I agree. Look at question #61 : Should the State be abolished. The test wants a "yes" answer and this is anarchic, not libertarian. Libertarians support minimum government, but not total abolition. Part 3 of the test mostly slants toward anarchism.Test is flawed. It is not a Libertarian purity test. Its an Anarchist purity test.
Agreed. I thought that was annoying as well. There is definitely a role for government, just at the local level, instead of the federal level.
How local? Governments preform the same function at all levels.
Anarchy is inherently impossible. You will always have "gangs" preying upon the weak. Gangs are "ruled" by a leader, who will have his seconds, and this represents a rudimentary form of government. Any social organization which arises to protect individuals against these gangs will also be "government". The earliest form of social organization, above the family level, was semi-nomadic tribalism. "Government" existed within this framework.One solution to prevent this again would be to eliminate government entirely. Otherwise, we'll wind up right back where we are now. Dr. P gets elected, makes every single governmental change he has proposed, and then 20 years later politicians have slowly and insidiously usurped all that power back and more. Thomas Jefferson was right, "The natural progression of things is for government to grow and liberty to shrink" or something like that. Constitutional limits have failed. Its a pretty radical idea, and totally unlikely in my lifetime, but I think it will happen eventually where we have a totally free society centered around property rights. I'll plug it again, "The Machinery of Freedom" is a great book on this issue.
Anarchy is inherently impossible... Any social organization which arises to protect individuals against these gangs will also be "government".
Anarchy is inherently impossible. You will always have "gangs" preying upon the weak. Gangs are "ruled" by a leader, who will have his seconds, and this represents a rudimentary form of government. Any social organization which arises to protect individuals against these gangs will also be "government". The earliest form of social organization, above the family level, was semi-nomadic tribalism. "Government" existed within this framework.
The prevailing mindset to think of people as groups is what allows governments to be formed.
What your describing is what many people actually associate with anarchy, mob rule. Once you realize that you are a sovereign individual with different thoughts than anybody else, you can truly be free. No one can ever rule you. They can present you with negative choices, but there will be a choice.
Disbanding the military would actually make America less susceptible to foreign invasion. Instead of conquering the government an invader would have to conquer everyone individually and create their own coercive institutions.
If we could just fundamentally alter human nature anarchy would work great. Come to think of it the same could be said of socialism.
I can't disagree with this. But the classic description of anarchy is the absence of government. You qualify and change this by saying anarchy is the absence of coercive government. I call this a libertarian government. It's just a case of defining the terminology.I agree that people will join together for mutual protection in the absence of government. But I think the difference would be that these social organizations would not initiate force. That is, they wouldn't tax members or force each other to do anything (i.e, register hand guns.) Group membership and society at large would be based on voluntary action. Then, if someone violates your person or property, others (your group, tribe, whatever) would voluntarily defend you and seek restitution. That's what I think of when I say "anarchy." And I think it is consistent with the basic libertarian message. I'm not sure if they still do this, but it used to be that to sign up to be a Libertarian you had to click "Yes" on a pledge that said "I do not support the initiation of force against other human beings" or something like that. Which, to me, means zero taxes, including no excise or sales tax.
Serving your government/society in ways other than military. ie peace corps or working in a free clinic, etcWhat is "national service?"