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Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
Locke's starting point "that you own yourself" is much more profound and useful than NAP. The AnCaps want us to forget Calculus and return to geometry.
AnCaps are intellectually lazy and dangerous
it is impossible to build "monopoly" without government grant, which is a violation of natural rights and gives a competitor exclusive access to a market. Socialists have attempted to redefine what a monopoly is, based on the flawed concept of perfect competition, which has never existed, is completely incompatible with property rights and incompatible with economic growth. In fact, the original concept was created by a religious professor at the University of Chicago to describe a perfect "altruistic" market.
Any license I was willing to give the author went out the window when he ranted about allowing a government that permitted "infant genital mutilation", obviously referring to male circumcision. The link between uncircumcised males and female cervical cancer has been reliably established, and I'm astounded that women's rights groups haven't demanded mandatory circumcision.
The very arrogance of the web site name tells it all, implying the owner has a superior intellect that can judge the views of his inferiors. I don't like the precept of MENSA, as I found most in that group to be what I call "educated idiots", lacking common sense and possessing unduly inflated egos.
If the free market allows "anything" then anyone could make billions of dollars with huge rip-off schemes for perpetual motion energy. And the world has no shortage of such swindles, from the South Sea Bubble to Florida Real Estate to Bernie Madoff. Let people do whatever they want and the parasites will enrich themselves by grinding everyone else into poverty. Just look at the world today.
But we know that is not true because reality requires reason which mitigates such silliness. While foolery exists, genius succeeds. The marketplace impels toward excellence.
In point of fact, if you look at the world today, you will find free market defense agencies, Securitas, G4S, AlliedBarton, Guardsmark,... And you will find arbitration written into your contracts for your mortgage, your credit cards, your car loan, your employment (especially if you are a contractor)... And those contracts specify _which laws_ are to govern the interpretation of the terms. Multinational corporations shop for laws. It is the only way that a manufacturer in Germany can buy parts from China for a product sold in the United States. Read your contracts. You live in one state. Your bank is located in another. The credit card company is in a third. They all specify the laws they want.
A hundred years ago, a self-appointed committee of jurists created the Uniform Commercial Code to reconcile the conflicts in contract law. Read any purchase order: it says one thing. Read any sales invoice: it says something else. How do you bring them together when something goes wrong? Today, the UCC has been included in part or in whole by various US state laws. It still exists on its own.
The essay is correct: this is the way the world works today. Some governments are better than others. Some businesses are better than others. Some people are better than others. Everyone is better on some days than on others. You cannot legislate it, mandate it, predict it, demand it, or avoid it.
These theories are all just explanatory filters. They say less about the way the world is (or should be) and much more about the persons who invent them.
That didn't work out so well.
As well, they do not address the problem of competing defence agencies, with regards to strength or representation. The example given in the article of how a defense agency grown monopolistic through wealth compared to smaller defence agencies representing those with less means has no solution. The larger defense agencies will prevail simply by their participants ignoring the rights of the less strong agencies. This can of course become a problem in even our current justice and law enforcement systems. The wealthiest neighborhoods influence local authorities for more protection than less wealthy neighborhoods and large companies often take risks that individuals or smaller companies will not sue because they will be outspent in taking the case to trial.
They may be a few others on this site who like me do not like the existence, let alone the paying, of taxes. Yet a government that relies only on voluntary payments would have several difficulties such as resisting significant aggression from outside.
There is a concept in economics that relates- the free rider principle.