Source: Facebook

  • LIBERTARIANISM libertarian lih-ber-tair’-ee-un An individual who demonstrates a

    LIBERTARIANISM

    libertarian lih-ber-tair’-ee-un

    An individual who demonstrates a preference for one or more of the definitions of Libertarianism.

    Libertarianism lih-ber-tair’-ee-un-ih’-zum (noun)

    –“Roderick Long defines libertarianism as “any political position that advocates a radical redistribution of power from the coercive state to voluntary associations of free individuals”, whether “voluntary association” takes the form of the free market or of communal co-operatives.”—

    However, Rod Long’s definition, by using the term ‘voluntary association’ is imprecise because it does not contain the purpose or consequences of that allocation of property to individuals who can form voluntary associations. That purpose is that individuals can associate and voluntarily organize production in an expanding division of knowledge and labor, and that individuals contribute to production what they can, as they wish. Unless property is allocated to individuals, then the voluntary organization of production is impossible. And the voluntary adaptation of production to the multitudinous changes in scarcity and preference is impossible.

    CAUSES OF LIBERTARIAN PREFERENCES

    1) SENTIMENT: A sentiment giving precedence to individual liberty above the competing sentiments of care-taking and order — which are the respective priorities of left and right.

    2) POLITICAL BIAS: A range of political biases that express the precedence for liberty as the freedom from organized coercion through the minimization or elimination of monopolistic government — and therefore maximizing the self organizing civic virtues and norms.

    3) ECONOMIC BIAS: An economic philosophy that seeks to maximize human prosperity by increasing the opportunity for entrepreneurial trial and error by advocating the inviolability of individual property rights, free trade, and sound money.

    4) GENERAL POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY: A set of political philosophies which give liberty (freedom from coercion) the highest moral preference, over all other moral preferences, and seek to minimize both government and reduce or eliminate the state by distributing all property rights to individuals who then voluntarily organize production and distribution.

    5) INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK: An framework of political institutions that seeks to replace the monopoly of the abstract state and its attendant bureaucracy with private formal institutions and public informal institutions that are subject to the pressures of market competition.

    i) Classical Liberalism – state, government of divided powers, and private property under common law.

    ii) Minimal Statism – minimum state and government and private property under common law

    iii) Private government – no state, private government, and private property under private law

    iv) Anarchy – no state, no government, and private property under common law.

    Each of these models relies upon an explicitly articulated political philosophy that reduces all rights to property rights, where property has been obtained by the processes of homesteading, manufacture, and voluntary exchange, which are necessary for peaceful human cooperation because they facilitate the emergence of a market for goods and services where prices convey information that we can use to determine our actions.

    These rights are enforced by some variation of the common law, and are inviolable and unalterable by the state or government. This leaves the function of government limited to the facilitation of investments in the commons, and the resolution of disputes between groups and classes.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-05-12 07:15:00 UTC

  • NOTHING TO LOSE AND NOTHING TO FEAR —“There is no one so careful about what th

    NOTHING TO LOSE AND NOTHING TO FEAR

    —“There is no one so careful about what they post on Facebook as University Professors.”— Anonymous

    Well some of us work outside of the Cathedral. The rules are different. We have nothing to lose. And nothing to fear.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-05-12 07:08:00 UTC

  • PARTICIPATING IN REVOLUTIONARY FERVOR Is there anything better for an anarchist,

    PARTICIPATING IN REVOLUTIONARY FERVOR

    Is there anything better for an anarchist, than a late night meeting, drinking scotch and coffee, talking about training local citizens how to fight an invasion using 5GW?

    People fantasize about this sh_t and some of us live it. I was VERY jealous, so I felt I had to do my part. I decided to finance something very interesting that they need very much. He he he. That will be my little contribution.

    People are apparently training all over Ukraine now. Someone told me that last night they overheard people practicing on the subway.

    Freedom is something you demand at the point of a gun.

    Every other kind is just permission.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-05-12 07:07:00 UTC

  • HUMOR AS TRUTH

    HUMOR AS TRUTH


    Source date (UTC): 2014-05-12 05:46:00 UTC

  • CONTRA KINSELLA ON AGGRESSION (I might as well just beat this horse until it’s r

    CONTRA KINSELLA ON AGGRESSION

    (I might as well just beat this horse until it’s really, really, dead.)

    Aggression that causes violence is determined empirically. The definition of Property that people treat as aggressed against is determined empirically. You don’t get to make stuff up. We are supposed to be the smart people you know?

    [kinsella]—“Libertarianism says that only aggression may be countered with force, that aggression is the only way to violate rights so that a forceful response is justified. Other rightful behavior, even if it is immoral or “bad,” is rightful so long as it is not aggression”— [kinsella]

    Yes, rothbardian libertarianism says that immoral and unethical actions are permissible and that you are forbidden from retaliating against people in court, and that you can be taken to court if you retaliate against immoral and unethical actions.

    Yes, rothbardian libertarianism legally authorizes immoral and unethical conduct. Yes, rothbardian libertarians prohibits retaliation for immoral and unethical conduct. Yes rothbardian libertarianism provides incentives to engage in immoral and unethical conduct. Because immoral and unethical actions allow profiting from unproductive professions that are parasitic to the polity. So yes, rothbardian ethics reflect the ethics of the low trust societies of the world. And in all low trust societies, the state is necessary as a suppressor of violence. That is why all low trust societies have strong central states: to suppress violence created by immoral and unethical actions that are non-productive, and which have no peaceful means of resolution other than violence.

    High trust societies force all profiting into the market where it is mutually beneficial. High trust societies force ALL competition into the market. They force all actions into PRODUCTIVE actions.

    It is ONLY high trust societies that have produced liberty. That is why only the formerly aristocratic nations possess liberty. Because through outbreeding and violence they forced all conflict into the market for goods and services, by prohibiting both criminal, unethical and immoral actions.

    Why have no low trust societies that employ the absence of moral and ethical standards ever formed?

    <sarcasm>

    OF COURSE I’M RIGHT.

    I know. You will get there. Or you will go to your grave whispering “I believe in NAP, I believe in NAP, I Believe in NAP” like any other good cult member.

    Sorry. Just how it is. Get over it. Abandon rothbardiansim as the failed program that it is: a pathetic attempt to pretend that cosmopolitanism was somehow a competitor to aristocratic egalitarianism.

    TIme for big boy shoes.

    You can do it if you try.

    <sarcasm/>

    PROPERTY IS DEFINED BY EMPIRICAL NOT RATIONAL MEANS

    If we define property as people ACT in high trust societies define property then yes it is a trespass. That is what I can’t seem to get across to you.

    Low trust = scarce property rights.

    High trust = lots of property rights.

    People flock TO high trust societies and AWAY from low trust societies.

    High trust = high velocity of trade and low demand for the state.

    Low trust = low velocity of trade and high demand for the state.

    It’s just the evidence. Nothing will change it. No matter how many canticles for rothbard you kneel for. No matter how much hand wringing that you muster.

    Jan lester was almost right. I”m right. This is how it is. Just time to deal with it.

    A voluntary polity is only POSSIBLE under suppression of immoral and unethical behavior via the common law, because people will not abandon or tolerate unethical behavior.

    2 mins · Like

    <sarcasam>

    So. Um. Like usual. I’m right. Yeah. Sorry. It must be painful.

    I kinda wish someone else had this job. You know? But it seems like it’s my civic duty to flush Rothbardian ethics into the toilet of phlogiston theories.

    <sarcasam/>


    Source date (UTC): 2014-05-11 16:26:00 UTC

  • FOUR LEGAL MODELS AND BLACKMAIL Given that necessary morality is objectively def

    FOUR LEGAL MODELS AND BLACKMAIL

    Given that necessary morality is objectively defined (in-group cooperation: the prohibition on free riding), and unnecessary moral rules are defined (in-group signals and rituals) and out-group cooperation is also defined (rothbardian ethics – the ethics of states) we can look at four possible permutations of representing the causes of criminal, ethical and moral in-group conflict under different legal prohibitions:

    1) ILLEGAL or LEGAL and NON-MORAL: If two people want to engage in blackmail, but the victim doesn’t want to prosecute, then there is no crime, because without a state there is no one else to make the claim of wrongdoing.

    2) ILLEGAL: If blackmail is illegal, because it is immoral, and the party wants to sue, he can.

    3) LEGAL: If it is not illegal but it is immoral, then the victim has no other recourse but violence.

    I do not see how one can claim innocence if one aggresses via blackmail, then is murdered for his aggression.

    4) MINIMUM LEGAL SCOPE, FREEDOM OUTSIDE THAT SCOPE. So that means the fourth scenario is that violence is of course always available as a means of settling unethical and immoral conflicts. So the law can only be used for rothbardian levels of conflict (crime) and violence remains available for unethical and immoral actions.

    Cheers.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-05-11 13:17:00 UTC

  • GOT IT. Q&A DIALOGS RATHER THAN EXPLANATIONS. Image Title of the concept Stateme

    GOT IT. Q&A DIALOGS RATHER THAN EXPLANATIONS.

    Image

    Title of the concept

    Statement of the concept

    Dialog.

    [Historical confirmation.]

    [Historical failure (reversal).]

    Poem.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-05-11 11:51:00 UTC

  • Dear government. We aren’t cooperating any longer. You and me, I mean. You aren’

    Dear government.

    We aren’t cooperating any longer.

    You and me, I mean.

    You aren’t helping us cooperate.

    Me and my fellow man, I mean.

    Instead, you put us into conflict.

    Then you tax and fine me,

    For resolving a conflict,

    That you created.

    And so many conflicts,

    and so many fees,

    That, now you’re farming me.

    Like a farm animal.

    Like a slave.

    So, sorry.

    The deal is off.

    I withdraw my consent.

    I take back my right of violence.

    I take back my sovereignty.

    I know what you think:

    I have no choice.

    And, we have no choice.

    But we do.

    We have a bunch of choices:

    Some of us will leave.

    Some of us will check out.

    Some of us will just ride it out

    Some of us will rebel.

    Some of us will depose you.

    And some of us will kill you.

    The virtuous use of violence.

    A return to rule of law.

    A return to liberty.

    A return to nobility.

    A return to aristocracy.

    The love of liberty.

    The cult of sovereignty.

    The religion of non-submission.

    The government of law not men.

    One has freedom of his own choosing.

    Or one merely has permission.

    Welcome to the new revolution.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-05-11 10:31:00 UTC

  • “NONE OF US IS A POLITICAL ISLAND.” —“I’ve heard many say they don’t believe t

    “NONE OF US IS A POLITICAL ISLAND.”

    —“I’ve heard many say they don’t believe the government should create and enforce laws that require certain actions be taken, such as for personal safety, general public safety, and reduction in personal injuries and resulting lawsuits, etc….I’m not going to say every Libertarian is like this, but I’ve heard this kind of thinking from such adherents a few times. I personally don’t agree with political ideals that treat each person as a practical island. A diverse, highly interconnected and fluid society cannot function that way, and I think it would probably end up being economically inefficient and unhealthy, ethical considerations aside. Of course, Libertarianism is more complex than that one issue, but it’s one that I disagree with in particular”— Athena (From Quora)

    That’s right Athena. None of us is an island. Even Crusoe got to his via boat. 😉

    Unfortunately, there are foolish people in every political philosophy. Libertarianism is not immune, any more than is progressivism or conservatism is immune.

    Unfortunately, once ignorant, socially incompetent, intellectual adolescents here the term “non-aggression principle” they apply this ideological hammer to everything that looks vaguely like a nail; the same way progressives use equality, diversity, and racism; and the same way that conservatives use meritocracy.

    All three points on the political triangle advocate their priorities over those of the other two. Progressives advocate nurture, caretaking, and prevention of harm and all but ignore social capital and liberty. Conservatives advocate the accumulation of social and behavioral capital equally with liberty and caretaking. And libertarians advocate liberty at the expense of caretaking and social capital.

    Libertarians place higher moral weight on liberty than the other groups do. And as such, their political preferences take on the name that represents that preference: Libertarianism.

    Libertarianism is an evolutionary extension of Classical Liberalism. Classical Liberalism is likewise a revision of Greek Political philosophy. Both of which are the result of unique european preference for sovereignty (aristocracy).

    Unlike all other world political traditions, which attempt to concentrate and manage the limits of power. Classical liberal institutions rely upon the balance of powers and consent among those powers. This reflects the european ancient prohibition on monopoly of political power. The prohibition against tyranny.

    Chieftains, Kings, Presidents are judges and administrators, empowered to resolve and prevent conflicts by the ascent of their peers (other nobles – which should be translated as ‘business owners’ because that’s what farmers and craftsmen who are heads of families are).

    The libertarian intellectual research program seeks to totally eliminate the coercive power of government, while at the same time providing the institutional, organizational, and procedural means by which people can cooperate and prosper, without the bureaucracy, corruption, self interest that results from monopoly bureaucracy and political representation.

    Now, Rothbardian Libertarianism, which copies the ethics of the Jewish ghetto, advocates Anarchy – no government at all, calls itself ‘Libertarianism’ in a linguistic attempt to claim the they are the sole proponents of the preference for liberty. A fact which frustrates the other ‘libertarian’ factions, who are more intellectually honest.

    While Classical Liberal libertarians may prefer something between… “Private Government” that resembles Lichtenstein, the small germanic states prior to German unification, or most clearly, the English model of layers of private government we call constitutional monarchy, but which is merely a continuation of ancient anglo saxon methods of government.

    So, continuing the tradition that makes use of the separation of powers and the prohibition on bureaucracy and professional politicians, libertarians divide the functions of government into different institutions.

    Technically speaking there is only one necessary institution of government: The common law. All other political institutions are not necessary, put preferences. Some libertarians would prefer to limit government to this one function, and other libertarians would like to make use of all of the functions I list below.

    NECESSARY INSTITUTIONS

    (1) Law: judges (courts) which adjudicate differences (conflicts) based upon just one universal law of private property and the common law, and naturally evolve the common law as was historically practiced by judges. Under this common law, everyone has universal ‘standing’ so members of corporations, politicians and bureaucrats who are today insulated from law suits by a requirement for ‘standing’ would not be, nor would those special privileges for government employees exist. Instead, people who care could control companies and other organizations both with market pressure AND with legal pressure.

    *The conflict over the definition of property.*

    Now some libertarians (the ones that most likely seem immoral (because they are), suggest that the definition of property is that which we can both verify by our own senses: our bodies and the stuff we know we own: IVP (Intersubjectively verifiable property). These are the people that obsess over the term NAP (the non-aggression-principle).

    While the NAP and IVP (NAP/IVP) are sufficient criteria for ethical relations between states, the NAP/IVP limits you to prohibitions on theft and violence. But this leaves open all the unethical and immoral behavior that all societies prohibit of their members.

    So for all intents and purposes, NAP/IVP legally institutionalizes permission for immoral and unethical behavior like scams and every other possible means of deception and criminal behavior. ie: it’s the ethics of the ghetto.

    The rest of us who are NOT observers of the NAP/IVP and therefore not members of the ever-present vocal minority of Rothbardian ghetto-libertarians, have been trying to distance ourselves from these ‘thin libertarians’, or ‘immoral-tarians’ or as the conservatives call them ‘aspie-tarians’, who are busy advocating Rothbardian Ghetto Ethics.

    The movements that distance themselves from such are called ‘thick’ libertarians who intuit, feel, think, believe, or what have you, that the NAP/IVP Rothbardian Ghetto Ethics are insufficient criteria for the formation of a polity whose members possess liberty.

    Some of these people are banded together into the “Bleeding Heart Libertarians”. The BHL’s do not have a plan. they just know that Rothbardian Ghetto Ethics are somehow not right. The criticism of BHL’s is that they don’t have a plan, and that any solution they talk about simply expands the state further.

    Others want to make use of private institutions to provide public services wherever possible. Some other people (on my side of the fence) are fairly rigorous and extend property rights to all those things that people act as if are a form of property, and therefore allow us all to adjudicate our disputes in court without the need for a third party. This is a very simple solution to a very difficult problem.

    Other people want to return to the past – which isn’t going to happen unless we reinvent the church, treat it as an independent wing of the government, and return most domestic social services to control of that branch of government. (This is not a crazy idea really, since it’s that set of services that have expanded most and consume most of the budget, and the failure to separate that service from the commercial functions of government has probably led to our current state of conflict.)

    PREFERENTIAL INSTITUTIONS

    (2) REGULATION/INSURANCE: The purpose of regulation is to prevent harm, particularly irreversible harm, and to use the polity as the insurer of last resort. To accomplish regulation, the libertarian preference, rather than reliance on a monopoly bureaucracy, is to use competing insurance companies.

    (Now, before you run away with criticisms, you’d have to understand how rigorous libertarian theory is on this topic. How universal standing, universal personal accountability, affect this. Today you cannot easily sue the guy who sold the poor family next door a cable plan that made them debt slaves, but under libertarian law you could. So people who want to ‘do good’ in the world would be able to, and not dependent upon approval of bureaucrats for it.)

    3) COMMONS: Developing all the infrastructure that we need and desire. Some infrastructure is necessary for competitive survival, some is preferential, and some is a luxury. However, it must be possible to construct commons, even if they are constructed by private firms.

    Most libertarians would deny this and state that commons are the responsibility of private parties, otherwise we get into taxation.

    Most libertarian solutions suggest we vote our tax dollars to those things that we really want ourselves over the internet, sort of how we run auctions on Kickstarter.

    Others suggest that we use a lottocracy (people are randomly selected like juries and proposals are put in front of them and they choose which ones.) The idea is to eliminate politicians who are open to special interest groups.

    (4) CHARITY: Most libertarians want a return to the civil society where people conduct charity personally, and where it is the defacto ‘job’ of a lot of people to administer it. I think those of us who are a bit more institutionally creative, see five or six solutions to the problem of charity. (I’m going to address this later because I’m running out of time.)

    5) CREDIT: borrowing money on behalf of the populace for the production of commons. Most libertarians would argue that if a population can print its own money then it is doomed, however, I won’t address that argument here.

    6) DEFENSE. (Not much to say here that isn’t obvious) Other than that under fifth generation warfare (what terrorists do) our ancient tradition of forming a militia, and training it under the Swiss model is probably the most effective military with the least international intervention we can come up with. Our current model doesn’t work well. And it will just get worse.

    Others have demonstrated how to create private firms that provide defense, however, history has told us that such groups never are effective compared to an armed citizenry.

    At present, nuclear weapons are an insurance policy and a necessary one. One’s freedom of self determination probably depends upon possession of nuclear weapons.

    CLOSING

    I hope this is somewhat helpful. My main purpose is not to enumerate all possible libertarian institutional solutions, although If I had a little more time I’d do that since I think the internet community would actually like that. It’s to (a) position the ‘everything is a nail’ Rothbardian’s as what they are – the passionate lunatic wing of liberty; (b) outline the underlying problem we’re trying to solve as the elimination of monopoly bureaucracy that always accumulates to the point of predation tyranny and failure; (c) show that we have thought (a lot) about how to continue the western tradition of divided government as a defense against tyranny, and that we have some solutions to it – most of which rely on just expanding the methods of our ancestors.

    Affections.

    Curt Doolittle

    The Propertarian Institute

    Kiev.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-05-11 10:23:00 UTC

  • Untitled

    http://blog.23andme.com/23andme-research/genes-and-geography/


    Source date (UTC): 2014-05-11 06:57:00 UTC