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View Full Version : Should the Federal Government have ANY secrets? Should they have nukes??




socialize_me
01-17-2009, 01:04 AM
Constitutional Law experts--you have been summoned.

So I was wondering, should the Federal Government be operating in secrecy at ALL? Like should there be secret, behind-the-door Congressional meetings where the Foreign Relations Committee and others receive classified briefings on what the CIA or FBI is doing?? To what level should we have secrets? Should only our nuclear codes that the President has access to be a secret, or where do you draw the line? And where is this line defined in the Constitution?

I might point out that a few days ago I remember reading about how Congressional leaders on BOTH sides were made aware of "enhance interrogations" (aka torture) techniques as far back as 2001 following 9/11. One of those people was Nancy Pelosi. Why the fuck are these people complaining about human rights in Guantanamo when they knew about all of this years before it was popular to complain??

So I guess my point is should the government have secrets and if so, where do you draw the line at. What should and shouldn't be made private.

blocks
01-17-2009, 03:04 AM
In times of war, of course they should, but only for the protection of US troops and civilians and limited to planned strategic/tactical actions. Beyond that, I can't think of anything else that NEEDS secrecy, but I look forward to other members inputs. Good topic!

Conza88
01-17-2009, 03:08 AM
No government. No problems. ;)

LibertyEagle
01-17-2009, 03:28 AM
In times of war, of course they should, but only for the protection of US troops and civilians and limited to planned strategic/tactical actions. Beyond that, I can't think of anything else that NEEDS secrecy, but I look forward to other members inputs. Good topic!

Yes, but with this perpetual war they have going on now, it's just used as an excuse to claim anything and everything is secret due to national security.

Brassmouth
01-17-2009, 04:37 AM
No government. No problems. ;)

+X (where X is the current number of Zimbabwe dollars)

blocks
01-17-2009, 05:36 AM
Yes, but with this perpetual war they have going on now, it's just used as an excuse to claim anything and everything is secret due to national security.

Well, I was speaking on the circumstance of a truly just war, in a such a case that we are actually defending ourselves from a direct attack. But honestly, even though you and I feel what is currently going on overseas is absolute insanity, certain troop movements and such should remain secret. Sure, that opens the door for abuse of secrecy but ultimately it is a necessary and moral responsibility of military commanders to keep those under their command as safe as they can. And I can't find a way to fault them for that.

Conza88
01-17-2009, 05:40 AM
+X (where X is the current number of Zimbabwe dollars)

Well, no ruler, state - no problems. That better? :p

Inflation is contained within those entities. Can't have them without it. :o

paulitics
01-17-2009, 09:46 AM
No, I don't think there should be any secrecy. All evil deeds are done in the dark. Our founding father's were more concerned about domestic enemies, than foreign. If you look at just a few public programs like operation northwards, mk ultra, cointelpro, you see how rogue the cia has become. Under Machivelian principles, everything becomes grey, and the American people are not safe from these programs. Lord knows what programs are being used on us today, to keep us in line.

DeadheadForPaul
01-17-2009, 11:08 AM
Yes.
Yes.

socialize_me
01-17-2009, 11:25 AM
No government. No problems. ;)

Okay, but I live in the real-world here.

Oh and eastern Somalia has no government, yet I remember reading about a month ago there was a 15 year old girl who was stoned to death in front of more than 1,000 people just because she was raped and that's considered fornication. Anarchy is the answer?? LoL, so all the fundamentalists can run wild doing that shit to people? Yeah, no thanks. If you like anarchy so much, move to Somalia where they have plenty of it. Report back to us in about a week (if you're still alive) and tell us how it's like. Could be a good topic to write a dissertation about rather than just sitting back on your ass preaching some Rothbard utopian theory that's never been practical in modern society.

If you honestly believe 300+ million people can live without a government to maintain order, then, well, you are very delusional. We have a lot of violence already even with hundreds of thousands of cops. Domestic violence isn't a byproduct of government, yet we still have it. Murder many times has nothing to do with government. Robbery, arson, assault, etc. all occur in spite of government. At least we have a government to protect individuals from the ones trying to kill them and giving justice to those who don't respect property rights and human life.

Thank you for deterring the topic from government + secrets(?) to America - government - secrets. There's always one who seems to not understand what's going on in a discussion and they derail the topics altogether. I just wanted to point out to you the instance of Somalia, but apparently giving you a real-life, real-time example of anarchy doesn't mean anything, yet some theory you read in Rothbard's tomes are the answer. That's pretty stupid if you ask me...so you'd still be an atheist even if God showed up tomorrow, or you would discount any evidence of unicorns even if one happened to walk past you. Somalia has anarchy and it's chaotic there (stoning 15 year olds because they were raped and having 1,000+ people watch this is pretty chaotic and psychotic if you ask me), yet you still turn to some idea rather than reality.

powerofreason
01-17-2009, 01:36 PM
The Rule of Law without the State

Daily Article by Spencer Heath MacCallum | Posted on 9/12/2007 12:00:00 AM

Were there such a category, Somalia would hold a place in Guinness World Records as the country with the longest absence of a functioning central government. When the Somalis dismantled their government in 1991 and returned to their precolonial political status, the expectation was that chaos would result — and that, of course, would be the politically correct thing to expect.

Imagine if it were otherwise. Imagine any part of the globe not being dominated by a central government and the people there surviving, even prospering. If such were to happen and the idea spread to other parts of Africa or other parts of the world, the mystique of the necessity of the state might be irreparably damaged, and many politicians and bureaucrats might find themselves walking about looking for work.

If the expectation was that Somalia would plunge into an abyss of chaos, what is the reality? A number of recent studies address this question, including one by economist Peter Leeson drawing on statistical data from the United Nations Development Project, World Bank, CIA, and World Health Organization. Comparing the last five years under the central government (1985–1990) with the most recent five years of anarchy (2000–2005), Leeson finds these welfare changes:

* Life expectancy increased from 46 to 48.5 years. This is a poor expectancy as compared with developed countries. But in any measurement of welfare, what is important to observe is not where a population stands at a given time, but what is the trend. Is the trend positive, or is it the reverse?
* Number of one-year-olds fully immunized against measles rose from 30 to 40 percent.
* Number of physicians per 100,000 population rose from 3.4 to 4.
* Number of infants with low birth weight fell from 16 per thousand to 0.3 — almost none.
* Infant mortality per 1,000 births fell from 152 to 114.9.
* Maternal mortality per 100,000 births fell from 1,600 to 1,100.
* Percent of population with access to sanitation rose from 18 to 26.
* Percent of population with access to at least one health facility rose from 28 to 54.8.
* Percent of population in extreme poverty (i.e., less than $1 per day) fell from 60 to 43.2.
* Radios per thousand population rose from 4 to 98.5.
* Telephones per thousand population rose from 1.9 to 14.9.
* TVs per 1,000 population rose from 1.2 to 3.7.
* Fatalities due to measles fell from 8,000 to 5,600.

Another even more comprehensive study published last year by Benjamin Powell of the Independent Institute, concludes: "We find that Somalia's living standards have improved generally … not just in absolute terms, but also relative to other African countries since the collapse of the Somali central government."

Somalia's pastoral economy is now stronger than that of either neighboring Kenya or Ethiopia. It is the largest exporter of livestock of any East African country. Telecommunications have burgeoned in Somalia; a call from a mobile phone is cheaper in Somalia than anywhere else in Africa. A small number of international investors are finding that the level of security of property and contract in Somalia warrants doing business there. Among these companies are Dole, BBC, the courier DHL, British Airways, General Motors, and Coca Cola, which recently opened a large bottling plant in Mogadishu. A 5-star Ambassador Hotel is operating in Hargeisa, and three new universities are fully functional: Amoud University (1997) in Borama, and Mogadishu University (1997), and University of Benadir (2002) in Mogadishu.

The Call to "Establish Democracy"

All of this is terribly politically incorrect for the reason I suggested. Consequently, the United Nations has by now spent well over two billion dollars attempting to re-establish a central government in Somalia. But here is the irony: it is the presence of the United Nations that has caused virtually all of the turbulence we have seen in Somalia. Let me explain why this is the case.

Like most of precolonial Africa, Somalia is traditionally a stateless society. When the colonial powers withdrew, in order to better serve their purposes, they hastily trained local people and set up European-style governments in their place. These were supposed to be democratic. But they soon devolved into brutal dictatorships.

Democracy is unworkable in Africa for several reasons. The first thing that voting does is to divide a population into two groups — a group that rules and a group that is ruled. This is completely at variance with Somali tradition. Second, if democracy is to work, it depends in theory, at least, upon a populace that will vote on issues. But in a kinship society such as Somalia, voting takes place not on the merit of issues but along group lines; one votes according to one's clan affiliation. Since the ethic of kinship requires loyalty to one's fellow clansmen, the winners use the power of government to benefit their own members, which means exploitation of the members of other clans. Consequently when there exists a governmental apparatus with its awesome powers of taxation and police and judicial monopoly, the interests of the clans conflict. Some clan will control that apparatus. To avoid being exploited by other clans, each must attempt to be that controlling clan.

The turmoil in Somalia consists in the clans maneuvering to position themselves to control the government whenever it might come into being, and this has been exacerbated by the governments of the world, especially the United States, keeping alive the expectation that a government will soon be established and supplying arms to whoever seems at present most likely to be able to "bring democracy" to Somalia. The "warlord" phenomenon refers to clan and independent militias, often including leftovers of the former central government, who promise to establish a government under the control of their own clan. They often operate outside the control of the traditional elders and sometimes in opposition to them.

Hence the most violent years in Somalia were the years following 1991 when the United Nations was physically present, attempting to impose a central government. When the United Nations withdrew in 1995, the expectation of a future central government began to recede, and things began to stabilize. But the United Nations continued it efforts to re-establish a government through a series of some sixteen failed "peace conferences." In 2000 it set up a straw government, the Transitional National Government (TNG). However, not only did the northern Somali clans not recognize the TNG, it was unable to control its intended capital city of Mogadishu. Today a combined "peace-keeping mission" of United States–backed troops from Ethiopia, Somalia's traditional enemy, and Uganda under the aegis of the African Union is in Mogadishu attempting to prop up the TNG and secure its control over the rest of Somalia. Violence soars.

The situation is curiously like an event in Greek mythology. The gods on Mt. Olympus were enjoying a festive party, to which, understandably, they had not invited Eris, the goddess of discord. Eris, just as understandably, took the matter personally. She had the blacksmith Hephaestus fashion a golden apple, on which was written καλλιστι — "To the fairest." Then she opened the door a crack and rolled the golden apple into the festive hall. In no time at all, the gods were fighting over who should have the apple. The golden apple in Somalia is the expectation that there will soon be a central government. As long as there is that expectation, the clans must fight over who will control it.

Somalia and the Rule of Law

Now, I've gone this far without telling you much about Somalia. It's the Horn of Africa, that part of northeast Africa that juts out into the Indian Ocean just below the Arabian Peninsula. The Somali culture area includes all of the Horn and is home to some 11.5 million people. The colonial powers arbitrarily fragmented this culture area so that today parts of it fall under the jurisdiction of Kenya in the south, some in Ethiopia in the west, and some in Djibouti in the north. The remainder along the coast is now without a working government.

What these people have in common, even more than similar language, lifestyle, and physical character is a body of customary law, the Xeer, which differs from clan to clan in nonessential ways such as founding myths but is remarkably uniform with respect to its provision for the protection of persons and property. The Xeer provides a rule of law — customary law, that is — permitting safe travel, trade, marriage, and so forth throughout the region. The Xeer is most intact in the north of Somalia, which was under British rule; in the south, the Italians tried to eradicate it. Nonetheless, it survives to a significant degree everywhere, even in the urban areas, and is virtually unaffected in rural Somalia.

The Xeer is the secret to the whole perplexing question of Somalia's success without a central government, since it provides an authentic rule of law to support trade and economic development. Fortunately, we know something about the Xeer because of Michael van Notten, a Dutch lawyer who in the early 1990s married into the Samaron Clan in the northwest of Somalia, the fifth largest of the Somali clans, and lived with them for the last twelve years of his life. He took full advantage of that opportunity to research the Xeer. The result was his pioneering study, The Law of the Somalis (Red Sea Press, 2005). Van Notten died when his manuscript was half finished. Fortunately, he had largely completed assembling the ethnographic material. In his will, he asked that I edit and complete the manuscript for publication. The task ahead is to see the work translated into Somali.

Highlights of the Xeer

There is time in this short talk to give you only some of the highlights of the Xeer. First, law and, consequently, crime are defined in terms of property rights. The law is compensatory rather than punitive. Because property right requires compensation, rather than punishment, there is no imprisonment, and fines are rare. Such fines as might be imposed seldom exceed the amount of compensation and are not payable to any court or government, but directly to the victim. A fine might be in order when, for example, the killing of a camel was deliberate and premeditated, in which case the victim receives not one but two camels.

Fines are used in another interesting way. It is expected that a prominent public figure such as a religious or political dignitary or a policeman or a judge should lead an exemplary life. If he violates the law, he pays double what would be required of an ordinary person. Also, it should be noted, since the law and crime are defined in terms of property rights, the Xeer is unequivocal in its opposition to any form of taxation.

Second, in order to assure that compensation will be forthcoming even in cases where the perpetrator is a child, or penniless, or crazy, or has fled abroad, the Xeer requires that every person be fully insured against any liability he might incur under the law. If an individual cannot make the required payment, a designated group of his kin is responsible. Van Notten describes in an interesting way how this happens:

A person who violates someone's rights and is unable to pay the compensation himself notifies his family, who then pays on his behalf. From an emotional point of view, this notification is a painful procedure, since no family member will miss the opportunity to tell the wrongdoer how vicious or stupid he was. Also, they will ask assurances that he will be more careful in the future. Indeed, all those who must pay for the wrongdoings of a family member will thereafter keep an eye on him and try to intervene before he incurs another liability. They will no longer, for example, allow him to keep or bear a weapon. While on other continents the re-education of criminals is typically a task of the government, in Somalia it is the responsibility of the family.

If the family tires of bailing out a repeat offender, they can disown him, in which case he becomes an outlaw. Not being insured, he forfeits all protection under the law and, for his safety, must leave the country.

Customary law is similar in this and many other respects throughout the world. An instance is told in the founding legend of my own Clan MacCallum in Scotland. The founder of the Clan supposedly was exiled 1,500 years ago from Ireland because he was a hothead whom his family disowned for embroiling them in fights. In the loneliness of his exile on the North Sea, he became a man of peace. He couldn't return to Ireland, as he was no longer under protection of the law and could have been killed with impunity. So he went instead to Scotland and there founded our clan.

A third point about the Xeer is that there is no monopoly of police or judicial services. Anyone is free to serve in those capacities as long as he is not at the same time a religious or political dignitary, since that would compromise the sharp separation of law, politics, and religion. Also, anyone performing in such a role is subject to the same laws as anyone else — and more so: if he violates the law, he must pay heavier damages or fines than would apply to anyone else. Public figures are expected to show exemplary conduct.

Fourth, there is no victimless crime. Only a victim or his family can initiate a court action. Where there is no victim to call a court into being, no court can form. No court can investigate on its own initiative any evidence of alleged misconduct.

Last, the court procedure is interesting. From birth, every Somali has his own judge who will sit on the court that will judge him should he transgress the law. That judge is his oday, the head of his extended family consisting of all males descended from the same great grandfather, together with their spouses and children. Several extended families make up a jilib, which is the group responsible for paying the blood price in the event a member kills someone of another jilib or clan. The oday, or judge, is chosen carefully, following weeks or months of deliberation by elders of the clan. He has no authority over the family but is chosen solely for his knowledge of human affairs and his wisdom, and he can lose his position if his decisions are not highly regarded in the community.

When an offense is committed, the offender goes first to his oday, who then forms a court with the oday of the plaintiff. If the two odays cannot resolve the matter, they form another court made up of odays representing additional families, jilibs, or clans. A virtue of each person knowing from birth who will be one of his judges, and vice versa, is that an oday knows each person in his extended family intimately and can observe and counsel him before what might seem to be a small problem escalates into a crime.

Once a court forms and accepts jurisdiction over a case, its first action is to appoint a recorder, who will repeat loudly during the hearing each important point made by the speakers. The court then announces when and where it will hear the case. When the court session opens, the court invites the plaintiff to state his case. The plaintiff has the right to appoint a representative to make the presentation on his behalf. During the presentation, the plaintiff has opportunity to confer with his family to make sure that he has not forgotten anything. When the plaintiff has finished, the court asks him to summarize his case and state his demands. Lastly, the court asks the defendant to present his defense and any counterclaims.

Then the court adjourns to deliberate on whether any witnesses should be heard. A disputed fact is admitted as evidence only when three witnesses have testified to its truth. The parties can also call in experts and character witnesses. If the victim has died or has been wounded, the court will instruct a religious dignitary to assess how the victim died or was wounded. These dignitaries assess injuries usually by applying the standards enumerated in the commentary of the twelfth-century Muslim scholar al-Nawawii's Minhaaj at-Talibiin. When the plaintiff has elaborated his case with witnesses and evidence, the defendant is given a chance to refute the plaintiff's charges, arguments, and evidence. It is not customary to cross-examine witnesses.

Finally, the court adjourns again to evaluate the evidence. If less than three witnesses support a fact, or if the witnesses contradict each other, the court will proceed to oath taking. There are several types of oaths. The simplest starts by the oath giver saying, "I swear by my virility." Alternatively, he can say, "I swear by Allah." A stronger oath is the so-called triple oath, in which he swears the same oath three times. A stronger oath yet is the one that is repeated 50 times. Also, there is the so-called divorce oath, in which the oath giver swears by his marriage(s). If it is later found out that he lied, his marriage(s) become null and void.

It should be noted that even when the plaintiff fails to convince the court of his case, the court will usually not rule in favor of the defendant until the latter has taken an oath of innocence.


In a longer talk, I could discuss the role of police and enforcement of judgments, but this much should give some flavor of the legal system practiced by the Somalis. It provides an effective rule of law entirely without the backing of a government.

The Xeer takes its place among such great legal systems of the world as the Roman law, the English common law, the Law Merchant, and the Jewish traditional law (Halacha). It must be extremely old and is believed to have developed in the Horn of Africa. There is no evidence that it developed elsewhere or was greatly influenced by any foreign legal system. The fact that Somali legal terminology is practically devoid of loan words from foreign languages suggests that the Xeer is truly indigenous.

MGreen
01-17-2009, 01:56 PM
Doesn't socialize_me say the same thing every time someone advocates anarcho-capitalism?

At least read Rothbard before dismissing his "utopian" theory.

Conza88
01-17-2009, 07:26 PM
Okay, but I live in the real-world here.

Oh and eastern Somalia has no government, yet I remember reading about a month ago there was a 15 year old girl who was stoned to death in front of more than 1,000 people just because she was raped and that's considered fornication. Anarchy is the answer?? LoL, so all the fundamentalists can run wild doing that shit to people? Yeah, no thanks. If you like anarchy so much, move to Somalia where they have plenty of it. Report back to us in about a week (if you're still alive) and tell us how it's like. Could be a good topic to write a dissertation about rather than just sitting back on your ass preaching some Rothbard utopian theory that's never been practical in modern society.

If you honestly believe 300+ million people can live without a government to maintain order, then, well, you are very delusional. We have a lot of violence already even with hundreds of thousands of cops. Domestic violence isn't a byproduct of government, yet we still have it. Murder many times has nothing to do with government. Robbery, arson, assault, etc. all occur in spite of government. At least we have a government to protect individuals from the ones trying to kill them and giving justice to those who don't respect property rights and human life.

Thank you for deterring the topic from government + secrets(?) to America - government - secrets. There's always one who seems to not understand what's going on in a discussion and they derail the topics altogether. I just wanted to point out to you the instance of Somalia, but apparently giving you a real-life, real-time example of anarchy doesn't mean anything, yet some theory you read in Rothbard's tomes are the answer. That's pretty stupid if you ask me...so you'd still be an atheist even if God showed up tomorrow, or you would discount any evidence of unicorns even if one happened to walk past you. Somalia has anarchy and it's chaotic there (stoning 15 year olds because they were raped and having 1,000+ people watch this is pretty chaotic and psychotic if you ask me), yet you still turn to some idea rather than reality.

Stateless in Somalia, and Loving It - LMvI (http://mises.org/story/2066)

4. Isn't anarcho-capitalism utopian?

No. Anarcho-capitalists tend to be pragmatic, and argue that, no matter how good or bad man is, he is better off in liberty. If men are good, then they need no rulers. If men are bad, then governments of men, composed of men, will also be bad - and probably worse, due to the State's amplification of coercive power. Most anarcho-capitalists think that some men are okay and some aren't; and there will always be some crime. We are not expecting any major change in human nature in that regard. Since utopianism by definition requires a change in human nature, anarcho-capitalism is not utopian.

Fail.


Doesn't socialize_me say the same thing every time someone advocates anarcho-capitalism?

At least read Rothbard before dismissing his "utopian" theory.

As do many. Too afraid too take one of the Founding Fathers advice.

“I was bold in the pursuit of knowledge, never fearing to follow truth and reason to whatever results they led, and bearding every authority which stood in their way.” ~ Thomas Jefferson

The problem is:

“Contempt prior to investigation will keep a man in everlasting ignorance" - Herbert Spencer

tremendoustie
01-17-2009, 07:33 PM
In times of war, of course they should, but only for the protection of US troops and civilians and limited to planned strategic/tactical actions. Beyond that, I can't think of anything else that NEEDS secrecy, but I look forward to other members inputs. Good topic!

I agree with this. And, ideally of course, no one would have nukes. If we have a well armed populace, I don't think nukes would help our enemies that much. A country that's been nuked to death isn't worth much, and with defense mainly based on a populace that can defend themselves, they wouldn't be able to incapacitate us just by bombing DC or something.

I guess I'm not 100% convinced we need nukes even if other countries have them.

Let's not make this another thread about anarchy/minarchism -- the question implies a state of some sort, or at least an organization that's set up to protect us -- should that organization have nukes or secrets? Let's address the question.

Bodhi
01-17-2009, 08:32 PM
Without reading any of the responses, I would say that yes the government should have secrets and yes we should have nukes.

I wish I could say no to both, but that is just not the world we live in.