Thursday, December 31, 2009

Reflecting on 2009

New Year's Eve already! How fast this year passed! I still can vividly remember January of this year like it was a second ago, when I temporarily returned to playing Age of Empires III, single player and online with a friend, to kill time. That was in the weeks leading up to Barack Obama's inauguration, when the enthusiasm of "hope and change" still filled the air while the economy looked like it hit the ninth circle of hell. (The former was nonsense of course, it's the same old story every time.) I warned people that I knew that he would be just like Bush.







































The past year has proven me wise to many people that were skeptical of my claims. Whether it's beating around the bush of closing Guantanamo, continuing the Bush Administration's disastrous economic policies to prevent a necessary correction (AKA a recession), or escalating the war in Afghanistan. Let's not forget the continued escalation of the debt ceiling- something now approaching $13 trillion. Look at that cool live feed with the changing numbers! It's fun!

...until you realize that your and your peers' future is what's being hanged.

Anyway, I'm not here to talk about this. I think I've said enough. Being proven right to my skeptics was predictable. I'm here to talk about myself.

2009, while discouraging politically (though what year isn't when you have a juggernaut state?), was for myself personally, a very productive and fulfilling year. It was a year in which my personal development, identity, and worldview reached new heights. My confidence in my sense of self is at a new plateau. Maybe it's kinda lame, but as I sit here, looking out my window at the snowstorm over New York, I write my accomplishments this year below:

1. It was the first full year of me being a bona fide anti-statist. I stopped believing in the state in late 2008 after Obama's election, but truly got on board with the ideology once 2009 began. Needless to say, it's a truly liberating worldview.

2. I finished acts one and two of my book. I probably should have finished the third as well, but writers have periods of highs and lows. That's what happened and I'm satisfied with the work so far. I think this book will truly be an epic that speaks to people if I can get it done the way I want to.

3. My YouTube channel has expanded rapidly. I only made videos sparingly throughout 2007-8. In 2009, I made them pretty regularly (with binges and gaps of course). I made my voice a regular in the libertarian/anti-state side of thinking on the tubez. As of this moment I have 414 subscribers, and am confident that I'll reach the 500 mark by the end of January. That's several hundred people at least somewhat interested in what I have to say. Imagine addressing those people in some kind of public assembly hall, and you can appreciate how the spread of information is becoming more and more decentralized- enabling anyone to reach a good audience.

4. As a result of making the videos, my speech has improved dramatically.

5. Through networking with the anti-state community, I met some real cool folks: http://www.youtube.com/user/fringeelements, http://www.youtube.com/user/InTheEndIWasRight, http://www.youtube.com/user/junior00bacon00chee, http://www.youtube.com/user/nonantianarchist, http://www.youtube.com/user/tumbleweedjoe, http://www.youtube.com/user/IndividualAutonomy, http://www.youtube.com/user/opheliaic, http://www.youtube.com/user/EndDepravity, http://www.youtube.com/user/spawktalk, http://www.youtube.com/user/blackacidlizzard, http://www.youtube.com/user/graaaaaagh, http://www.youtube.com/user/spinnernet1.

These are excellent channels to check out and cool people to talk to to boot. Of course the passerby may wish to join a hub we use to congregate, Fringe Elements.

6. My ability in logical argumentation improved dramatically over the summer. Say something stupid to me now and I will immediately be able to call you on it, and tell you where your reasoning went wrong.

7. Consequently, at around the same time, I realized that objective morality was nonsensical. I became an ethical nihilist. All moral codes are based on subjective preferences.

8. Ditto on free will. It does not exist, all actions are causal in some way. This is not to say that humans cannot make rational choices among alternatives in what way best suits them, but none of these choices are outside the realm of a causal agent. I had a bit of difficulty giving this up, but once I recognized the facts I realized I didn't.

9. In line with these realizations, I discovered egoism. Big thanks to David Gauthier and Morals By Agreement for putting it into words for me.

10. I learned an immense amount about economics this year, far more than I'd known previously. Big thanks to Ryan Faulk (confederalsocialist/fringeelements), the Mises Institute, Peter Schiff, and others. I'm even considering a career in the Financial District now (maybe I'll get my own bailout!) as a securities attorney (bit of an irony, being an anti-statist isn't it?). But hey, I can defend firms against stupid regulations by the state, can't I?

Overall, it was an excellent year for those reasons, and I'm looking to continue to take myself higher in 2010. It might be cliche, but I've got a couple of resolutions for the new year and decade (though technically the latter doesn't start until 2011, I'm such a party pooper):

1. Finish my book.

2. Get out more than I do now and meet new people.

Small simple steps to each, of course.

That's about it. I want to continue my process of self-liberation that expanded rapidly in 2009, and those two resolutions will help me along in that life goal. Now, let's go watch Nirvana break shit! Imagine the shit they're breaking are the barriers in your life. Just smash them, and have fun while doing so!



Have a great 2010! Be back soon.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

In Defense of a Radical Idea

When you say the words “stateless society,” most people consider them an oxymoron. “A society without a state?! Isn’t the state the very thing that makes society possible?!” Many of them will ask in disbelief, and they have reason to be skeptical. The state, after all, currently provides certain goods and services, the most basic of them
being protection and dispute resolution, necessary (or at least highly desirable) for a functioning society. When one advocates a stateless society, you inevitably wind up hearing objections on these grounds. Some say that an advocate places way too much faith in the goodness of man. The fact that it is men who are in charge of the state, who can, by their logic be just as easily corrupted, or just as evil, and what’s more have a monopoly on aggressive action never seems to enter their minds. Nonetheless, the advocate of the stateless society must in the eyes of skeptics, demonstrate the validity of the idea, and go through the difficulty of the inertia that the state has in people’s minds (it is an institution thousands of years old, after all). In this paper I will argue that the state is not necessary for a functioning and flourishing human society, and that what’s more, certain services currently being provided by the state are sub-optimally provided.

Firstly, I contend that problems in human society can all be solved by the market. What I mean by the market is not strictly a private entity or business selling a good or service for a profit, but rather the free interaction of people.
A market is after all, a matrix of people demanding something, and then being supplied in that demand. Society itself could then be seen as an outgrowth of the market. People live together in a society for their mutual benefit through their free interaction with one another.

There are problems in society, (problems in interaction) obviously, and David Gauthier, in his treatise Morals By Agreement outlines a few of these. He contends in chapter four that there are certain necessities for markets to operate that cannot themselves be provided by markets, and that certain outcomes need correction via law.

But is law really outside of the market? Remember, markets are the matrix of free human interaction. Obviously, people have a preference for rules of some kind to safeguard their own interests (whether they be short term or long term). In this sense does law precede markets, or do we have a chicken and egg scenario? Are laws and rules the outcome of markets or are markets the outcome of law and rules? In my opinion, the two are very much interlinked, to the extent that I would say they are one in the same, all operating under the aegis of human action.

Nonetheless, Gauthier is certainly valid in his concerns. It is in the interest of all parties to have modes of conduct (what he calls moral constraints). To Gauthier, moral constraints are those that “replace the utility-maximizing response, with the optimizing response,” (Gauthier, 82) which, in somewhat of an irony, winds up maximizing utility, even if it is not at first obvious. It is in effect, your interest to sacrifice your immediate utility-maximizing interest for a longer term Pareto optimal interest that winds up maximizing your utility.

It sounds circular, but here Gauthier is completely correct. While I would hesitate to call it morality, as stated earlier, there are certain common rules that are necessary to satisfy our preferences of a cohesive society, even if they at first appear to dissatisfy our immediate utility. But this again begs the question of how do these rules come about, and what problems must be solved? There are many problems in society that require solving
via a corrective method, but who does the correcting, and why? How do the rules operate?

Consider an example that Gauthier outlines in chapter four: “Let us now suppose that a factory owner disposes of the wastes from her factory by having them discharged into the atmosphere, thus causing pollution. If anyone may use the air as she pleases, so that it is a free good, then there is no way to require the factory owner to compensate
others for the ill effects on them of her method of waste disposal. The effect of any person breathing the polluted air then is a negative externality.” (Gauthier, 88)

Gauthier goes on to explain externalities as arising as a result of free goods, whether positive or negative. The existence of externalities prevents the market from being a perfect one, and thus, prevents the market from being a morally free zone. To deal with this issue, there needs to be some type of moral constraint, that is to say, rules or correction via law.

To this, we can agree. There has never been, nor there will there ever be, a perfectly competitive market. The trick of the matter is to find out how to get closest to that point, in order to make a solution optimal. How would a stateless society deal with such a scenario?

First consider what the current arrangement (at least in people’s minds) of dealing with this is. The people affected by this externality would run to the state and complain, demanding that some action be taken against the factory owner. The affected parties would then have to hope that the state responds, and if it does, hope that it responds in a timely manner. Remember, as a monopoly, the state has less of an incentive to provide the affected with a good service (dispute resolution), and what’s worse, it gets funded a priori (you pay your taxes no matter what, if you don’t you go to jail, and if you resist going to jail you are shot), a further disincentive for the performance of a good service. The result is that the state often twiddles its thumbs while the polluter still roams free. Further, the assumption that the environment is a commons problem (which is why the state, supposedly the collective will of the people, takes command of the environment) leads to just this sort of tragedy of the commons scenario. What the state winds up doing is empowering polluters, whether passively in the form of ignoring the problem, or actively in the form of subsidizing the polluter (consider the vast subsidies that corporations that pollute the environment get from the state). But it goes even further than this. Oftentimes, the state will abuse its supposed duty to protect the environment and use this power not to punish polluters, but to expand its own. Consider a program known as Superfund. It originally started out as a program to clean up abandoned waste sights. However, Superfund quickly morphed into a program that imposed devastating cleanup costs on businesses the EPA determined had sent waste to a Superfund sight, and the accused must then prove otherwise. (Bovard,) In effect you are guilty until proven innocent. Programs such as these impose pollution costs onto parties that may not have ever engaged in the act of polluting. What does all of this add up to? A sub-optimal solution to dealing with resolving disputes over negative externalities such as pollution.

So what is the alternative? First we need to realize that the beauty of the stateless society is that there is no one be-all, end-all solution, unlike the monopoly of the state that leads to the problems I just outlined. The first thing that my model of a stateless society would do is realize that this externality is an act of aggression. This is not so much a commons problem against the environment, but rather an act of aggression against a matrix of individuals, who may enjoy a good environment, but above all, healthy air to breathe. In stateless societies in the past, such as Ireland, who’s legal system (known as Brehon Law) lasted 1,000 years, the affected parties might have acted in this manner: affected parties would consider the externality of Gauthier’s factory owner an act of aggression against their property (their part of the air over say, their homes). Our modern day members of stateless Ireland would submit a dispute to an arbiter of the common law known as a Brehon. Brehons were not judges the way that we consider state judges to be. My friend, Ryan Faulk, points out what the Brehon was in Irish society: “Brehons were not appointed; they didn't go to a university and graduate, Brehons simply emerged, and one could become known as a Brehon if he was known for having a thorough understanding of Brehon law and was known for issuing fair rulings as
a judge, and people were willing to pay for your arbitration.” (Faulk, 53)

Having submitted their dispute to an effective and reputable Brehon (who needs to issue fair rulings to stay in business), Gauthier’s factory owner would have two choices: show up for arbitration, or ignore it and continue polluting. Choices, however, have consequences. The plaintiffs would more than likely be members of a Tuath, the
basic community unit in stateless Ireland.

The Tuath was composed of an assembly of freemen and led by a king (not to be confused with Hobbes’ sovereign). He was a chief representative of the Tuath when dealing with other Tuaths, and a religious and military leader (though the latter was very rare). (Peden, 4) The king did not administer justice and was independent of the Brehon courts.

The king, nonetheless, had the responsibility of making sure that the Tuath represented his clients in terms of protection. If his Tuath failed, or in any way was corrupt (in this case, empowering the polluter), individuals could secede to another Tuath that would better represent their interests, or form their own, toppling the king. If the
factory owner continued to pollute, ignoring the Brehon’s rulings, his reputation would take an immediate nose-dive, and the Tuath would enforce the ruling through a system of sureties.

In stateless Ireland, people would agree to a surety, say, to prevent property damage. (Faulk, 53) This would usually consist of a fine of some sort, but this could not exceed what was known as an honor-price which was directly related to someone’s wealth (this meant that you couldn’t take advantage of a poor person by imposing an
insane fine).

Turning back to our factory owner, he would probably have to agree to a surety with the assembly of the Tuath (of which our plaintiffs are members) in order to operate his factory in the Tuath’s territory, or to sell his goods there. Absent such a surety (which would be in the long term interests of the king and assembly), the factory owner may
never have been able to operate his capital.

The factory owner, through this surety, would then (if he lost the suit, or if he ignored the Brehon) be considered a debtor, and, being most likely a rich businessman, have a high honor price to pay to those who were affected by his pollution. In effect, he’d be a debtor to his victims.

Absent all other options, the factory owner would be outlawed by the Tuath, and would be fair game to anyone who had ill intentions toward him, such as the armed men of the Tuath representing the plaintiffs (remember, the externality is aggression against the property of the plaintiffs).

In a modern day stateless society, consider the Tuath a township with an assembly or association, complete with agents of multiple protection agencies competing on the market for customers, and independent arbitration services to resolve disputes. Credit and crime ratings may also be used, that is, if the factory owner ignored arbitration or the ruling, his credit rating would go down and crime rating would go up- a further disincentive to do business with him. The only way to recover would be to pay the restitution to the plaintiffs affected by his pollution.

Here we see an alternative to the state that still fits David Gauthier’s idea of moral constraints. Furthermore, as these associations are all voluntary, and operating by a profit and loss system (even if it isn’t truly monetary, such as reputation or residents of the township), it optimizes the situation for all by not displacing costs onto third parties
(unlike with various state programs like Superfund outlined earlier), subsidizing polluters, having inevitable commons problems, and being slow to act (voluntary agencies need to settle disputes in as timely a manner as possible to satisfy their subscribers).

Here we saw that the parasite associated with the negative externality was dealt with in an example of a stateless legal order. What then, of free riders- those who benefit from a positive externality without paying the costs? David Gauthier outlined one such externality- a group of businessmen building a lighthouse that then can be used by those who have not paid any costs upfront for its construction. This results in a game of chicken- people maximizing their immediate utility by not paying the costs of construction, yet at the same time, expecting a lighthouse to be built. This, likewise, calls for some type of moral constraint- and we turn back to our structural analysis of the operation of a stateless version of those types of constraints. How would we deal with free riders operating on the positive externality of the Tuath (or in a modern day association, a defense agency operating in a township)?

We must remember first of all, that in a stateless society, there are no taxes. No one is forced to pay for a service that they do not want to use. Individuals could secede from a Tuath, for example, or a Claims Association in the Old West (before the US Government began to exercise real power) (Faulk, 61) when these protective agencies
were not fulfilling their needs or they simply did not want to be a part of them. The more conventional reader would ask: in a modern situation, how would free riders be dealt with who take advantage of a protective association’s services without paying costs? If this issue were not dealt with, may we get David Gauthier’s game of chicken?

One method to prevent such a scenario would be Robert P. Murphy’s idea of insurance and call options to spontaneously organize communal defense via market mechanisms. (Murphy, 4)

One such option he describes would be an insurance company or a competing network of insurers to provide defense. Suppose that bombers from England (the neighboring state that conquered stateless Ireland only after a very long, 500 year struggle) were swarming the skies over our modern Tuaths in Ireland. How would a stateless society mount a defense? Suppose there were insurance companies operating in the Tuath that sold policies to homeowners to protect the value of their homes. To prevent payout claims, the insurance agency would have to be quite good in specializing in shooting down enemy bombers. (Murphy, 4)

Another solution that he lays out is something known as a call option on real estate. If such an attack were inevitable, an entrepreneur may see a profit to be had, and can buy call options on the properties, which homeowners would have an incentive to sell. If the entrepreneur did nothing, his investment would collapse, if however, he defended against the attack, the property values would rise again after the danger ends, netting him a large gain. (Murphy, 6) It would be in the free rider’s interest to buy such services, or else the value of his home would plummet (especially if it got hit by a bomb).

I was somewhat skeptical of this, and Murphy admits on page seven of his small analysis that a more likely scenario would be signing a binding contract upon joining an association to pay for a part of its defense, going back to a Tuath-type model. I just wanted to point out that purely market solutions to such a problem are possible, and
they’re possible because there’s a large demand for defense, obviously!

The biggest reason why I believe that free riders leeching off of mutual associations such as a Tuath or Claims Association is minimal is because failure to pay means alienation. For example, a person without a Tuath in stateless Ireland was in effect an outlaw as described above. He forfeited all protection and took a large risk. This
would be a very strong disincentive to play the chicken game.

In addition, I believe that free riders would be alienated from the market. Their credit ratings would sink like a stone (if you’re unwilling to invest in your own protection, why should anyone loan you money?), and their crime ratings would skyrocket (such a person is an immense risk to do business with, as he has no court or the
like to peacefully resolve a dispute).

These two very strong negatives, and the demonstration that currently existing market operations (albeit operating in a new way) can work should overcome the free rider problem without much difficulty. But, we must take into account the fact that ultimately, protection is a choice. If competent parties feel good about being unprotected,
it is their choice (I assume most would form their own associations anyway). Forcing protection on people is the first step toward the complications of the state, which, for liberty advocates like me, is highly undesirable.

Gauthier also speaks of what he terms initial factor endowments. Simply put, Gauthier defines these as those things from which goods and services get converted from an initial situation, and the individual’s original situation in the market is the initial factor endowment. (Gauthier, 94) He goes on to say that the only way the outcome of market
operations can be justified are if they are originally fair.

I agree here as well, to a degree. Using words such as “fair” are problematic, due to the simple fact that they mean different things to different people. Unfortunately, I have not been able to read the entirety of Gauthier’s book to clarify what exact position he has on this. I defined what a free market is at the top of my paper. If the initial factor
endowments arise as a result of voluntary interactions in the marketplace, absent of force or fraud, I see them being fair. There may be conditions that appear unfair to the eye, such as ‘wage slavery’ or inequalities of wealth, but in a free market, these are not unfair. You work for what you get; the products of your labor are your own. The demand for
charity would help alleviate the latter, and worker-run coops would probably form too, to address the former, though I do not see these being widespread. If I’m wrong about that, it’s not a real problem. I still stand by my statement that while some find those two things undesirable, they are not unfair.

However, it is precisely the state that is responsible for most of the unfair initial factor endowments. This is done through forced barriers to entry. Barriers to entry are sets of circumstances that make it very difficult or even impossible for new firms to enter a market and compete with more established firms. Now to be fair, in a free market, there would be at least some barriers to entry, but these would be a result of superior goods or services that some firms produce, thus gaining popularity on the market. This is not unfair. As stated, the firms would have had to work and plan the structure of production correctly in order to be successful. The fruits of their labor are truly their own. However, the vast majority of barriers to entry are imposed on the market via the state, at the prodding of corporate lobbyists. (Johnson)

Consider, for example, the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008. Even the casual reader will probably be familiar with the story leading up to it. In 2007, there was widespread media-induced hysteria over unsafe Chinese toys that were being recalled (no, I am not saying that the unsafe products should not have been recalled, just
that the attention was hyped!). Using this attention, large toy companies such as Mattel and Hasbro mobilized their lobbyists to get CPSIA passed. (Weisenthal) The law mandates that businesses (and a whole bunch of other outlets) that produce products marketed to children twelve and under have independent labs accredited by the state give them their seals of approval. This even if you’re person that likes to craft barrettes in your basement and donate them to your church’s holiday fair. (Rehyle)

What does this all mean? It means that established firms can pay for these regulations, and Mom & Pop shops get run out of business. They simply cannot afford to pay the expenses before their products even get to market, whereas the established firms can, even if it is at a higher cost to them then to the smaller businesses. Regulations such as these disproportionately hurt small firms. (Faulk, 22)

Corporations also get a hefty amount of subsidies from the state. These subsidies are (obviously) paid for in tax dollars- the same tax dollars that these Mom & Pop shops (and individuals that run them) are forced to pay. This results in less money for the up and coming entrepreneurs to operate their firms and even more money getting pushed upward toward their competitors.

It is state actions such as these that create the vast majority of unfair initial factor endowments. The modern marketplace is far from fair or competitive, rather, it is a heavily cartelized economy, and the coercive power of the state is responsible.

In a free market, businesses are regulated by motive to profit. It is because firms want to profit that they have an interest in selling safe products. Does this mean that we should simply take their word for it? Of course not. Obviously, there’s a demand for safe products (otherwise people wouldn’t project this demand onto the state). Therefore, I have reason to believe savvy entrepreneurs will start their own regulating firms based on reputation rather than a state monopoly like the FDA. Consider Underwriter’s Laboratories for example, an independent regulator that operates on the fees of companies sending their products to be tested, in order for them to appear safe. (Faulk, 38) I suspect that firms like these would expand in a stateless society, and may possibly be linked with one’s township association (our modern Tuath). That is, the township could approve of independent regulators to test products in order for them to be safe, if firms did not pass the test, they could not sell their products in that township. Oftentimes, a combination of whatever communitarian organization plus trusted private regulators would be enough to discourage people from buying products deemed unsafe even if they did get to market (thus, businesses have an incentive to make safe products). Is this the same as state laws like CSPIA? No! The lack of a monopolistic legal entity means it is virtually impossible for firms in a free market to impose such a blanket mandate onto everyone else. Any regulations that follow are about general safety issues, not about getting some firms coercive advantages. (Corporations as we know them today are likewise state-chartered entities given legal advantages.)

What does this all mean? Initial factor endowments would be as closely based on merit as possible. The only advantage firms would have on a free market would be those that have been earned based on the preferences of consumers.

As we have seen, there are many problems in human interaction that David Gauthier brings up, and we’ve seen various solutions to these problems, all based as closely on what people actually demand as possible. These are true moral constraints, ones which make interaction in society between people as close to Pareto-Optimal as
possible. The largest problem with the state is its monopolistic legal framework. It is based not on true interaction, but on whoever can lobby it to get some advantage that in turn gets imposed on everyone else. Think about it, the current legal system of states elevates a tiny minority of people into positions of immense power who can then impose their subjective definition of ‘law’ onto millions. How can this small an amount of people know how to deal with the issues of many millions (in each respective country)? It is truly then, the state that is Hobbes’ War of All Against All. It is fundamentally antisocial in that people war with each other for its favor. It is time that humanity looked to something new. Stateless societies throughout history, large and small, have both worked well and flourished. The idea may be radical, but radical ideas have always been the source of revolution. Without radicalism, society is stagnant. Indeed, statelessness is truly ‘the change we can believe in.’









Sources Cited:

Gauthier, David. Morals By Agreement. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 1986. Print.

Bovard, James. “Robbery with an Environmental Badge.” Freedom Daily. March 1999. Retrieved 11/29/09. http://www.fff.org/freedom/0399d.asp

Faulk, Ryan. “For an Emergent Governance.” (No date given.) Retrieved 11/30/09. http://www.lulu.com/items/volume_66/7855000/7855614/1/source/ForAnE...

Peden, Joseph, R. “Stateless Societies: Ancient Ireland.” The Libertarian Forum. April 1971. Retrieved 11/30/09. http://mises.org/journals/lf/1971/1971_04.pdf

Murphy, Robert P. “Private Solutions to Positive Externalities: Military Expenditures, Insurance, and Call Options.” Mises Institute. May 2004. Retrieved 12/05/09. http://mises.org/journals/scholar/Murphy6.pdf

Weisenthal, Joe. “The New York Times Goes to Bat for Big Toymakers.” The Business Insider. February 19th, 2009. Retrieved 12/05/09.http://www.businessinsider.com/the-new-york-times-goes-to-bat-for-b...

Paul M. Johnson. “A Glossary of Political Economy Terms.” Auburn University. (No date given.) Retrieved 12/05/09.
http://www.auburn.edu/~johnspm/gloss/barriers_to_entry

Reyhle, Nicole. “Understanding CPSIA and How it Will Effect Your Business.” Retail Minded. April 7th, 2009. Retrieved 12/05/09.
http://retailminded.com/blog/2009/04/understanding-cspia-and-how-it...

Thursday, October 8, 2009

YouTube Needs to Fail

YouTube. A name that changed the Internet forever. When it first started in February 2005 and debuted in November of that year, it had an awesome vision- to allow individuals to 'broadcast themselves' with a cheap, easy to make and upload video format. For possibly the first time, individuals had a type of broadcasting access to the airwaves of the information superhighway, in effect making people their own media companies.

It was no wonder that the site expanded rapidly in the summer of 2006. The decentralized, individualistic, and all-around free market of information on YouTube made it one of the fastest growing websites on the Internet, with people watching 100 million videos per day and uploading 65,000 at the same rate.

YouTube had become a paradise of individual creativity, an underground to the world's stifling media market. This was the time period that made YouTube what it is today- at least in terms of its market share on the Internet. As expected, "freedom is popular!"

Such times however, do not seem to last. A control freak is always waiting in the wings, ready to pounce on the free market for a variety of reasons.

Such was the case with YouTube. Under siege from the threat of copyright lawsuits (I.E.: using the guns of the state to protect "ownership" of a certain sequence and pattern of information) On October 9th, 2006, Google agreed to buy YouTube for $1.65 billion. The deal appeared to be a win-win for both parties, as Google had been wanting to compete with the rapidly-growing MySpace.com, expand beyond it's search-based revenue, and go into the social networking market. YouTube, for its part, would reap a great deal of revenue and be better-prepared for any lawsuits in the future. The deal was finalized on November 13th, 2006.

By this time, I had my own account on YouTube, and at first I noticed no obvious changes. By December, however, I noticed that many "copyrighted" videos were being removed. This was to be expected, and at first it was frustrating, but wasn't too terrible. Some cool inputs were added to the site, such as the ability to thumb up or down comments.

However, the website began to go downhill. The copyright vultures were always hovering over, always poised to attack those that skirted their barriers to entry. This can be most easily seen by the Viacom lawsuit, and later, the issues with Warner Music Group. Warner, in particular, was removing videos normally covered under Fair Use.

You'd think that Warner was doing this to represent their artists right? Nope. Several artists signed up with the record label are angry that their content has been removed from YouTube.

In all fairness, it is unfair to blame YouTube for ALL of this brouhaha. No one wants the guns of the state pointed at them, and this is what present Intellectual Property legislation demands. YouTube is at fault however, for completely failing to protect its users from false copyright claims or fair use content.

However, the current state of YouTube as we know it today, what I and others call GooTube (as in, watch what Google broadcasts) truly began with the YouTube Partner Program.

In a nutshell, the Partner Program allows users to take in a portion of ad revenue that their videos generate to YouTube. The program launched in 2007 and expanded rapidly in 2008.

Sounds great doesn't it? Here's the problem: GooTube has actively and vociferously promoted its partner videos over the rest of its user population. You will not find a definitive source for this, but every long-time YouTube user who has the ability to inductively reason will tell you that this is true. This is how the god-awful non-comic Fred was able to rise so rapidly in popularity: YouTube has endlessly promoted his videos on its front page. Here they actually admit their bias toward partners. This is in the form of their "spotlight videos." Ignore the idiots commenting on this page that don't see this for what it is. This is also apparent in that the "popular" page is shown before that of most viewed. Other pages, such as highest rated, are several clicks away to get to, thus turning many people away.

In addition to this, many people believe, and with good reason, that YouTube is censoring the view counts of its users (making it even harder to get onto the top viewed page). The example mentioned in the link is just one, and I believe this happened to me this past summer. My "The New Channels Suck!" video was frozen at 318 for at least two days, even though numerous comments were posted on it during that time.

In effect, the Partner Program has become a massive barrier to entry for small users attempting to expand their YouTube channel. What once was a free market in the exchange of information has become censored beyond belief since Google bought YouTube.

But just as it gets bad, it gets even worse. YouTube was transformed into GooTube, and recently, especially since Viacom and WMG began their saber-rattling, it has become ArchonTube (broadcast what the ruler says).

YouTube has been removing videos and suspending users for no apparent reason, even those with no noticeable "copyright infringement" at all. Indeed, my buddy, fellow Anarchist Vlogger InTheEndIWasRight, was suspended last week for no reason at all. Fortunately, his channel is now back up. Leading Anarchist confederalsocialist has gone through numerous accounts.

But perhaps the most egregious change of all occurred this summer, symbolizing perhaps once and for all the force-fitting conformity camp that a once-great website has been transformed into over the course of Google's ownership.

On June 24th, 2009, "YouTube" announced that it would be mandating that all users switch to the "beta channel" format. The response to the blog and companion introductory video was overwhelmingly negative, with the video receiving a one-and-a-half star rating and around 30,000 comments, around 95% of them being negative. The blog received the same reaction in its 66,000 comments.

In fact, the "beta" channels were so buggy that YouTube had no choice but to postpone the changeover. For two months nothing happened. Had the users won? Would these arrogant jerks at ArchonTube realize that customer feedback was nearly-one sided on the negative? Would the user base be able to keep the old channels, that worked extremely well since the site's inception? Would they honor the old maxim: "if it ain't broke, don't fix it?"

Nope. As expected, ArchonTube gave no care to the wishes of its customers and proceeded to go ahead and make the change anyway. My channel got hit last night.

The beta channel affair should make it clear once and for all now that YouTube is no longer the free market that honors individual initiative that it once was. It has become entirely fascized/corporatized. It is the same in name only, and while proceeding to make stupid changes that apparently only anger the user base, YouTube has been beset with numerous glitches, the most recent one having comments disappear. But ArchonTube is of course, too busy switching its customers into a new format that they don't seem to care about something so basic as this.

The writing is on the wall: YouTube needs to fail. It has treated its customers like crap for years. It believes that it's the only game in town, and unfortunately, it is somewhat right in that assessment. It still has the largest market share in its genre...by far. For this reason, it still has the most people congregating and networking, and this is why I'm still there for the most part: my channel is beginning to grow and I want to get more people onto the anti-state ship, and in all fairness, uploading and viewing videos there is still surprisingly, extremely simple.

However, its new methods of operation should not be tolerated. Like any business that treats its customers badly, people should vote with their feet, and a huge amount are already extremely dissatisfied with the direction the site has been going, especially the older users that have been around for a long time, like myself. The time is ripe for serious competitors to emerge if they can play their cards right, and rest assured I am looking for them.

confederalsocialist's Fringe Elements is a good place for anti-statists of all stripes to congregate, and is a nice way to begin detaching from ArchonTube. Perhaps a sort of video Agorism to promote competitors, marketed toward older users first might be a good way to begin to slay this dragon.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Moon Landings: Just Another Government Boondoggle

This is going to be hard for me to write. There's very, very few things that the federal government (and other states around the world) do that I actually like. In fact, space exploration is the only one that I can think of.

Yesterday marked the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing, and I only wish that I could have been alive at the time- to bask in the excitement of what we as a species can accomplish. I do hope that man lands on Mars in my lifetime.


















All that said, it's now time to face the facts. The moon landing was conducted by NASA, a government agency funded by taxpayer money (aka) extortion. The moon landings in essence were just a massive PR stunt by the United States to demonstrate its 'superiority' over the Soviet Union (and it surely would have been the exact same thing were it the other way around).

That's the reason for Kennedy's famous "we choose to go to the moon" speech. (Or if you prefer, the full video.) That's the reason for NASA's fervor and dedication. While there indeed were some idealists in that project, the reason why it worked so efficiently (quite uncharacteristic of a government agency) was to get the world's most expensive and glorious PR stunt in history accomplished. And they did so, making Neil Armstrong the most glorified bureaucrat to ever live and guaranteeing NASA permanence as a government agency.

Because of this, what should have been a day of triumph for all of humanity was instead riddled with nationalistic hubris (as the Apollo 11 mission logo and the famous photographs demonstrate clearly).



























































What was accomplished by this mission, besides the already mentioned greatest PR stunt of all time?

The cost of the Apollo program was $25.4 billion, or $145 billion in 2007 dollars. (God knows what it will be in terms of 2009 and beyond dollars, they've already printed trillions.)

The ugly truth of this matter is that that wealth could have been used in ways that would have been productive to the economy. No one in their right mind would have invested in the moon landings because the gain would not match the investment. This is why the only way the landings could have been pulled off was for the state to extort money from its population and then spend it on something people would normally not want to. No matter the triumph, it is not justified to steal money from others in order to accomplish it.

What has NASA done since the last moon landing in 1972? It's become a typical government bureaucracy, mired in inefficiency, laziness, and graft. This is made evident by the fact that NASA even erased the original footage of the Apollo 11 moon landing!

Since the bygone Apollo days, NASA has been stuck launching satellites (among them the space telescopes such as Hubble and the new Kepler, something private foundations could have easily done), and putting people in low Earth orbit for no apparent reason except to keep a permanent human presence in space, lodging them in the still incomplete International Space Station.

In addition to the bone-crunching cost of keeping people in space per day (paid for by you, of course), prolonged zero-gravity exposure has very detrimental effects on the human body. Thus we are forced to needlessly endanger people's health, even when there is no imperative scientific operation underway.

Where does this put the future of human spaceflight? Is it really something that we want to leave to states? Being somewhat of an astronomy geek and science fiction writer, there's no doubt in my mind that space exploration (culminated of course in the moon landings), is the coolest thing that the government has ever done. However, mass extortion was needed to fund it, and the ends do not justify the means. Fortunately, help is on the way!

Finally, it appears that private enterprise is entering the space market.
Undoubtedly, the prohibitive cost of sending matter into space has been holding the free market back from taking off beyond Earth. However, a few brave entrepreneurs are now taking up the challenge. Richard Branson and Virgin Galactic are the most famous examples that come to mind. Indeed, Virgin Galactic has just recently broken ground on the world's first commercial spaceport! The concept art for it is below:
















I'm sounding like a geek now, I know, but I can't help it. The first few years (or decades) will be very expensive, thus reserving spaceflight for the wealthy, but so then were the first cars and air travel. The free market lowered their costs quite quickly, and ought to do the same for space travel too.

What will be the obstacle for the success of such enterprises? Undoubtedly, the arch-nemesis of free markets everywhere: the state. It can do this in a number of ways: taxes that siphon off money that could be used for further investment, regulating commercial spaceflights with silly agencies like the TSA, or inflating the money supply, thus making people poor and further unable to invest or demand as much of private enterprise.

These are just a few of the barriers to entry the state may try in the future. However, even NASA's future may depend on private initiatives.

I sincerely hope that the market is allowed to work, and take space out of the hands of states and their armies of bureaucrats. Perhaps there will even be private spaceflights to the Moon and Mars. Now I sound even more far fetched, but maybe there will even be private colonization efforts on the Red Planet.

This could only happen by the end of my lifetime most probably (at the earliest), but if it means I could escape the madness of this world of states and live out my last few years in freedom, I'd be there in a heartbeat, however remote the chance.

Here's hoping that the future of space travel be taken out of the hands of states and turned over to the marketplace.

But hope isn't enough, liberty lovers and space enthusiasts alike must work toward achieving the goal, whether this be by investing, popularizing private space ventures, or by smashing the state.



















To hell with the glorified bureaucrats, guys like this are my heroes!






















Free on Mars? This is my greatest dream of space travel, let's work to achieve it!

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

The Evils of Income Taxation

It's April 15th...and you know what that means, long lines at post offices, comprised of people sending in their slave forms...err "tax returns" to the government. The income tax and the IRS are the worst of the worst that the federal government has to offer (this is saying quite a lot indeed!). There is no greater demonstration of who rules who, of the people's submission, and the loss of America's founding ideal of individual liberty. America has gone from a nation of sovereign individualism to a nation of servitude to a centralized authority. Today's system is one of modern feudalism, and the income tax is the greatest indicator.

Unfortunately, the income tax has become so ingrained in our culture that most people barely give it a thought. You constantly hear people saying "I hate it, but it's necessary" or "how will the government operate?" A few years ago I even saw a news clip of a bunch of guys with nothing better to do lining up and singing "happy tax day to you."

The income tax is the greatest tool our illegitimate rulers have against the people waking up to their game. It is constantly used to divide us, set one "income class" off against another, having people debate the merits of a tax credit for one group or another, getting people to scream useless shit like "the middle class needs a tax cut!" or "the rich need to pay more!" or "cutting taxes on the rich will stimulate the economy!" I've seen and heard it all. The ruling, stated class uses these sleight-of-hand tactics to keep their big boot on top of everyone else and make them believe that this is actually what people want and need. Indeed, as the famous philosopher of freedom, G. Edward Griffin states: "the income tax is a collectivist's favorite tool."













At the heart of the philosophy that allows for an income tax lies a great evil. Slavery in the United States was abolished by the 13th amendment, setting a group of people free from hundreds of years of bondage. Unfortunately, the means to these people's freedom was government, which greatly expanded its power in the process. And of course, government was not just going to give up its newfound strength, the law of unintended consequences was already at work.

The modern federal juggernaut state was sealed in the revolution of 1913. We have this horrible year to thank for the Federal Reserve System, the 17th amendment, which deprived states of their representation in Washington, which killed federalism and replaced it with the current system of states being vassals to the feds that I outlined in my previous essay, and the topic at hand, the 16th amendment, which reduced not just blacks, but everyone to slavery.















Slavery is defined as the state of being under the control of another person. The 16th amendment did just that.

While the days of physical, chattel slavery have long been gone in America, the federal income tax makes everyone a slave to the federal government. At the heart of the income tax is the doctrine of collectivized wealth. What this basically means is that the central authority assumes ownership of every penny that every American makes, and what they can keep is solely due to the good graces of our feudal lords, the feds. This is the same whether the tax is 1% or 100.% The rate of taxation itself is irrelevant. Case in point, our rulers in 1913 promised that very little people would have to pay the income tax. After all it was a "tax on the rich." However, the top rate quickly went from 7% in 1913 73% in 1918, and the bottom rate from 1% at below $20,000 in 1913 to 16% at that income bracket in 1918, with the minimal rate at paying any tax at a mere $4,000.

At one point in 1944, the rate was at an unbelievable 94%. So much for the promises that the politicians made. Then, as now, they are utter absurdities. To say that people operating or connected to something with a monopoly on violence are beholden to keeping their promises is like saying that another star will pass through our solar system tomorrow.

The rates confirm the theory: the politicians own all of your property- you are a peasent, a serf. They can change the rate that you pay at any time, for whatever reason. There is nothing stopping them from taking everything and making you a bona fide slave where master keeps everything you produce. The income tax exhibits all of the hallmarks of feudalism. To show how today's state is indeed a modern emanation of the feudal system, let us jump back in time to the Middle Ages.

In the feudal economy, there was a virtually non-existant free market. Though the life of the Medieval peasent was not as horrible as is generally portrayed, they were permanently tied to the manor of their feudal lord, they could not leave to seek employment on another manor, for example. It was only very rarely that the serf could become what was known as a "freeman." It was expected that the paesent work the lord's land three days a week, and even make repairs to his home! The feudal lord could tax anything, at anytime, and much of the peasent's crop yields went to the lord. Failure to conform to the lord's rules and work his land, or give up any other part of your property that he deemed necessary could mean cruel Medieval punishments, such as trial by ordeal.

Sounds like the IRS, doesn't it? How many times have Americans over the past century been 'audited' by the bloodsuckers, deeming that some necessary 'back-taxes' (often from a number of years ago) were owed? Indeed, this happened to my own family this past winter. How nice of them to say that they were wrong in their assumptions, never mind the hassling and threatening letters, often the logo of the IRS on a letterhead alone is enough to make people fearful. Stories like this are the reason more Americans fear an audit by the IRS than a terrorist attack.






















Many people often make the argument that income taxes are unconstitutional, or intentionally and deceptively misapplied by the government. While I would not doubt their claims, as I would not doubt that the government would find a way to collect any funds they could without setting off a big red alert among the people, I believe the tax-protester movement is barking up the wrong tree. While I am sympathetic with their goals, it is a big waste of time to say things like 'show me the law.' 'The law' is irrelevant. The government says that they want the loot, and they have the means of extracting it. Investigating whether or not the violent monopoly is following its own procedures is diverting attention from the real ethical issue in question: the reduction of Americans to serfdom, as well as the economics of why the tax is indefeasible in the effort toward helping the poor, the classic argument in favor of the income tax (though this is a different topic). It is simply not worth going to jail (or being killed) over, when the protesters could be of better help fighting the ideological struggle.

So, this April 15th, instead of attempting to reduce our humiliation and bondage to a cultural ritual, while making fun of how taxes suck and seeing Obama's tax return that I do not doubt will be on some news network (to show that our rulers are, 'just like us'), it might be a better idea to use this day to spread the word about the absolute evils of income taxation, and organize to figure out a way to break this state of bondage.

It is time to leave the manor.

P.S.: A couple of days ago I saw some newscaster reporting on how "San Francisco is the city where people file their tax returns the latest on average."

Awww...those poor San Franciscans. They're supposed to be good serfs and file on time! Or even better, early!

Sunday, February 22, 2009

A Much Needed Lesson in Federalism

With an increasing number of states declaring or introducing resolutions to declare sovereignty (21 according to my last check), the issue of federalism might finally start to be meaningfully discussed again. There is an air of revolution about, and the long-lost doctrine of state's rights might be a part of such a revolution.

So what is federalism anyway? Here is an extensive philosophical treatise on it, but it is more simply defined as a body of more or less self-governing entities collaborating to form a center of gravity that would have powers over areas concerning the entirety of the said bodies, such as national defense.

This was the original intent of the Founding Fathers as they set up the Constitution of the United States (though I am increasingly beginning to believe that a certain number of them, especially Alexander Hamilton, deliberately left loopholes in the Constitution to undermine this).

The federalism of the past has been replaced with a system of de facto unitary government, with the federal government being supreme and the states merely acting as its vassals. Nowhere is this more evident than in the unfunded mandates forced upon the states should they desire to get back some of the money sucked out of them by the feds. Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal rejecting the stimulus handout for his state is evidence that the states may finally be ready to fight back against federal mandates tied in with such funds. Whether Jindal's rejection has more to do with politics or principal remains to be seen.

Needless to say, the states being vassals and the feds acting as feudal lord is not the system that was envisioned by most of America's founders. The case is made by Thomas Jefferson in this short letter. Contrast this notion of popular sovereignty with the centralized autocratic state of today. The National Minimum Drinking Age Act is a perfect example that the states, rather than being the self-governing entities they were in the past have been reduced to a state of vassalage. For all of American history prior to that point, the drinking age was, as it should be, a state prerogative. When you read the article I mentioned above, notice how the feds set up a system of carrots and sticks to the states, as if they were mere serfs instead of the autonomous and sovereign bodies put forth in the constitution (though lessened from the Articles of Confederation).

While the NMDA attached penalties to states that did not raise their drinking ages, in essence paying lip service to such things being the prerogative of the states and not the federal government, other bills give no heed whatsoever. Take for example a recent bill that has gun owners very concerned. H.R. 45 would essentially criminalize possession of any firearm without a novel little thing called a "Blair Holt License." (I love how politicians name bills after people who died in incidents, sensationalizing them in an attempt to create hysteria and take the moral high ground, as if their bills were not about controlling people!)

Where in the constitution do the feds get authority to issue such a license to ordinary citizens who want to exercise their right to bear arms (or issuing "Federal Firearms Licenses") to owners of gun shops? Stretching the commerce clause to the limit again?

The simple answer is that the feds for the most part are power hungry thugs. They will look for any opportunity to expand their power and then cite this as a reason why they need to be re-elected, skirting around the constitution in any possible way they can in the process.

This is the present situation, and it is here and now that some bold state legislators are finally entering the fray. The New Hampshire Sovereignty Resolution is one of the strongest out there opposing unconstitutional federal power. (Although it has since been killed, it is a step in the right direction, and ideas always advance over time, and resolutions are still pending in many other states!)

So where do state rights and prerogatives come from anyway? The most obvious examples of course are the ninth and tenth amendments, ratified in the federal (not unitary) spirit of late 18th century America. These two amendments attempted to make certain that certain rights were not denied and were reserved to the states and people. The last two amendments in the Bill of Rights were essential to some states agreeing to the federal compact.

But a deeper philosophical question ought to be asked here? Where did the federal government come from anyway? What gives the it its power and authority? The average person would probably says "the constitution." However, this is not an adequate answer and begs the question.

The answer is of course, found in the preamble, "We the People." However, now the question needs to be raised as to how We the People ratified the constitution. The constitution was ratified by the people acting through their elected representatives in the state in which they resided. Take the Virginia ratification, for example.

In essence, the people, acting through the states, created the federal government, and it was always understood that the states were to be the primary means by which the people would have their say, as that is where most of the power was supposed to reside except for the few specialized instances put into the constitution through Article 1, Section 8).

Now we must come to the conclusion that the federal government is a creature of the people and the states, not the other way around. It is not, and never was supposed to be a unitary authority that dictates people's private lives and tells state governments what to do. The created can never be more powerful than the creator.

The truth is that the people must put the federal beast back into its cage, and they must do this through the states (primarily). The states of course, are quite corrupt as well, and it will indeed be a true battle to take those back alone, but the sovereignty resolutions show that the states are on the right path.

Trying to get the feds under control through their own power system is for most purposes, a pipe dream. It is simply counter productive to hope for the feds to use their power more temperately, as we have seen recently with the election of Barack Obama. It is increasingly becoming clear through just the first few months of his administration that he will not change anything substantively and continue to feed the dangerous federal beast. People like Ron Paul are rare, and while they should always be encouraged, they will affect little change unless the people and states find the true meaning of federalism again.

Further Reading:
The 10th Amendment Center

Monday, February 16, 2009

The Pale Blue Dot

Two days ago, the nineteenth anniversary of the taking of an iconic photograph passed. On February 14th, 1990, Voyager 1 was turned back one last time toward the solar system it was now on course to leave.

3.6 billion miles away, the cameras photographed the Sun and visible planets (Pluto and Mars were too small to see from that distance and Mercury was lost in the glare of the Sun).

















Among those visible was the Earth. It showed up as a mere blue pixel at such a huge distance. For the first time, humanity was now able to see visually what Copernicus and Galileo had proven centuries earlier: that humanity was far from the center of the universe and that for all intents and purposes, we are insignificant in the grand scheme of things.














However, there is one thing that ought to hit home about this photograph. We might indeed be insignificant overall, but so far, we as humans are very unique in the universe as the only intelligent civilization on the only planet that is known so far to have life on it. Carl Sagan had some memorable words to deliver on the subject of this dichotomy:

Look again at that dot. That's here. That's home. That's us. On it everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, lived out their lives. The aggregate of our joy and suffering, thousands of confident religions, ideologies, and economic doctrines, every hunter and forager, every hero and coward, every creator and destroyer of civilization, every king and peasant, every young couple in love, every mother and father, hopeful child, inventor and explorer, every teacher of morals, every corrupt politician, every "superstar," every "supreme leader," every saint and sinner in the history of our species lived there – on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam.

The Earth is a very small stage in a vast cosmic arena. Think of the rivers of blood spilled by all those generals and emperors so that, in glory and triumph, they could become the momentary masters of a fraction of a dot. Think of the endless cruelties visited by the inhabitants of one corner of this pixel on the scarcely distinguishable inhabitants of some other corner, how frequent their misunderstandings, how eager they are to kill one another, how fervent their hatreds.

Our posturings, our imagined self-importance, the delusion that we have some privileged position in the Universe, are challenged by this point of pale light. Our planet is a lonely speck in the great enveloping cosmic dark. In our obscurity, in all this vastness, there is no hint that help will come from elsewhere to save us from ourselves.

The Earth is the only world known so far to harbor life. There is nowhere else, at least in the near future, to which our species could migrate. Visit, yes. Settle, not yet. Like it or not, for the moment the Earth is where we make our stand.

It has been said that astronomy is a humbling and character-building experience. There is perhaps no better demonstration of the folly of human conceits than this distant image of our tiny world. To me, it underscores our responsibility to deal more kindly with one another, and to preserve and cherish the pale blue dot, the only home we've ever known.


















That passage of Sagan's instantly made me think of the state and statism as being the primary cause of all of humankind's problems. Surely, the abolition of the state will not end violence and misunderstanding among man, as man is a fallible creature. However, the biggest problem among humanity and the primary cause of our division is undoubtedly the state.

The state actively promotes this misunderstanding by violently forcing people to live in a certain way. Every individual's morals, beliefs, hopes, and dreams, are different. The state ignores this fact with its violent monopoly. It forces the individuals the it claims jurisdiction over to conform to its wishes. To solidify its power base, the ruling class that the state fosters often invokes a spirit of the greatness of a certain group to demonize outsiders or members of a different ethnic group or class. The "endless cruelties" that Sagan spoke of inevitably follows. We saw this recently in Rwanda in 1994, and more recently, in Sudan in the present day. For more historical examples, we ought to look toward the Rape of Nanking in World War II and the atrocities of the French Revolution.

There are countless other examples, but I cited these to show that the "cruelties visited by the inhabitants of one corner of this pixel on the scarcely distinguishable inhabitants of some other corner" are not just the work of Europeans and their descendants against non-Westerners as the current vogue of political correctness would have so many people believe. The problem is not one group of people, the problem is the ideology of collectivism, and the institution of a state is the ultimate expression of collectivism.






























By legitimizing the initiation of violence and instituting group thinking, the inevitable result will be violence in favor of one group or another, with the perceived inferiors or outsiders suffering. Statism is responsible for every atrocity and tragic war in recorded history. It is a religion that demands constant blood sacrifice. This is all in the name of attaining some perceived good, of course. In ancient times, this was such things as bringing "civilization" to the "barbarians," or more brazenly, the glory of conquest.

Of course, these things still very much exist, only now they are disguised in more likable language, such as "freeing people from tyranny" or "spreading democracy around the globe."

The problem is, even to those that are good intentioned about such things, in essence this is telling other people how to live. Thus it falls into the same trap- collectivism. Those who disagree over how the state tells them to live must then be sacrificed in the name of the so-called majority that the state serves (in reality, in the interest of the state itself, and the of the ruling class that it fosters.) Inevitably, those whose way of life is being threatened will fight back, as we've seen from the 300 Spartans to Sitting Bull at the Battle of the Little Big Horn.

The state has always- and will always, cause needless bloodshed. It will always divide people into different groups and then favor one over another. This is why the Pale Blue Dot has been tainted so red with blood over the eons.


















Humanity must come to the realization that there is no right way to live, except to live nonviolently. You or me cannot tell Jane what she must value, how she must raise her children, or what she must do with her money (though we may attempt to use the power of friendly persuasion). If such a thing was attempted Jane would laugh in our face, and if we persisted and brought some guns in, she'd probably get exceedingly angry and only grudgingly accept our values because of the violence we threaten her with.

This most people would generally agree with, but why then do they accept that kings or committees can do what we ourselves cannot? This is an utter absurdity. It is this tension that results from the organized violence of the state that has proven so tragic over history.

It is long past due that humanity emphatically reject collectivism, and its extension, the state, in all its forms. We must recognize the fact that we belong to only one distinction: individual human beings who live on Planet Earth. "Only then can we deal more kindly with one another through mutual understanding rather than pointing guns in each other's faces, and preserve and cherish the Pale Blue Dot."

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

24: Season Seven and Non-Intervention

24 is probably one of the most controversial television shows out there. The fact that it has given popular credence to torture to prevent terrorism has drawn both praises and accusations that the show's creators are sympathetic to the heatedly-debated anti-terror initiatives of the Bush Administration. I have not looked at the politics and ethics involved in the show, as I realize that it is a work of fiction, and is surprisingly very entertaining to me, even though I am a staunch libertarian.



























However this season is shaping up to be very different, as it is a radical shift from the previous seasons. CTU has been disbanded, and instead of taking place in Los Angeles, the action is now in Washington D.C. The biggest difference however, is in the terrorist threat. Instead of using external weapons of mass destruction, the terrorists hijacked a module (called a CIP device) that allows for breaches of the government's firewall systems to cause massive damage internally. The conspiracy (which includes members of the President's own staff) is led by a Colonel Ike Dubaku of the fictional country of Sangala, who in the last episode was stopped by Jack Bauer & Crew just in the nick of time before he killed tens of thousands of Americans by using the hacking module to release toxins from an insecticide plant in Ohio.





















The reasons for Colonel Dubaku's aggression are very simple in this season, far from the complicated self-rightousness of the threats in previous seasons. Dubaku is angered about America's interventionism in his country of Sangala.

The events of season seven so far ought to give further credence in the argument for a non-interventionist foreign policy as advocated by America's Founding Fathers.

President Taylor has an armada on the African coast, ready to invade Sangala and forcibly evict the sitting regime, which is carrying out a genocide on hundreds of thousands of Sangalans. The armada causes Dubaku to enter the United States and bribe government officials with diamonds. He then gets ready to kill American citizens.

This is the classic example of the CIA's term of 'blowback' that Ron Paul cited so frequently in his 2007-8 campaign for the presidency. While we as Americans in no way sympathize with Dubaku (and more importantly, his real life counterparts), what ought to be the U.S. government's priorities?



















The reason a government supposedly is set up is to protect the people living within its borders from aggression. This is the only reason the Founders set government up and wrote the Constitution. Even in today's age of Democratic-Socialism and pervasive dependence on the government for nearly anything imaginable, the core premise for its existence is still, fortunately, the Enlightenment ideal that it is a necessary evil to protect individuals against aggressors.

Yet in 24: Season Seven, we once again see how flimsy this notion is, and it is once again turned on its head. The United States government has again stuck its big nose where it did not belong, which fostered resentment resulting in a strike to the said nose. Unfortunately, it is the innocent American people who now must suffer because of their misguided government.

I reiterate that we should never sympathize with people like Dubaku who are causing the deaths of innocent people in a foreign land. However, the United States government is mandated to protect the American people through the Constitution, and nowhere in that document is permission given to the President to send an overseas armada to a foreign country without a congressional declaration of war.

In 24: Season Seven, war was not declared on Sangala, and I find nowhere in the events leading up to the season that it had anything to do with United States national security. What I am able to deduce so far is that the president unilaterally sent an armada to Sangala to stop Dubaku's faction from continuing to destroy innocent life.

While this is indeed, a noble purpose, it is not authorized under the Constitution, and more importantly, has nothing to do with U.S. national security. However, due to the government's foreign involvement, it becomes a matter of national security when the terrorists then come to kill Americans as a response!

To put it more simply: the government created the problem, then Dubaku reacted and actually threatened Americans. Now, the government has to solve the problems that it created!

Unfortunately, this isn't just a work of fiction. This is happening in real life, right now. This is what caused the attacks of September 11th and started the "War on Terror" (which is only adding fuel to the fire).

For too long, the United States has told the people of the world what to do and how to live. We see this perfectly in Iraq by trying to bring American "democracy" to that country. It is certainly not surprising that many people see this as a foreign invader that is occupying their country and taking control. Naturally, this is going to generate resentment, and all too often, violence to protect themselves against what they (the people in the countries America sends troops to or controls via proxy) see as aggression on their way of life.


















This should not be difficult for us to understand. Americans went through the same thing. We call it the American Revolution. The colonists were unhappy with new taxes, and mounted their protests against them. The British government responded with ever-increasing authoritarianism, highlighted by the Intolerable Acts.

The most vile of these was the Massachusetts Government Act. This made self-government nearly impossible, and it is not surprising that the rest of the colonies sympathized with Massachusetts and recognized that their way of life was also under threat. The first Continental Congress met to discuss this fact in July of 1774. A mere nine months later, the first shots were exchanged at Lexington and Concord, igniting the war of independence.




















The insurgency in Iraq is a modern example that ought to show that a foreign power attempting to tell a population how to live has historically gone very wrong and led to much bloodshed. The local populace is deeply resentful of the interference in their lives, and often enough will lead to radicalization, as we saw in the American Revolution with the Patriots eventually unanimously supporting independence from Britain (which was a radical measure and unthinkable even in the Continental Congress of 1774). Similarly, our invasion of Iraq has led to the radicalization of Iraqis in the insurgency in the present.

It ought to have come as no surprise that the attacks of 9/11 occurred. America's imperial presence in the Middle East since the Shah was installed in Iran in 1953 fostered radicalization that led to the deaths of innocent civilians. What's worse, instead of reassessing foreign policy after 9/11, the same imperial trend accelerated in the invasion of Iraq, leading to a greater possibility of other attacks in the future. The effort to prevent these attacks has eroded our civil liberties, all in the name of empire.

One thing that nearly made me fall out of my seat when watching 24: Season Seven was when President Taylor, on explaining her willingness to move forward with the invasion of Sangala even after Dubaku used the CIP device to cause a mid-air collision between two commercial airliners, and threatened an even greater attack, used the reasoning that she was "determined to keep America as a force for good in the world."


























We must always watch out with those sorts of statements. No one can clearly define what 'good' is, as it is something very much in the eye of the beholder. This, coupled with the violent nature of government, means forceful conformity to a certain view of 'good,' in effect, telling other people how to live.

The result, as already explained, has been an endless cycle of aggression and backlash. Government cannot decide what 'good' is and then force people to conform to that view. Only an individual can decide this for himself, and then try to persuade others to that view. While most of us would agree that people like Dubaku and what he represents must not be supported, the government forcing us to that view can only create problems, as we are now seeing in the events of this season of 24.

Is it worth it to "keep America as a force for good in the world" even though the consequences may be untold destruction of American lives and the degradation of civil liberties that will surely be done in the name of preventing another such circumstance?

I think not.