Source: Original Site Post

  • Santagata’s Four Kinds of People

    James Santagata  June 21

    Four kinds of people in this world. 1. People who are building things. 2. People who steal from those who are building things.
    3. People who watch the people who are building things and the people who are stealing from those who are building things. 4. People who are asleep in this world and have no fucking idea that people are building things or that other people are stealing from the people who are building things.
  • Anti-Aristocracy Is Reducible To Anti-Evolution.

    The struggle against aristocracy is reducible, to the struggle against meritocracy, and the struggle against meritocracy is reducible, to the struggle against eugenics, and the struggle against eugenics is reducible, to the struggle against evolution.

  • Anti-Aristocracy Is Reducible To Anti-Evolution.

    The struggle against aristocracy is reducible, to the struggle against meritocracy, and the struggle against meritocracy is reducible, to the struggle against eugenics, and the struggle against eugenics is reducible, to the struggle against evolution.

  • Q&A: War and Interventionism

    —“Q&A: I am curious to know how war and interventionism would be dealt with within a propertarian polity. Anarchists are obviously dogmatically supportive of “non-interventionism” but do you find this a viable position?”— Great question. We can address the general topic of war on one hand, and the criteria for moral war on the other. ONE. 1) as for war, it is the most costly and consequential commons that a group can produce. It’s is, like norms and law, a necessary commons if for no other reason than it is the sole criteria upon which sovereignty ( control of ones destiny ) depends. In the case of Liberty if you are not sufficiently capable of denying others dominance over you, then regardless of your opinion, you have not Liberty but permission. It is only through organised violence that we obtain Liberty in fact rather than permission. So in this sense I can find no other argument of any kind other than the capacity for war is necessary for Liberty, and that the militia is the only effective producer of Liberty, even if led by a minority of professional warriors. TWO Now Liberty will always be the desire of the minority. It is an aristocratic and bourgeoise desire. The majority of men lack the ability to compete in any sphere of life and as such desire entertainment, consumption and security, not Liberty. So as a minority, those who seek Liberty have, and must, always seek to expand their numbers. Liberty is and can only be constructed by the reciprocal insurance of life and property – creating legal equals where no other equality exists. So any man that offers this contract for reciprocal insurance regardless of stature, increases our numbers and increases equality under law even if vastly unequal in ability and property. THREE So that any request by other peoples to join the group of reciprocally insured will increase our numbers, our strength, strength, our resources, and our territory — and consequently deny illiberalism over those people, resources and territory. Increasing our competitiveness and decreasing the competitiveness of the illiberal. So any request for reciprocal insurance is one that we must accept as long as we can succeed in it. FOUR Now we come to the problem of conquest: the involuntary imposition of rule. If other are a constant problem of immigration, conversion, cheating, raiding, or harming, even if they do not conduct the war of states, then their conquest and rule and domestication is objectively moral. FIVE Now we come to the problem of the less moral or the primitive and impossible to cooperate with. Any group less objectively moral ( gypsies ) less objectively rational ( Muslims / women ) less objectively truthful ((( you know who ))), is a candidate for domestication. So it is not a question of whether violence is employed but whether one domesticates and rules, or whether one conquers, damages, and exploits. If we are eliminating parasitism and increasing productivity then since morality is reducible to the universal incentive to cooperate productively, then exercise of violence is warranted. LASTLY. In my experience libertines and libertarians are nearly always social misfits unable to obtain status signals in the status quo equal to their perception of self worth. In other words they are largely parasites trying to escape the very high cost of creating the high trust polity that grants them Liberty to live parasitically off the commons just as leftists want to live parasitically off private production. Thanks for the great question. Curt Doolittle.
  • Q&A: War and Interventionism

    —“Q&A: I am curious to know how war and interventionism would be dealt with within a propertarian polity. Anarchists are obviously dogmatically supportive of “non-interventionism” but do you find this a viable position?”— Great question. We can address the general topic of war on one hand, and the criteria for moral war on the other. ONE. 1) as for war, it is the most costly and consequential commons that a group can produce. It’s is, like norms and law, a necessary commons if for no other reason than it is the sole criteria upon which sovereignty ( control of ones destiny ) depends. In the case of Liberty if you are not sufficiently capable of denying others dominance over you, then regardless of your opinion, you have not Liberty but permission. It is only through organised violence that we obtain Liberty in fact rather than permission. So in this sense I can find no other argument of any kind other than the capacity for war is necessary for Liberty, and that the militia is the only effective producer of Liberty, even if led by a minority of professional warriors. TWO Now Liberty will always be the desire of the minority. It is an aristocratic and bourgeoise desire. The majority of men lack the ability to compete in any sphere of life and as such desire entertainment, consumption and security, not Liberty. So as a minority, those who seek Liberty have, and must, always seek to expand their numbers. Liberty is and can only be constructed by the reciprocal insurance of life and property – creating legal equals where no other equality exists. So any man that offers this contract for reciprocal insurance regardless of stature, increases our numbers and increases equality under law even if vastly unequal in ability and property. THREE So that any request by other peoples to join the group of reciprocally insured will increase our numbers, our strength, strength, our resources, and our territory — and consequently deny illiberalism over those people, resources and territory. Increasing our competitiveness and decreasing the competitiveness of the illiberal. So any request for reciprocal insurance is one that we must accept as long as we can succeed in it. FOUR Now we come to the problem of conquest: the involuntary imposition of rule. If other are a constant problem of immigration, conversion, cheating, raiding, or harming, even if they do not conduct the war of states, then their conquest and rule and domestication is objectively moral. FIVE Now we come to the problem of the less moral or the primitive and impossible to cooperate with. Any group less objectively moral ( gypsies ) less objectively rational ( Muslims / women ) less objectively truthful ((( you know who ))), is a candidate for domestication. So it is not a question of whether violence is employed but whether one domesticates and rules, or whether one conquers, damages, and exploits. If we are eliminating parasitism and increasing productivity then since morality is reducible to the universal incentive to cooperate productively, then exercise of violence is warranted. LASTLY. In my experience libertines and libertarians are nearly always social misfits unable to obtain status signals in the status quo equal to their perception of self worth. In other words they are largely parasites trying to escape the very high cost of creating the high trust polity that grants them Liberty to live parasitically off the commons just as leftists want to live parasitically off private production. Thanks for the great question. Curt Doolittle.
  • The Danger of Philosophy

    THE DANGER OF PHILOSOPHY I read “Infinity” by Brian Clegg back in the early 00’s, and was struck by his observation that many of those who study it developed psychological problems. Someone said to me last winter, that reading my work had turned humans into zoo animals for mere observation, and decreasing empathy with their experiences.

    And it’s true that propertarianism reduces sociology and psychology and pretty much all human action into an analysis of acquisition and defense of property, and the various signals that we display to negotiate success at both. I have always thought of most people as terribly dim creatures (i usually call them zombies) that I must ensure do not hurt me out of ignorance. As a child I though peers mere animals. Most adults dangerous idiots to be managed. In my teens, I thought everyone was just evil. Then in my twenties, to my horror, I understood that they were just incompetent, and I tried to become a teacher. In my forties I tried to be paternalistic, realizing that you cannot teach zombies many tricks. And in the past decade, it has become clear to me that I have lost a lot of empathy with people because I am now operating by cognitive rules that are as alien to the secularist, as superstition is the scientist, – and that my work has reduced my subconscious evaluation of most people to gene machines that I must just negotiate with. I am an alien now in this world. I think this has dramatically influenced my moral intuitions. Meanwhile, I still have human impulses for human contact and experience. I try to keep people at an emotional and intellectual distance. And this leads me to an interesting conclusion: have I, for all intents and purposes, between tragic stresses the 00’s, and my reductionism of man, become victim to the same consequences as the authors of infinity? I think this is not the right analysis. It’s rather this in both the case of infinity and propertarianism: have I managed to transcend? Have I gone mad in some poetic sense? Or is there really any difference between transcendence and madness other than the desire you feel to interact with others – such that you transcend if you do not care, and you go mad if you do?
  • The Danger of Philosophy

    THE DANGER OF PHILOSOPHY I read “Infinity” by Brian Clegg back in the early 00’s, and was struck by his observation that many of those who study it developed psychological problems. Someone said to me last winter, that reading my work had turned humans into zoo animals for mere observation, and decreasing empathy with their experiences.

    And it’s true that propertarianism reduces sociology and psychology and pretty much all human action into an analysis of acquisition and defense of property, and the various signals that we display to negotiate success at both. I have always thought of most people as terribly dim creatures (i usually call them zombies) that I must ensure do not hurt me out of ignorance. As a child I though peers mere animals. Most adults dangerous idiots to be managed. In my teens, I thought everyone was just evil. Then in my twenties, to my horror, I understood that they were just incompetent, and I tried to become a teacher. In my forties I tried to be paternalistic, realizing that you cannot teach zombies many tricks. And in the past decade, it has become clear to me that I have lost a lot of empathy with people because I am now operating by cognitive rules that are as alien to the secularist, as superstition is the scientist, – and that my work has reduced my subconscious evaluation of most people to gene machines that I must just negotiate with. I am an alien now in this world. I think this has dramatically influenced my moral intuitions. Meanwhile, I still have human impulses for human contact and experience. I try to keep people at an emotional and intellectual distance. And this leads me to an interesting conclusion: have I, for all intents and purposes, between tragic stresses the 00’s, and my reductionism of man, become victim to the same consequences as the authors of infinity? I think this is not the right analysis. It’s rather this in both the case of infinity and propertarianism: have I managed to transcend? Have I gone mad in some poetic sense? Or is there really any difference between transcendence and madness other than the desire you feel to interact with others – such that you transcend if you do not care, and you go mad if you do?
  • We’ve Been Focused On The Wrong Institution. We Need the Church

    (important piece) Group evolution is not a matter of specialization, of but the addition of layers of competency in increasingly abstract techniques.

    One cannot abandon the militia for the state. One cannot abandon rule of law for market expansion. One cannot abandon land holding for the commercial universalism.. The milita must exist hold the territory and limit the law. The Law must exist to hold the nation and limit commerce. The Church must exist to hold the mythos and The state- that which we call government – is a temporary organization for the purpose of producing temporal commons. And that is all. it is a purely utilitarian entity with short term objectives. We are focused on the wrong institutions. Government does not matter. Church, law, and militia do. Church, and family. Law and Nation. Militia and Land THUS ENDETH THE LESSON. WE START WITH THE CHURCHES. Curt Doolittle The Philosophy of Aristocracy The Propertarian Institute Kiev, Ukraine
  • We’ve Been Focused On The Wrong Institution. We Need the Church

    (important piece) Group evolution is not a matter of specialization, of but the addition of layers of competency in increasingly abstract techniques.

    One cannot abandon the militia for the state. One cannot abandon rule of law for market expansion. One cannot abandon land holding for the commercial universalism.. The milita must exist hold the territory and limit the law. The Law must exist to hold the nation and limit commerce. The Church must exist to hold the mythos and The state- that which we call government – is a temporary organization for the purpose of producing temporal commons. And that is all. it is a purely utilitarian entity with short term objectives. We are focused on the wrong institutions. Government does not matter. Church, law, and militia do. Church, and family. Law and Nation. Militia and Land THUS ENDETH THE LESSON. WE START WITH THE CHURCHES. Curt Doolittle The Philosophy of Aristocracy The Propertarian Institute Kiev, Ukraine