

- Navigation
- Hot
- New
- Recent Comments
- Activity Feed
- Marketplace
- Members Directory
- Producer's Lounge
- Producer's Vault
- The Gulch: Live! (New)
- Ask the Gulch!
- Going Galt
- Books
- Business
- Classifieds
- Culture
- Economics
- Education
- Entertainment
- Government
- History
- Humor
- Legislation
- Movies
- News
- Philosophy
- Pics
- Politics
- Science
- Technology
- Video
- The Gulch: Best of
- The Gulch: Bugs
- The Gulch: Feature Requests
- The Gulch: Featured Producers
- The Gulch: General
- The Gulch: Introductions
- The Gulch: Local
- The Gulch: Promotions
Previous comments... You are currently on page 9.
But where this is different is you have the possibility of having the only route available or possibly the only thing within many miles. This would effectively eliminate competition. How do you deal with that? Specifically if someone can't pay. I realize this looks like nitpicking details but If you're wondering why some people are having difficulty with this subject (I AM NOT BLARMAN!) here it is. I can't back something if I can't follow it through as far as I can see it going.
AR advocated for a system of laissez faire, free market capitalism. In that case, an individual/group rather than a government sets up a thoroughfare through land that he/they owns, buys, or receives from donations and then operates and maintains it as any other business would operate. The business owner makes contractual arrangements to connect to other owners' thoroughfares. It's a simple affair until government gets involved, or some authoritarian wants to use travel restrictions to control people.
Customers will decide if they want to go through your conditions, or find another route, or a competitor will offer different conditions for use that draw your dissatisfied customers away.
We should be for Objectivism, not every single utterance of its fallible developer.
On the 100 mile exclusion of the Constitution which affects 2/3rds of the country (Borders and coastlines) they turned down a DOHS bid to broaden their powers. Another small step for mankind.
The 100 mile from the border or coastline means every major city except what Chicago and St. , Minneapolis, St. Paul, Denver and St. Louis? has the partial suspension of the Constitution in effect. Discussed elsewhere in another post in more detail.
What if a person can't pay the toll? He/she can barter, trade or make a deal of some kind. But that relies on the willingness of the owner or a third party to help. What if none of these options work out? The right to travel cannot be a claim on the product of someone else's labor. Yes, it is a legitimate question deserving of a legitimate answer. No doubt the market will find an answer. Most likely a third party or a charity. DB? Zen? Thoughts?
So the free is built but the government never pays Stumbo. he didn't agree with the amount but never mind that they weren't paying anyway.
One day Stumbo rolls out some 55 gallon drums filled with concrete and rocks and lines them up along his property line including the unpaid for portion which effectively blocks I-5 north bound to one narrow section on the shoulder If i remember correctly. slightly more than civil disobedience perhaps but in that genre.
there were some other factors. He and his sons sitting on the hillside with hunting rifles didn't help but no shots fired.
Stumbo stories were alwaysfloating around the county but no matter what else they did I always admired the way he marched to the beat of a different drum-mer.
Since my memory is probably a tad bit faulty here's the sources on how one dude enforced property rights.
Search Results
[PDF]Blockade of freeway struck blow for the common man ”
web.thedailycourier.com/eedition/2010...
Stumbo brothers — Josephine. County ... In 1960, the Ore- gon Supreme Court upheld the ... meets Interstate 5 bears the family name. ... THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 2010 • DAILY COURIER, GRANTS PASS, OREGON — 3 E. By Shaun Hall.
Grants Pass - James Loewen
sundown.afro.illinois.edu/sundowntown...
2 + 5: (to stop spam). Email: ... "I've lived in Oregon for 30 years now and people from Grants Pass proudly proclaim that Grants Pass was ... Later, I did find the local law officials less than friendly even in the 1960s when I drove through such ...
U.S. Route 199 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Ro...
South of downtown Grants Pass, US 199 meets OR 99 and OR 238 and splits .... (I-5 here was built in the early 1960s, but US 99 remained on the old alignment.) ...
Transcript - the Southern Oregon Historical Society Online ...
sohs.pastperfectonline.com/.../930B70......
5. Shale City by Marjorie O'Harra ( 1922 shale beds in Ashland foothills) 6. ... The Stumbo Brothers by Marjorie O'Harra (Blockade of Hwy. ... George Tweed by Marjorie O'Harra (Grants Pass man survives WWII on Guam, 1940s) 22. ... Lindy's on Highway 99 by Dawna Curler (Honky-tonk south of Roseburg, 1945-1960s) 56.
As for rules being made by that group and they insist on things being done their way, I am expected by my university to have a special class for the 20 Muslim students (out of 120 total students in the class) on Friday to make up the content that students will miss on Thursday for their religious holiday. I am willing to do so, because both my university and the Muslim students (and their they pay me quite well.
The loss of ideology by population saturation will happen in less time even than AJ thinks.
Load more comments...