A
lot of people argue that without a government or law enforcement that our
society would erupt into violent chaos. There would be murder, mayhem and
thievery as far as the eye could see. Did the word anarchy just pop into your head? Well it
shouldn't have; the association of anarchy and violence is kind of a new thing.
While it does mean that there would be no government or law, the violent
stereotype associated with the word has become a form of fear mongering that
has been planted in our brains by those who are truly afraid of how beneficial
and progressive a stateless society could be. I for one believe that without the state, the
very opposite would happen. Our government and its subsidiaries commit these grievous
crimes on a daily basis under the pseudonyms of war, imprisonment, and taxes. There
has been very little societal progress during my short time on this planet, and
what we do consider progress is something that should have never been an issue
to begin with such as race, gender, and sexuality. If America truly were the
land of the free, our national debt wouldn’t be in the trillions, people wouldn’t
be kidnapped from their homes and families for “crimes” such as owning a
certain plant, and the millions of innocent lives that have been lost due to
war could have been spared. The American society has become complacent to the
hypocritical double standard our government enforces.
Taxation is theft. Many people argue that they
voluntarily pay their taxes, and maybe they don’t really even mind them. Honestly
the idea – aside from forcibly having
our hard earned income taken from us - seems noble. With our tax money we can
help with the funding for schools, hospitals, transportation, protection, and
even our own entertainment! After all; education, health care, and roads, are essential
for success in our modern world, and it is nice to take in the occasional national
park. Unfortunately this money also goes to people who contribute little if
anything to our society, whether they are a government official such as a
congressperson or just a welfare recipient who refuses to pull their weight.
There is also the added down side that if I don’t pay my extortion fees, for
whatever reason, someone will show up at my door, kidnap me, and throw me in a
cage. That doesn’t sound too voluntary at all…There are numerous other ways for
us to educate ourselves, ensure our health and even pave roads without being
robbed. If our hard earned money wasn’t being taken away to fund all the things
we hate about taxes, we probably wouldn’t mind contributing to the things we do
enjoy. In fact, not having any government involvement would essentially eliminate
the middle man and their ridiculously high income; and since I’d no longer have
to worry about the kidnapping and caging for not paying for something that I may
not even use, I can turn around and voluntarily give my money to the things I
actively want to keep.
War is
murder. This ideal is usually a tough one to swallow; after all many of us, our
friends, or our family, at some time or another, has served in the military.
While I do acknowledge and applaud the bravery of many of those service
members, I find it hard to support the violence and corruption the military
embodies. Barging into a neighbor’s house, and killing them, their children, or
even just their pet, simply because you do not agree on something, or they have
something you want is the same as going to war with another country. Occupying
my neighbor’s home until they have forfeited their beliefs or property is in no
way shape or form acceptable for a single person to do, why then do we support
it on a much, much larger scale? According to Google, “There are more than 133,000 individually
recorded civilian deaths since
the 2003 invasion of Iraq due to direct war related violence and tens of
thousands of Iraqi civilians have been wounded.” These are
all people, who up until their untimely deaths were more than likely going
about their business just as we are right now. We can try and justify it as some
and say they were part of a terrorist organization, or maybe their religious
beliefs would have led them to eventually kill us; kill or be killed, but in
all honesty they were just humans, the same as you and I, trying navigate their
way through life. We’ve all heard the saying “one man’s terrorist is another
man’s freedom fighter”, it all comes down to perspective, however violence only
begets violence. Murray N. Rothbard, a
renowned libertarian, once said "If no man may aggress against - invade -
the person or property of another, this means that every man is free to do
whatever he wishes, except commit such aggression."[1] If we were to
model our life after these words alone, the death machine that is war would
cease to exist.
So without
the government and the military how do we achieve the illustrious freedom that
we, as humans, are all entitled to?
The best answer is through a free market economy and society. In Rothbard’s
article found in The Consice Encyclopedia of
Economics, he defines the free market as such: [The free market] “is a
summary term for an array of exchanges that take place in society. Each
exchange is undertaken as a voluntary agreement between two people or between
groups of people represented by agents. [2] This model would essentially
become the foundation for our interactions with each other. If everything we do
is based off a voluntary agreement between two consenting people, the majority
of petty crimes would be eliminated. There is always the exception to the rule,
and someone somewhere would commit an act of violence, but in a society where
it would be just as easy to boycott a bad business, we could basically boycott the
offender. In extreme cases imprisonment or exile may be necessary but only
after absolute guilt has been proved. The use of the free market and reputable
private parties can also help define the blurry lines of justice that many of
us call for. Using Rothbard’s nonaggression principle
and adding in a free market economy for structure is the perfect recipe for
true freedom and maybe even a little happiness.
1.
http://mises.org/rothbard/newlibertywhole.asp
ch. 2, pg. 1.
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