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helmuth_hubener
11-11-2015, 06:46 AM
Four Ways to Build a Free Society

By Jeff Deist
Mises.org
November 11, 2015

This article is adapted from a talk delivered at this past weekend’s Mises Circle event in Phoenix.

The topic of our symposium this morning is “What Must Be Done,” which originally was the title of a talk given by Dr. Hans-Hermann Hoppe at a Mises Institute conference in 1997. Hoppe posed his title as a declarative, but it’s also the question we all wrestle with as libertarians in a world so dominated by the state and its apologists.

And it’s a question we hear time and time again at the Mises Institute: What can we do to fight back against government? We all understand the problem, but what is the solution? What can we do in the current environment to help build a more sane and libertarian world? And how can we find some measure of freedom in our lives today, to live more freely in our lifetimes?

Four Common Strategies

When libertarians talk about what must be done, the discussion tends to revolve around four common strategy options. None of them are mutually exclusive necessarily and there can be plenty of overlap between them.

1. The Political Option

The first, we’ll call the political option, or to borrow a tired phrase, “working within the system.”

The argument goes something like this: government, and the political process that surrounds it, are inevitable in the real world. Therefore libertarians must not stand idly on the sidelines while politicians inexorably steal our freedoms. Instead we must organize and become active politically, under the banner of a third party vehicle like the Libertarian Party or by working within the Republican Party, because whether we want to involve ourselves with politics, politics involves itself with us.

Political action can be viewed as a form of self-defense. This approach usually has a national focus — such as running a presidential candidate — though it contemplates political action at the state and local level as well. It appeals to libertarians in a hurry, so to speak. Ultimately, at least in theory, the political option attempts to mimic and reverse the incrementalism that has been so successful for the political Left over the past century.

Let me say that the political option, at least in terms of national politics, strikes me as the least attractive alternative among those available to us today.

The amount of time, energy, and human capital that have been invested trying to win political and legislative battles is staggering, but what do we have to show for it? The twentieth century represents the total triumph of Left progressivism in the political sphere: central banking, income taxes, the New Deal, and Great Society entitlement schemes were all enormous political victories that changed the landscape forever. Everything has become politicized: from what bathroom transgender people should use to whether online fantasy football should be allowed. Progressives frame every question as “What should government do?”

So we need to understand the political option within the context of the progressive triumph.

2. Strategic Withdrawal

A second approach libertarians often consider might be loosely termed strategic withdrawal. You may have heard of the “Benedict option” being discussed by Catholics unhappy with the direction of the Church and the broader culture. Ayn Rand fans talk about “going Galt,” in reference to the strike by the productive class that takes place in Atlas Shrugged.

This approach involves separating, withdrawing, or segregating in some way from the larger society and political landscape. It asserts that the current environment is largely hopeless for libertarians politically and culturally, and therefore attempting to play the game where the rules are so heavily slanted in favor of the state is foolish.

It’s better to retreat, at least for now, and build a life outside the state’s parameters to the extent possible. In this sense the withdrawal option is tactically appealing: like certain martial arts, it attempts to deflect and redirect a greater force, rather than face it head on.

A strategic withdrawal can take many forms across a range of alternatives, from absolute separation to quite subtle lifestyle changes. In some cases this strategy can mean actually physically uprooting where one lives and works. We have examples like the Free State Project in New Hampshire or Liberland in Europe, along with various seasteading proposals and attempts to create libertarian homesteads in Central and South America.

But withdrawal can take other forms. Some libertarians choose to live off the grid, both literally and metaphorically. The prepper movement represents a form of strategic self-sufficiency, as does simply choosing to move to a rural or remote area.

Withdrawing from the American way of endless consumption and debt — “living small” — offers another form of strategic retreat, and often allows libertarians not only to lead happier lives, but also minimize or avoid the state’s regulatory and tax clutches.

Of course, homeschooling represents one of the greatest examples of libertarian strategic withdrawal in the modern age, enabling millions of kids and parents to escape the state education complex. And withdrawal can be as simple as abandoning state media or unplugging from the digital white noise that surrounds us.

Finally, expatriation — voting with one’s feet — is a time-honored historical strategy for removing oneself from a tyrannical state. This happens domestically in the US, with people fleeing high tax states, as well as across borders. I’m sure many people in this room have at least considered leaving the US, and increasing numbers of Americans are not only doing just that, but renouncing their citizenship as well. Who could judge a young person today who looks around and decides to leave the US for greener, or freer, pastures?

3. Hearts and Minds

A third tactic that libertarians often advocate we might call “winning hearts and minds.” This approach is multi-pronged, involving education, academia, traditional and social media, religion, books and articles, literature, and even pop culture. Hearts and minds is why we hold conferences like this. The hearts and minds strategy is all about education, persuasion, and marketing, at every level. And it’s the approach through which I think the Mises Institute has made the most headway.

A hearts and minds strategy argues that no change can occur unless and until a significant portion of a given population shrugs off its bad ideas and embraces sensible ideas, particularly in the areas of politics, economics, and social theory. Politics is a lagging indicator, and it follows downstream from culture. We should focus on the underlying disease, not the symptoms. Just as Left progressives have captured the institutions of the West — academia, news media, government, churches, Hollywood, publishing, social media — libertarians ought to focus our efforts on reclaiming these institutions for liberty and a brighter future. So it makes sense to launch liberty-minded people into the streams of academia, business, media, and religion. This is how we strike the root, or at least chip away, at the mindset that supports the state.

Clearly a wholesale attack on these institutions is a daunting task. It’s a long game. But the argument goes like this: until we win hearts and minds, it scarcely matters whom we elect, what bill gets passed, or how we arrange our personal and professional lives. The same statist mentality will surface time and time again to work against us.

Surely the state’s education racket offers the ripest target for this approach. As public schools deteriorate into mindless PC zones, and as universities continue to produce heavily indebted graduates with uncertain job prospects, it becomes increasingly obvious to the public that the whole model is unsustainable.

That’s why we have an opportunity like never before to appeal directly to the intelligent lay audience, and bring Austrian economics and libertarian theory to the masses at very little cost. The digital revolution has been the great leveler, and we should use it to its full advantage in changing as many hearts and minds as possible.

But this strategy is not for the faint of heart, and it doesn’t promise a quick fix. It’s a strategy for sober people with long time horizons.

4. Resistance

Of course another strategy often discussed among libertarians involves simple resistance to the state, whether open or covert. This tactic contemplates actions like civil disobedience, tax protests, evading or ignoring regulations, and engaging in agorism and black markets.

It also contemplates the use of technological advances to advance freedom. “Third way” libertarian technologists promote this approach, citing advances like encryption, cybercurrencies, and platforms like Uber — all of which when first developed existed in a sort of grey area as regards their legality.

Agorism was the preferred approach of the late libertarian theorist Sam Konkin, who encouraged people to bypass the state by devoting their economic lives to black-market or gray-market activities, thus avoiding taxation and regulation and helping to shrink the beast. Konkin called it “counter-economics.”

Agorism and its variants was critiqued by Murray Rothbard, who found Konkin’s antipathy to wage labor and “white markets” as anti-market: after all, what does agorism offer the vast majority of wage workers? And who will provide “legitimate” goods and services like automobiles and steel? Rothbard saw agorists as “neglecting the overwhelming bulk of economic life to concentrate on marginalia.”

And let’s be frank: the notion of living an agorist’s life in the shadows, without, for example, having a driver’s license or owning real estate, might not hold mass appeal.

As for applying new technology to bypass the state, I’m all for it. Any innovation that makes it harder for the state to govern us, as a practical matter, is something to be celebrated. But we should guard against false hope: the same technology which serves to facilitate privacy or title transfers or stealth movement of money or people can be exploited by the state’s spying apparatus. And no innovation can change the fundamental questions of whether and how human affairs should be organized by the state.

Hoppe’s Revolution

So these four basic approaches — politics, withdrawal, “hearts and minds,” and resistance — provide us with a framework to consider, in an unfree world, what must be done.

These questions bring us back to Professor Hoppe and his aforementioned speech. I encourage you to read it, it’s a fascinating topic and his treatment of it is razor-sharp.

Keep in mind that when Hoppe delivered his talk in 1997, the digital revolution was still in its infancy. Social media and mobile devices did not exist. Several precipitating events — the introduction of the euro, the September 11th attacks, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Crash of 2008, Greenspan and Bernanke’s monetary hyperdrive, the rise of Obama, and the full contagion of PC in the West — had not yet occurred.

Each of these events intensified the growth and scale of centralized government power. But even in what now seems like the carefree year of 1997, Hoppe’s explicit focus was the fundamental fight against any and all centralized political power.

The Problem of Centralization

And, in fact, decentralization is a linchpin that connects each of the four tactical approaches mentioned earlier. If there is one principle, and only one principle, that libertarians ought to apply when considering strategy, it is this: radical decentralization of state power must be our relentless goal.

The twentieth century, the Progressive century, witnessed the unprecedented centralization of political and economic power in the hands of the political class. We see this in Washington DC, in Brussels, at the UN, at the Fed, at the European Central Bank. Our overriding goal therefore must be the reversal of this terrible trend to create a critical mass of “implicitly seceded territories.”

Hoppe prescribes a bottom up strategy that identifies natural elites not found among the political class, its court intellectuals, or its state-connected allies. These elites are simply accomplished, upstanding local citizens. These natural elites form the counterbalance to the parasitic centralizers, and serve as the vanguard of the bottom up revolution.

Hoppe’s posits three strategic keys for this revolution:

First, protection, defense, and justice must be de-monopolized. These are the very areas — policing, courts, armies — where libertarians often falter in their advocacy of a truly private society. But here we must be steadfast: if these functions remain under the sole power of a central state monopoly, no progress toward liberty is possible. We can’t trust the state with guns, lawyers, and jails.
Second, political decentralization must be ruthlessly pursued, and here Hoppe makes the case that voting on local matters can be morally justified on grounds of self-defense.
Third, democracy as a concept must be attacked and ridiculed whenever possible. Private property forms the basis for a free society, while majority rule — i.e., the system that permits the theft of private property — forms the antithesis of a free society.

Conclusion

Let me conclude with a quote from Rod Dreher, writing in The American Conservative about the Benedict option I mentioned earlier:

Rome’s collapse meant staggering loss. People forgot how to read, how to farm, how to govern themselves, how to build houses, how to trade, and even what it had once meant to be a human being.

Has the world fallen so far into reflexive statism that we have forgotten how to be free? Are we living, like Benedict says, on the edge of a new dark age? Or is a revolution, a radically decentralized Hoppean “bottom up” revolution brewing? Is the pushback we see all around the world — against central states and their cobbled together borders, against political elites, against the UN and the IMF, against the euro, against taxpayer bailouts, against cronyism, against PC, against manufactured migration, and against drug laws, a last gasp? Or the sign of worldwide movement toward political decentralization?

Finally, let us remember that every society worth having, every advanced liberal society, was built by people with long time horizons. Horizons beyond their own lives. And generally those societies were built under very difficult circumstances and conditions of material hardship far beyond what we’re likely to face. So let’s appeal to our better natures and turn “What Must be Done” from a question into a declaration.

Ronin Truth
11-11-2015, 08:44 AM
Get more votes than anyone else?

Cheat?

I give up. <shrug>

Origanalist
11-11-2015, 09:50 AM
Get more votes than anyone else?

Cheat?

I give up. <shrug>

Use all of the above in whatever forms you can and never stop, it's all we can do.

Ronin Truth
11-11-2015, 09:54 AM
Use all of the above in whatever forms you can and never stop, it's all we can do.

Think about it a little harder.

Origanalist
11-11-2015, 10:02 AM
Think about it a little harder.

Lol, I will try after work. Just got up after a 14 hr day yesterday and heading back to work. I have no doubt I'm missing something.

osan
11-11-2015, 09:15 PM
Once again into the futile fray...




Four Common Strategies

When libertarians talk about what must be done, the discussion tends to revolve around four common strategy options. None of them are mutually exclusive necessarily and there can be plenty of overlap between them.

A crucial point.


1. The Political Option

government, and the political process that surrounds it, are inevitable in the real world.

This assumption fails with great violence, even though it is true enough in statistical reality. It is the fact that this very assumption that stands unquestioned in the minds of so many that makes the world what it is. If government and its products are inevitable, I see no reason to even bother thinking about liberty because government is the anti-liberty. I do not accept that this garbage is inevitable.



Therefore libertarians must not stand idly on the sidelines while politicians inexorably steal our freedoms.

True, however...


Instead we must organize and become active politically, under the banner of a third party vehicle like the Libertarian Party or by working within the Republican Party, because whether we want to involve ourselves with politics, politics involves itself with us.

It would seem to me that at least one of two things must be true: either political activity has no effect, or there is simply insufficient mass to drive the "liberty movement" to effectiveness. I strongly suspect it is the latter.


Let me say that the political option, at least in terms of national politics, strikes me as the least attractive alternative among those available to us today.


And why is that? Because it is ineffectual. Why is it ineffectual? Because the nation, on the average, has fallen into deep and widespread corruption, whether it takes the form of people wanting something for nothing, those too busy with their lives to take a heads-up on the world around them, are simply too lazy and expect their freedoms to be maintained by someone else, or other similar reasons.


The amount of time, energy, and human capital that have been invested trying to win political and legislative battles is staggering, but what do we have to show for it?

Less freedom, more tyranny, and status that grows ever closer to that of abject chattel.


The twentieth century represents the total triumph of Left progressivism in the political sphere: central banking, income taxes, the New Deal, and Great Society entitlement schemes were all enormous political victories that changed the landscape forever.

All true, save for that dramatic bit in bold. Forever is a very long time, which is a good reason that the word should be used most sparingly. This was not the place for it.


So we need to understand the political option within the context of the progressive triumph.


All one needs understand is corruption at the individual and group levels. If you understand that, you understand the problem with near perfection; certainly with sufficiency to see that the liberty movement has no chance against progressivism because the latter appeals to corruption, and that is an almost universal winner. Toss a super-hot, ultra-slut into a bed with a 17 year old boy with the expectation that he will be a gentleman and not sully the young maiden's virtue and you will be bitterly disappointed virtually every time. The Progressive has but to hold out the vaguest promise of the ho' ending up in junior's bed, saying he deserves the ho' and that everyone should have a ho' and that ho's be people juzz like me'n'u, and they have his vote, usually for life.

One need look no further than corruption as the root basis in explaining why the world as it is.

2. Strategic Withdrawal


It’s better to retreat, at least for now, and build a life outside the state’s parameters to the extent possible.

Note those four key words.


Withdrawing from the American way of endless consumption and debt — “living small” — offers another form of strategic retreat, and often allows libertarians not only to lead happier lives, but also minimize or avoid the state’s regulatory and tax clutches.

This is becoming increasingly difficult to do. Just consider BammyCare - no longer can you "withdraw" on that front. Today you are fined $X. Tomorrow it is likely to be $X + some delta. And one day, Theire lapdogs will come to take you away for failure to comply. Who knows, perhaps one day further still, they will simply euthanize you on the spot after a remotely conducted drumhead trial. Don't scoff; in 1900 I doubt more than a few ever thought carrying a firearm would become a government-interfered activity or that any of the other things would come to pass that nevertheless have.


Finally, expatriation — voting with one’s feet — is a time-honored historical strategy for removing oneself from a tyrannical state.

And though this may have at one time been a viable option, it no longer is, if escaping "the state" is the goal. Where can one go on the face of this planet where "state" neither exists nor darkens one's door?


This happens domestically in the US, with people fleeing high tax states, as well as across borders. I’m sure many people in this room have at least considered leaving the US, and increasing numbers of Americans are not only doing just that, but renouncing their citizenship as well. Who could judge a young person today who looks around and decides to leave the US for greener, or freer, pastures?

Meh... "greener"... "freer"

I want FREE... not freER.


3. Hearts and Minds

A third tactic that libertarians often advocate we might call “winning hearts and minds.” This approach is multi-pronged, involving education, academia, traditional and social media, religion, books and articles, literature, and even pop culture. Hearts and minds is why we hold conferences like this. The hearts and minds strategy is all about education, persuasion, and marketing, at every level. And it’s the approach through which I think the Mises Institute has made the most headway.


This is the only way we will be able to avoid widespread warfare... that, or we simply lay down for that long nap. I'm not sleepy, thanks.


A hearts and minds strategy argues that no change can occur unless and until a significant portion of a given population shrugs off its bad ideas and embraces sensible ideas, particularly in the areas of politics, economics, and social theory. Politics is a lagging indicator, and it follows downstream from culture. We should focus on the underlying disease, not the symptoms. Just as Left progressives have captured the institutions of the West — academia, news media, government, churches, Hollywood, publishing, social media — libertarians ought to focus our efforts on reclaiming these institutions for liberty and a brighter future. So it makes sense to launch liberty-minded people into the streams of academia, business, media, and religion. This is how we strike the root, or at least chip away, at the mindset that supports the state.

Unlikely that this will ever happen under "normal" circumstances. People are readily corruptible and have in fact been corrupted in vast swaths. Undoing that is no mean task.


Clearly a wholesale attack on these institutions is a daunting task. It’s a long game. But the argument goes like this: until we win hearts and minds, it scarcely matters whom we elect, what bill gets passed, or how we arrange our personal and professional lives. The same statist mentality will surface time and time again to work against us.


All correct, meaning that nothing but brute and unequivocal force is the only thing that is going to accomplish the goals of liberty, which in turn almost unquestioningly implies lots of dead people.


Surely the state’s education racket offers the ripest target for this approach. As public schools deteriorate into mindless PC zones, and as universities continue to produce heavily indebted graduates with uncertain job prospects, it becomes increasingly obvious to the public that the whole model is unsustainable.

Increasingly obvious? Bullshit. Nothing is obvious to the raft of willfully ignorant nitwits who revel with pride in that ignorance. They want what they want and when they do not get it they blame anyone and anything other than the actual cause. That means that truth itself remains non-obvious to them precisely because they find it unpalatable. Therefore, like children who hope that a thing will become untrue if the believe it so with sufficient force and fervor, these pea-brained avatars of everything corrupt in the human animal will steadfastly refuse to accept reality no matter how deplorably their circumstances have deteriorated. They will always blame a "republican" or a "conservative". They would blame Captain Kangaroo before acknowledging the truth. Many would go to their literal physical destruction and still refuse to admit that which dances, naked, before their eyes.


That’s why we have an opportunity like never before to appeal directly to the intelligent lay audience,

Yes, and they will both be on board with the messages. What do we do with the other 320 millions?


and bring Austrian economics and libertarian theory to the masses at very little cost. The digital revolution has been the great leveler, and we should use it to its full advantage in changing as many hearts and minds as possible.

No doubt this can help, but the question is whether it will be enough. I am not confident that it would be. I have witnessed too much of the depth and breadth of stupidity here, and the past seven years that Bammy has held the public attention, conditions have deteriorated mightily.


4. Resistance

This tactic contemplates actions like civil disobedience, tax protests, evading or ignoring regulations, and engaging in agorism and black markets.

All of which are being addressed with ever stiffening intolerance and more draconian punishments. We are rapidly approaching a "take no prisoners" philosophy in such matters.


It also contemplates the use of technological advances to advance freedom. “Third way” libertarian technologists promote this approach, citing advances like encryption, cybercurrencies, and platforms like Uber — all of which when first developed existed in a sort of grey area as regards their legality.


Encryption can be stymied easily. Theye don't have to bother with cracking. All Theye need is to implement a policy of non-transport. Anything encrypted to which they have no back-door access is simply returned to sender. They put not the sender on the hook, but the cab driver - the ISP - on the block. If you relay such messages, we will send in a team and execute your CEO or fine you a trillion dollars, or what have you. The ISPs will toe that line like religion. Access to network facilities for the use of digital currency could be handled similarly. The moment a currency cannot be freely exchanged, its future is sealed, no matter how incomplete and even innocuous the restriction may appear.

Agorism was the preferred approach of the late libertarian theorist Sam Konkin, who encouraged people to bypass the state by devoting their economic lives to black-market or gray-market activities, thus avoiding taxation and regulation and helping to shrink the beast. Konkin called it “counter-economics.”


As for applying new technology to bypass the state, I’m all for it.

Sure - so am I - right up to the point that entry team stacked up outside my front door, kicks it in, shoots my dog, fucks my wife, and drags my children off to God-only-knows-where.


Any innovation that makes it harder for the state to govern us, as a practical matter, is something to be celebrated.

Agreed, until Theye decide it is time to take the gloves off for real and all due process goes out the window in response to the "state of emergency" that has arisen such that we can "no longer afford" such luxuries.



The Problem of Centralization

And, in fact, decentralization is a linchpin that connects each of the four tactical approaches mentioned earlier. If there is one principle, and only one principle, that libertarians ought to apply when considering strategy, it is this: radical decentralization of state power must be our relentless goal.


Well isn't this a bit silly. Yes, that is obvious. What is less obvious, and I daresay a quantum more difficult is how to achieve that lofty goal. This reminds me of the following:


South Park Underpants Gnomes Profit Plan (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tO5sxLapAts)

It's the question mark bit that is missing from this.


Hoppe’s posits three strategic keys for this revolution:

First, protection, defense, and justice must be de-monopolized. These are the very areas — policing, courts, armies — where libertarians often falter in their advocacy of a truly private society. But here we must be steadfast: if these functions remain under the sole power of a central state monopoly, no progress toward liberty is possible. We can’t trust the state with guns, lawyers, and jails.
Second, political decentralization must be ruthlessly pursued, and here Hoppe makes the case that voting on local matters can be morally justified on grounds of self-defense.
Third, democracy as a concept must be attacked and ridiculed whenever possible. Private property forms the basis for a free society, while majority rule — i.e., the system that permits the theft of private property — forms the antithesis of a free society.


Point 1 still suffers from Underpants Gnome Syndrome (UGS).

Point 2 - why does voting have to be justified? UGS present. Decentralization talk is all well and good, but the moment you move to make it real, Theye step in because you are now nibbling at their lunch and the big dog doesn't cotton to that.

Point 3 certainly makes sense and is the most readily doable... at least as of this writing. Tomorrow? Who can say. But yes, I agree with this point strongly, however I do not believe it should simply be ridiculed. It must be destroyed with reason and fact. I do not see it as a terribly daunting task, actually. Get your ducks in a line and fire away. Those who are nominally intelligent and retain some measurable honesty will at least hear you. The rest will not hear you regardless of what you may present as evidence. So just be prepared to run into some serious assholery because they are a dime a dozen.


Conclusion

Let me conclude with a quote from Rod Dreher, writing in The American Conservative about the Benedict option I mentioned earlier:

Rome’s collapse meant staggering loss. People forgot how to read, how to farm, how to govern themselves, how to build houses, how to trade, and even what it had once meant to be a human being.


Um, which people were those? Who is this Dreher character? I ask, not to be an asshole, but because the quote is rife with half-baked innuendo. The so-called "dark ages" were not quite as bad as high school history books claim in the single paragraph they tend to devote to that 900 year chunk of history. The Byzantine era was quite alive with art and a notably stable economy that did not turn to shit until some douche got the idea that they could cut a little copper into the mintage and expand the money supply. Might have worked, too, had they stopped after the first run. But no, they repeated it again and again until doom struck.


Has the world fallen so far into reflexive statism that we have forgotten how to be free?

Oh, it is much worse than that. We have, the most of us, been taught in the tradition of 1984 that freedom is slavery and slavery freedom. We have not merely forgotten how to be free - we have had our perception of what it means to be free utterly destroyed by manipulators who have done their job so very adroitly. Most people, when presented with a statement describing true and actual freedom, blanch and recoil reflexively. They see it as a state of ultimate evil, and are afraid, appalled, and ultimately blind with hatred for it, and anyone who espouses it. For them, there is no life without the "state". Those people are hopeless because their corruption is complete and utter. They are the faithful disciples of FAIL*, rendering them ever so dangerous, for they are indeed a mob in the most real and unflatteringly scary sense of the word. They far outnumber those I will be so bold as to term the "superior men", reducing the latter to impotence against the former by virtue of the sheer numbers. One percent against vast hordes of grasping corruption does not make for good odds.


Are we living, like Benedict says, on the edge of a new dark age? Or is a revolution, a radically decentralized Hoppean “bottom up” revolution brewing? Is the pushback we see all around the world — against central states and their cobbled together borders, against political elites, against the UN and the IMF, against the euro, against taxpayer bailouts, against cronyism, against PC, against manufactured migration, and against drug laws, a last gasp? Or the sign of worldwide movement toward political decentralization?


Who can say? Only time will tell. What is really depressing is that at this time, the radicalized Muslims are the only significant population out doing what they need to do in order to realize their goals. That is just pathetic, to think that they are out working to achieve their perverted vision of heaven on earth while those who actually have it sit idly by, letting the zealots take what they want.


Finally, let us remember that every society worth having, every advanced liberal society, was built by people with long time horizons. Horizons beyond their own lives. And generally those societies were built under very difficult circumstances and conditions of material hardship far beyond what we’re likely to face. So let’s appeal to our better natures and turn “What Must be Done” from a question into a declaration.

Agreed. However, never before in our recorded history has the tyrant had at his disposal the tools he now uses daily to pile-drive humanity into the earth, up to its eyes. The technologies and the understanding that the sciences have placed at Theire finger tips are staggering... quite literally. So far as I can see, never before has anyone held such advantage over the mob as does the modern tyrant. Computers alone have utterly altered the landscapes of power. Then consider the advances in engineering that have brought us all the other technologies.

As I have oft repeated here to rolling eyes, I hope to be proven wrong, but I do not see this situation resolving without either third-party intervention or through global war. So long as the mob is empowered to corruption, corrupt shall they remain. It is only when the choice is virtue or death does some proportion of the mob see light and proceed to make better choices. Many would sooner lunch with death than take up the reins of the free life. That is not a force to take lightly.

presence
04-22-2016, 05:52 PM
politics, withdrawal, “hearts and minds,” and resistance

I've never been too political, though I don't mind lending my support.

I've always tended naturally toward agorism and hermeticism.

Lately the "hearts and minds" campaign feels like screaming into the void.

If I had to bet on one strategy it would be agorism.