Where is this civil war nonsense coming from? Advances in technology allow us other, peaceful avenues of resistance. (Video, nearly instant communication, cryptocurrencies...)
There are a plethora of ways to segregate individuals via classifications -- cops and mundanes; Democrats and Republicans; liberals vs conservatives; statists vs anarchists; bureaucrats and voters and illegals and government and... the list goes on! -- which often are used to demonize said groups. (The narrative of which the Media controls. But, oops! There's that lumping of individuals again! Individuals whom often label themselves, but, crap, that lumping!)
Demonization -- seeing other human beings as demons essentially, deserving of punishment; not just lesser beings that happen to be a nuisance -- generally allows us to permit certain abuses that we otherwise wouldn't.
We're living in anarchy -- per the original post -- now. (Phase 4.)
I think most of us can agree -- to some degree, at least -- that the law has been converted into plunder.The abolition of the state would result in a civil war (between would be state-builders), out of which would emerge a new state.
Power cannot be abolished; if once scattered, it would be only a matter of time until it reappeared.
The process by which this occurs is aptly called civil war.
I think most of us can agree -- to some degree, at least -- that the law has been converted into plunder.
"When, then, does plunder stop? It stops when it becomes more painful and more dangerous than labor."
Social media can be an effective tool, and there are plenty of other ways to dissuade someone from persisting with this occupation than resorting to violence.
Pragmatically, everyone should occupy as much of an enforcer's time as possible during each interaction, limiting their number of victims every shift in the process. (This takes more courage than most people possess, though.)
Absent a New Libertarian Man, the result of any experiment in anarcho-capitalism (or any kind of anarchism) is going to be as I described.
And why not as I described?
I can appreciate that reasoning, but it isn't going to persuade minarchists (such as myself). The minarchist view is that anarcho-capitalism will devolve into warlords fighting over control of territory. When a warlord establishes control of a particular piece of territory (as one sooner or later inevitably will), a state is born.
We can think of an experiment in anarcho-capitalism in four distinct phases:
1. the status quo (the state exists)
2. the experiment begins (anarcho-capitalism exists)
3. break-down (anarcho-capitalism devolves into warlords fighting for territory)
4. return to where we began (the state reemerges when warlords consolidate their controls over their respective territories)
Now, what's the point going through the unpleasantness of phase #3 only to return to our starting point?
The main point I guess I want to get across is: We're at so-called "Phase 4" already! (And, this "territory" only extends to the amount of control over a peoples. Imagine how different things would be without the 3rd amendment being taken for granted...)
I wanted to link something about the Nightwatchman State earlier, but never got around to it.
You sidetracked me with that "civil war" guff before. All of those "phases" you supplied in the first quoted response are happening around us now, already, depending on where you look. War usually isn't in anyone's best interests, and technology -- like the internet -- provides avenues to counter propaganda which were unavailable in the past. (Granted, these often are also dissemination points of propaganda itself -- everything is a double-edged sword -- in the battle of ideas, the libertarian philosophy will undoubtedly win.)I know.
So, why undertake this experiment only to end up back in the same place again, with the added bonus of having lived (or not) through a civil war?
It's like burning down your house for the pleasure of spending the money to rebuild it exactly as it was.
That's the minarchist ideal.
Power never wrests with the individual, even when they are alone? (Though, "No man is an island...")The abolition of the state would result in a civil war (between would be state-builders), out of which would emerge a new state.
Power cannot be abolished; if once scattered, it would be only a matter of time until it reappeared.
The process by which this occurs is aptly called civil war.
“The responsibility in the first instance falls to the United Kingdom to take care of their ships,” Pompeo said, adding, “This isn’t because of US sanctions, this is because of the theocracy of the leadership in Iran, the revolutionary zeal to conduct terror around the world, for now four decades, continues.”
Iran has said that all 23 crew members on the Stena Impero are “safe and in good health,” and that it seized the tanker in response to the UK’s seizure of one of its own tankers on July 4.
Would Nazis still have felt the urge to gas and incinerate those held captive, had there not been a war at the time? (That's the crux of this currently non-existent debate.)[UNHIDE]Well, if someone kidnaps you, then you're at the mercy -- or lack thereof -- of your captor. [UNHIDE](I want to discuss Nazi Germany -- and in a very specific way relating to the exacerbating effects of war -- but, I'm not sure how to transition. I can't just leave the rest unposted, though, because it might serve as a foundation for better discussions in the future. I'll stop here for now.)[/HIDE][/HIDE]
Martin Luther King Jr. said:“One has not only a legal but a moral responsibility to obey just laws. Conversely, one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws. I would agree with St. Augustine that ' an unjust law is no law at all. ' ”
One of these days, I'll eventually get around to re-posting the original text outside of quotes and with links to ease referencing. I have multiple reasons for writing all of this and persistently bumping, but the biggest one is this: do what you can in the here and now, because really, that's all you've got. [...]
You sidetracked me with that "civil war" guff before. All of those "phases" you supplied in the first quoted response are happening around us now, already, depending on where you look. War usually isn't in anyone's best interests, and technology -- like the internet -- provides avenues to counter propaganda which were unavailable in the past. (Granted, these often are also dissemination points of propaganda itself -- everything is a double-edged sword --
in the battle of ideas, the libertarian philosophy will undoubtedly win.)
Power never wrests with the individual, even when they are alone? (Though, "No man is an island...")
The case I'm trying to make is that you're always living in anarchy, regardless of location. "The State" only manifests itself when enforcers are actively coercing you or others in your vicinity, otherwise you are free. (Freedom within the mind is a discussion for another time?)Sorry it took such a ridiculously long time to respond, I lost track of this thread.
Sometimes states collapse and, when they do, they get rebuilt, yes.
But I don't see how that helps the case for anarcho-capitalism (which is the case you're ultimately trying to make, no?).
Ideas ebb and flow, but are never completely eradicated. The era of the internet changes this atavistic reliance on physical domination, doesn't it?The battle of ideas is something of a misnomer.
Which ideas prevail depends on who wins the battle of swords, or guns, or aircraft carriers, not the battle of ideas.
"Power" in that context could be synonymous with liberty; freedom of choice; the ability to do what you want, presuming you don't hurt others of course. (The "No man is an island" bit was to emphasize voluntarism, which is more plainly spoken in that last descriptor of the previous sentence.)I'm not sure what you're getting at.
If power means power over others, then there's no such thing on Robinson's island (at least not till Friday appears).
This is the post I would like to highlight the most.One of these days, I'll eventually get around to re-posting the original text outside of quotes and with links to ease referencing. I have multiple reasons for writing all of this and persistently bumping, but the biggest one is this: do what you can in the here and now, because really, that's all you've got.
Sometimes, governments serve the correct purpose. Actual criminals -- not merely dissidents -- are apprehended. Corrupt and fraudulent institutions are occasionally investigated. ("Even a broken clock is right twice a day.")
Too often, political and philosophical discussions devolve into hypotheticals. Straw-man arguments help no one. Rather than waiting for ideal conditions, work with what you've got.
Case in point: Medical Marijuana legalization. Relatively recent hemp legislation has made current methods for testing inadequate, as most of Texas' facilities are unable to determine the amount of THC on suspected contraband. (Being interrogated and potentially punished for a substance that you choose to put in your body is absurd, but it still happens.)
Why does any of this matter? Per the original post, we're living in anarchy and governments exist within it. There are a myriad of ways to handle entanglements with the State, but reciprocating violence is the most dramatic. Pulling a trigger is easy, but few heed the consequences of hurting -- if not outright killing -- another human being. Why take such drastic action when the "law" suddenly shifts in the favor of the persecuted?
And more specifically, discuss the above.The era of the internet changes this atavistic reliance on physical domination, doesn't it?
Wi-fi, Bluetooth, and other forms of communication have become so ubiquitous that controlling them all is impractical, if not impossible. (So have people!)So, you are opening the door to the conversation re. the "freedom of the mind"?
The internet is what is accessible on it. It has a material existence, nebulous perhaps, but I understand that the data available is stored somewhere (on a server, for instance). This alone makes the internet subject to physical domination, which may be atavistic but will never be archaic. The era of the internet has modified the reach of physical domination, extending it--rather than challenging it. I think that the experience of your average Chinese bears this out. I would even hazard to say that ideological domination is the foundation of physical domination, the latter being exerted only in instance when the former fails.
Wi-fi, Bluetooth, and other forms of communication have become so ubiquitous that controlling them all is impractical, if not impossible. (So have people!)
I can agree with the notion that ideological domination is the foundation of physical domination; however, attempts at physical domination mean you have already lost. Really, resorting to outright violence usually isn't necessary, because people police themselves enough already via propagandized fear. (Better or worse, nothing ever lasts!)
This is the crux, and what I want to emphasize. Unintended consequences from utilizing violence are the normal, not the exception. Governments aren't exempt from it, and neither are you. Neither is anyone. ("Live by the sword; die by the sword.")Loosely consider the Civil Rights movement. Sicking dogs on people, etc. These are instances wherein physical force is exerted by an ideology in extremis, but failed to protect the integrity of that peculiar ideological aspect (segregation) and actually maximized the damage done to it. There, the attempt at physical domination was a loss (to the prevailing ideological constellation).