I only saw two questions, but we'll overlook that.
Your question is the third, of course. 1. How can one set up an army (without taxes)? 2. How can one set up a mammoth retail distribution and sales empire (without taxes)? 3. How can one build and operate a preposerously enormous conglomeration of machinery and engineering -- build it for billions, and operate it for years at a loss, a loss of millions of dollars per day (without taxes)?
If a man could answer any one of these three questions, could solve any one of these very difficult, very challenging problems, then he could probably at least see the possibility that the other two might be soluble as well, if enough men who were smart enough and motivated enough were to try to tackle the problem. It would be anything but inevitable -- it would be a tremendous accomplishment, to be applauded for sure! -- but it just might be
possible, at least in theory, to build a deep-sea oil drilling operation. Or to establish a sophisticated retail network. Or to maintain a defensive army.
You see my point, I trust.
I did read your whole post, of course, with great interest, but I am going to boil it down to what I see as the fundamental point you would like to make, and also a fundamental misunderstanding we may be experiencing. Here it is:
But the bottom line is that the anarcho-libertarian incorrectly assumes that the fundamental human nature is that of the autonomous individual, and particularly the autonomy of the individual will.
But nowhere do I see that point being made! Am
I making that point? There may be libertarians who feel that way, but guess what? There are also conservatives and right-wingers who feel this way! There are people who
100% agree with you politically who feel that way. Does that prove your political philosophy wrong?
Yes, the concept of individual autonomy pervades modern American conservatism as well as liberalism as well as libertarianism. Individualism is part of American culture -- that's just a fact of life. And, inevitably, some take it too far. But believing in some sort of "super autonomous individual," is not a part of private property society (aka anarcho-capitalist) philosophy. Note: not only is it
not an important part, and not a fundamental part (which is what you seem to believe it to be) -- it is
not a part at all! The private property philosophy does not assume that "the fundamental human nature is that of the autonomous individual". It doesn't. Advocates of the voluntary private property society do not necessarily assume that. Some may, just as some may be overweight, or play too many video games. But that is not the philosophy's fault. People are affected by the culture they live in. Surely you, of all people, can understand and agree with that. It should be no surprise that a philosophy with its orgin and stronghold in one of the most individual-glorifying cultures on Earth would have some adherents who may be extreme in their individual-glorifying.
But this assumption is nowhere justified.
But this assumption is nowhere
made. It is not an assumption that is important or relevant at all to the political philosophy to which I adhere.
We are, to the depths of our being, mutually dependent.
Indeed, it is hard to see how we could last very long if all infants and their parents were to decide to operate as "rugged individualists".
So, like I say, I believe that you have misunderstood us. Or at least me. Which is certainly no sin. But I hope that maybe you are beginning to understand a little better from are little conversation.
I will reply to just one more sentence of yours for now:
You need intermediary institutions to restrain the troops.
But then, how are the intermediary institutions restrained? If they have more power than the "knights" or whoever the bad guys are, then they are the ones with the most power. And if there's one institution (intermediary or not) with overwhelmingly superior power, guess what will happen over time? They will use and consolidate their power! Surprise, surprise, surprise! Even if there's somehow multiple "intermediary institution
s", each weak alone but strong enough if they all cooperate to limit the bad guys, chances are that the extent of their cooperation will increase over time until they are for all practical purposes one institution.
There really is no utopic solution to the power problem. Having big muscles lets you protect the tribe from the wooly mammoths, but it also lets you beat up the rest of the tribe more easily. That's just the way it is. Some people seek power over each other. That's a very real, very deep motivation for them.
So how do we keep them from bossing and bullying?
We can't.
They
will do so. The competent ones, anyway. Some would-be bullies will be too stupid to ever gain any real power. But others will be smart. They will be valuable. They will have real skills and leadership ability. They will have people under them whom they bully. Period. End of story.
But what has proven to be very effective and nice in limiting the damage caused by this abusive behavior is the "meta-institution", if you will, of competition and decentralization. Are there megalomaniac manufacturing company owners, who bully and harangue and abuse their workers all day every day? Yep. But there are multiple manufacturing companies that the machinist who tires of the abuse can go work for. This makes everyone fairly happy, and makes everything work out fairly OK, and nothing gets too out of hand. If the peasants could have chosen whichever knight rental service they wanted, then it would have been much more difficult for the contractual relationship to turn into a non-contractual one. Not impossible, but less likely and less easy. If would have been a much more robust system, resistant to undermining. When was the last time a grocery chain owner went rogue and started charging taxes and mass-murdering millions? Free and open competition is the key "meta-institution" which has proven wildly successful in preventing the darker lusts for power in the human race from running out of control, and taking over the world, so to speak.
So that is what we, as advocates of the free and voluntary private property society, seek to acheive. We are
not trying to overturn society. We are
not like the French Revolution. We want to strengthen society. We want to make it more robust. We want to enable all the good, worthwhile, free, and voluntary systems of mutual dependency -- commerce, religion, family, science, art -- to be able to be strong and flourish and hold their own against those who would detroy them: those who seek for hegemony.