Up With Libertarian Entrepreneurship!
by
Gil
Guillory
by Gil Guillory
There are lots
of great ideas for expanding liberty. The most important is probably
spreading the ideas of liberty through popular articles, lectures,
books, interviews, and formal classes. For these things, we need
a professional class of libertarian intellectuals. For those of
us who are not quite scholars and who are fed up with politics,
but are motivated to do something relevant, entrepreneurship
beckons. Entrepreneurship is the peaceful, libertarian version of
propaganda
by deed. Entrepreneurship is the creative and productive form
of direct action.
What is Libertarian
Entrepreneurship? It is the creation of new institutions with the
goal of advancing the cause of liberty. Examples, tried and untried:
Galt’s Gulch.
Once fiction,
Werner
K. Stiefel tried to make Galt’s Gulch a reality at sea in the
1970’s. The Seasteading Institute is now giving
it another shot, following other related efforts, such as The
Republic of Minerva and the Principality
of Sealand.
The
Free State Project operates on the idea of geographically concentrating
freedom-lovers in the state of New Hampshire. It was and is one
of many libertarian institutions to successfully leverage the power
of the internet.
Monetary
Entrepreneurship. Re-establishing commodity money – or at least
making commodity money possible again – is a tricky problem. Bernard
von Nothaus established a warehousing-and-money
certificate company in 1998 whose face values mimic those of
contemporary US currency. Douglas
Jackson and Barry K. Downey founded e-gold in 1996. While e-gold's
effort has been impressive, it still hasn’t broken into the mainstream.
The Free Lakota Bank combines
secession with monetary entrepreneurship, and is partnered with
the AOCS initiative
to re-establish silver coinage. Of course, PayPal also began as
an effort to create a digital currency.
Adjudication.
Arbitration and mediation are thriving business sectors, but quite
rare in the area of personal torts. Victim-offender mediation arose
through the simple suggestion of a youth probation officer in the
early 1970s, and has grown to considerable
size, but it is far from ubiquitous and not yet a replacement
– as it should be – for criminal proceedings.
Firefighting.
In 1667, after the great
fire of London, Nicholas
Barbon set up a fire insurance business, and in 1680 set up
a fire brigade. By the 1700’s, insurance companies in London maintained
their own firefighting companies. These
institutions passed away for bad reasons.
Crime Insurance
and Patrol. My own pet project is subscription
patrol and restitution, an attempt to bring restorative justice
and accountable patrol to the masses.
Identification.
The state crowds out production of personal identification. There
is a crying need for good non-state identification methods.
Libertarian
Entrepreneurship Society. Maybe there needs to be one. More
than one person has mentioned it to me.
Much has been
done, but there is also much to do.
Why Entrepreneurship?
As
Patrick Tinsley and I noted in our
article on Subscription Patrol and Restitution, there are several
good reasons to advance libertarianism through entrepreneurship.
Entrepreneurs already sculpt the institutions that create
social change: Henry Ford and his motorcar, Fred Smith and overnight
letter delivery, J. C. Fargo and travelers’ cheques, Akio Morita
and the Sony Walkman. Some might fear that being a libertarian first
and an entrepreneur second might be bad for business, but Collins
and Porras have shown that companies who succeed in creating
major social change while trouncing their competition and beating
the returns of the general market all share the characteristic of
having a core ideology beyond just making money that guides and
inspires people throughout an organization and remains relatively
fixed for long periods of time, and that their less successful rivals
lack this characteristic. Consumers do not tend to be ideological
in their purchases of goods and services: they purchase what works.
(This is partially because few people are temperamentally ideological.)
But, entrepreneurs are and must be ideological, for they
are creating a better way: they must have a vision of the
good.
What we libertarians
cannot do is "leave to the market" the essential task of sculpting
libertarian institutions. The reason that a
small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world
is that they are focusing on creating institutions. We
have met the market, and the market is us.
So dust off
your Napoleon
Hill (I recommend this and this),
start eating
like a bird and pooping like an elephant, and let’s see some
hustle
out there!
April
10, 2009
Gil
Guillory [send him mail]
is
a libertarian entrepreneur, professional engineer, and project manager
in Houston, Texas.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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Guillory Archives
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