a_propagandist
The Light Brigadier
Then do you say we need to go against the will of the people? Cause it seems the will of the people supports having a well-defined, established system, no?
Serfs were scared of liberty?The same reason why even serfs themselves were scared of liberty, afraid that no one would take care of them, the same reason as people were scared that without an absolute monarch order couldnt persist in a country.
You assume that all employers would take part in the cartel, but if even one doesnt, the mechanisms of a cartel breaks down.
And an employer has every reason to not join a cartel since by offering higher wages they have a bigger choice of labour and can get all the smart guys to work for them.
As for private governments not being responsible for their actions(lets call thempda-s) they can fully expect to be retaliated and their clients' capital be destroyed(and the rich elite certainly have a lot of capital to lose) for unjust action by other pda-s if they choose to not work together with them.
This system works, it worked well in iceland and ireland for 300 and a 1000 years respectively(until they were interfered by other countries).
notice both areas are islands. so it could be assumed the reason for monopolistic governments come to be accepted is through them propagating fear of outside dangers and how only through coercion can the population be safe.
people are generally not sadistic predators, unless they are agitated by oppressive rule.
So it is in everyones interests for pda-s to be reasonable and offer good services, otherwise their customers will be hurt and they will remove their own income.
The same reason why even serfs themselves were scared of liberty
I adressed this issue in post 57. what are your counter-arguments?
Perhaps you could give some examples and ideas to make our debating more productive? Its hard to correct mistakes when theres little help to use.
No government does not mean no power. It just means no almighty hierarchical power. If a community sees a threat, they'll act to it. Then the threat will see it's better to not be a threat. Also, the less laws there are, the more responsibility one takes. A law is an outsourcing of responsibility.To be more specific: All utopian schemes fail on the simple reason that none of them deal with the diversity of human behaviors and abilities. In any possible scenario there will be people who scam the system through laziness, and there will be people who take advantage of it through predation. What anarchy and libertarianism do is to remove all obstacles from the way of the predator.
Government at its worst is the strong imposing their will on the weak. But government at its best is people combining to protect themselves collectively when they lack the power to do so individually.
If you remove the power of collective defense, than all that is left is a government of the strong imposing their will on the weak. It is essentially feudalism, where the strong form a hierarchy for the purpose of domination and control.
That is the only possible outcome of libertarian or anarchy capitalism.
Workers would form unions and mass strikes(why wouldnt they?)
if such cartels form, and return to work when an equilibrium froms between the demands of workers and employers.
Your theory has other major problems too as i already adressed with the wiki article( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Privat...ession_and_abuses_by_private_defense_agencies ), what is your response to those problems?
The nazi government could work because people wanted it to.
Germans wanted revenge for the humiliating ww 1 peace treaty, so there was a large enough number of people to support it.
Youre basically wondering why people support governments.. Its because they've never had it any other way so they think it needs to be like that,
even if a different form of society would work better and even if governments use coercive force against their people. Like any type of order, an-cap needs a large enough support first before it can work. We simply dont have that yet, its a very new form of society, whose theoretical work has only been done during the last few decades.
Again, business elite is not a concealed bubble whose power cant collapse unless it is put into a privileged position which can only happen if there is a coercive force SUPPORTED BY THE PEOPLE
Ill give you that, capitalist principles were not that well realised back then, but a form of independent courts which people could choose between did exist so it provides some idea of how it could work.
A free competition between PDAs is better than one central government.
The reason pda-s havent been able to form thus far is that people havent wanted them to!
The idea of a central government taking care of us is simply so inbred, that people prefer it even though its less efficient.(and yes PDA-s are able to enforce laws if they have support from their clients and other pda-s)
Because it will be retaliated (its talked about in the wiki article man, did you read my posts?)
No government does not mean no power. It just means no almighty hierarchical power. If a community sees a threat, they'll act to it. Then the threat will see it's better to not be a threat. Also, the less laws there are, the more responsibility one takes. A law is an outsourcing of responsibility.
Still, milder forms of this actually increase people's safety. You can't say your laws serve you anymore, because you can't even understand them. That's not because of you, but because there's so many difficult laws that you'd have to do years of research at the very least for it. Today's law isn't there to serve the people anymore. If it were there to save the people, they'd make it understandable for the people.
Oh, by the way, I'm not one of the anarcho-capitalists. I actually think one day the monetary system will get obsolete. I'm more left wing anarchist so to say.
Product Description
A Brief History of the Birth of the Nazis is a timely and concise history of the Freikorps, the voluntary paramilitary groups that dominated German political life from the abdication of the Kaiser in 1918 to Hitler's Beerhall Putsch of 1923. Theirs is an often overlooked story of political intrigue and murder. Raised in the chaotic aftermath of war, the Freikorps were composed mostly of veteran soldiers, embittered and out of place in civilian life, and young, right-wing students determined to crush those forces who had "betrayed" their homeland. First used by the Social Democrats in power to defeat their enemies on the extreme left in Berlin and Bavaria, they soon launched a counteroffensive in which the Freikorps all but overturned the State in their attempt to set up a full-blown Fascist military government. Once thwarted, however, the disgruntled Freikorps embarked on a campaign of political murder; their leaders retired briefly to Bavaria, where they came under the influence of the little-known but rising political agitator Adolf Hitler. The ideology of the Friekorps was adopted, almost unmodified, by the Nazis, who, fittingly, marked their arrival in 1934 with the massacre of many former Freikorps members. Photographs are included.
I will agree with this to some extent- a major problem, I feel, with the perceptions that most people hold of the concept of "government" is that they are so very attached to the hierarchical, essentially authoritarian form which we've inherited from the old despots. Democratised as they are, they so often reflect ancient tyrannies in their centralised, dehumanised and hierarchical natures. Government could just as easily be "bottom-up" as "top-down", grass roots and subsidiaritarian as centralised and authoritarian. Potentially, a system could be constructed spanning the entirety of human civilisation, from the individual to a world government, decisions being made at the level of the lowest competent authority.No government does not mean no power. It just means no almighty hierarchical power. If a community sees a threat, they'll act to it. Then the threat will see it's better to not be a threat. Also, the less laws there are, the more responsibility one takes. A law is an outsourcing of responsibility.
How is it the one and only tool? It's the one and only tool we use nowadays, but that doesn't mean others don't exist. Again, a community police/army force can protect the people without government having control over them. Besides, by arming everyone with something basic, violent oppression will have a big price for the oppressor because he risks his life.The government is the means the community uses to do that. Prohibiting the one and only tool available leaves only violence and revolution.
How is it the one and only tool? It's the one and only tool we use nowadays, but that doesn't mean others don't exist. Again, a community police/army force can protect the people without government having control over them. Besides, by arming everyone with something basic, violent oppression will have a big price for the oppressor because he risks his life.
Human behavior is created by its environment. Change the environment, you change the behavior.There is no possibility of that working. A few of the armies will band together, defeat the others, and rule.
You cannot devise a system that utterly ignores human behavior and expect it to stand.
For the record, I disagree with anarcho-capitalism too. But I think socialism is a greater disaster.