I recently got into a discussion on one of the forums I frequent about how an anarcho-capitalist society would work. I am not quite an AnCap, but I believe it deserves a somewhat knowledgeable representative so I stood up for it. There is one fellow who seems open to considering the idea, but I am unsure if I am explaining things correctly. Normally, I don't like to have other people have me debate, but this is a special case in that I am representing something that I am not quite certain on.
A link to the discussion: hxxp://www.twcenter.net/forums/showthread.php?t=460141&page=3
Am I doing a good job? Anything I should mention/stop talking about?
I think the question is upside down and backwards. If we lived in a society devoid of government, people would ask, "How the hell can you have a society where there is one person/organization which has unilateral power to decide all disputes - even disputes involving themselves - in a given territory, without a total breakdown of all social order?" As it turns out, the historical record clearly shows that the more completely the State manifests itself, the more completely the fabric of society is ripped to shreds with devastating consequences to human life and prosperity. The wars of the 20th century are the ultimate illustration of this point. The History Channel-style propaganda in the seven decades since the close of formal hostilities paints out the wars as some kind of epic struggle of good against evil - as if we live in a comic book universe. The reality is that the wars of the 20th century, like all wars, were the inevitable result of publicly subsidized, aggressive organizations equipped with standing armies, aka States. The wars were nothing more than territorial ambition funded on the sweating backs of peasants conscripted into military production and fought by commoners conscripted into ranks of trained bullet-stopping brigades. This is the same game the Elites have been playing for millenia. Like Charlie Brown and Lucy with the football kick, the masses fall for it every single time.
Clayton -
I would like a critique on this post. Sorry if it is a bit long.
Problem is, without an overseeing body there would be generally no way of knowing whether a PDA is corrupt. Right now we have a complicated hierarchy that does it's best to reduce corruption as much as possible. And guess what: countries like the Scandinavian ones have the lowest corruption rates in the world. Corruption and crime are the biggest problem where the central authority is weakest (Somalia etc).
People wouldn't necessarily know. Right now we have a (more or less) free press that is protected by the state and we have several layers of overseeing bodies.
You mean using their own weapons? Doesn't really seem like a good idea.
1) many people can't afford to/don't have to pay taxes because they are unemployed or extremely poor. What about them? 2) I don't know if it would be much cheaper. It's very possible that some cases would just be ignored since the potential customers can't pay enough.
Huh? That's a very poor argument. For one, the people do "hunt down" murderers who kill the homeless. The only problem is that often you don't have any clues or don't even know if the guy in question was even killed or just disappeared. Still, the police tries and has solved such cases before. If it were PDAs instead, they would never do anything. Better? Not really. Also, it's not just the homeless. There are many poor and/or unemployed people who pay no or barely any taxes yet still get police protection. In your system? Tough luck.
But there is a clear set of laws that are equal for everyone. In your system, victims could just cherry-pick a court/PDA of their choice and have the criminal punished in a completely unjust way. What if he was innocent? Tough luck! There are no control mechanisms.
So if a poor guy is the criminal, do you really think a private defense agency would care about defending a guy without any money? Also, what if that PDA goes by different laws than the PDA that is hired by the victims? There are just countless practical problems, I could go on and on.
The problem is, those are all just minor "solutions". Sure, some businessmen might pay for a few roads. Sure, some companies might finance cheap roads. But there are simply so many roads in a country like the US, there is no way they would all be handled properly without some sort of central organization. There are many poorer quarters where nobody would ever do anything. Half the country would turn into some kind of slum and the majority of people would have a mentality of "I'm sure someone else is going to build those roads for me".
I believe every human deserves the right to get an education if he wants to. In your system that doesn't seem possible. You are also again relying on many different things that might work - however, that is by no means certain. What if there is a recession and charities have to close down? What if businesses go bankrupt? And so on. If education is provided by the state then it will at least always be there, unless the whole country collapses. Sure, the budget might be cut in dire times, but chances are that everyone who wants to go to school will still be able to.
Sweden has one of the highest GDPs per capita in the world, ahead of Germany... Norway is #4, even.
And do you have any evidence for that claim? Countries like Sweden or Germany have had free education for many decades and currently both of us seem to be doing splendid. I can't speak for Sweden since I don't live there, but Germany's economy is currently the 4th strongest in the world
Which property rights? Yours? The PDA next door's? The one's that is in the neighbor town? Or the property rights of the one 500km away? You know, lack of a clear set of laws that are the same across the whole country. Secondly, what are you and your gun going to do about huge company X that hires a large PDA for millions of dollars? Not much.
Problems: 1) The public might not know the details about who the "criminal" is. Bad PR is not bad PR if nobody knows it. And there is no free press that is protected by the state. 2) Bad press might be worth it in some cases if large amounts of money are involved. 3) Or even worse: the PDA is paid off. You disappear. What happens? Nothing. Because nobody knows and cares.
No, because people sadly do not care most of the time. Or they don't know. Also, people's memories are short. Look, there have always been tons of scandals. Here in my country we had several big issues with supermarkets keeping their employees under close surveillance. Huge outrage, many newspaper articles etc. What happened? Nothing. People still buy there. Same goes for abusing workers in poor countries. All big department stores produce stuff under terrible conditions in Vietnam. Who cares? Nobody. Now obviously you would say that those problems apparently already exist in the current system. And yes, that's true. But the difference is: if an actual crime happened, the state would intervene. In your system, there would be no state. And the customers wouldn't know...
Come on, individuals often win against big companies in the current system. Just look at all of those McDonald's vs Joe Plumber cases in which the latter gets a few millions because the ice in his drink was too cold.
What does insurance help if a flood contaminates an entire city with nuclear waste because a company decided to dump it into its backyard? Sure, the company might go belly up, but does that help anything? Right now we have laws for that very reason, to prevent such things from happening. I shudder at the things that could happen if you were allowed to pollute your own property as much as you wanted to.
That means I can just blow as much carbon-dioxide into the air as I want to, great! Because, you know, it only causes problems in a few years or decades anyway. Seriously, that would be a disaster.
But again, there are no clear laws. And again, this is a very simplistic example. Environmental pollution is generally not about one company causing problems for one individual or family. It's about hundreds of corporations carelessly destroying the environment. Not everything that cause damage to the environment automatically destroys another person's property. Also, often it might be cheaper for the company to compensate the individual in question and continue polluting the area.
Government corruption is a good thing. It means you can pay the cops to avoid a bigger fine, or prison time, or torture and death.
On a marketplace, a corrupt PDA is pointless. We're forced to lick the boots of the state, or pay lip service to it anyway, but there's no incentive to bother with a PDA that's corrupt. Why spend money on something that people are going to know or at least presume is an utterly pointless gesture devoid of any meaning? i.e. Going to a corrupt PDA for arbitration.
If governments can't keep their secrets secret - which they can't anymore - with essentially unlimited funds to spend on intelligence and counter-intelligence and black propaganda and grey propaganda, and all sorts of shit designed to uphold the maxim of 'secrecy for the sake of secrecy', then a PDA relying on voluntary customers paying real money doesn't have a hope in hell. A PDA sells integrity, don't forget. A government claims a monopoly over it.
I was involved in the same thread. This stuff is frustrating is hell, you will never shut them up. Society is way too complex for us to predict everything that would happen in a stateless society. But they're still caught in the statist mentality. Everything must have a plan! Everything must have a one-fits-all solution.
1) many people can't afford to/don't have to pay taxes because they are unemployed or extremely poor. What about them? 2) I don't know if it would be much cheaper. It's very possible that some cases would just be ignored since the potential customers can't pay enough. 1) such people generally aren't as well protected by the police, either.
Wow thank you for bringing up this point- I tend to forget about it myself. All the poor neighborhoods in New York City get little to no police response-- while the richer neighborhoods like Forest Hills, Fresh Meadows you'll see a whole lot of police cars and vans patrolling the area. They're also actually courteous and glad to give the average citizen advice for directions and things like that! wow! The poorer neighborhoods have to deal with a very different type of police officer.
A friend of mine had his car stolen straight from his driveway- called 911- and the police precinct by him NEVER showed up- ever despite repeated calls and assurances that they were on the "way"(for 5 hours?). Eventually he had to just go there himself to file a report that didn't help for anything.