Theme: Property

  • The Non-Neutrality of Money: Where Short-Term Gains Go to Hide

    My point in sharing this is to reinforce a repetition of the principle that all increases in wages are consumed by increases in mortgages and rent. Likewise all increases in rent and mortgages drive up the rate of inflation.

    I was taught the hydraulic model of economics which is vaguely analogous to the conservation of energy in physics. Just like Economics in One Lesson, it teaches you to search for the equilibrating output that response to your input.

    You can only ‘cheat’ a market for the time it takes for it to adapt. Its means of adaptation may change something direct and obvious or indirect and non-obvious.

    My favorite example being the non-neutrality of money in the short to medium term and the accumulation of those non-neutralities in ‘hidden places’ if repeated with frequency.


    OP:
    –“Rent is the single largest component of the consumer price index (CPI) and a key determinant of inflation. Our research shows that by increasing rents, interest rate hikes can unintentionally drive-up inflation.” — Boaz Abramson

  • REPORTED and it’s only violent and property crime. It’s not destruction of the a

    REPORTED and it’s only violent and property crime. It’s not destruction of the asset we most depend upon: social trust and cohesion.


    Source date (UTC): 2025-06-25 18:01:50 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1937934272691868078

  • “Stolen” requires property rights. “Conquest does not” The continent of stone ag

    “Stolen” requires property rights.
    “Conquest does not”
    The continent of stone age people was conquered by moderns with thousands of years of evolutionary advantage over them.
    Which is about as common in history as drinking water.


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-12 20:24:29 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1922025105112138170

  • “Stolen” requires property rights. “Conquest does not” The continent of stone ag

    “Stolen” requires property rights.
    “Conquest does not”
    The continent of stone age people was conquered by moderns with thousands of years of evolutionary advantage over them.
    Which is about as common in history as drinking water.


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-12 20:24:29 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1922025105112138170

    Reply addressees: @iAnonPatriot

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1921739874350047349

  • RT @LukeWeinhagen: Not being able to violently protect your property protects cr

    RT @LukeWeinhagen: Not being able to violently protect your property protects criminals, not communities, and not victims.


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-09 17:15:19 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1920890336861106230

  • Attn: Advanced Crypto Bros For about 15 years I’ve been arguing for the followin

    Attn: Advanced Crypto Bros
    For about 15 years I’ve been arguing for the following uses of the blockchain technology.
    1) a ledger.
    2) a registry.
    3) a stock in a corporation absent an exchange.
    4) a store of value (if large enough to overcome volatility)
    5) a method of circumventing the various banking impediments such as time delay, weekends, and escrow.
    6) a method of banking the unbanked (bypassing check cashing services etc) for the poor.
    7) a method of redistribution using multiple ‘money substitutes’ usable for different categories of expenses.
    AND
    I am skeptical of more sophisticated uses.
    AND
    And I’ve been consistently clear that the distributed architecture is inferior to centralized blockchain transactions because the tech is too slow, costly, and inflexible for a money substitute.
    AND
    That unless the state becomes a holder as they are with gold that the state will have an interest in developing a fiat “State-Coin” and can easily undermine the viability of alternatives.
    SO
    If you are not just some random fanboy but have some deep understanding of the viability of the tech for these purposes, I’d love to hear from you. (And I’ve built a number of 100M tech consulting firms serving the fortune 400. So it’s not as though I’m ignorant of the difference between a good tech on its face, and the practicality and incentives of it’s success in the marketplace.)
    Thanks so much.
    Let’s see what the fishing expedition yields. 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-09 15:56:41 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1920870547346649090

  • RT @ContraFabianist: THE LIBERTARIAN ETHIC VS FULL-ACCOUNTING: The core differen

    RT @ContraFabianist: THE LIBERTARIAN ETHIC VS FULL-ACCOUNTING:

    The core difference between the Libertarian Ethic (NAP) and the Propertaria…


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-08 15:05:33 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1920495291356103023

  • The Libertarian Ethic of Non-Aggression vs. The Natural Law Ethic of Reciprocity

    The Libertarian Ethic of Non-Aggression vs. The Natural Law Ethic of Reciprocity

    The Difference Between Non-Aggression and Reciprocity
    The libertarian ethic says: “Don’t hurt people and don’t take their stuff.” That’s a good start. But in the real world, harm doesn’t always come from a punch or a theft. It comes from lies, manipulation, fraud, free-riding, and shifting costs onto others without their knowledge.
    That’s where Natural Law steps in.
    Natural Law doesn’t just ask, “Did you attack someone?”
    It asks:
    “Did your action cost anyone something they didn’t agree to? Did they get a say, a benefit, or a way out?”
    Libertarianism draws the line at violence. Natural Law draws the line at unreciprocated cost.
    So if you’re peaceful but deceitful, if you’re polite but parasitic, if you’re civil but extractive—libertarianism lets you pass. Natural Law doesn’t.
    Put simply:
    Libertarianism says:
    “Don’t strike me.”
    Natural Law says:
    “Don’t exploit me—by hand, word, policy, or omission.”
    One stops aggression.
    The other stops
    predation of all kinds, even the subtle, legal, and polite ones.
    Core Distinction:
    The former avoids obvious harm.
    The latter demands proof of
    non-harm and mutual benefit across all dimensions: physical, informational, institutional, and systemic.
    In other words Libertarian ethics licence the very irreciprocities that have caused the jews to be evicted from over a hundred countries. It’s an immoral ethic.
    Cheers
    CD


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-08 14:39:08 UTC

    Original post: https://x.com/i/articles/1920488645250986452

  • The Difference Between Non-Aggression and Reciprocity The libertarian ethic says

    The Difference Between Non-Aggression and Reciprocity

    The libertarian ethic says: “Don’t hurt people and don’t take their stuff.” That’s a good start. But in the real world, harm doesn’t always come from a punch or a theft. It comes from lies, manipulation, fraud, free-riding, and shifting costs onto others without their knowledge.

    That’s where Natural Law steps in.

    Natural Law doesn’t just ask, “Did you attack someone?”
    It asks: “Did your action cost anyone something they didn’t agree to? Did they get a say, a benefit, or a way out?”

    Libertarianism draws the line at violence. Natural Law draws the line at unreciprocated cost.

    So if you’re peaceful but deceitful, if you’re polite but parasitic, if you’re civil but extractive—libertarianism lets you pass. Natural Law doesn’t.

    Put simply:
    Libertarianism says: “Don’t strike me.”
    Natural Law says: “Don’t exploit me—by hand, word, policy, or omission.”

    One stops aggression.
    The other stops predation of all kinds, even the subtle, legal, and polite ones.

    The Rothbardian ethic of non-aggression is a minimalist rule rooted in the belief that liberty is best preserved by prohibiting the initiation of force. Its logic rests on axiomatic self-ownership and property rights, with moral violations defined narrowly as invasions of person or property.

    Natural Law, by contrast, replaces the moral axiom of non-aggression with the scientific standard of reciprocity. Reciprocity is not a suggestion but a test: Does your action impose costs on others without their consent, or without proportional and observable compensation? This expands the ethical lens beyond aggression to include fraud, omission, externality, and systemic parasitism—making it both stricter and more complete.

    Whereas Rothbard’s framework operates primarily at the level of personal ethics and idealized markets, Natural Law applies a universal standard of decidability: whether actions, policies, or institutions satisfy the criteria of testifiability, operational possibility, and reciprocity in demonstrated interests.

    Core Distinction:

    Non-aggression is a prohibition.
    Reciprocity is a full accounting.

    The former avoids obvious harm.
    The latter demands proof of non-harm and mutual benefit across all dimensions: physical, informational, institutional, and systemic.

    In other words Libertarian ethics licence the very irreciprocities that have caused the jews to be evicted from over a hundred countries. It’s an immoral ethic.

    Cheers
    CD


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-08 14:27:00 UTC

    Original post: https://x.com/i/articles/1920485592586207232

  • RT @curtdoolittle: @adulpanget @yaycapitalism @ItIsHoeMath @memeticsisyphus @Noa

    RT @curtdoolittle: @adulpanget @yaycapitalism @ItIsHoeMath @memeticsisyphus @NoahRevoy Because we invented individualism, property rights,…


    Source date (UTC): 2025-05-06 14:39:45 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1919764024939475218