Really? Because there are many real world examples dating back thousands of years. From the Old West, to Colonial Pennsylvania, to Iceland, to the Xeer in Somalia, to Celtic Ireland and Tuaths, etc. If you are going to continue to ad hom, at least make sure you know a bit about history, please.
In Celtic Irish society of the Middle Ages and Early Modern period, courts and the law were largely anarchist, and operated in a purely stateless manner. This society persisted in this manner for roughly a thousand years until its conquest by England in the seventeenth century. In contrast to many similarly functioning tribal societies (such as the Ibos in West Africa), preconquest Ireland was not in any sense "primitive": it was a highly complex society that was, for centuries, the most advanced, most scholarly, and most civilized in all of Western Europe. A leading authority on ancient Irish law wrote, "There was no legislature, no bailiffs, no police, no public enforcement of justice... There was no trace of State-administered justice.
All "freemen" who owned land, all professionals, and all craftsmen, were entitled to become members of a tuath. Each tuath's members formed an annual assembly which decided all common policies, declared war or peace on other tuatha, and elected or deposed their "kings." In contrast to primitive tribes, no one was stuck or bound to a given tuath, either because of kinship or of geographical location. Individual members were free to, and often did, secede from a tuath and join a competing tuath. Professor Peden states, "the tuath is thus a body of persons voluntarily united for socially beneficial purposes and the sum total of the landed properties of its members constituted its territorial dimension. The "king" had no political power; he could not decree or administer justice or declare war. Basically he was a priest and militia leader, and presided over the tuath assemblies.
Celtic Ireland survived many invasions, but was finally vanquished by Oliver Cromwell's reconquest in 1649-50.
While not perfect, nor strictly adhering to Natural Law, it is very close, and it is a poignant real world example that illustrates how a Stateless society is far better off than a State induced society. For one, name me one Nation-State that lasted for 1,000 years, like the Anarchistic Irish did. Think of the "King" as the CEO or business owner, and the tuath as a DRO/Insurance/Judicial type of Business venture.
No College or High School, or any Government school ever teaches their pupils about Ireland, and other Stateless societies which have thrived far better than any State. No, they will not because it is not in their interest to. States are not instituted to preserve your liberty, it is to create a monopolistic geographical extortion ring. The
State is indeed, nothing more than the Mafia. I bet a thousand-years from now, people looking back on this period of history will wonder what the fuck we were thinking.
I suspect if Hobbes was never born, we would not be in the current dire situation we are in today.