Anarchy
Posted by Rozar 11 years, 5 months ago to Philosophy
Alright here we go. I've been looking into anarchy for the past few weeks and it's starting to get to me. So I want to discuss it here with everyone who would like to help me out.
Mostly I intend on playing devil's advocate and debating a few issues with you from an anarchist perspective to kind of test it out.
Any input would be wonderful so let me know what you think. :)
Some food for thought:
What is the purpose of a government and does it accomplish that purpose or make it worse.
What can the government do that the free market can't?
Governments use force to redistribute wealth, the government doesn't own anything, or produce anything, and is funded by force. So anything the government does is forced redistribution.
Right?
Why couldn't individuals survive in a community without government?
Thanks I'll try to add more as time progresses.
Mostly I intend on playing devil's advocate and debating a few issues with you from an anarchist perspective to kind of test it out.
Any input would be wonderful so let me know what you think. :)
Some food for thought:
What is the purpose of a government and does it accomplish that purpose or make it worse.
What can the government do that the free market can't?
Governments use force to redistribute wealth, the government doesn't own anything, or produce anything, and is funded by force. So anything the government does is forced redistribution.
Right?
Why couldn't individuals survive in a community without government?
Thanks I'll try to add more as time progresses.
Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
So I like to simplify things and I think I can summarize your statement into the fact the society needs a way to punish people who don't have integrity. This is where things get complicated. So, you sign a contract with Bob to fix his roof for $1,000. You both use the same DRO who checks your credibility and charges each of you a fee based on the risk of the contract, as determined by the DRO. You both agree and sign the contract. Bob gives you a thousand dollars and you leave town. Bob tells his DRO who after a really short investigation, reimburses Bob his $1,000. Now the DRO updates your file in a database that it shares with other DRO's that you broke a legitimate contract. Say goodbye to ever getting a DRO to insure anything you say anymore. Try taking that $1,000 and trying to buy a hotel room in the next town. If I owned a hotel and you wanted a room I'd either take a deposit in case you broke something or I would want a credit card. The second you gave me that credit card I'd know that you broke a contract and wouldn't rent you a room. You wouldn't be able to get a job anywhere without a credit check. You go to the gas station to fill up your tank, unfortunately for you that gas station uses the same DRO that you used to and in their contract with that DRO they can't do business with anyone who broke a contract with them. No gas for you.
Your life turns into an economic hell.
Satisfied?
Then you have the credit rating agencies which monitor who breaks their contracts and gives them a score. The first person who broke their contract has his score reduced based on how extreme it was, making it difficult for him to hire DRO's in the future until he rectifies his bad credit. Even an individual could make an appeal to the credit agency with the case that the DRO he originally signed up with is corrupt or lying or breaking the contract and get the DRO's credit rating score lowered, which is extremely important to them because that is what their business is based on.
All of this reduces risk to an extremely small number. Risk will always exist, and it is about shifting it. Shifting it to a smaller number.
There are most certainly bad apples, and I would even go on to say that even the good apples have a few bad spots on them. We all make those little mistakes that limit our productivity and hurt us in the long run, though some make less than others.
Anarchy isn't a utopia, and it won't end all instances of the initiation of force. But it is a much better system than forcing people to pay for the bad apples and pay for the mistakes of others.
But in an Anarchy? It is very easy to economically distance yourself from people you disagree with.
If you are willing to use force to suppress people, you are only building an army that they can use to suppress you once they vote it away from you.
The same thing happened to Rome; Christianity got a foothold and grew in strength because Romans became sophisticated and tolerated alien religions. IIRC, around the time of Christ most of the military worshiped Moloch, not a Roman household god. Christianity at the time wasn't particularly tolerant; Christians had no power, but the faith itself gave no credence to other religions, just as Judaism didn't. If your populace gets in the mental habit of treating all religions as equally valid, pretty soon religious faith itself becomes meaningless. And you are ripe for a vigorous, intolerant religion to come to the fore.
As Christianity grew in influence and power, they didn't treat other religions as equally valid. They were vigorous. And they had a very compelling, and different message from other religions of the time.
I agree about Bill Clinton. He was only worse than John Kennedy: more failures; fewer achievements. It is not just that we all err. It is that power corrupts. So, those who are drawn to power are drawn to immorality. We see this in the private sector where the inventor engineer is steamrollered by the office politician.
So, I am not sure that we have an institutional solution, no special social system will solve the problem of personal moral failure. Some arrangements cater to it; others quarantine it.
In business we have auditable controls. In government, we have laws.
And so too with government.
Here and now, as I said, I point to Multinational Corporations. The MNCs live and act in world of anarcho-capitalism because they are above most national governments, they shop for the laws they want for their contracts, they have their own security forces, and they arbitrate when they have honest disagreements, and they do not shoot it out with their market rivals.
So, yes, I agree with you in that sense that "most" people will eventually live without government.
When you say: ".... nce you have one person using force to get their way and has any success at it, then you will see others copy the strategy or align ..." you are describing government, or one origin or ontology for it. Any doctrinaire anarchist will claim (with some justification) that the government is just the gang big enough to keep the other gangs out.
And so it was, until 1776. Then, from a blank slate, we created a new social contract. Ideas matter.
Here's what you'll find in any public policy text book regarding when it appropriate for government to provide a good/service:: if the consumption of a desired good/service cannot be withheld from a member of a society (ie. through a pricing system. Ex. the common defense, police services, etc).
If a good/service can be denied to a person, for example, who is not willing to trade or pay for it, then this is a good/service the private sector should provide.
And this is at the heart of most economic and social financing problems.
therefore, the risks assessed might be too risky for the company to take on. Even if they took it on-now you have to meet THEIR contract. Just shifting risk does not solve the problem
Think about this: Bill Clinton, the President of the United States, cheated on his wife with a girl who was drastically younger than him and had about the polar opposite amount of power, she was an intern. His moral compass which guided the nation abused his position for adultery. That's not even the worst part. How many people met him, worked with him, supported him and helped him rise to the highest office. And not one of them could detect his personality well enough to think that he was capable of this act? Either they knew, and didn't care, or they didn't and any one who is good at lying can control National policies.
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