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Government is a Quack Faith-Healer
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The Laissez Faire City Times, Vol 3, No 16
by Wolf DeVoon

http://zolatimes.com/V3.16/gov_faith.html

Humans exist in perfect freedom. Obedience is a
choice. Government is therefore an illusion. The
evidence isn't hard to gather, and it requires no
special twist of language, no cognitive somersault.
Just pick up the telephone and summon a policeman to
attend a crime in progress (robbery, rape, murder,
kidnapping). Good luck getting help in time. Nor is it
clever to claim that the state's protection exists in
a more diffuse, but efficacious realm beyond the
average response time of emergency services. In any
public street, the law is observed by its citizenry
without police. Los Angeles has 7,000 cops and 7
million citizens. The LAPD are garbage collectors in
fancy uniforms, picking up the dead and praying that
the rest of us will argue quietly. Our dwellings are
rendered safe from fire by homeowners and tenants,
employing nothing more coercive than an individual
desire to survive. All instrumentalities of community
protection and public welfare existed first as
private, voluntary organizations (constabularies, fire
brigades, libraries, schools, hospitals) before
dilettantes and ward-healers proposed that a
bureaucracy should monopolize and run them badly. The
historical origins of governments were neither
rational nor provident. In every instance, ancient and
modern, sovereigns were created by plunder and a fairy
tale of divine right (British Empire), a crackpot
theory of destiny (USSR), or a bad bargain improvised
under duress (U.S.A.) Any student of the U.S.
Constitution can see through the myth of glory: the
Virginia Plan was a recipe for Civil War.
Noam Chomsky wants government to thwart "evil
predators." Robert Nozick fears competition. Hobbes,
von Mises, and Ayn Rand hail the state as a champion
of the weak, a bulwark of liberty. Burke sighs that
the established order of ermine and tithes is
comfortable; all innovation a threat.

Phooey! Their theoretical defense of an illusion makes
no donut disappear from a cop's mouth, no soldier more
likely to question his orders, no real evil less
vicious. Government is the sole, permanent source of
repression and waste. It does not exist of necessity,
but rather by virtue of a tragic, almost comical
combination of klutzy, opportunistic terrorism against
sitting ducks whom it pretends to shelter, plus our
childish phobia of responsibility, praying to be
exempted from the hard reality of life on life's
terms. It is daft to moan about crime. Government
cannot stop a thief, a lunatic, or a kid playing with
matches. It took the Nazis twenty years to flatter and
frighten the German nation into collective obedience
-- and still someone shoved a bomb under the Fuhrer's
conference table. The state does not and cannot
triumph by coercion. Ayn Rand was correct: "Evil
requires the sanction of the victim."

During the war, German factory owners wheedled
endlessly to avoid losing skilled Jewish workers.
Twenty percent of all Nazi munitions were duds,
sabotaged on the assembly line. The greatest tragedy
of the Holocaust was the role of Jewish Councils, who
collaborated with and made possible the systematic
transportation of innocents. In 1935, SS troops only
numbered in the hundreds, not tens of thousands. Jews
were ordered to emigrate from Nazi Germany. It is an
uncomfortable fact, but the state at its worst and
most triumphal was incapable of genocide without the
passive compliance of its intended victims. In Soviet
Russia, the only tyrant was not Stalin; it was
millions of citizens who chanted slogans and perished
as a consequence of their own folly. Thirty million
British trade unionists, doctors, butchers, bakers and
candlestick makers democratically cut their own
economic throats in the 1970s with the same Marxist
slogans. Harold Wilson did not "force" them into
penury, and Margaret Thatcher did not "force" the
British to wake up and smell the bank statements. We
the people do these things to and for ourselves.

In fact and in reality, we are ungoverned and
ungovernable. I defy anyone to name a single instance
of governmental action that succeeded in achieving its
intended outcome. Above all, please don't tell me that
you filed an honest tax return, or that you know
someone who did. No public work was raised without
delay, confusion, cost overrun, graft, or outright
disaster as a final consequence. Every morning, the
state mangles reason and justice to perform simple
tasks that private actors (a) would not undertake
because the project is stupid; or (b) could do faster,
cheaper, and better than government; or (c) are
implicitly required to do anyway, since the state has
no competence except that which is supplied by private
contractors. All the U.S. politicians and bureaucrats
combined could not repair a flush toilet.

I become bored with discussing the state's
incompetence, so obvious a fact. The worst toxic waste
sites are government property. The Soviet Union
wrought environmental catastrophe, because wanton
misery and economic folly are proportionate to the
size of government. They never learn, never fail to
make stupid decisions. Boris Yeltsin spent $3.5
billion of IMF cash trying (and failing) to defend the
rouble, precisely reproducing Black Wednesday, when
Britain emptied her purse trying (and failing) to
defend the pound's membership in the Exchange Rate
Mechanism. "Bad protection drives out good," Alan
Greenspan used to say, condemning the ludicrous
spectacle of government conducted by morons. If the
peace and prosperity of the entire world rests on Bill
Clinton's shoulders, how does the Commander-In-Chief
have time to masturbate in the Oval Office during
office hours? Answer: Peace and prosperity don't.
Clinton's leadership is an illusion. Politicians have
nothing of consequence to do, say, or decide. They are
physiocratic windup toys, floating in a bubble bath of
lukewarm hysteria, reciting platitudes written by
schoolboys. We prosper to the extent that government
does nothing. Clinton feels our pain, didn't inhale,
whimpers for forgiveness. If there is any
justification for this carnival of hot air, it must be
discerned from an abstract principle, because none of
the empirical data suggest any tangible benefit
produced by these "sterile" public employments.

What Good is the State?

"Supposedly, there exist important services, such as
national defense, which benefit people whether they
pay for them or not. The result is that selfish agents
refuse to contribute, leading to disaster. The only
way to solve this problem is to coerce the
beneficiaries to raise the funds to supply the needed
good. In order for this coercion to work, it needs to
be monopolized by a single agency, the state. Public
goods arguments have been made not only for national
defense, but for police, roads, education, R&D,
scientific research, and many other goods and
services. The essential definitional feature of public
goods is 'non-excludability'; because the benefits
cannot be limited to contributors, there is no
incentive to contribute." Prof. Bryan Caplan's Anarchy
FAQ

How this justifies Kosovo, the Vietnam War, or the
defense of Kuwait is impossible to guess. So, let's
suppose that it's 1939 and our national security
problem is Adolph Hitler. Selfish plutocrats are weary
of throwing good U.S. savings after bad, rescuing
England. Jewish Americans raise funds to help their
kinfolk in Poland, and German-Americans parade through
Wisconsin waving swastikas. These are historical
facts. It is undeniably true that, at any moment in
history, the community will be divided into rival
interest groups, each demanding that all the others
contribute to some "public good." See The Federalist
Papers, No. X.

I am not an infantile individualist, demanding the
right to be let alone by my neighbors or by whichever
dominant faction has control of the elephantine
mousetrap of state. Nor is David Friedman's example of
housetrailers in France a solution. We do not live in
housetrailers. Our lives and fortunes are deeply
rooted in geographical community. Try building a
factory or a nuclear power station on a housetrailer!
Even in some micro-agrarian society, where the
population is geographically dispersed and scatters
farther into the hills at the first whiff of trouble,
like the peasants of Corsovo, the penalty for
isolation is deprivation, and ultimately you run out
of room to run. Kropotkin's "sensible dictates of
[Polish] tribal conscience" are a joke, when the
problem is a ruthless neighbor like Adolph Hitler,
mobilizing twenty Panzer divisions with absolute air
supremacy.

The solution is here at ground zero, the foundation of
society. If the American government had been disbanded
in 1910 (to pick a date when it might have been
historically feasible), the problem of Adolph Hitler
would never have arisen. The mass suicide of World War
I would have ended without Wilson's mismanagement, and
there would have been no Great Depression to bankrupt
postwar Europe. The American society of 1933, sans
Franklin Roosevelt, would have been free of Keynesian
doctrine, trading in hard currency and guided by a
consortium of wealthy private bankers and
industrialists -- a vastly different regime than
Kropotkin's "tribal conscience." American military
adventures in Europe and Asia have always been
pointless and unprofitable, from a strictly commercial
perspective. War is an irrational waste of resources
that no business would dare undertake. Consequently,
the capitalist policy of national defense is to: (a)
maximize industrial output; (b) maintain a strategic
intelligence network; and (c) when necessary, call
upon the whole community for men and munitions to meet
any clear and present danger, providing capital and
moral support to those who volunteer to fight. If this
seems preposterously simple, then you have not read
the history of the American Revolution. Most people
are not mercenaries; they will not fight for money
alone, unless they perceive that their communities and
their loved ones are in real peril, a natural
counterweight to reckless abuse of policy. The only
difference between a coercive state and a consortium
of leading citizens is competence. In the economic
crisis that brought Hitler to power, leading citizens
refused to participate. They stupidly entrusted the
mechanism of state to Hindenburg, Hoover, and
Chamberlain, who preferred National Socialism to
Marxism. It is no surprise that German democracy ended
badly in 1933. Politicians routinely proffer disaster,
since their social contribution consists of flattery,
fantasy, hatred and fear.

If roads are needed, communities have local bankers,
landlords, and employers to determine and pay for
local development. Ditto schools and hospitals. Every
example of American philanthropy was an Andrew
Carnegie or Sam Walton "rags-to-riches" story. My
proposal is very simple. Do not let these men (or
anyone else) compel obedience via legislation. Make
the law of society de jure anarchy and promulgate the
idea that some will govern more than others, not by
virtue of piecrust campaign promises and balloon drops
at a party meeting, but as a consequence of diligence,
effort, savings, and sobriety.

Inequality, Legal Fictions & Legal Rights

It is silly to cry "fascism!" as an objection to my
proposal. The operative feature of fascism was
direction of industry by government. I would hope that
critics have enough sense to say that an elite banking
consortium constitutes an oligarchy -- i.e., rule by a
few -- and is hence undemocratic. Quite so. Yet
democracy is a disaster. Nothing you can say will
convince me that your vote is equal to mine, or that
the two of us together have a legal right to silence
one of our economic or intellectual betters, or that
someone's childish whims deserve to be given a free
microphone in aid of "the public good." I am not in
favor of "free speech" by morons and children. Nor do
I believe that free speech exists in contemporary
society. Speech is the weapon of broadcasters. These
are trifling side-issues, but it won't hurt to sweep
them aside. I am a media exile. My works don't have a
hope in hell of publication. As far as I'm concerned,
CBS is a "predatory force" and their New York
headquarters should be short-listed for a surgical
strike.

The society in which we live is neither democratic nor
fair. Take away their Federal license to print money,
and CBS falls tomorrow. We cannot be rid of them too
soon. Their agenda of glib vacuity, opinion polls,
blandishments, and flashy manure is anesthetizing our
society. Sport is next on my hit list. If I were a
religious man, I'd fall on my knees and beg God to
turn the NFL into thirty pillars of salt, ending one
of the vainest vulgarities in human history.

I hope I have demonstrated a core proposition: that
your vote and mine are incompatible and cancel one
another. If you comfort yourself with the knowledge
that a "majority" agree with your preference, I hereby
denounce your brainless majority as de facto fascism
and blame you for wrecking the American economy.
Forty-four of GDP is government outlays. When the
market crashes, don't look for oligarchic villains on
Wall Street, or State Street, or in Grand Cayman. The
next Depression will be of your own majoritarian
making, because you pretended that political wishes
were horses and beggars could ride, if enough of them
wanted to.

Ayn Rand had the right idea. The guiltiest of men are
the natural oligarchs, who abdicated their leadership
of an anarcho-capitalist revolution. Instead of giving
Harry Truman the atomic bomb, it could have and should
have been developed in a laboratory at Galt's Gulch.
This is the moral meaning of inequality. When the men
of brains collaborate with a mob of dullards, it's
unfair to blame the resultant calamity on a crowd of
pickpockets and cheerleaders. Sadly, a moral principle
never reaches beyond itself. Its ethical arms are too
short, extending no farther than one man's soul, one
man's purpose and lifespan. We have to look elsewhere
for political guidance, because the thing at issue is
"a nation of laws and not of men."

I deal in very simple ideas. The rotten timber is a
fiction, so let's blast the fictions. In reality,
there are living human beings whose freedom and
interest are the subject of this debate. There is no
divine right of incorporation, whether as a
government, or a Subchapter S tax dodge, or a family
trust that never dies like a natural person. I hereby
propose that the law abolish all corporations. Let
each parcel of land, each railroad and airline, every
road and factory be the property of some individual
(or partnership of individuals). Legal cases shall be
A vs B, two natural persons. I don't care if embryos,
animals, and plants qualify for legal standing. Fine.
Whatever. But no more fictitious, disembodied,
immortal "corporate persons" like the United States of
America, or CBS Inc. Let's get the bullshit out of the
way and call some real defendants in court, to explain
their guilt or innocence.

I am not impressed by the need to combine capital for
big projects. The laws of banking and agency are
sufficiently imaginative for any requisite venture.
When J.P. Morgan owned J.P. Morgan, there was no legal
limit to his activities or scope of responsibility as
proprietor. He bailed out the Federal Government twice
(the damn fool). When a natural person dies, his
fortune can be willed to anyone he chooses, but not to
a charitable ghost. All religious groups and trade
unions are hereby dissolved. Associate as you please,
go where you like, and sing your heart out in the
choir -- but legal ownership of property pertains to
real persons from now on. God owns nothing, unless he
shows up in court and speaks for Himself.

The Initiation of Force

"There is certainly one truth in anarchistic beliefs:
Every large organization contains an element of veiled
or open force, and every kind of force is an evil, if
we consider its effects on the human character. But is
it not the lesser evil? Can we dispense with force?
When this question is clearly put, the case for
anarchism seems extremely weak. It is true, that the
experiment of an entirely forceless society have never
been made. But such evidence as we have does not
indicate that ill intentions will cease to exist if
repressive force disappears, and it is clear enough
that one ill-intentioned person can upset a large part
of society if there is no repressive force. The fact
that some intelligent and highly idealistic men and
women have believed and still believe in anarchism
shows that there is a type of sectarianism which
accepts a belief in spite of, or perhaps because of,
its apparent absurdity." (Landauer, quoted in Prof.
Bryan Caplan's Anarchy FAQ)

Every kind of force is an evil? Does that include
Toyotas and Beamers, screeching past me as I attempt
to cross an intersection? The way Landauer talks,
you'd think that anarchists have to foreswear use of
pesticides and cash registers. Lord-amighty! -- I
might economically "force" someone to act differently
by bribing her, or threatening to withhold a job
promotion. (Sound familiar?) Does Landauer expect all
anarchists to be Buddhist monks, or what?

Let's put this on a sensible basis. Force is good. I
like force. I wish I had more of it at my disposal,
and that I was able to wave a battalion or two at my
enemies. However, being a hothead by nature, some
years ago I made a moral decision not to carry a
handgun -- mainly because I was tempted to shoot two
or three people a day. If I began to indulge the habit
of shooting people, it was unclear to me how I might
ever wean myself from the practice. So, I decided to
"Just Say No" to homicide. Don't laugh. This is
serious business. When I got held up at gunpoint in
Beverly Hills, had I been armed, there would've been
at least two dead and several injured. I passionately
hate being threatened at gunpoint.

The rule in current law, as I understand it, is that
"initiation" of force is not an issue. (Attention, all
Objectivists. Initiation of force is irrelevant.) The
crime of assault is the threat of violence. Victims
can take whatever actions seem reasonable under the
circumstances. It is a complete justification for
killing someone, if you can prove in the context of
the situation that you had reason to believe that your
life or the life of another was in jeopardy. If you
kill somebody by mistake (wrongly believing that he
meant to kill you) it still isn't murder -- just
manslaughter. You could be paroled in two years,
assuming that you hadn't killed anybody before and you
were genuinely sorry for killing an innocent person by
mistake. That's the law.

Where does that leave us? Clearly, the government
intends to hunt us down if we refuse to pay taxes. If
we resist, like Randy Weaver or the Branch Davidians,
the FBI will use lethal force. That's their whole game
plan, eerily reminiscent of Hitler. Obey or die.

Having resisted the Federal Government by nonviolent
means (in court), I suggest that their intermediate
weapon of coercion (imprisonment) is just as deadly.
My life was in jeopardy on numerous occasions while in
custody, and I witnessed several deaths. The practical
enterprise of coercive government is to take life,
liberty, and property for the enrichment and
satisfaction of government officials. Motives are
another story. Tyrants always think well of themselves
and explain their activities as some kind of "public
service." Hitler certainly did.

But the law is quite firm on this point. You do not
have to understand an assailant's motive. All you have
to do is reasonably interpret his behavior as a clear
threat to your life or the life of another, and you
are legally justified in launching a preemptive
strike. Of course, the law grants special immunity to
government employees. You are never justified in
disobeying or impeding the actions of a sovereign --
not even when he aims a gun at you, or drops napalm on
your village, or regulates your employer out of
existence, or orders your child to die as a conscript,
thus sparing Bill Clinton the inconvenience of
interrupting his political career.

I admit that I am sometimes overwhelmed with
bitterness, because Jefferson's Declaration of
Independence is never far from my heart. No sovereign
has the right to take life, liberty, or property. The
historical cost is numbered in hundreds of millions
killed, two billion enslaved by Communism, five
billion denied an example of liberty -- largely
because America chickened out in 1787. The Framers
lost the courage to say that all men were created
equal.

Randolph of Virginia was not a fool, Benjamin Franklin
no devil. I'm sure that Madison hoped for the best,
and Hamilton thought that the survival of the Republic
mattered more than technical issues of justice.
Washington admitted that he was a simple man, unable
to understand what ought to be done or why. Few
imagined that the Constitution would survive more than
a few decades, and Jefferson expected a revolution
every 20 years or so. No one believed we would fight a
Civil War. No one wanted it. They did everything
possible to avoid it -- and yet, it was implicit from
the first signature in Philadelphia. I have made the
point elsewhere, but it bears repeating, that the
Civil War was fought as a result of protectionist
trade tariffs. It was the government's sole source of
revenue at its inception. When the South was denied a
voice in the Senate, saw her economic prospects
sinking, and knew that Randolph's Compromise was being
eclipsed by westward expansion, the Constitution was
finished.

Until the moment of secession, the Federal Government
never exerted substantial coercion against anyone,
neither private citizen nor state nor foreign power.
(I am not discussing Native Americans: the topic is
not germane to my present thesis.) Hamilton's doctrine
of "implied powers" sat on the shelf, disused. For the
umpteenth time, President Andrew Jackson vetoed the
construction of the Cumberland Road, saying that the
Federal Government had no lawful power to "promote the
general welfare." Banking and commerce were still in
the hands of private individuals. There were few
corporations. America was not a world power.

If Murray Rothbard felt free to argue natural law, he
inherited a tradition that skipped twice into the
American Experiment and died at the Ford Theater.
Jefferson's inspiration became Lincoln's epitaph: that
all men are created equal. I spent a long time
studying "Lincoln's claim" (If A may enslave B, why
not B steal the same argument and enslave A?) because
his was a beautiful eulogy of American common law, on
the occasion of its eclipse by hardship and chicanery,
paper greenbacks and Federal land grants -- the
desperate acts of an embattled, failing leadership.
When the Supreme Court reconvened, after a million
Americans had been sacrificed in battle against one
another, the American Experiment was legally ended. In
the Legal Tender Cases, common law was buried by the
will of the sovereign. Graft and power politics took
over. Henceforth, the only thing that mattered were
votes.

So, I find it somewhat remote and nostalgic, to
discuss "initiation of force" and common law assault.
The notion of justice survives because we live in
constructive, actual liberty. We are self-governing in
daily life, and we use justice to regulate our private
intercourse. But it is no longer operative in law. The
will of the state is our master, and We The People are
servants, unequal as a matter of legal principle. If
you are a government official, you are exempt from
personal liability -- in fact, you aren't even present
in court; you are a manifestation of the immortal,
disembodied, corporate Sovereign (local, state or
federal, it doesn't matter). So long as government
employees execute the will of the sovereign, they are
immune from prosecution, like the guards at Auschwitz
who were "only following orders." Oliver North was
able to take this another step farther, claiming that
he served his country by intuition, without asking for
embarrassing orders. His conscience was clear. It was
his duty to shred documents.

As a citizen, you are guilty with nothing to say in
your defense, if you refuse to obey or to provide such
information as the state may demand. The state has
first claim on your property, perpetual title to your
liberty. In tax matters, you are presumed guilty until
proven innocent. If you refuse to speak, you can be
jailed without trial. In antitrust, trade and consumer
protection law, you are guilty without knowing what
might constitute a crime. In immigration law, you are
guilty by reason of your place of birth.

At the moment, none of this matters to the American
people. Unemployment is low, inflation a distant
memory. The stock market quadrupled in value in ten
years. Life is good. Television is amusing and
familiar, like an old family friend. What could
possibly go wrong?

The Right of Revolution

"The basic argument of the advocates of 'propaganda by
the deed' was that anarchist terrorism would provoke
governments -- even avowedly liberal and democratic
governments -- to resort to increasingly harsh
measures to restore order. As governments'
ruthlessness increased, their 'true colors' would
appear for all to see, leading to more immediate
results than mere education and theorizing. As E.V.
Zenker notes in his Anarchism: A Criticism and History
of the Anarchist Theory, a number of Western
governments were driven to adopt anti-terrorist laws
as a result of anarchist terrorism. (Zenker goes on to
note that Great Britain remained true to its liberal
heritage by refusing to punish individuals merely for
espousing anarchist ideas.) But as one might expect,
contrary to the terrorists' hopes, it was the
reputation of anarchism -- peaceful and violent alike
-- which suffered rather than the reputation of the
state." Prof. Bryan Caplan's Anarchy FAQ

It is difficult to understand how the reputation of
the state was enhanced by the Unabomber, inasmuch as
he remained 100 percent invisible to the FBI for a
decade until his mother turned him in. Nor is the
arrest and prosecution of Timothy McVeigh quite the
same thing as preventing Timothy McVeigh from blowing
up a Federal office building. Had the attack taken
place at night, with no one killed except DEA and ATF
agents, our national reaction would have been
different.

I lived through an interesting period in American
history. I was in Madison when the Army Math Research
Center was blown up. I was in Milwaukee when an
anarchist was shot dead as he attempted to firebomb a
supermarket. I was in Washington when half a million
students fought a U.S. Marine Corps division, hoping
to stop the Vietnam War. The revolutionary cell had
guns, explosives, and a medical team. We were at war.
People died. With other survivors of that struggle, I
concluded that the enemy was not Richard Nixon or Dow
Chemical. It was the American majority -- an overfed,
self-satisfied, obedient bourgeoisie. To the majority
it is a matter of indifference whether their salaries
are paid by Lockheed or IBM or the Dept of Paperwork.
Their moral sense is superglued to their stomachs. We
cannot expect acts of revolutionary sacrifice to play
in Peoria, where folks applaud Bill and Hillary.

Ayn Rand said it best: "It's earlier than we think."
Revolutions are, of necessity, occasioned by hardship
and oppression. We simply have to wait for a
21st-century Stamp Tax. Those of us in the vanguard
have plenty to do in the meantime. Idle libertarians
can concentrate on agitprop activities, such as:

1. Publicize the declining "private sector" share of
GDP and growth of government.
2. Practice the virtue of speaking the truth. Identify
religion for the sewer it is.
3. Defend the rights of children. Boycott compulsory
public education.
But we cannot win without direct action. Real
revolutionaries must implement John Galt's strategy,
persuading American industrialists to shut their
factories, American bankers to quit. It doesn't matter
whether this happens by accident or design, but it is
vital to strip as much competence as possible from the
economy, to hasten and deepen the inevitable crash.

Minor Matters

In answer to Murray Rothbard, there is no such thing
as "natural law" or "human rights." All that exists
are natural persons and human interaction.

In answer to David Friedman, invisible hand
utilitarianism is impossible to test or measure,
because historical data are incomplete, and because
the "greatest good" is conjecture. I don't care what
happened in medieval Iceland.

In answer to Karl Marx, property rights are created
and maintained by general consent. If the
anarcho-capitalist oligarchy imposes a tyranny, the
downtrodden will revolt. The masses will not accept a
paradigm shift until their majoritarian welfare state
hits an economic brick wall, creating an opportunity
to rally them behind a new set of Founding Fathers. I
think we need to rewrite the common law definition of
"property" to defeat Marxist liberals like Ralph
Nader.

Should there be restitution for crime? No. I favor an
Old West Nevada approach to crime. In previous
writing, I suggested deportation of unwanted criminals
to Upper Michigan. Public prosecution is not part of
my scenario. All court cases are A vs B. Nor do I see
the courts as a beehive of activity. Anarchy means
conducting your affairs in propria persona, choosing
good partners, consulting mentors as needed, and
taking risks.

Pareto-optimal calculations are lost on me. It all
sounds like Garrett Hardin's "The Tragedy of the
Commons" and an excuse for environmentalists to join
the debate as intellectual equals, which they are not.


Conclusion

I have suggested above that mankind exist in perfect
freedom, and that government is a choreographed
ritual, nothing more than a public parade, or a
secularized religion of quack faith-healers. We can
increase or decrease the size of government at will.
In a totalitarian state, the parades are bigger, there
are more people in uniform, and they have less to eat.
There is only one way to end tyranny: from within.
Hitler was not defeated by Churchill or Eisenhower. He
was defeated by stupidity and disobedience. Tyrants
exude the former and inspire the latter.

My theory does not rely on a moral code. I view
morality as a personal choice. Perhaps that makes me
an emotive anarchist.

Because government does nothing and alters nothing, I
am far more concerned with personal choice and private
action. Hitler could not have come to power without
the support of his intellectual superiors, who wrongly
assumed that they could "control" him like a puppet.
This is also the tragic legacy of American political
history since the Civil War. So long as scientists and
businessmen support the majoritarian fable, average
Americans have no choice but to admire the Emperor's
New Clothes with embarrassment and concealed terror.
They know that something is wrong with our country,
despite reports of a "strong economy" and everyone's
best efforts to parade in cheerful rhythm. But the
figures tell a different story, and I name Alan
Greenspan as the guiltiest man in America for
withholding the bottom line. Public debt as a percent
of M2 has risen to wartime levels. Public spending
will exceed 50 percent of GDP in FY2015. When it does,
the IMF cannot rescue us. We are the IMF, boys and
girls.

How each person chooses to cope with this unfolding
disaster is unimportant. I cannot say that
"survivalists" have it wrong, nor the whores led by
Rupert Murdoch, nor the vultures led by George Soros.
But I speak the truth as I understand it, and I accept
the risk of public humiliation, rather than wait in
silence for another, smarter person to someday speak
for me and proclaim: All government is theft.

-30-

from The Laissez Faire City Times, Vol 3, No 16, April
19, 1999


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