Category: Politics, Power, and Governance

  • Why Do Governments and Courts and Markets and Militias Exist?

    May 1, 2020, 8:30 PM (Answer: b/c of Multipliers) Government creates a market for central corruption in exchange for suppression of local corruption, with the dividend for the citizenry produced by reduced transaction costs and increased economic velocity, producing reduced costs. That’s what government does. That’s why we have it. That’s why it’s required. Conversely, the court, using law of tort, creates a market for the suppression of market corruption and government corruption as long as law is equally applied to all – except the judge of last resort (Monarch) in extreme circumstances. So governments use force to collect taxes, to pay for the suppression of local free riding, corruption, and crime, and external military, economic, informational, and demographic warfare. The only fault in this system is lack of universal standing in the prosecution of the members of the government, the court, and their agents. Which is why we must have the militia to demand that universal standing, and the enforcement of our law of tort. Edit

  • Tactics

    Tactics https://propertarianism.com/2020/05/09/tactics/


    Source date (UTC): 2020-05-09 16:13:44 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1259154596498464768

  • Tactics

    [T]hese posts are an illustration of the current form of warfare – fourth generation warfare. This is the dominant form of warfare – as illustrated by iran – because military action is no longer possible by most actors. Therefore the use of “irregulars” is once again returning to norm after the long ‘rules of war’ institutionalized by europeans to the point where we assumed our ‘pacification of warfare’ was a given. TACTICS Washington DC caved to the civil rights movement in just three weeks. As soon as fires started. Why? Control is an illusion. A tiny number of people create the pretense. The state cannot tolerate the illusion of loss of control. This is why Baltimore and Kansas City and such were let go: the force necessary would result in the loss of political legitimacy and the evidence of the illusion of institutional control. FAILED TACTICS For those of us who remember the marxists and civil rights movements of the sixties and seventies, bombings were a daily if not weekly occurrence. We are reminded of a few right wing activists frequently, but we are never reminded of the fact that marxists of all sorts and the civil rights movement was a continuous campaign of ATTENTION-SEEKING violence, with as many as five bombings per day. Civil terrorism doesn’t work. It never works. Revolts against the institutions do work. Revolts with SPECIFIC DEMANDS work – if those demands are JUST. Self determination is just. FROM TIME MAGAZINE

    —“Nearly a dozen radical underground groups, dimly remembered outfits such as the Weather Underground, the New World Liberation Front and the Symbionese Liberation Army, set off hundreds of bombs during that tumultuous decade—so many, in fact, that many people all but accepted them as a part of daily life. As one woman sniffed to a New York Post reporter after an attack by a Puerto Rican independence group in 1977: “Oh, another bombing? Who is it this time?’” The underground groups of the 1970s were a kind of grungy, bell-bottomed coda to the protests of the 1960s; their members were mostly onetime student leftists who refused to give up the utopian dreams of 1968. While little remembered today, there was a time during the early 1970s when the U.S. government—the Nixon Administration—considered these groups a genuine threat to national security. Alarmed by a series of Weatherman attacks, Nixon told J. Edgar Hoover during a June 1970 Oval Office meeting that “revolutionary terror” represented the single greatest threat to American society. Hoover promised to do what he could, which wasn’t much. As paranoid as Nixon could be, it was hard to argue with his line of thinking: Bombing attacks were growing by the day. They had begun as crude, simple things, mostly Molotov cocktails college radicals hurled toward ROTC buildings during the late 1960s. The first actual bombing campaign, the work of a group of New York City radicals led by a militant named Sam Melville, featured attacks on a dozen buildings around Manhattan between August and November 1969, when Melville and most of his pals were arrested. Weather’s attacks began three months later, and by 1971 protest bombings had spread across the country. In a single eighteen-month period during 1971 and 1972 the FBI counted an amazing 2,500 bombings on American soil, almost five a day. Because they were typically detonated late at night, few caused serious injury, leading to a kind of grudging public acceptance. The deadliest underground attack of the decade, in fact, killed all of four people, in the January 1975 bombing of a Wall Street restaurant. News accounts rarely carried any expression or indication of public outrage.”—

    TACTICS Governments require economies. Economies require people, People require consumption. Consumption requires money. Commerce requires electronic transfer. Where they don’t have electronic transfer, it requires cash. Under duress demand for cash increases. Deprive the system of cash, and its value multiplies for those that have it. ISIS, with ex-Ba’ath party members, took out all the banks – fast. Source: ISIS TACTICS Their confidence comes from controlling the discourse, security in anonymity, and plausible deniability. This is a false confidence. Easily reversed. And commercial organizations lack coercive power. Or defensive resources. Source: napolitano mafia TACTICS Their confidence comes from communication, mobility, rallying nearby resources, and the concentration of forces. That confidence is easily eradicated by attrition of equipment. After that it’s just calling, and telling them to stay put. Don’t make an enemy. Appeal to incentives. Source? ISIS. TACTICS They are only in control until the third trap, and they figure out they’re involuntarily in the business of delivering supplies. Then they aren’t. Source: Mexican Cartels TACTICS The primary use of fifties is: helicopters. Ground or Air. Source: Taliban.

  • Tactics

    [T]hese posts are an illustration of the current form of warfare – fourth generation warfare. This is the dominant form of warfare – as illustrated by iran – because military action is no longer possible by most actors. Therefore the use of “irregulars” is once again returning to norm after the long ‘rules of war’ institutionalized by europeans to the point where we assumed our ‘pacification of warfare’ was a given. TACTICS Washington DC caved to the civil rights movement in just three weeks. As soon as fires started. Why? Control is an illusion. A tiny number of people create the pretense. The state cannot tolerate the illusion of loss of control. This is why Baltimore and Kansas City and such were let go: the force necessary would result in the loss of political legitimacy and the evidence of the illusion of institutional control. FAILED TACTICS For those of us who remember the marxists and civil rights movements of the sixties and seventies, bombings were a daily if not weekly occurrence. We are reminded of a few right wing activists frequently, but we are never reminded of the fact that marxists of all sorts and the civil rights movement was a continuous campaign of ATTENTION-SEEKING violence, with as many as five bombings per day. Civil terrorism doesn’t work. It never works. Revolts against the institutions do work. Revolts with SPECIFIC DEMANDS work – if those demands are JUST. Self determination is just. FROM TIME MAGAZINE

    —“Nearly a dozen radical underground groups, dimly remembered outfits such as the Weather Underground, the New World Liberation Front and the Symbionese Liberation Army, set off hundreds of bombs during that tumultuous decade—so many, in fact, that many people all but accepted them as a part of daily life. As one woman sniffed to a New York Post reporter after an attack by a Puerto Rican independence group in 1977: “Oh, another bombing? Who is it this time?’” The underground groups of the 1970s were a kind of grungy, bell-bottomed coda to the protests of the 1960s; their members were mostly onetime student leftists who refused to give up the utopian dreams of 1968. While little remembered today, there was a time during the early 1970s when the U.S. government—the Nixon Administration—considered these groups a genuine threat to national security. Alarmed by a series of Weatherman attacks, Nixon told J. Edgar Hoover during a June 1970 Oval Office meeting that “revolutionary terror” represented the single greatest threat to American society. Hoover promised to do what he could, which wasn’t much. As paranoid as Nixon could be, it was hard to argue with his line of thinking: Bombing attacks were growing by the day. They had begun as crude, simple things, mostly Molotov cocktails college radicals hurled toward ROTC buildings during the late 1960s. The first actual bombing campaign, the work of a group of New York City radicals led by a militant named Sam Melville, featured attacks on a dozen buildings around Manhattan between August and November 1969, when Melville and most of his pals were arrested. Weather’s attacks began three months later, and by 1971 protest bombings had spread across the country. In a single eighteen-month period during 1971 and 1972 the FBI counted an amazing 2,500 bombings on American soil, almost five a day. Because they were typically detonated late at night, few caused serious injury, leading to a kind of grudging public acceptance. The deadliest underground attack of the decade, in fact, killed all of four people, in the January 1975 bombing of a Wall Street restaurant. News accounts rarely carried any expression or indication of public outrage.”—

    TACTICS Governments require economies. Economies require people, People require consumption. Consumption requires money. Commerce requires electronic transfer. Where they don’t have electronic transfer, it requires cash. Under duress demand for cash increases. Deprive the system of cash, and its value multiplies for those that have it. ISIS, with ex-Ba’ath party members, took out all the banks – fast. Source: ISIS TACTICS Their confidence comes from controlling the discourse, security in anonymity, and plausible deniability. This is a false confidence. Easily reversed. And commercial organizations lack coercive power. Or defensive resources. Source: napolitano mafia TACTICS Their confidence comes from communication, mobility, rallying nearby resources, and the concentration of forces. That confidence is easily eradicated by attrition of equipment. After that it’s just calling, and telling them to stay put. Don’t make an enemy. Appeal to incentives. Source? ISIS. TACTICS They are only in control until the third trap, and they figure out they’re involuntarily in the business of delivering supplies. Then they aren’t. Source: Mexican Cartels TACTICS The primary use of fifties is: helicopters. Ground or Air. Source: Taliban.

  • The Cause is the Militia

    The Cause is the Militia https://propertarianism.com/2020/05/09/the-cause-is-the-militia/


    Source date (UTC): 2020-05-09 16:09:24 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1259153506662936577

  • The Cause is the Militia

    May 2, 2020, 8:01 AM Greece, Rome, and the British Empire are expressions of the European Group Strategy at increasing scales. They are not causes – they are consequences. The cause is the militia.

  • The Cause is the Militia

    May 2, 2020, 8:01 AM Greece, Rome, and the British Empire are expressions of the European Group Strategy at increasing scales. They are not causes – they are consequences. The cause is the militia.

  • 60’s Radicals and their bombings

    May 2, 2020, 9:01 AM

    —“In the 1960’s the radicals were too small a percentage of the population to be a real threat, so their bombings was not regarded as the tip of any iceberg (except when blacks got involved and there was concern that all blacks would revolt). … Today the revolt against over-reach represents a larger group of people, and therefore has to be taken more seriously.”—Red-State Secession

  • 60’s Radicals and their bombings

    May 2, 2020, 9:01 AM

    —“In the 1960’s the radicals were too small a percentage of the population to be a real threat, so their bombings was not regarded as the tip of any iceberg (except when blacks got involved and there was concern that all blacks would revolt). … Today the revolt against over-reach represents a larger group of people, and therefore has to be taken more seriously.”—Red-State Secession

  • What I Learned About Revolutions

    What I Learned About Revolutions https://propertarianism.com/2020/05/09/what-i-learned-about-revolutions/


    Source date (UTC): 2020-05-09 15:36:15 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1259145162355335169