As long as their security actions doesn't infringe on your rights and is merely for the security of their own property then it's irrelevant.
If it does then you're a victim of an unlibertarian mob, no different from a governmental authority or a gang of private home invaders who don't respect your rights.
This is why the ideas people hold about social organization are so important to a free society. If society at large accepts infringement on rights in the name of "authority" that's what they'll get. If most people want a king, or to kill the jews, or whatever and you're "stuck" there, you're fucked too.
Cops come from their mommie's tummies. When a mommy cop and a daddy cop like each other they get together and kiss each other and stuff and later you get a baby cop the stork drops off! (Or go ask you mother how it happens).
Exactly...which is why I am always and will remain skeptical of any "collective authority".
And if I'm stuck in between you all, with marauding bands of private cops and sweeping surveillance, what then?
My hired hands can "maraud" all they want on my property. They can also patrol my property and look out beyond the borders. If you don't want visual images from your property to be visible offsite, build a freaking fence or plant some bamboo. You don't get to tell me what I can look at.
Not so much definitions,, as concepts and principles.
Liberty is the opposite of Authoritarian. It bothers me some when people try to twist authoritarian concepts into liberty positions.
People are very capable of peaceful interactions without coercion. And most people are aware on Natural Law.
Don't Murder,, Don't steal, defraud or assault. Those are pretty universal and generally accepted.
And those natural Laws only need to be enforced rarely among civil society,, and can be enforced by all members of society.
It is hard to imagine only because the present system is so utterly corrupted.
Back then, slaves -- people -- were treated as property. Even to this day, really, they still are. Contrary to popular belief, the 13th amendment never abolished slavery; it merely changed the criteria for enslavement. The enigmatic "State" purports to be your owner; or more accurately, "its" enforcers do on "its" behalf.I imagine a private police officer whatever would have to respect property rights unlike cops today who are protected under the state.
The arm of the Leviathan only extends as far as the conscience of its enforcers. Most of the people who perpetuate this broken system actually, honestly, believe they are helping. They think they are the "good" guys.Lysander Spooner said:“But whether the Constitution really be one thing, or another, this much is certain - that it has either authorized such a government as we have had, or has been powerless to prevent it. In either case it is unfit to exist.”
Private "police" are still Police.
The very concept is Authoritarian. The Polar opposite of Liberty.
It should not exist in a free society. in any form. Period.
The very concept that people need to be controlled,, and that unnatural laws need to be enforced is offensive.
A free people are capable of policing themselves. Police should not exist.
http://www.constitution.org/lrev/roots/cops.htm
It (the concept) should not exist in a free society. It is only necessary in an Authoritarian society.
Read the link I gave. Please.
the very concept of police is anti-liberty.
I think you have the quotation marks on the wrong part. It should be "private" police. I think in a fully anarchist society you would have communities that would hire armed guards to protect their areas, perhaps on a level even as large as cities or towns. Those armed guards would essentially be police. They wouldn't have the power to violate individual rights and if they did then people could legally defend themselves.
They wouldn't have the power to violate individual rights and if they did then people could legally defend themselves.
That link is very long. I doubt anyone will read it any time soon. Could you provide some especially insightful quotations that demonstrate your point?
Law enforcement in the Founders' time was a duty of every citizen.32 Citizens were expected to be armed and equipped to chase suspects on foot, on horse, or with wagon whenever summoned. And when called upon to enforce the laws of the state, citizens were to respond "not faintly and with lagging steps, but honestly and bravely and with whatever implements and facilities [were] convenient and at hand."33 Any person could act in the capacity of a constable without being one,34 and when summoned by a law enforcement officer, a private person became a temporary member of the police department.35 The law also presumed that any person acting in his public capacity as an officer was rightfully appointed.