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<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="https://archive.freecapitalists.org:443/utility/FeedStylesheets/rss.xsl" media="screen"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/" xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"><channel><title>General</title><link>https://archive.freecapitalists.org:443/forums/27.aspx</link><description>Everything else.</description><dc:language>en</dc:language><generator>CommunityServer 2008.5 SP2 (Build: 40407.4157)</generator><item><title>Re: Disaster Statism</title><link>https://archive.freecapitalists.org:443/forums/thread/19178.aspx</link><pubDate>Sat, 16 Feb 2008 17:45:41 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="false">944abf2b-d1be-4bf2-990d-438cb0e377e9:19178</guid><dc:creator>TomG</dc:creator><slash:comments>0</slash:comments><comments>https://archive.freecapitalists.org:443/forums/thread/19178.aspx</comments><wfw:commentRss>https://archive.freecapitalists.org:443/forums/commentrss.aspx?SectionID=27&amp;PostID=19178</wfw:commentRss><description>&lt;p&gt;The upper left quadrant is an oxymoronic, schizoid state that is objectively untenable.&amp;nbsp; And the non-Capitalist half&amp;#39;s impulse is to always undermine several property rights.&amp;nbsp; Apart from these shortcomings, it&amp;#39;s a cozy diagram. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;div style="clear:both;"&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</description></item><item><title>Disaster Statism</title><link>https://archive.freecapitalists.org:443/forums/thread/19176.aspx</link><pubDate>Sat, 16 Feb 2008 16:31:33 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="false">944abf2b-d1be-4bf2-990d-438cb0e377e9:19176</guid><dc:creator>Inquisitor</dc:creator><slash:comments>0</slash:comments><comments>https://archive.freecapitalists.org:443/forums/thread/19176.aspx</comments><wfw:commentRss>https://archive.freecapitalists.org:443/forums/commentrss.aspx?SectionID=27&amp;PostID=19176</wfw:commentRss><description>&lt;p align="center"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia" size="6"&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;div&gt;Disaster
        Statism&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
        &lt;p align="center"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia" size="5"&gt;&lt;b&gt;A
        Review of Naomi Klein&amp;#39;s Book &lt;u&gt;The Shock Doctrine&lt;/u&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
        &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;" align="center"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;by
        &lt;a href="mailto:abcritter@yahoo.com"&gt;Hogeye Bill&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      
        &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;" align="left"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;February
        15, 2008&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;There&amp;#39;s
      &lt;i&gt;actually existing capitalism&lt;/i&gt; and there&amp;#39;s the ideal of &lt;i&gt;no state
      intervention at all&lt;/i&gt; free market capitalism - two different things.
      Nevertheless, both capitalists and anti-capitalists are prone to confuse
      the two. Naomi Klein&amp;#39;s book, &amp;quot;The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of
      Disaster Capitalism,&amp;quot; is a case in point. Discussing the Iraq
      occupation, Klein writes, &amp;quot;When Iraqis resisted, they were rounded up
      and taken to jails where bodies and minds were met with more shocks.&amp;quot;
      Here we have an occupied country, with checkpoints on streetcorners, where
      all capital goods are destroyed or under control of the occupation army or
      its puppet government, and Naomi Klein considers this to be &amp;quot;complete
      free trade!&amp;quot; One can only wonder what &lt;i&gt;controlled&lt;/i&gt; trade would
      be like for her.&lt;/font&gt;
      &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;Klein&amp;#39;s
      vulgar statism is reflected in her choice of poster-boy for fascist
      corporatism. There are many possible choices - she discusses actions of
      Kissinger, Cheney, Rumsfeld, James Baker, Jeffrey Sachs and various World
      Bank and IMF functionaries - but she chooses a moderately libertarian
      egghead professor, Milton Friedman, as the quintessential demon of
      corporatism. Anyone who has read any Milton Friedman, his &amp;quot;Capitalism
      and Freedom&amp;quot; or &amp;quot;Free to Choose,&amp;quot; or his many Newsweek
      articles, knows that his main theme was free markets, that is, markets &lt;i&gt;without&lt;/i&gt;
      government control. His ideal was relatively free-market Hong Kong, not
      fascist Chile. Klein tries to demonize Friedman using rather transparent
      guilt by association. His university had exchange programs with some Latin
      American universities, so Friedman had a lot of Latin American students.
      Some students later got government jobs under Pinochet. Friedman once met
      with Pinochet for 45 minutes. For Klein, this makes the kindly nobel prize
      winning professor Pinochet&amp;#39;s evil mentor and accomplice. There are
      hundreds of pages with sentences juxtaposing &amp;quot;Chicago Boys&amp;quot; or
      &amp;quot;Milton Friedman&amp;quot; with phrases like &amp;quot;torture and kill
      people&amp;quot; or &amp;quot;shock treatment.&amp;quot; The fact is: Milton
      Friedman&amp;#39;s capitalism is closer to the laissez faire no-government type
      than the fascist corporatist type.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;Klein
      makes a big deal out of Milton Friedman&amp;#39;s assertion that reforms are best
      made during crises. This is puzzling, since virtually every
      reformer/revolutionary, from Tom Paine to Margaret Sanger to Karl Marx,
      has said the same thing - that you need to &lt;i&gt;strike while the iron is hot&lt;/i&gt;.
      Klein tries to construe the &lt;i&gt;crisis can be opportunity&lt;/i&gt; idea as
      unique to Friedman and evidence of evil intent. It is neither.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;Some
      may find it humorous that Klein considers Milton Friedman to be the
      quintessential radical capitalist. Among pro-capitalists, he is considered
      rather mild - a soft libertarian. Some haven&amp;#39;t forgiven Friedman for
      giving us income tax withholding (as a temporary WWII war expedient, of
      course), which is about as anti-capitalist as a program can be. Milton
      Friedman&amp;#39;s (the Chicago School&amp;#39;s) monetary economics is distinctly &lt;i&gt;un&lt;/i&gt;-laissez-faire
      since it endorses government control and regulation of the money supply.
      If you want radical laissez faire, look to Milton&amp;#39;s son David Friedman
      (&amp;quot;The Machinery of Freedom&amp;quot;), Murray Rothbard, Walter Block, and
      other anarcho-capitalists.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;The
      source of Naomi Klein&amp;#39;s confusion is her one-dimensional political model.
      For her, it&amp;#39;s socialism versus capitalism. She holds an unstated
      assumption throughout the book that a strong invasive state is necessary
      and desirable. In her one-dimensional model, consideration of liberty and
      authority is omitted. In her view, authority is a done deal; what matters
      now is only how you use the ring of power - for good (socialism) or evil
      (capitalism).&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;Klein&amp;#39;s
      statism permeates the book. She never met a &lt;i&gt;nationalization of property&lt;/i&gt;
      she didn&amp;#39;t like. She equates government ownership of resources with people
      owning the resources. Thinking &lt;i&gt;the state is the people&lt;/i&gt; is a sure
      sign of statism. Klein seems to celebrate any increase in state power,
      without an inkling that state power can only be extorted from society,
      from the sweat and blood of the people.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;Klein&amp;#39;s
      one-dimensional framing yields a false choice between statist socialism
      and statist capitalism. Libertarians of both economic schools are
      &amp;quot;off the radar&amp;quot; in her model. We get a clearer understanding by
      adding another dimension, a libertarian-authoritarian dimension, to the
      model.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.ozarkia.net/bill/anarchism/rants/picts/Ideomap32p.pdf"&gt;&lt;img src="http://www.ozarkia.net/bill/anarchism/rants/picts/Ideomap32p.jpg" alt="" border="0" height="471" width="648" /&gt;
      &lt;/a&gt;It is clear that Klein favors the statist socialist lower
      left quadrant. Her one-dimensional left-right model works out to left
      being statist socialist and right being statist capitalist. For Klein,
      libertarian socialist and libertarian capitalist ideas are unknown, or at
      least unworthy of consideration. Klein isn&amp;#39;t alone in this; economic
      partisans of both socialist and capitalist persuations tend to ignore the
      libertarian variant of their opposition. Thus, e.g. Mises and Hayek use
      &amp;quot;socialism&amp;quot; to mean only statist socialism, while Marxists and
      most democratic socialists use &amp;quot;capitalism&amp;quot; to mean an unholy
      alliance between capitalists and rulers, i.e. statist capitalism.&lt;/font&gt;
      &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;The
      liberty-blindness resulting from her one-dimensional view explains a lot
      of things, from her misclassification of Milton Friedman to her inability
      to distinguish free trade from economic fascism. Kleins left-right model
      is indicated in the diagram above. If one favors any place on the
      libertarian side, her statist-biased model leaves you out in the cold.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;Two
      other errors detract from the book. One, her historiography is hackneyed
      and inadequate. She offers ideologically-reeking propaganda as historical
      fact. Thus, in her eyes every statist socialist regime in Latin America
      was on the right track and doing pretty well, and when they had problems,
      it was not at all remotely due to their policies, but just happened
      accidently like the weather, or was a nefarious plot of the Chicago boys
      or their ilk. On the other hand, when something goes wrong economically in
      a statist capitalist regime, it is clearly the result of mismanagement and
      proves the abject failure of voluntary markets. Of course, she&amp;#39;s half
      right - the statist capitalists screw things up. But her ideological
      blinders won&amp;#39;t allow her to see that the statist socialist policies also
      screw things up. Perhaps it takes an anti-statist to perceive the state&amp;#39;s
      fecal touch or to recognize the corruption inherent in the political
      means.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;Klein
      portrays various Latin American statist socialist regimes as struggles
      between the capitalist ruling class and benevolent socialist rulers
      representing the people. She wants these states to forcibly prevent people
      from buying and selling their produce, cleverly using the obscure
      sugar-coated &amp;quot;developmentalism&amp;quot; rather than the standard term
      &amp;quot;protectionism.&amp;quot; Her transparent party-line history is generally
      misleading when not outright wrong.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;Readers
      who want a good explanation of Latin American politico-economics would do
      much better by reading &amp;quot;Liberty for Latin America: How to Undo Five
      Hundred Years of State Oppression&amp;quot; by Alvaro Vargas Llosa. Llosa&amp;#39;s
      view is that it really doesn&amp;#39;t matter much whether the rulers call
      themselves capitalist or socialist, whether they plunder by concessions
      and taxation through crony firms or straight-out theft from nationalized
      industries. According to Llosa, the difference between left and right is
      cosmetic - they are both basically the same ruling Spanish-descended
      landowning elites. Llosa&amp;#39;s five &amp;quot;principles of oppression&amp;quot; are
      corporatism, state mercantilism, privilege, wealth transfer and political
      law. In his book, he traces these five pillars through colonialism, the
      republican revolutions, the people&amp;#39;s revolutions, and the capitalist
      reforms. He sees the solution involving the recognition of property rights
      for the masses, thereby legalizing the squatters and informal markets.
      Contrary to Klein&amp;#39;s contentions, the ideological professions of the ruling
      caste are not very relevant to the real problems. The critical factor is
      basic liberty for the people, not the favorite economic flavor of the
      rulers&amp;#39; intellectuals.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;Other
      examples of history gone bad in this book are Klein&amp;#39;s recap of FDR&amp;#39;s
      administration and the Marshall Plan. FDR is portrayed by Klein as
      anti-capitalist, yet in fact he enacted Mussolini&amp;#39;s corporatism
      (Industrial Boards) just like the original fascist. One would think that
      Klein would be leery of &lt;a href="http://www.lewrockwell.com/rothbard/rothbard99.html"&gt;the
      business-government alliance&lt;/a&gt; Roosevelt engineered. Mussolini
      recognized and publicly congratulated FDR for coming around to fascism. As
      for the Marshall Plan, &amp;quot;the countries that received the most Marshall
      Plan money grew the slowest ... while those that received the least money
      grew the most.&amp;quot; (&lt;a href="http://www.lewrockwell.com/jarvis/jarvis67.html"&gt;Jeffrey
      Tucker, The Marshall Plan Myth&lt;/a&gt;.)&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;A
      second weakness in The Shock Doctrine is the total absense of economic
      theory. There isn&amp;#39;t a clue about causation, of what might cause inflation
      or unemployment. It would be unfair to say that The Shock Therapy has bad
      economics - it simply has no economic ideas or knowledge at all. This is
      what allows Klein to attribute bad things that happen to &amp;quot;good&amp;quot;
      regimes as accidental, but bad things happening to &amp;quot;bad&amp;quot; regimes
      as the inevitable result of mistaken policy. Without any theory, she may
      suppose she can get away with such bald assertions, especially considering
      how dismally ignorant most Americans are in economics. More knowlegable
      readers will discern that the hyperinflation may be caused by a
      printing-press money policy, and that massive social spending has to come
      from somewhere. If the rulers don&amp;#39;t steal it overtly with nationalization
      and taxation, then they have to do it covertly with fiat money inflation.
      Politicians and rulers, no matter how popular, cannot magically will
      wealth into existence. If you understand this, then you already know more
      economics than 90% of USAmericans.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;The
      Shock Doctrine does have some strong areas. The inside stories behind
      government secret research and malfeasance are wonderful. I especially
      liked the information about torture research, where the US government
      contracted professors at McGill University in Canada to do sensory
      deprivation, psychotropic drug, and electric shock &amp;quot;research&amp;quot; on
      students. Also I enjoyed getting the lowdown on various influence peddling
      schemes, conflicts of interest by government officials, and collusions
      between crony corporations and states. Naomi Klein, ace journalist,
      clearly excels at this type of thing.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;&lt;img src="http://www.ozarkia.net/bill/anarchism/rants/picts/when_we_do_it.jpg" alt="" align="right" border="2" height="360" hspace="14" width="257" /&gt;
      Klein&amp;#39;s main theme in the book is the growing malevolence of corporatism -
      &amp;quot;the merger of political and corporate elites in the name of
      security, with the state playing the role of chair of the business
      guild.&amp;quot; This main theme is right on the mark. However, her hysterical
      anti-capitalism causes her to get most of the details wrong. Some of her
      most far-fetched claims may leave you in stitches. She blames the 9/11
      mass murders, not on interventionist US military policy, not on utter
      failure on the part of the CIA, NSA, FBI and other government intelligence
      agencies, not on US mass murders or embargoes or military subsidies to
      foreign powers, not even on the terrorists, but on (hold your breath)
      Ronald Reagan&amp;#39;s firing of striking air-traffic controllers in 1981! With
      all the government failure, she must have had to work hard to come up with
      that one. A particularly strange contortion is Klein&amp;#39;s claim that statist
      capitalists are trying to &amp;quot;auction off&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;hollow
      out&amp;quot; the state. To paraphrase Bakunin, a state&amp;#39;s power hurts about
      the same whether you call the stick you&amp;#39;re getting beaten with &amp;quot;an
      outsourced stick&amp;quot; or &amp;quot;the people&amp;#39;s stick.&amp;quot; Brownshirts can
      kill you just as dead as SS agents can. Her suggestion that the
      Bush-Cheney junto is withering away the state is absurd.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;I
      cannot recommend this book because of the large amount of disinformation
      and absence of economic aptitude. Parts of the book are good, but if you
      want to learn about the corporatocracy, &amp;quot;Confessions of an Economic
      Hit Man&amp;quot; is a better book. John Perkins, the author, has his biases,
      but is much better at separating observations from opinion. His fact and
      experience chapters come first, with his commentary mainly restricted to
      the last few chapters. In Klein&amp;#39;s book, virtually every page is drenched
      in state-socialist ideological dogma.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;It
      is absolutely true that states collude with special interests for mutual
      benefit, and that there is a cozy alliance between certain business
      interests (especially in the munitions and security industries) and the
      state. It is true that there exist dangerous cartels of states (such as
      the World Bank, WTO, and IMF) which operate as worldwide fascist
      &amp;quot;corporations.&amp;quot; It is also true that so-called &amp;quot;free trade
      agreements,&amp;quot; despite their names, are actually not free trade
      agreements at all, but &lt;i&gt;managed&lt;/i&gt; trade agreements between conniving
      state rulers. The mistake Klein makes, in keeping with her authoritarian
      ideology, is trying to absolve states, the main perpetrators, of any
      blame, by shoving all blame on secondary beneficiaries of the state&amp;#39;s
      plunder operation. Klein attempts to frame the problem of political
      aggression soley in terms of economic preference. She does not seen to
      realize that the root problem is political power. The hapless serfs are
      screwed whether the rulers own or lease out the people&amp;#39;s plundered
      resources. Solutions need to involve reducing the predatory power of
      rulers, and recognizing the rights, including property rights, of people.
      Whether such rights follow a capitalist, mutualist, or socialist model is
      of secondary importance. So long as rulers sell their people out, it
      doesn&amp;#39;t matter what economic system they claim to follow - the result is
      the same&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font color="#000000" face="Georgia"&gt;.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p style="margin-left:35px;margin-right:35px;"&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.strike-the-root.com/81/bill/bill1.html"&gt;Source&lt;/a&gt;.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;div style="clear:both;"&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</description></item></channel></rss>