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Property
and Freedom
by
Doug French
by Doug French
The price of
gold’s collapse of $44 one day last week prompted a quick call to
Camino Coin. Sales on gold have been few and far between this year
and the sudden move below $600 per ounce was too good of a buying
opportunity to pass up. However, in addition to selling me cheaper
insurance against the coming dollar collapse, my guy at Camino was
interested in learning more about the first Property and Freedom
Society conference held last month in Bodrum, Turkey. Surely, there
was more to the trip than creamy yogurt, ancient ruins, and nubile
belly dancers, George Resch, the first Rothbardian, wondered?

A view of
Bodrum Harbour from the Castle of St. Peter.
As a matter
fact, the speakers were world class. Mises Fellow Guido Huelsmann
led off the conference with a presentation about the strategic lessons
to be learned from Ludwig von Mises’s experience with the Mont Pelerin
Society. Mont Pelerin was started in 1947 by Friedrich von Hayek
and 35 others including Mises. But by the mid-1950’s Mises was already
dismayed with the direction of the Society towards the Chicago School
and famously told a group of Chicago economists, who were trying
to figure out how to collect the maximum in taxes without causing
popular opposition; "you are all a bunch of socialists." By the
early 1960’s the classical liberals had lost control of Mont Pelerin.
Huelsmann’s message to the Property and Freedom crowd was not to
make the same mistakes, listing four key elements to make PFS successful:
1) It must be private, 2) members should have a minimum of philosophical
differences, 3) the organization should be structured in a monarchial
fashion, not a democracy, and 4) PFS should not be a political association.
Paul Gottfried,
whose new book The
Strange Death of Marxism: The European Left in the New Millennium
is getting rave reviews, spoke of the moral bankruptcy of the American
Right. Those on the Right have resorted to just parroting the party
line, with messengers like Ann Coulter and Sean Hannity preaching
that Lincoln and FDR were great. Those on the Right are not high
in intellect and are just followers, according to Gottfried, making
constant piece meal concessions to the Left. In fact, the Right
has a good working relationship with the Left to promote a big welfare
state, while at the same time presenting the neo-cons and left liberals
as bitter foes so that there is the appearance of competition. This
neutralizes any real opposition and thus America is undergoing a
consolidation of philosophical power.
The culture
war in Britain was the subject of Sean Gabb’s presentation. Gabb,
the author of Smoking, Class and the Legitimation of Power,
stressed that intellectuals may be swayed by the power of ideas,
but that ordinary folks aren’t interested, they have better things
to do with their minds (like contemplating the benefits of yogurt
and belly dancers, perhaps). England had a great constitution that
has kept that country relatively free because people don’t want
change. But, in Gabb’s view, this freedom has little to do with
the power of ideas but with tradition. However the web of these
traditions continues to be worn thin by continual assaults against
freedom. Written documents are not enough to ensure freedom, Gabb
explained, traditions and customs are required.
Dr. Paul Belien
provided more European perspective with his talk about Belgium.
Belien is the author of A Thorn in Brussels: Britain, the Saxe-Coburgs
and the Belgianisation of Europe. Belgian is important in Europe
because if that government fails, the entire idea of the European
Union is called into question. Like the European Union, Belgian
is an artificial construct. There is no unifying national consciousness.
By the way, the Belgium government continues to be a thorn to Dr.
Belien and his wife, Dr Alexandra Colen (who is even a Member of
the Belgian Parliament).

One of Bodrum's
finest accompanied by a Gypsy band.
According to
Dr. Colen, her husband was summoned to the police station and interrogated.
"He was told that the Belgian authorities are of the opinion
that, as a homeschooler, he has not adequately educated his children
and, hence, is neglecting his duty as a parent, which is a criminal
offence. The Ministry of Education has asked the judiciary to press
charges and the judiciary told the police to investigate and take
down his statement."
Dr. Belien
is a lawyer by training, and his wife was a university lecturer,
so they are plenty qualified, and the Belgian Constitution allows
homeschooling. I met two of their children at the conference and
they are articulate and smart.
PFS Conference
panels included a discussion on property rights and international
investment with panelists primarily from Eastern Europe; a panel
covering religion and liberty from a variety of perspectives; and
a discussion of political correctness and property rights, where
Robert Grözinger made the point that property rights cause people
to be polite in a voluntary and spontaneous way while political
correctness creates forced politeness.
Mises Fellow
Marco Bassani asked the crowd to consider how beautiful the world
could be without the state, and another Mises Fellow, Yuri Maltsev
reminisced about the evil empire of Mikhail Gorbachev that he used
to toil under. For those that made the trip to the ancient ruins
of Ephesus, professional philosopher Eugen-Maria Schulak spoke about
Heraclites, who when asked to be king of that ancient city, instead
chose to be a philosopher (if only George Bush and Tony Blair had
done the same).
Christian Michel
explored whether Libertarians and Communitarians are friends or
foes, and Enrico Colombatto discussed the future of law and economics,
stressing that people need a way to "opt out" of government
programs especially education. Private education is a must because
currently the masses are programmed to be dependent and love the
government by their mid-twenties.
Journal
of Libertarian Studies contributor, Frank van Dun discussed
the nature of society and how rulers hold artificial positions that
are not found in nature. He also discussed how what he called "thick"
communities impose restrictions on people through traditions and
commons values, and that the state is a force of emancipation from
these thick communities.
Secession,
Devolution, and Freedom was Tom Dilorenzo’s topic. Dilorenzo, author
of The
Real Lincoln, How
Capitalism Saved America and the upcoming Lincoln
Unmasked: What You’re Not Supposed to Know About Dishonest Abe,
traced state’s rights and secession movements through US history.
The American Revolution was a secession movement from Britain.
Unfortunately, the right to secede was then lost during what DiLorenzo
calls "The War to prevent Southern Independence." Anyone
who champions states rights today is considered a racist. The US
should be split into 7 or 8 republics, Dilorenzo speculated during
the Q & A, "and then get rid of them one by one."

Expensive
yachts and vacation condos combined with ancient history.
Appropriately,
Property and Freedom Society founder Hans-Hermann Hoppe gave the
closing presentation on the prospects for liberty and how we can
win. The author of Democracy:
The God that Failed and
Economics and Ethics of Private Property told the crowd
that for freedom to win, we must stick to the truth, not make theoretical
compromises and that we must be radical to have any hope of influencing
young people.
Hoppe has worked
out a complete theoretical system for a private law society and
presented it in detail. Hoppe made the point that competition is
good when "goods" are being produced but is "utterly
terrible" when "bads" are being produced. Democracy
provides for competition in producing these "bads." A
person must be bad to reach the top in a democracy. On the other
hand, if you have a king, you might get lucky and he could be a
good guy. Plus, kings tend to be kept under control by their families.
A private law society would encourage self defense instead of discouraging
it and if insurance companies specialized in defense (and they would
because it would be in the self interest of those companies) they
would recover goods taken in a crime, whereas government has no
incentive to recover stolen property and therefore doesn’t. And
perhaps most important, insurance companies are defensive by nature,
not aggressive like, say, governments. It costs too much to be aggressive.
These
are but a few highlights from the outstanding presentations made
at the first meeting of the Property and Freedom Society; which
stands for an uncompromising intellectual radicalism. If only Murray,
that joyous, uncompromising intellectual radical could have been
there with us.
June
21, 2006
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and associate editor
for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He is the 2005 recipient of the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the
Center for Libertarian Studies.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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