not what hypothesis you hold, but what evidence or reasoning caused you to form that hypothesis.

    Thus if I answered 'strong agree' to their question: "Do you think the principle of an eye for an eye is a good one?" They will attribute this to some political position with no knowledge as to WHY I hold that principle. As such, the test is completely invalid. It tests only the effects and not the causes of each aspect of a political position, meaning that any principled discipline of ethics, morality, and politics will return a false result by their test.


    If you think so. But you are really kidding yourself, and you know this right? Deep down you know that it is wrong to assert unjust force over others, and that the only thing that can ever justify any use or threat of force is [SIZE=-1]retributive justice[/SIZE] / retaliation.

    Oh I've read my books. I read a new one every week. Clearly you, on the other hand, are unaware of the terrible failings of socialism and the current problems with your projected progressive 'utopia' of the day.

    You wanted a strong state, you have one. You wanted large welfare systems, you have them. You wanted high taxes, you have them. You wanted regulations, they exist. And yet you are still unhappy. Most of mankind is suffering. Wages go down, prices go up. People die in hideous ways from war. Despotic rule replaces democracy and people have no hope.

    You have your dystopic future. It is here; embrace your illusion. Embrace death.
     
  12. The Fat Controller

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    So by logical extension of this you would say that if the state acquired the land legitimately then state authoritarianism would be fine. And you call this anarchist analysis?

    This shows that state and private ownership are based on the same authority structures, thus neither can be classed as anarchist.

    I would argue that this definition is too loose to be useful. The flaw is that formalization of property rights come from one source - and that's the pronouncement from the state that something belongs to someone. In the third world you don't see this, and according to de Soto, this is a major reason capitalism fails there.

    Speaking of trespassing, could you not legitimately murder someone on your land because they strayed onto it accidentally, and hang them from a gibbet next to the nursery next to your land?

    --

    I'm not surprised that you choose to praise Somalia - despite massive famine and warlord groups slaughtering each other and innocents for control - just because it has no central government.

    Private courts means justice for those who can afford it. If you had a problem then it would be you and your dog vs your employer, BigEvilCorp LLC, and you wouldn't get very far. Private courts means a great number of separate legal systems and little consistency. How would a plaintiff and a defendant agree on a common court?
    You say that labour standards have never been held up by legislation. Absolute rubbish. There are 181 members of the ILO for a reason.

    Which is what I said. Without redistribution of wealth, it would go straight into the hands of those with enough economic power to service it.

    Monopoly is never seen in a good light because it limits consumer choice. I'd be surprised to find investors willing to risk funding a new utility, telecom network etc in an environment where a monopoly business can use predatory pricing and similar tactics to beat competition down.

    Good point, monopoly in the movie industry wouldn't be all that bad. I'm not a fan of copyright, but surely if you apply anarcho-capitalist principles it would be the right of authors to control others' copying of their creations. Why shouldn't the control over use of an owner's property extend to the control over the use of intellectual property?

    That is a remarkably simple explanation for a complex issue. Antitrust laws break up natural monopolies which can form and are perpetuated through some industries requiring huge upfront R&D investments, economy of scale and the network effect.

    It is their choice, but if it were as simple as that then there wouldn't be any poverty. The socio-economic problems that come with a regulated market aren't even properly addressed as it stands.

    Why would the criteria naturally move? The elite have the most economic power and their singular goal is profit, same as everyone else. If you want to claim land, why wouldn't the elite simply shoot you for trespassing? You might say the person could claim the land through a court. But courts in your society are driven by profit, not justice.

    Land tax actually has considerable advantages over other forms of tax. It reduces the waste of locations (a finite resource), it encourages economic productivity using land as it is applied whether the land is used or not, it lowers the market price of land and it will not distort market mechanisms or cause deadweight losses.

    Local communities (at least in the UK) have a large influence over what can be built where because of land use legislation. We recognize, say, the impact you and your dog opening a quarry 200m down the road will have, and we will oppose it. The regulation makes business take considerations other than profit into account. Additionally, if you take pictures of places with looser zoning laws you get some of the best arguments for zoning laws ever:
    Sao Paulo

    I hate your all or nothing approach. Zoning laws can be pernicious sometimes, but other times they serve to prevent one individual from violating the freedom of many. It's your land, but what you do with your land affects the locale in many respects.

    I'm sure the government would let you be if the concept of total anarcho-capitalism hadn't been discredited about a century ago. Indeed, as mentioned before, even the founders of the ideology would never have supported the extremes you go to. Unfortunately for you, any idea of complete deregulation would not only be overturned by big business and the state, but even if we had a democratic vote on the matter.
     
  13. Sythe

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    No. The state cannot have justly acquired property. If it could then it would not be the state.

    A government's defining feature is that it uses force to obtain either monetary or physical property, and thus it is criminal by its nature. Any property it acquires through either theft or expenditure-after-theft, is therefore unjust. And any state land, or state owned institutions cannot be said to be legitimately owned by the state.

    Thus in a free society, in the conversion of the current system to a free system, the state's assets would become either unowned (if the true ownership of the asset is too difficult to establish due to the fact that it was built or made through stolen money) or be returned to its original owner (in clear cut cases where the state has taken someone else's property.)

    To 'rebel' against 'Authority structures' in general is simply childish. Humans must organize in some manner in order to survive more easily. The anarcho-communist concept of an authority-less society is frankly absurd. Anarchy, in the sense of anarcho-capitalism, simply means to move away from the 'political means' to the 'economic means' of ownership and production. It means the establishing of civility.

    Capitalism doesn't exist in the third world, precisely because the have no property rights, and thus no advanced means of production. Your continual attempt to construct a straw-man argument from third world nations is banal.

    Third world nations tend to be feudal or totalitarian or tribal or theocratic. None of these systems resemble anarcho-capitalism in any way. They all have brutal political power wielded by some undeserving person or persons.

    The definition of property is neither too loose nor incorrect. Would you say that a painter does not own his painting? What makes the atomic structure of the painting different from the natural state in which he found the matter that constitutes the painting? The fact that he has reorganized the natural state of the matter into a more valuable construction -- the fact he has mixed his labour with it. This is originial ownership, and it is the only definition of ownership which is fair and objective.

    Theres no such thing as an LLC in a free society. Courts would be much cheaper in a free society than they are now. In the current state of things a middle class individual doesn't have the resources to even sue someone. At least in a free society they would due to competition. And further, the lawsuit is much more likely to be fair, being based on common law (which presumably would be based on natural law.)

    Please review Merchant courts, ie the original private courts. The government didn't invent courts. Just like it didn't invent property rights, or roads, or social structures.

    They can't be. It is a physical impossiblity to continue to force a business owner to pay more than he can afford for labour. If you attempt it he will go broke. When he goes broke those jobs will no longer exist.

    Its called *REASON*, I suggest you employ some.


    Which is why, I suppose, in Somalia, which, despite being wracked by mini-dictatorships, tribalism, and foreign intervention, there exist no fewer than ten competing telecom companies battling in a fierce price war and providing the best and cheapest telephone service in all of Africa.

    You understand NOTHING of economics. So do not bore me with your attempts to justify the state by that means.

    You really have some deep issues with authority that you need to sort out. You implicitly advocate socialism. If you believe that your system will work, then I strongly suggest you review real world examples of attempts at socialism (or any kind of divergence from liberal philosophy) and see how they turned out for other people. Freedom creates wealth, central planning destroys it.
     
  14. Zypur

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    No sir! It is YOU whom has NO understanding of economics!
     
  15. Uncle_Vodka

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    can someone explain what this is?
     
  16. Sythe

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    Great, thanks for your intelligent and meaningful input. If you would be so kind as to refrain from tautologically invalid / rationally unsupported assertions in future, we would all genuinely grateful.
     
  17. Frasier

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    There is great question in this case as to why criminality is wrong then. If the state is inherently criminal, the question surely is why is criminality wrong?

    Ownership is defined a "legal status in which an owner holds fee simple title to a property, or a portion of it". In that case, state ownership is legitimate by the very nature that it is legal. If it is not legitimate, then it is not for reasons of ownership therefore - the entire concept of ownership is based on, not a nature right as you claim, but an entirely legal concept.

    Your claimed heroes of the Enlightenment would disagree. Really, I think you need to read up on classic liberalism.

    Civility in what sense? Civility, as far as I know it, does not extend to claiming that those who die because they are disabled or sick deserve to do so.

    Again, ownership is merely a legal concept. For example, one can own an idea, despite not mixing labour with an matter, which your definition implies. Is that incorrect? Can one only own something when one mixes one's labour with matter?

    What governs this natural law? Who determines what it is?

    In some ways yes. Your problem is you advocate a system that is built to defend minorities against majorities but it does nothing of the sort. Mill's harm principle goes as follows:

    “the only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilised community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others”

    - and yet how can power be rightfully exercised without the use of the state? In which case, your system merely enforces the principle that the majority can rule the minority.
     
  18. The Fat Controller

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    A great deal of land and wealth has been accumulated unjustly by private entrepreneurs through the ages, especially if you apply the criteria you're using to determine what is acquired justly and unjustly. You suggest redistribution of land - but who is going to decide? You? The state? :rolleyes: Not to mention the previous point that without redistribution of wealth, most unowned land goes straight back to the elite as they were the ones with the money to service the land to begin with.

    Humans do organize in a manner in order to survive more easily like you say. How they do so normally is clear. Additionally I don't support the concept of an authority-less system, as I believe at least a limited state and some regulation is needed to stop complete chaos.

    A large reason capitalism fails in the third world is because property rights aren't upheld by governments, and governments don't create the infrastructure nor the centralized system through which the taxpayer is tricked into aiding big business (also see the point concerning this in my original post).

    Frasier has already made points about this, but what about patents? Intellectual property? What would be done about counterfeiting? Who defines what "mixing of labour" constitutes? The definition is far too loose.

    What about water? Tell me how that service is going to work.

    I stand corrected, it would be you and your dog vs plain BigEvilCorp :rolleyes:. I have passing knowledge about merchant courts, I'm asking you questions I wouldn't find answers to in a million years through reading about them. Merchant courts were called so for a reason, they were used between businesses, not peasants - this is about how workers will uphold their rights here, not how businesses will solve quarrels between themselves. You haven't addressed the basic question I asked before: how would a plaintiff and defendant choose a common court when the laws they enforce would vary wildly?

    You seem to have missed the point for the second time. Worker rights don't solely involve doubling wages and making everything uneconomical. The fact is that any profit-seeking entity will not seek to maximize the wellbeing of the workers, but maximize profits. Regulation prevents this from becoming a reality, and that includes basic provisions such as limitations to working hours, child labor, health, safety, etc. Here's a quote highlighting an extreme example:

    "Suppose someone facing starvation accepts a contract with General Electric that requires him to work 12 hours a day locked into a factory with no health-safety regulations, no security, no benefits, etc. And the person accepts it because the alternative is that his children will starve."

    I'll concede that I think Somalia's telecom industry prior to 1991 was a brilliant example of how an inefficient state-maintained monopoly in a third-world country can be. Working on the back of the fact that 1.5% of the people owned telephones before the last regime fell apart in 1991, the popularity of telecom services has rocketed. Not to mention the influence of mobile phones etc. As well as that, I'm sure if you've looked into the matter you'll realize that the telecom industry is not representative of trade in Somalia. I'd also like to point out how efficient all your private security firms have been in ensuring there isn't complete terror :rolleyes:

    One minute I'm an anarchist, next I'm a socialist? :eek: In any case, I'm not advocating anything more extreme than what you can see in most of Europe today. You're blind to the benefits of some socialized services, and equally blind to the disadvantages inherent in privately run services. I think most people agree that complete socialization is unworkable in most respects, just as your position is. Besides, your ideology differs considerably from liberal philosophy.
     
  19. The Fat Controller

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    Good input, thanks :p
     
  20. Jansen

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    It would be nice if you unblocked Zypur's IP address from your site, so he can moderate, you tool

    Zypur told me to say that - he said you will only read this topic and if you see this you might do something about his predicament.
     
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