In Walter Block's book, "The Privatization of Roads and Highways" he makes two arguments that seem to contradict.
The first argument is that governments are criminally responsible for all highway deaths because they outlaw safer competing roads. This I agree with.
He also argues that things like drunk drivers, bad weather, and icy roads are only proximately responsible for road deaths. The road managers are ultimately responsible because they have the power to change the conditions that led to the accident.
My question is whether that holds true if we had a free market in roads. It seems to me if you are responsible, you should be held liable, but would we hold Wal*Mart liable for a death that occurred in their store that could have been prevented with, say, better security? This I don't agree with.
Does it really matter? We know government roads aren't efficient, so why bother try to blame someone to make ourselves feel better?
@Heather: There are a bunch of issues here. First, no one is liable for things that happen in public space. So, if you're floating on the ocean and you tip over and drown, no one can possibly be liable for that because no one owns the ocean. Second, people can be liable for things that happen on or with their property but only to the extent that their use of their property was causative of the damage.
Causality - as a matter of legal liability - is a complex issue and there is no magic formula that establishes who is repsonsible for what, when. In the absence of a coercive monopolist of law services, we would have a much clearer picture of liability. As it stands, we have a heavily distorted picture of liability where some property owners are held liable for things they should not be and other property owners are not being held liable for things they should be.
In the case of the State, it has monopolized the road system and then endowed itself with virtual immunity from any consequences arising from its road maintenance and design. For example, there is an stop-light intersection not far from where I live between a 45mph versus 25mph road that crests slightly along the path of the 45mph road just 100 yards from the intersection. If you are stopped along the 25mph road trying to make a right-hand turn (the crest will be to your left), you cannot see cars until a second or two before they reach the intersection. This would be bad enough on its own but the city has additionally decided to maintain a thick row of rosebushes along the sidewalk on that side of the intersection, as well, blocking the view of right-hand turners stopped on the 25mph road.
There have been two fatal accidents at that intersection (both involving a right-hand turner from the 25mph road) just in the last 5 years that I've been living here. The causality is beyond obvious to me. I knew that people were going to get killed at that intersection. Does it get fixed? Nope, the rosebushes are still there and will remain there. The reason is that it would be a waste of money to sue the government. No government court will hold the government accountable for the design issues which have contributed to the fatalities. So, no one even thinks to sue.
It is this toxic combination of the monopolization of the roads and the courts which I believe makes Block absolutely right: the government is criminally responsible for almost all the deaths that occur on its roads.
Clayton -
Wheylous:Does it really matter? We know government roads aren't efficient, so why bother try to blame someone to make ourselves feel better?
"I do the blaming, not for the sake of blaming, but, rather, in an attempt to improve conditions. We can scarcely achieve improvement if we are not clear as to the cause of this calamity of roadside deaths."
- Walter Block
& thank you, Clayton!
Surely you can only be responsible for "causing" harm through negative conduct (i.e. a failure to prevent it) if you'd agreed to protect someone from that harm.
It would depend on the contract you had with the owner of the road... You essentially have to ask what risks a reasonable person would have thought they were subjecting themselves to by using someone else's property, and whether the owner knew, or ought reasonably to have known, of any risks that the plaintiff wouldn't have. If the owner of the property had, or ought to have had, material knowledge of the risk which the plaintiff did not, and if he negligently failed to disclose such knowledge, then he should be liable for harm occasioned by that risk.
Heather Malin: In Walter Block's book, "The Privatization of Roads and Highways" he makes two arguments that seem to contradict. The first argument is that governments are criminally responsible for all highway deaths because they outlaw safer competing roads. This I agree with. He also argues that things like drunk drivers, bad weather, and icy roads are only proximately responsible for road deaths. The road managers are ultimately responsible because they have the power to change the conditions that led to the accident. My question is whether that holds true if we had a free market in roads. It seems to me if you are responsible, you should be held liable, but would we hold Wal*Mart liable for a death that occurred in their store that could have been prevented with, say, better security? This I don't agree with.
The second argument follows from the first argument; so, the "road managers" in the second argument are the statist road managers. So, when Block says that "drunk drivers, bad weather, and icy roads are only proximately responsible for road deaths," he is saying this under the context of state roads, not non-state roads.
The reason why the statist road managers are the cause is because the state doesn't allow non-statist roads to exists, thus people can only use the state's roads. Whereas non-statist road owners don't force you to into not using non-statist roads.
To paraphrase Marc Faber: We're all doomed, but that doesn't mean that we can't make money in the process. Rabbi Lapin: "Let's make bricks!" Stephan Kinsella: "Say you and I both want to make a German chocolate cake."
I think he means the govt is responsible because they do not allow privatization, where competition would minimize the problems because people would go to the best roads.
In other words, the govt was able to do something about it, but didnt. More importantly, it stopped anyone else from doing something about it.
Wal mart, on the other hand, is not stopping anyone from doing anything. You can avoid going to the store if you think it is unsafe, as I bet some people avoiding certain fast food places because of the violence in them.
My humble blog
It's easy to refute an argument if you first misrepresent it. William Keizer
Thanks for the answers, they were super helpful!
Here is what Walter Block said in a message he sent me:
As to the substance of your question, you say: “The first argument is that governments are criminally responsible for all highway deaths because they outlaw safer competing roads.” I don’t think I say exactly that, although I certainly agree with this. I think what I say in the book is that govts are “criminally responsible for all highway deaths” because they run death traps, charnel houses, forcing people onto their monopoly roads (if they want to travel). But, the two statements are not really that far apart. In a similar manner, I would say that the govt is responsible for lots of deaths of innocent people due to their military policies and drug war.
You also state “He also argues that things like drunk drivers, bad weather, and icy roads are only proximately responsible for road deaths. The road managers are ultimately responsible because they have the power to change the conditions that led to the accident.” I agree with you 100% on this.
I would certainly not “hold Wal*Mart liable for a death that occurred in their store that could have been prevented with, say, better security.” Unless Walmart engaged in fraud, of course, let’s stipulate that they did not.
Right now, some 35,000 people die on the nation’s roads. Suppose they were all private. And, now, say, 5000 people die on these private highways. Would I hold these private owners criminally responsible for these 5000 deaths. Assuming, again, no fraud, of course not. People enter these highways at their own risk. So, I’m not exactly sure of where you think I’m contradicting myself. Please try again, so that I can be more clear on your argument.
What did you think of my chapter where I attacked Larry White for saying that the govt, under conditions I just specified, is only responsible for 30,000, not 35,000 deaths?
So, what did you conclude; contradiction or no? Or still not sure?
No contradiction. Now I undertand that the key is whether force was used. People who enter Wal Mart or private roads have the freedom to choose so they enter at their own risk. But if the govt takes over all roads or all stores and doesn't allow for any competition, then they have essentially forced people to make a decision and are therefore fully responsible for anything bad that happens. I just think of it now like a gunman (the government) pointing a gun at my head and telling me where he wants me to drive. It's ultimitately his fault if I die.
Like Dr. Block writes in his chapter attacking Laurance White, "If a gunman forces a victim to jump to his death off the roof of a skyscraper by threatening to shoot him if he does not, [did] the latter voluntarily plunge to the concrete below? No. When government precludes private highways by threatening violence against all those who would provide these services, and as a result the people have little or no alternative but to patronize these death traps, we may not at all conclude that their entrance onto the public streets and highways was a voluntry one.
Very much to the contrary, when you eliminate a safer alternative, "allowing" people to venture onto a very much more dangerous one, you are forcing them to make a decision under duress. So, yes, the government is very much criminally responsible for the deaths they cause, all of them, not just those subtracted by the number who would perish on private roads."
When government precludes private highways by threatening violence against all those who would provide these services, and as a result the people have little or no alternative but to patronize these death traps, we may not at all conclude that their entrance onto the public streets and highways was a voluntry one.
This is akin to saying "since IP laws threaten violence against anyone who tries to make and sell iPods (besides Apple), we may not conclude that the purchase of iPods is voluntary."
they said we would have an unfair fun advantage
mikachusetts:When government precludes private highways by threatening violence against all those who would provide these services, and as a result the people have little or no alternative but to patronize these death traps, we may not at all conclude that their entrance onto the public streets and highways was a voluntry one. This is akin to saying "since IP laws threaten violence against anyone who tries to make and sell iPods (besides Apple), we may not conclude that the purchase of iPods is voluntary."
So basically what you're saying is being able to listen to an mp3 player with a picture of a partially-eaten apple on it is the same as being able to travel.
Because the ability to listen to music, on-demand, on a portable device, is a basic human right...and there are literally no alternatives to achieving that outside of the iPod.
Block's point is that if the iPod has a defect that damages hearing or something like that, a monopoly on iPod-manufacture converts that defect from merely making iPod a poor product which consumers can avoid by purchasing the alternative, into a tort. By outlawing competition, the State and the iPod manufacturer now ought to bear full liability for any damages caused by use of the product. This argument is extensible to all monopolized and even cartelized goods and services. If you take it upon yourself to wave a gun in everyone's faces and prohibit them from seeking alternatives to the appointed goods and services, then you bear tortious liability for damage caused in the use of those goods and services at every point.
Heather: Thanks for writing Dr. Block, his response clarified the point.
The fact that individuals are prevented from buying a safer iPod doesn't make Apple liable for tortious damages because nothing is preventing individuals from not buying an iPod at all. I just don't see any logical connection between torts and monopolies otherwise, except at the level of entering the market.
Block, I think, would differentiate between iPod's and roads by pointing out the lack of reasonable alternatives to roads and the level of necessity that roads have compared to iPods (as JJ pointed out). The problem with this, is that it should apply to any important or necessary good regardless of whether force was used to exclude entry into the market.
EDIT: Think of it this way, even in a free market, the street that you live on will only be owned by a single person or company (unless we count co-ops). Is this enough to make the company responsible for any and all accidents that occur on the street? Probably not. Now, if they used force to maintain their position as owner, but not against their customers, how would this change the status of their liability?
mikachusetts:Block, I think, would differentiate between iPod's and roads by pointing out the lack of reasonable alternatives to roads and the level of necessity that roads have compared to iPods (as JJ pointed out). The problem with this, is that it should apply to any important or necessary good regardless of whether force was used to exclude entry into the market.
The issue has nothing to do with "necessity". The issue is with rights...in this case, freedom of movement. You don't have a right to personal listening device. But one does have a right to travel freely. Monopolizing virtually all avenues of travel such that one is essentially beholden to the allowance of an overbearing authority for a basic right is not the same as preventing people from copying an ipod and calling it by that name.
For another thing, there are alternatives to the ipod.