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  • THE VIRTUE OF MONARCHIES Monarchies, or “private governments” denied access to p

    THE VIRTUE OF MONARCHIES

    Monarchies, or “private governments” denied access to political status to all but the family, and those few hired by the family.

    The remainder of the population sought status signals in the market, and within their identity groups. These societies were ‘diverse’. Sections of each city were dedicated to the cultural expression of their members, and signals within those sections served to convey status without the need for political power to convey such status.

    Under representative democracy, heterogeneous societies compete for the political power necessary to alter their status in relation to other groups. Instead of using the market, and market behavior to signal status. IN other words, we harm cultures by giving them access to political power.

    The answer is not how we share power. It is how we have no ability to use the violence of the state to create signals that are only mutually beneficial if they are manufactured do to the most important community service we can deliver: market participation.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-01-13 18:18:00 UTC

  • A QUESTION FOR THE LEFT: IF IT MEANT THAT IT WOULD BE POSSIBLE TO PRODUCE A FAR

    A QUESTION FOR THE LEFT: IF IT MEANT THAT IT WOULD BE POSSIBLE TO PRODUCE A FAR MORE MATERIALLY EQUAL SOCIETY, PERHAPS THE MOST MATERIALLY EQUAL IN THE WORLD, WOULD YOU THEN CEASE DENIAL OF INEQUALITY OF ABILITY, INEQUALITY OF RACES, AND THE IRRECONCILABILITY OF GENDER PREFERENCES?

    I think you would. And you should. Because that is what it will take for you to have a heterogeneous society that includes redistribution.

    Propertarianism solves the problem of politics.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-01-13 18:06:00 UTC

  • Untitled

    http://direct.mises.org/misesreview_detail.aspx?control=215


    Source date (UTC): 2013-01-12 22:28:00 UTC

  • I WOULD LOVE TO HELP CONSERVATIVES WITH MESSAGING STATEGY If I could find one sm

    I WOULD LOVE TO HELP CONSERVATIVES WITH MESSAGING STATEGY

    If I could find one smart enough to talk to about it. (sigh)

    I realize that we are supposedly the thought leadership for the conservatives.

    Unfortunately we provide all the thought and they provide all the leadership. 🙁

    ( I think I made a rare bit of humor there. Ironic humor. Sad humor. But still humor. )


    Source date (UTC): 2013-01-12 17:23:00 UTC

  • ARGUMENTS AGAINST SOMETHING AREN’T ALL THAT USEFUL UNLESS YOU ALSO HAVE ARGUMENT

    ARGUMENTS AGAINST SOMETHING AREN’T ALL THAT USEFUL UNLESS YOU ALSO HAVE ARGUMENTS FOR SOMETHING ELSE.

    This is libertarianism’s problem. A failure to provide a solution to the problem of institutions both formal and informal.

    Without formal institutions you have a religion. Not a replacement for the state.

    Institutions create norms.

    Property is a norm.

    Property was created by the application of violence.

    Propertarianism gives us the tools with which to create formal institutions in heterogeneous populations.

    Propertarianism completes libertarianism.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-01-12 17:12:00 UTC

  • SHE CAN COOK TOO. I thought it was a lost art. :/ It looks like the majority of

    SHE CAN COOK TOO.

    I thought it was a lost art. :/

    It looks like the majority of women here in Kiev are pretty good cooks.

    In no small part due to the absence of the kind of false dietary propaganda produced in the USA for the past hundred years.

    The fashion in the states is to use fresh food quickly prepared but to combine tastes from multiple cuisines. Its good. But it’s very expensive.

    Ukrainian food is still old fashioned meat and vegetables with fat supplying the sweetness. Although heavy on potatoes ( which along with corn syrup, wheat, pasta and MSG are terrible for your waistline and chance for diabetes) the locals are fit and trim.

    Eat paleo. Hug women who cook paleo.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-01-12 17:05:00 UTC

  • A BUDGET FOR SCOTCH? So I don’t have a car here in Kiev. That’s a savings. A big

    A BUDGET FOR SCOTCH?

    So I don’t have a car here in Kiev. That’s a savings. A big savings. Cell phones fees are half of what they are in the states.

    But, we have gone thru four liters of scotch in one week.

    Not ourselves. With guests.

    At this rate, a car is cheaper. 🙂

    Ukrainian alcohol tolerance and all.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-01-12 13:55:00 UTC

  • COMPLIMENTS. AND AGREEMENT ON ENDS IF NOT MEANS Even though I am from the conser

    COMPLIMENTS. AND AGREEMENT ON ENDS IF NOT MEANS

    Even though I am from the conservative side of the fence, this is a fantastic list, and I enjoy it every day.

    I try to judge people by their desired ends, not so much as by their method of getting to those ends. Desired ends are determined by moral sentiments. The means of achieving them are a function of knowledge or ignorance. Creating a wonderful world to share with each other requires that we also share those desired ends, and that we cooperate on those ends, even if we prefer to use different means.

    While I’m a critic of the GSHM ideology for a host of reasons — its limited understanding of the necessary properties of economic cooperation through competition and prices, the impossibility of the Utopian idea of outcome-equality, the anti-scientific, contra-rational faith in biological equality, the universal error of false consensus bias, the and the confusion between over-population and over-consumption, that doesn’t mean that I have a different desire for the same peaceful equal, egalitarian world. I do. I just realize that consensus hasn’t ever, and can’t helped us get there. Only institutions that help us do it through productive competition can. And government is the problem more often than it is the cure.

    What I love about this page and its members is the positive and aspirational nature of the posts. I can solve the problem of knowledge and ignorance. We can do that together. What we can’t solve is the problem of people who have selfish ends.

    Thanks for your work.

    Curt


    Source date (UTC): 2013-01-11 10:14:00 UTC

  • FIXING THE FALSE CRITICISM: LIBERTARIANISM IN SOMALIA. THE PROBLEM OF DEFINING P

    FIXING THE FALSE CRITICISM: LIBERTARIANISM IN SOMALIA.

    THE PROBLEM OF DEFINING PROPERTY RIGHTS WHERE THEY DO NOT EXIST IS STILL OPEN.

    To start with, definitions help us communicate clearly. And they both force us to be honest, and prevent others from making false arguments against us.

    1) Liberty is a sentiment. It is a minority sentiment. It is a sentiment held by some percentage of the people that favors the ability to obtain new experiences without external constraint, as long as they harm no others in doing so. (see Haidt)

    2) Libertarianism is a political bias. That bias favors various forms of minimal government. It eschews the concentration of power, and the loss of sovereignty. It is a sentiment that is embedded in the western tradition. That western tradition is the egalitarian union of aristocracy. That Aristocratic Egalitarianism is a social adaptation to early Indo-European battle tactics which required independent but coordinated action by self-funded warriors. This social strategy allowed a professionalized minority using advanced weapon technology to conquer or fend off conquerors with much greater numbers. (see Duchesne)

    3) Libertarianism it is a philosophical framework authored by Murray Rothbard. This framework argues that all possible rights are reducible to articulated property rights. It contains errors. (Which I have discussed elsewhere). Those errors are significant in that they are morally, and therefore socially and economically regressive. However, the fundamental insight that human actions can be reduced to property rights remains valid, and the errors in Rothbard’s incomplete ethical framework are repairable.

    Rothbard was unable to solve the problem of institutions, so his framework describes little more than a secular moral religion of opposition to the state. Hoppe solved the problem of cooperative institutions, but did not correct Rothbard’s (or Mises’) initial errors. He did not solve the problem of heterogeneous societies which we live in. So for these two reasons he has described small governments. (I have tried to repair Mises and Rothbard’s errors, and use Hoppe’s insights to create solutions for the problem of heterogeneous and therefore large governments consisting of voluntary institutions which preserve the aristocratic egalitarian ethical system of property rights. But my work is incomplete and not yet available for analysis and criticism.)

    4) Anarchy is a) a state of disorder – an inability for humans to organize. Propertarians argue that this means little more than an absence of homogeneous property rights. b) Anarchy is a Utopian idea of an ordered society without any articulated form of order other than human instincts.

    5) Property is a form of establishing order – the ability of humans to organize. It is a very simple rule that matches, with some significant variation, the human moral instinct, while allowing us to cooperate in a vast division of knowledge and labor, the result of which is lower prices and increased choices.

    Since a) property can vary from the purely private to the purely common, and since b) the utility of property at any point on that spectrum is different for those with different abilities, and c) since the genetic bias of men and women has shown us a demonstrated preference for different points on that spectrum, which better suit the reproductive strategies of each gender, therefore, the preferred monopoly of property rights varies by class and gender, as well as, perhaps, race whenever a population is heterogeneous.

    6) Anarchism is a philosophical research program the purpose of which is to find institutional solutions (organizations, processes and rules) that are an alternative to a monopoly power that we grant to the state, when we create a government in order to institute some set of property rights, and therefore establish order.

    DISCUSSION

    Since our invention of it, we cannot seem to limit the republican or democratic state to a) the defense of those property rights, and b) the concentration of capital for shared investment at the same time. And by doing so, force people to cooperate in the market, instead of by violence, or the proxy of physical violence we call politics. So, because of that failure of democratic institutions, the anarchic research program seeks to use competition for services to eliminate the corporeal state’s monopoly on power, while maintaining a monopoly on the articulated enumeration of some set of property rights within a geography.

    The libertarian sentiment, and the libertarian philosophy (which are different things) do not answer this problem. The anarchic research program has attempted to. And any attempt by libertarians to state that we have solved this problem is either a failure to understand the state of our intellectual development, or an intentional misrepresentation of it.

    But in no case do Anarchists or Libertarians suggest there is no ‘governance’. A set of articulated property rights and a judiciary that resolves conflicts over property, is a government. It is just a reactive government. A government or rules. Judges under the common law cannot make law. They can discover it. And they can be overruled by other judges through market competition. But they cannot proactively make law. As such, there is a government under all libertarian models that have been articulated to any degree.

    The problem remains only in how we first establish a set of property rights. In the west this is not as difficult as elsewhere because those property rights are native to the framework of thought that we inherited with our Aristocratic Egalitarianism. Anyone who is enfranchised (fights) has a right to property which is not abridge-able by his peers. We extended the requirement to fighting, first to those who demonstrated nobility through service of any kind (chivalry). And third to those who demonstrated nobility through exchange and trade. But the principle of property is fundamental regardless of which means one earns his enfranchisement.

    When anarchists say that they advocate anarchy, it means that they eschew the concentration of power to alter the set of property rights involuntarily, since it breaks with the Aristocratic Egalitarian ethics. Ethics which allow each of us who is enfranchised to experiement and add value to ourselves and society as long as we commit no involuntary transfer from others who are enfranchised.

    CREATING THAT SYSTEM

    What anarchists and libertarians of all stripes have failed to do is describe how we create a monopoly definition of property rights without the application of force to do it. In the west, the aristocracy created it out of habitual necessity. And they did it by force. Rome in particular was a powerful machine that mandated a set of property rights and then defended them because it was simply profitable to do so.

    CRITICS AND ADVOCATES

    Critics are wrong in the sense that libertarianism will not work in somalia. But they are right in that libertarians and anarchists have not provided a means by which to institute a monopoly of property rights without it first existing.

    FILLING THE HOLES IN ANARCHISM AND LIBERTARIANISM

    As I’ve stated above, we are less than a century into our research program at articulating our ancient system of cooperation that we call the libertarian sentiment, but which is more accurately termed the political system called Aristocratic Egalitarianism with its dependency on property rights.

    While I have filled the hole in our ethics. The hole in our institutional process of implementing a monopoly of individual property rights by other than organized violence is still in need of filling.

    And we should ask our critics to help us answer that problem, rather than deny we have it.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-01-11 08:45:00 UTC

  • VS ROTHBARD: ARISTOCRATIC VERSUS GHETTO ETHICS PROPERTARIANISM AS SOLVING THE PR

    VS ROTHBARD: ARISTOCRATIC VERSUS GHETTO ETHICS

    PROPERTARIANISM AS SOLVING THE PROBLEM OF ETHICS

    The aristocratic egalitarian ethic requires all able men capable of bearing arms, deny access to power, to anyone and everyone. I usually refer to this (erroneously) as the warrior ethic, since it originates with the Indo European warrior caste.

    The ethic of the bazaar or ghetto (incorrectly referred to as the slave ethic), requires only that we fail to engage in trade with those who would seek power. It is a form of ostracization.

    Rothbard returned to his cultural history to develop his ethics when he could not sovle the problem of institutions. And in doing so, he regressed ethics into that same ghetto by ignoring the aristocratic ethical requirements of a) symmetry of knowledge, b) warranty that provides proof of that symmetry of knowledge, and c) a prohibition on external involuntary transfer.

    All three of these ethical constraints are necessary to create the high trust society. Yet they are also insufficient.

    The fourth constraint appears to require d) outbreeding by forbidding cousin-marriage. Outbreeding creates a universalist ethic, which in the west we call ‘christian love’ but which means treating all humans regardless of family origin with the same ethical constraints as you would the members of your immediate family or even tribe.

    This is why libertarianism under Rothbard failed to gain the same level of traction that it has gained under Ron Paul. Ron Paul is promoting Aristocratic Egalitarian Ethics (even if he does not know how to articulate such a thing) while Rothbard was promoting the ethics of the Bazzaar and ghetto (even if he did not understand his actions in this context.)

    Humans are not terribly bright when it comes to rationalism. But we can sense moral patterns and status signals and ‘feel’ positives and negative moral reactions due to those patterns whether or not we can analytically separate and articulate those moral instincts and reactions.

    Propertarianism allows us to articulate these moral instincts as reducible to different concpets of property rights. Propertariansm makes moral differences commensurable.

    If you can grasp that idea, you may eventually understand that Propertarianism is the solution to the problem of the incompleteness of Misesian, Rothbardian praxeology, and explains the causal property of Hoppe’s Argumentation Ethics, rendering it descriptive, not causal. This explanation then, in turn, provides us with the tools to solve the 2500 year old problem of politics that the greeks, and the english, and the americans failed to solve.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-01-11 07:47:00 UTC