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(Forbes Parkhill biography here:
http://kenoshakid.wikispaces.com/Forbes+...
His movie credits here:
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0662751/)
well, if we are considering early settlers of the west we are looking at the Santa Fe Trail 1820s and The Oregon Trail (1840s) long before 1878.
Science and commerce share deep roots. Eventually, the rational-emoirical (objectivist) scientific method will be more deeply accepted by more people.
Wackenhut used to be the security firm tasked with letting me through the fence daily for the year that I worked with on a project (before reading AS) that would not be approved of by Gulch citizens. I had no problem with Wackenhut during that year.
Here in America, private and public policing went back and forth. Public police were the agents of the wealthy, leaving the poor on their own; so the merchants in those neighborhoods hired their own guards. Then, the police were democratized and rich people hired their own guards. So, too, in London, were the Bow Street Runners made irrelevant by the Bobbies. Note, of course, as is famous, that the London Metropolitan was _unarmed_ unless circumstances warranted arms. In modern times, gangs outside the English tradition (IRA, Muslims) forced the Bobbies to arm. Even so, when they bust down your door, they announce themselves, "Armed police!" It is a cogent point.
http://wiki.mises.org/wiki/Principle_of_...
The protective services of Ford Motor Company and General Motors worked in the same cities, the same neighborhoods, without ever firing upon each other -- or their own workers (even labor disputes being limited in force). Minarchists claim that that was because they were under the dominion of a monopoly government... but that same monopoly government is incapable of stopping gangs such as M13 and the Zetas... So, what is the explanation that subsumes both sets of facts? To me, it is a commitment within the persons involved to engage in business or to engage in aggression.
Incentives matter. However, culture is deeper. Changing culture via incentives seems to require means and methods that are not well understood. These objecto-could-be-anarchos and their mini-objecto-would-be-governors all argue _should_ (everyone should do as I say) without ever referring to the actual facts of human action.
Cutting the faceless government bureaucracy can be simple, if we elect people with the will to cut the budgets of Federal agencies. Reducing or eliminating the budgets will reduce the number of those who brutalize the American public without consequence.
President Wilson's fantasy of the apolitical, selfless government bureaucrat was behind the rapid growth of agencies. As we've seen, it also laid the path to an imperial Executive, able to conduct much Federal activity in defiance of the other branches of government.
Sometimes the government makes a (usually ineffectual) effort to reign in ruthless corporate entities. As far back as the Grover Cleveland administration, some attempt to curtail hostile destruction or theft of entrepreneurs new ideas was attempted, being viewed as harmful to the free market. Unfortunately, the half-life of such efforts is brief, given the opportunity to corrupt politicians to allow corporations to buy their way out of compliance.
Without abandoning the idea of representative government, there's a lot we can do to gum up the payoff game. Term limits for all political offices, including the judiciary is a good start. Banning the acceptance of any gifts, of any value from any source that could benefit from government largesse would help. Only then would I begin to trust government oversight to protect the free market.
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