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Libertarian
Anarchism: Responses to Ten Objections
by
Roderick T. Long
by Roderick T. Long
Thanks
to Revi N. Nair for transcribing this talk from the 2004 Mises
University.
I
want to talk about some of the main objections that have been given
to libertarian anarchism and my attempts to answer them. But before
I start giving objections and trying to answer them, there is no
point in trying to answer objections to a view unless you have given
some positive reason to hold the view in the first place. So, I
just want to say briefly what I think the positive case is for it
before going on to defend it against objections.
THE
CASE FOR LIBERTARIAN ANARCHISM
Problems
with Forced Monopoly
Think
about it this way. What’s wrong with a shoe monopoly? Suppose that
I and my gang are the only ones that are legally allowed to manufacture
and sell shoes – my gang and anyone else that I authorize, but nobody
else. What’s wrong with it? Well, first of all, from a moral point
of view, the question is: why us? What’s so special about us? Now
in this case, because I’ve chosen me, it is more plausible
that I ought to have that kind of monopoly, so maybe I should pick
a different example! But still, you might wonder, where do I and
my gang get off claiming this right to make and sell something that
no one else has the right to make and sell, to provide a good or
service no one else has the right to provide. At least as far as
you know, I’m just another mortal, another human like unto yourselves
(more or less). So, from a moral standpoint I have no more right
to do it than anyone else.
Then,
of course, from a pragmatic, consequentialist standpoint – well,
first of all, what is the likely result of my and my gang having
a monopoly on shoes? Well, first of all, there are incentive problems.
If I’m the only person who has the right to make and sell shoes,
you’re probably not going to get the shoes from me very cheaply.
I can charge as much as I want, as long as I don’t charge so much
that you just can’t afford them at all or you decide you’re happier
just not having the shoes. But as long as you’re willing and able,
I’ll charge the highest price that I can get out of you – because
you’ve got no competition, nowhere else to go. You also probably
shouldn’t expect the shoes to be of particularly high quality, because,
after all, as long as they’re barely serviceable, and you still
prefer them to going barefoot – then you have to buy them from me.
In
addition to the likelihood that the shoes are going to be expensive
and not very good, there’s also the fact that my ability to be the
only person who makes and sells shoes gives me a certain leverage
over you. Suppose that I don’t like you. Suppose you’ve offended
me in some way. Well, maybe you just don’t get shoes for a while.
So, there’s also abuse-of-power issues.
But,
it’s just not the incentive problem, because, after all, suppose
that I’m a perfect saint and I will make the best shoes I possibly
can for you, and I’ll charge the lowest price I possibly can charge,
and I won’t abuse my power at all. Suppose I’m utterly trustworthy.
I’m a prince among men (not in Machiavelli’s sense). There is still
a problem, which is: how do I know exactly that I’m doing the best
job I can with these shoes? After all, there’s no competition. I
guess I could poll people to try to find out what kind of shoes
they seem to want. But there are lots of different ways I could
make shoes. Some of them are more expensive ways of making them,
and some are less expensive. How do I know, given that there’s no
market, and there’s really not much I can do in the way of profit
and loss accounting? I just have to make guesses. So even if I’m
doing my best, the quantity I make, the quality I make may not be
best suited to satisfy people’s preferences, and I have a hard time
finding these things out.
Government
Is a Forced Monopoly
So
those are all reasons not to have a monopoly on the making and selling
of shoes. Now, prima facie at least, it seems as though those
are all good reasons for anyone not to have a monopoly in the provision
of services of adjudicating disputes, and protecting rights, and
all the things that are involved in what you might broadly call
the enterprise of law. First of all there’s the moral question:
why does one gang of people get the right to be the only ones in
a given territory who can offer certain kinds of legal services
or enforce certain kinds of things? And then there are these economic
questions: what are the incentives going to be? Once again, it’s
a monopoly. It seems likely that with a captive customer base they’re
going to charge higher prices than they otherwise would and offer
lower quality. There might even be the occasional abuse of power.
And then, even if you manage to avoid all those problems, and you
get all the saintly types into the government, there’s still the
problem of how do they know that the particular way that they’re
providing legal services, the particular mix of legal services they’re
offering, the particular ways they do it are really the best ones?
They just try to figure out what will work. Since there’s no competition,
they don’t have much way of knowing whether what they’re doing is
the most successful thing they could be doing.
So,
the purpose of those considerations is to put the burden of proof
on the opponent. So this is the point, then, when the opponent of
competition in legal services has to raise some objections.
TEN
OBJECTIONS TO LIBERTARIAN ANARCHISM
(1)
Government Is Not a Coercive Monopoly
Now,
one objection that’s sometimes raised isn’t so much an objection
to anarchism as an objection to the moral argument for anarchism:
well, look, it’s not really a coercive monopoly. It’s not
as though people haven’t consented to this because there’s a certain
sense in which people have consented to the existing system – by
living within the borders of a particular territory, by accepting
the benefits the government offers, and so forth, they have, in
effect, consented. Just as if you walk into a restaurant and sit
down and say, "I’ll have a steak," you don’t have to explicitly
mention that you are agreeing to pay for it; it’s just sort of understood.
By sitting down in the restaurant and asking for the steak, you
are agreeing to pay for it. Likewise, the argument goes, if you
sit down in the territory of this given state, and you accept benefits
of police protection or something, then you’ve implicitly agreed
to abide by its requirements. Now, notice that even if this argument
works, it doesn’t settle the pragmatic question of whether this
is the best working system.
But
I think there is something dubious about this argument. It’s certainly
true that if I go onto someone else’s property, then it seems like
there’s an expectation that as long as I’m on their property I have
to do as they say. I have to follow their rules. If I don’t want
to follow their rules, then I’ve got to leave. So, I invite you
over to my house, and when you come in I say, "You have to
wear the funny hat." And you say, "What’s this?"
And I say, "Well, that’s the way it works in my house. Everyone
has to wear the funny hat. Those are my rules." Well, you can’t
say, "I won’t wear the hat but I’m staying anyway." These
are my rules – they may be dumb rules, but I can do it.
Now
suppose that you’re at home having dinner, and I’m your next-door-neighbor,
and I come and knock on your door. You open the door, and I come
in and I say, "You have to wear the funny hat." And you
say, "Why is this?" And I say, "Well, you moved in
next door to me, didn’t you? By doing that, you sort of agreed."
And you say, "Well, wait a second! When did I agree to this?"
I
think that the person who makes this argument is already assuming
that the government has some legitimate jurisdiction over this territory.
And then they say, well, now, anyone who is in the territory is
therefore agreeing to the prevailing rules. But they’re assuming
the very thing they’re trying to prove – namely that this jurisdiction
over the territory is legitimate. If it’s not, then the government
is just one more group of people living in this broad general geographical
territory. But I’ve got my property, and exactly what their arrangements
are I don’t know, but here I am in my property and they don’t own
it – at least they haven’t given me any argument that they do –
and so, the fact that I am living in "this country" means
I am living in a certain geographical region that they have certain
pretensions over – but the question is whether those pretensions
are legitimate. You can’t assume it as a means to proving it.
Another
thing is, one of the problems with these implicit social contract
arguments is that it’s not clear what the contract is. In the case
of ordering food in a restaurant, everyone pretty much knows what
the contract is. So you could run an implicit consent argument there.
But no one would suggest that you could buy a house the same
way. There are all these rules and things like that. When it’s something
complicated no one says, "You just sort of agreed by nodding
your head at some point," or something. You have to find out
what it is that’s actually in the contract; what are you agreeing
to? It’s not clear if no one knows what exactly the details of the
contract are. It’s not that persuasive.
Okay,
well, most of the arguments I’m going to talk about are pragmatic,
or a mixture of moral and pragmatic.
(2)
Hobbes: Government Is Necessary for Cooperation
Probably
the most famous argument against anarchy is Hobbes. Hobbes’ argument
is: well, look, human cooperation, social cooperation, requires
a structure of law in the background. The reason we can trust each
other to cooperate is because we know that there are legal forces
that will punish us if we violate each other’s rights. I know that
they’ll punish me if I violate your rights, but they’ll also punish
you if you violate my rights. And so I can trust you because I don’t
have to rely on your own personal character. I just have to rely
on the fact that you’ll be intimidated by the law. So, social cooperation
requires this legal framework backed up by force of the state.
Well,
Hobbes is assuming several things at once here. First he’s assuming
that there can’t be any social cooperation without law. Second,
he’s assuming that there can’t be any law unless it’s enforced by
physical force. And third, he’s assuming you can’t have law enforced
by physical force unless it’s done by a monopoly state.
But
all those assumptions are false. It’s certainly true that cooperation
can and does emerge, maybe not as efficiently as it would with law,
but without law. There’s Robert Ellickson’s book Order
Without Law where he talks about how neighbors manage to
resolve disputes. He offers all these examples about what happens
if one farmer’s cow wanders onto another farmer’s territory and
they solve it through some mutual customary agreements and so forth,
and there’s no legal framework for resolving it. Maybe that’s not
enough for a complex economy, but it certainly shows that you can
have some kind of cooperation without an actual legal framework.
Second,
you can have a legal framework that isn’t backed up by force. An
example would be the Law Merchant in the late Middle Ages: a system
of commercial law that was backed up by threats of boycott. Boycott
isn’t an act of force. But still, you’ve got merchants making all
these contracts, and if you don’t abide by the contract, then the
court just publicizes to everyone: "this person didn’t abide
by the contract; take that into account if you’re going to make
another contract with them."
And
third, you can have formal legal systems that do use force that
are not monopolistic. Since Hobbes doesn’t even consider that possibility,
he doesn’t really give any argument against it. But you can certainly
see examples in history. The history of medieval Iceland, for example,
where there was no one center of enforcement. Although there was
something that you might perhaps call a government, it had no executive
arm at all. It had no police, no soldiers, no nothing. It had a
sort of a competitive court system. But then enforcement was just
up to whoever. And there were systems that evolved for taking care
of that.
(3)
Locke: Three "Inconveniences" of Anarchy
Okay,
well, more interesting arguments are from Locke. Locke argues that
anarchy involves three things he calls "inconveniences."
And "inconvenience" has a somewhat more weighty sound
in 17th century English than it does in modern English,
but still his point in calling it "inconveniences," which
still is a bit weaker, was that Locke thought that social cooperation
could exist somewhat under anarchy. He was more optimistic than
Hobbes was. He thought, on the basis of moral sympathies on the
one hand and self-interest on the other, cooperation could emerge.
He
thought there were three problems. One problem, he said, was that
there wouldn’t be a general body of law that was generally known,
and agreed on, and understood. People could grasp certain basic
principles of the law of nature. But their applications and precise
detail were always going to be controversial. Even libertarians
don’t agree. They can agree on general things, but we’re always
arguing with each other about various points of fine detail. So,
even in a society of peaceful, cooperative libertarians, there are
going to be disagreements about details. And so, unless there’s
some general body of law that everyone knows about so that they
can know what they can count on being able to do and what not, it’s
not going to work. So that was Locke’s first argument. There has
to be a generally known universal body of law that applies to everyone
that everyone knows about ahead of time.
Second,
there is a power-of-enforcement problem. He thought that without
a government you don’t have sufficiently unified power to enforce.
You just have individuals enforcing things on their own, and they’re
just too weak, they’re not organized enough, they could be overrun
by a gang of bandits or something.
Third,
Locke said the problem is that people can’t be trusted to be judges
in their own case. If two people have a disagreement, and one of
them says, "Well, I know what the law of nature is and I’m
going to enforce it on you," well, people tend to be biased,
and they’re going to find most plausible the interpretation of the
law of nature that favors their own case. So, he thought that you
can’t trust people to be judges in their own case; therefore, they
should be morally required to submit their disputes to an arbitrator.
Maybe in cases of emergency they can still defend themselves on-the-spot,
but for other cases where it’s not a matter of immediate self-defense,
they need to delegate this to an arbitrator, a third party – and
that’s the state.
So
Locke thinks that these are three problems you have under anarchy,
and that you wouldn’t have them under government or at least under
the right kind of government. But I think that it’s actually exactly
the other way around. I think that anarchy can solve all three of
those problems, and that the state, by its very nature, cannot possibly
solve them.
So
let’s first take the case of universality, or having a universally
known body of law that people can know ahead of time and count on.
Now, can that emerge in a non-state system? Well, in fact, it did
emerge in the Law Merchant precisely because the states were not
providing it. One of the things that helped to bring about the emergence
of the Law Merchant is the individual states in Europe each had
different sets of laws governing merchants. They were all different.
And a court in France wouldn’t uphold a contract made in England
under the laws of England, and vice versa. And so, the merchants’
ability to engage in international trade was hampered by the fact
that there wasn’t any uniform system of commercial law for all of
Europe. So the merchants got together and said, "Well, let’s
just make some of our own. The courts are coming up with these crazy
rules, and they’re all different, and they won’t respect each other’s
decisions, so we’ll just ignore them and we’ll set up our own system."
So this is a case in which uniformity and predictability were produced
by the market and not by the state. And you can see why that’s not
surprising. It’s in the interest of those who are providing a private
system to make it uniform and predictable if that’s what the customers
need.
It’s
for the same reason that you don’t find any triangular ATM cards.
As far as I know, there’s no law saying that you can’t have a triangular
ATM card, but if anyone tried to market them, they just wouldn’t
be very popular because they wouldn’t fit into the existing machines.
When what people need is diversity, when what people need is different
systems for different people, the market provides that. But there
are some things where uniformity is better. Your ATM card is more
valuable to you if everyone else is using the same kind as well
or a kind compatible with it so that you can all use the machines
wherever you go; and therefore, the merchants, if they want to make
a profit, they’re going to provide uniformity. So the market has
an incentive to provide uniformity in a way that government doesn’t
necessarily.
On
the question of having sufficient power for organizing for defense
– well, there’s no reason you can’t have organization under anarchy.
Anarchy doesn’t mean that each person makes their own shoes. The
alternative to government providing all the shoes is not that each
person makes their own shoes. So, likewise, the alternative to government
providing all the legal services is not that each person has to
be their own independent policeman. There’s no reason that they
can’t organize in various ways. In fact, if you’re worried about
not having sufficient force to resist an aggressor, well, a monopoly
government is a much more dangerous aggressor than just some gang
of bandits or other because it’s unified all this power in just
one point in the whole society.
But
I think, most interestingly, the argument about being a judge in
your own case really boomerangs against Locke’s argument here. Because
first of all, it’s not a good argument for a monopoly because it’s
a fallacy to argue from everyone should submit their disputes
to a third party to there should be a third party that everyone
submits their disputes to. That’s like arguing from everyone
likes at least one TV show to there’s at least one TV show
that everyone likes. It just doesn’t follow. You can have everyone
submitting their disputes to third parties without there being some
one third party that every one submits their disputes to. Suppose
you’ve got three people on an island. A and B can submit their disputes
to C, and A and C can submit their disputes to B, and B and C can
submit their disputes to A. So you don’t need a monopoly in order
to embody this principle that people should submit their disputes
to a third party.
But
moreover, not only do you not need a government, but a government
is precisely what doesn’t satisfy that principle. Because if you
have a dispute with the government, the government doesn’t submit
that dispute to a third party. If you have a dispute with the government,
it’ll be settled in a government court (if you’re lucky – if you’re
unlucky, if you live under one of the more rough-and-ready governments,
you won’t ever even get as far as a court). Now, of course, it’s
better if the government is itself divided, checks-and-balances
and so forth. That’s a little bit better, that’s closer to there
being third parties, but still they are all part of the same system;
the judges are paid by tax money and so forth. So, it’s not as though
you can’t have better and worse approximations to this principle
among different kinds of governments. Still, as long as it’s a monopoly
system, by its nature, it’s in a certain sense lawless. It never
ultimately submits its disputes to a third party.
(4)
Ayn Rand: Private Protection Agencies Will Battle
Probably
the most popular argument against libertarian anarchy is: well,
what happens if (and this is Ayn Rand’s famous argument) I think
you’ve violated my rights and you think you haven’t, so I call up
my protection agency, and you call up your protection agency – why
won’t they just do battle? What guarantees that they won’t do battle?
To which, of course, the answer is: well, nothing guarantees
they won’t do battle. Human beings have free will. They can do all
kinds of crazy things. They might go to battle. Likewise, George
Bush might decide to push the nuclear button tomorrow. They might
do all sorts of things.
The
question is: what’s likely? Which is likelier to settle its disputes
through violence: a government or a private protection agency? Well,
the difference is that private protection agencies have to bear
the costs of their own decisions to go to war. Going to war is expensive.
If you have a choice between two protection agencies, and one solves
its disputes through violence most of the time, and the other one
solves its disputes through arbitration most of the time – now,
you might think, "I want the one that solves its disputes through
violence – that’s sounds really cool!" But then you look at
your monthly premiums. And you think, well, how committed are you
to this Viking mentality? Now, you might be so committed to the
Viking mentality that you’re willing to pay for it; but still, it
is more expensive. A lot of customers are going to say, "I
want to go to one that doesn’t charge all this extra amount for
the violence." Whereas, governments – first of all, they’ve
got captive customers, they can’t go anywhere else – but since they’re
taxing the customers anyway, and so the customers don’t have the
option to switch to a different agency. And so, governments can
externalize the costs of their going to war much more effectively
than private agencies can.
(5)
Robert Bidinotto: No Final Arbiter of Disputes
One
common objection – this is one you find, for example, in Robert
Bidinotto, who’s a Randian who’s written a number of articles against
anarchy (he and I have had sort of a running debate online about
this) – his principal objection to anarchy is that under anarchy,
there’s no final arbiter in disputes. Under government, some final
arbiter at some point comes along and resolves the dispute one way
or the other. Well, under anarchy, since there’s no one agency that
has the right to settle things once and for all, there’s no final
arbiter, and so disputes, in some sense, never end, they never get
resolved, they always remain open-ended.
So
what’s the answer to that? Well, I think that there’s an ambiguity
to the concept here of a final arbiter. By "final arbiter,"
you could mean the final arbiter in what I call the Platonic sense.
That is to say, someone or something or some institution that somehow
absolutely guarantees that the dispute is resolved forever; that
absolutely guarantees the resolution. Or, instead, by "final
arbiter" you could simply mean some person or process or institution
or something-or-other that more or less reliably guarantees most
of the time that these problems get resolved.
Now,
it is true, that in the Platonic sense of an absolute guarantee
of a final arbiter – in that sense, anarchy does not provide one.
But neither does any other system. Take a minarchist constitutional
republic of the sort that Bidinotto favors. Is there a final arbiter
under that system, in the sense of something that absolutely guarantees
ending the process of dispute forever? Well, I sue you, or I’ve
been sued, or I am accused of something, whatever – I’m in some
kind of court case. I lose. I appeal it. I appeal it to the Supreme
Court. They go against me. I lobby the Congress to change the laws
to favor me. They don’t do it. So then I try to get a movement for
a Constitutional Amendment going. That fails, so I try and get people
together to vote in new people in Congress who will vote for it.
In some sense it can go on forever. The dispute isn’t over.
But,
as a matter of fact, most of the time most legal disputes eventually
end. Someone finds it too costly to continue fighting. Likewise,
under anarchy – of course there’s no guarantee that the conflict
won’t go on forever. There are very few guarantees of that iron-clad
sort. But that’s no reason not to expect it to work.
(6)
Property Law Cannot Emerge from the Market
Another
popular argument, also used often by the Randians, is that market
exchanges presuppose a background of property law. You and I can’t
be making exchanges of goods for services, or money for services,
or whatever, unless there’s already a stable background of property
law that ensures us the property titles that we have. And because
the market, in order to function, presupposes existing background
property law, therefore, that property law cannot itself be the
product of the market. The property law must emerge – they must
really think it must emerge out of an infallible robot or something
– but I don’t know exactly what it emerges from, but somehow it
can’t emerge from the market.
But
their thinking this is sort of like: first, there’s this property
law, and it’s all put in place, and no market transactions are happening
– everyone is just waiting for the whole legal structure to be put
in place. And then it’s in place – and now we can finally start
trading back and forth. It certainly is true that you can’t have
functioning markets without a functioning legal system; that’s true.
But it’s not as though first the legal system is in place, and then
on the last day they finally finish putting the legal system together
– then people begin their trading. These things arise together.
Legal institutions and economic trade arise together in one and
the same place, at one and the same time. The legal system is not
something independent of the activity it constrains. After all,
a legal system again is not a robot or a god or something separate
from us. The existence of a legal system consists in people obeying
it. If everyone ignored the legal system, it would have no power
at all. So it’s only because people generally go along with it that
it survives. The legal system, too, depends on voluntary support.
I
think that a lot of people – one reason that they’re scared of anarchy
is they think that under government it’s as though there’s some
kind of guarantee that’s taken away under anarchy. That somehow
there’s this firm background we can always fall back on that under
anarchy is just gone. But the firm background is just the product
of people interacting with the incentives that they have. Likewise,
when anarchists say people under anarchy would probably have the
incentive to do this or that, and people say, "Well, that’s
not good enough! I don’t just want it to be likely that they’ll
have the incentive to do this. I want the government to absolutely
guarantee that they’ll do it!" But the government is just people.
And depending on what the constitutional structure of that government
is, it’s likely that they’ll do this or that. You can’t design a
constitution that will guarantee that the people in the government
will behave in any particular way. You can structure it in such
a way so that they’re more likely to do this or less likely to do
this. And you can see anarchy as just an extension of checks-and-balances
to a broader level.
For
example, people say, "What guarantees that the different agencies
will resolve things in any particular way?" Well, the U.S.
Constitution says nothing about what happens if different branches
of the government disagree about how to resolve things. It doesn’t
say what happens if the Supreme Court thinks something is unconstitutional
but Congress thinks it doesn’t, and wants to go ahead and do it
anyway. Famously, it doesn’t say what happens if there’s a dispute
between the states and the federal government. The current system
where once the Supreme Court declares something unconstitutional,
then the Congress and the President don’t try to do it anymore (or
at least not quite so much) – that didn’t always exist. Remember
when the Court declared what Andrew Jackson was doing unconstitutional,
when he was President, he just said, "Well, they’ve made their
decision, let them enforce it." The Constitution doesn’t say
whether the way Jackson did it was the right way. The way we do
it now is the way that’s emerged through custom. Maybe you’re for
it, maybe you’re against it – whatever it is, it was never codified
in law.
(7)
Organized Crime Will Take Over
One
objection is that under anarchy organized crime will take over.
Well, it might. But is it likely? Organized crime gets its power
because it specializes in things that are illegal – things like
drugs and prostitution and so forth. During the years when alcohol
was prohibited, organized crime specialized in the alcohol trade.
Nowadays, they’re not so big in the alcohol trade. So the power
of organized crime to a large extent depends on the power of government.
It’s sort of a parasite on government’s activities. Governments
by banning things create black markets. Black markets are dangerous
things to be in because you have to worry both about the government
and about other dodgy people who are going into the black market
field. Organized crime specializes in that. So, organized crime
I think would be weaker, not stronger, in a libertarian system.
(8)
The Rich Will Rule
Another
worry is that the rich would rule. After all, won’t justice just
go to the highest bidder in that case, if you turn legal services
into an economic good? That’s a common objection. Interestingly,
it’s a particularly common objection among Randians, who suddenly
become very concerned about the poor impoverished masses. But under
which system are the rich more powerful? Under the current system
or under anarchy? Certainly, you’ve always got some sort of advantage
if you’re rich. It’s good to be rich. You’re always in a better
position to bribe people if you’re rich than if you’re not; that’s
true. But, under the current system, the power of the rich is magnified.
Suppose that I’m an evil rich person, and I want to get the government
to do something-or-other that costs a million dollars. Do I have
to bribe some bureaucrat a million dollars to get it done? No, because
I’m not asking him to do it with his own money. Obviously, if I
were asking him to do it with his own money, I couldn’t get him
to spend a million dollars by bribing him any less than a million.
It would have to be at least a million dollars and one cent. But
people who control tax money that they don’t themselves personally
own, and therefore can’t do whatever they want with, the bureaucrat
can’t just pocket the million and go home (although it can get surprisingly
close to that). All I have to do is bribe him a few thousand, and
he can direct this million dollars in tax money to my favorite project
or whatever, and thus the power of my bribe money is multiplied.
Whereas,
if you were the head of some private protection agency and I’m trying
to get you to do something that costs a million dollars, I’d have
to bribe you more than a million. So, the power of the rich is actually
less under this system. And, of course, any court that got the reputation
of discriminating in favor of millionaires against poor people would
also presumably have the reputation of discriminating for billionaires
against millionaires. So, the millionaires would not want to deal
with it all of the time. They’d only want to deal with it when they’re
dealing with people poorer, not people richer. The reputation effects
– I don’t think this would be too popular an outfit.
Worries
about poor victims who can’t afford legal services, or victims who
die without heirs (again, the Randians are very worried about victims
dying without heirs) – in the case of poor victims, you can do what
they did in Medieval Iceland. You’re too poor to purchase legal
services, but still, if someone has harmed you, you have a claim
to compensation from that person. You can sell that claim, part
of the claim or all of the claim, to someone else. Actually, it’s
kind of like hiring a lawyer on a contingency fee basis. You can
sell to someone who is in a position to enforce your claim. Or,
if you die without heirs, in a sense, one of the goods you left
behind was your claim to compensation, and that can be homesteaded.
(9)
Robert Bidinotto: The Masses Will Demand Bad Laws
Another
worry that Bidinotto has – and this is sort of the opposite of the
worry that the rich will rule – is: well, look, isn’t Mises right,
that the market is like a big democracy, where there is consumer
sovereignty, and the masses get whatever they want? That’s great
when it’s refrigerators and cars and so forth. But surely that’s
not a good thing when it’s laws. Because, after all, the
masses are a bunch of ignorant, intolerant fools, and if they just
get whatever laws they want, who knows what horrible things they
will make.
Of
course, the difference between economic democracy of the Mises sort
and political democracy is: well, yeah, they get whatever they want,
but they’re going to have to pay for it. Now, it’s perfectly true
that if you have people who are fanatical enough about wanting to
impose some wretched thing on other people, if you’ve got a large
enough group of people who are fanatical enough about this, then
anarchy might not lead to libertarian results.
If
you live in California, you’ve got enough people who are absolutely
fanatical about banning smoking, or maybe if you’re in Alabama,
and it’s homosexuality instead of smoking they want to ban (neither
one would ban the other, I think) – in that case, it might happen
that they’re so fanatical about it that they would ban it. But remember
that they are going to have to be paying for this. So when you get
your monthly premium, you see: well, here’s your basic service –
protecting you against aggression; oh, and then here’s also your
extended service, and the extra fee for that – peering in your neighbors’
windows to make sure that they’re not – either the tobacco or the
homosexuality or whatever it is you’re worried about. Now the really
fanatical people will say, "Yes, I’m going to shell out the
extra money for this." (Of course, if they’re that fanatical,
they’re probably going to be trouble under minarchy, too.) But if
they’re not that fanatical, they’ll say, "Well, if all I have
to do is go into a voting booth and vote for these laws restricting
other people’s freedom, well, heck, I’d go in, it’s pretty easy
to go in and vote for it." But if they actually have to pay
for it – "Gee, I don’t know. Maybe I can reconcile myself to
this."
(10)
Robert Nozick and Tyler Cowen: Private Protection Agencies Will
Become a de facto Government
Okay,
one last consideration I want to talk about. This is a question
that originally was raised by Robert Nozick and has since been pushed
farther by Tyler Cowen. Nozick said: Suppose you have anarchy. One
of three things will happen. Either the agencies will fight – and
he gives two different scenarios of what will happen if they fight.
But I’ve already talked about what happens if they fight, so I’ll
talk about the third option. What if they don’t fight? Then he says,
if instead they agree to these mutual arbitration contracts and
so forth, then basically this whole thing just turns into a government.
And then Tyler Cowen has pushed this argument farther. He said what
happens is that basically this forms into a cartel, and it’s going
to be in the interest of this cartel to sort of turn itself into
a government. And any new agency that comes along, they can just
boycott it.
Just
as it’s in your interest if you come along with a new ATM card that
it be compatible with everyone else’s machines, so if you come along
with a brand new protection agency, it is in your interest that
you get to be part of this system of contracts and arbitration and
so forth that the existing ones have. Consumers aren’t going to
come to you if they find out that you don’t have any agreements
as to what happens if you’re in a conflict with these other agencies.
And so, this cartel will be able to freeze everyone out.
Well,
could that happen? Sure. All kinds of things could happen. Half
the country could commit suicide tomorrow. But, is it likely? Is
this cartel likely to be able to abuse its power in this way? The
problem is cartels are unstable for all the usual reasons. That
doesn’t mean that it’s impossible that a cartel succeed. After all,
people have free will. But it’s unlikely because the very incentives
that lead you to form the cartel also lead you to cheat on it –
because it’s always in the interest of anyone to make agreements
outside the cartel once they are in it.
Bryan
Caplan makes a distinction between self-enforcing boycotts and non-self-enforcing
boycotts. Self-enforcing boycotts are ones where the boycott is
pretty stable because it’s a boycott against, for example, doing
business with people who cheat their business partners. Now, you
don’t have to have some iron resolve of moral commitment in order
to avoid doing business with people who cheat their business partners.
You have a perfectly self-interested reason not to do business with
those people.
But
think instead of a commitment not to do business with someone because
you don’t like their religion or something like that, or they’re
a member of the wrong protection agency, one that your fellow protection
agencies told you not to deal with – well, the boycott might work.
Maybe enough people (and maybe everyone) in the cartel are so committed
to upholding the cartel that they just won’t deal with the person.
Is that possible? Yes. But, if we assume that they formed the cartel
out of their own economic self-interest, then the economic self-interest
is precisely what leads to the undermining because it’s in their
interest to deal with the person, just as it’s always in your interest
to engage in mutually beneficial trade.
QUESTION
PERIOD
Anyway,
those are some of the objections and some of my replies, and I’ll
open it up.
Q1:
My chief concern about anarchism is: why can’t you say that government
is just another division of labor? Because it could be that some
people are better or possess natural capabilities that are more
suited to ruling over others. I’m not saying anarchy cannot work,
but solely from empirical evidence, the fact that none of the industrialized
regions in the world are in a state of anarchy, nor have they ever
been for long in a state of anarchy says something about perhaps
the stability or viability of complex human societies in the present
state. And also, going back to what I said earlier, you can conceive
of the relationship between the ruler and the ruled as just another
common division of labor. Some people possess leadership abilities
that are better able to organize people than others. Some people
lack that.
RL:
On the division-of-labor point, to the extent the division of
labor is voluntary – if you’re better at something-or-other than
I am, and so you do it, and then I buy the services from you – as
long as it’s voluntary, that’s fine. But when we’re talking about
division of labor and some people are better at ruling than other
people – well, if I consent to your ruling me – maybe I’m
hiring you as my advisor because I think you’re better at making
decisions than I am, so I make one last decision which is to hire
you as my advisor, and from then on I do what you say – that’s not
government; you’re my employee, you’re an employee that I follow
very religiously. But, ruling implies ruling people without their
consent. That the division of labor is beneficial to everyone involved
doesn’t seem to apply in cases where one group is forcing the other
to accept its services.
And
on the question of why we don’t see any industrialized country that
has anarchy – of course, we also don’t see any industrialized county
that has monarchy. But then industrialized countries haven’t been
around all that long. There was a time when people said every civilized
country (or just about every civilized country) is a monarchy. You
find people in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries saying:
look, all the civilized countries are monarchies; democracy would
never work. And by saying democracy would never work, they meant
not just that it would have these various bad results in the long
run; they just thought it would completely fall apart into chaos
in a matter of months. Whatever you may think of democracy, it was
more viable than they predicted. It could last longer, at any rate,
than they predicted. So, things are in flux. There was a time when
it was all monarchies. Now it’s all semi-oligarchical democracies.
The night is young.
Q2:
Roderick, surely we all appreciate the wonderful work that you do
here at the Mises Institute, but Ludwig von Mises wasn’t an anarchist.
So, I was wondering if you could tell us more about your institute
and the Molinari Institute.
RL:
Mises wasn’t really a Misesian! [laughter] Well, I have
my own think tank. It is somewhat smaller than this one. I’m not
sure whether it has a physical size. It does consist of more than
one person. The board of directors is three people. So, it’s three
people plus a website. Someday it will rule the Earth – in an anarchic
way. Right now mostly what it does is put up various libertarian
and anarchist classics on the website. There’s an offshoot of it
– the Molinari Society, which is the same three people plus one
more. Insofar as, as Hayek said, social facts consist in people’s
attitudes toward them, the more people who think that it exists,
the more it exists. The whole thing exists a little bit more because
we got affiliated with the American Philosophical Association. The
Molinari Society is hosting a session at the American Philosophical
Association meetings in December. So it is actually going to be
a Molinari event in December involving the three-people-plus-another-one.
So that’s the grand and glorious progress. Its mission is to overthrow
the government. We’ve applied for tax-exempt status from the government.
(We’ll see just how dumb they are! We worded the description somewhat
differently when we sent in the forms.)
Q3:
I was going to bolster the point you made about the Randian
objection that market transactions require some sort of legal background
to them. The fact that there are black markets belies this. If you’re
a cocaine dealer and you get ripped off by your middle-man, you
certainly can’t go to a court and say "Go arrest him, he didn’t
give me the cocaine he was supposed to"…
RL:
I’m sure someone’s tried it…
Q3:
…Now, of course, this very easily can lead to violence, but
don’t forget that there are people actively trying to stop you,
not just that they’re not letting you arbitrate, they’re actively
stopping you from doing it.
RL:
David Friedman makes the argument that one of the main functions
of the Mafia is to serve as something like a court system for criminals.
That’s not all it does, but the Mafia takes an interest in what
sorts of criminal goings-on are going on in its territory –because
it wants its cut, but it also doesn’t want gangs having shoot-outs
with each other in its territory. If you’ve got a conflict, you
agreed to some kind of criminal deal with someone and they cheated
you, and it happened in the jurisdiction of some particular Mafia
group, they’ll take an interest in that as long as you’re providing
your cut. If they’re not cooperating, the Mafia will act as something
kind of court-like and police-like. They’re sort of cops for criminals.
Q4:
What will prevent protection companies from becoming a protection
racket?
RL:
Well, other protection companies. If it succeeds in doing it,
then it’s become a government. But during the time it’s trying to
do it, it hasn’t yet become a government, so we assume there are
still other agencies around, and it’s in those other agencies’ interest
to make sure that this doesn’t happen. Could it become a protection
racket? In principle, could protection agencies evolve into government?
Some could. I think probably historically some have. But the question
is: is that a likely or inevitable result? I don’t think so because
there is a check-and-balance against it. Checks-and-balances can
fail in anarchy just like they can fail under constitutions. But
there is a check-and-balance against it which is the possibility
of calling in other protection agencies or someone starting another
protection agency before this thing has yet had a chance to acquire
that kind of power.
Q5:
Who best explains the origin of the state?
RL:
Well, there’s a popular nineteenth-century theory of the origin
of the state that you find in a number of different forms. It’s
in Herbert Spencer, it’s in Oppenheimer, and you find it in some
of the French liberals like Comte and Dunoyer, and Molinari – who
wasn’t really French, he was Belgian ("I am not a Frenchie,
I’m a Belgie!"). This theory – they had different versions
of it, but it’s all pretty similar – was that what happens is that
one group conquers another group. Often the theory was that a sort
of hunter-marauder group conquers an agricultural group.
In
Molinari’s version of it what happens is: first, they just go and
kill people and grab their stuff. And then gradually they figure
out: well, maybe we should wait and not kill them because we want
them to grow more stuff next time we come back. So instead, we’ll
just come and grab their stuff and not kill them, and then they’ll
grow some more stuff, and next year we’ll be back. And then they
think, well, if we take all their stuff, then they won’t have enough
seed corn to grow it, or they won’t have any incentive to grow it
– they’ll just run away or something – so we won’t take everything.
And finally, they think: we don’t have to keep going away and coming
back. We can just move in. And then gradually, over time, you get
a ruling class and a ruled class. At first, the ruling class and
the ruled class may be ethnically different because they were these
different tribes. But even if, over time, the tribes intermarry
and there’s no longer any difference in the compositions, they still
have got the same structure of a ruling group and a ruled group.
So
that was one popular theory of the origin of the state, or at least
the origin of many states.
I
think another origin you can see of some states or state-like things
is in the same sort of situation but in cases where they succeed
in fending off the invaders. Some local group within the invaded
group says: we’re going to specialize in defense – we’re going to
specialize in defending the rest of you guys against these invaders.
And they succeed. If you look at the history of England, I think
this is what happens with the English monarchy. Before the Norman
conquest, the earliest English monarchs were war leaders whose main
job was national defense. They had very little to do within the
country. They were primarily directed against foreign invaders.
But it was a monopoly. (Now, the question is how they got that monopoly.
I’m not so sure.) But once they got it, they gradually started getting
involved more and more in domestic control as well.
Q6:
Hector, Murray’s story about Hector? It’s very much similar
to this story and it's on the web, and it’s just a beautiful story.
RL:
Which story about Hector is this?
Q6:
The first one about why do we have to leave, let’s just stay there…
RL:
Oh, yeah.
Q6:
Murray did a beautiful job on that, and I would recommend it.
RL:
What’s that in?
Q6:
It’s on LewRockwell.com.
RL:
It’s one of the Rothbard articles on there? Okay.
Q6:
I wanted to buttress your thesis in several ways. One, another argument
in favor of anarchy is that if you really favor the government,
you have to favor world government because right now there’s anarchy
between governments, and we can’t have that if you want government.
Very few people favor world government, and it’s incompatible with
the case against anarchy.
RL:
There has to be a final final arbiter.
Q6:
Another buttress is the issue about negotiations. The way that the
time zones came up and the way that the standard gauge for railroads
came up was through negotiations between railroad companies.
RL:
And the Internet. Some of that is legal, but other aspects are just
customary.
Q6:
And another support is this thing about the cartel. At one time
the National Basketball Association had eight teams and they wouldn’t
allow any other people to come in, so they started the ABA (the
American Basketball Association, with the red-white-and-blue ball).
So if you had this cartel that wouldn’t let other people in, they
could start another cartel.
RL:
What happened to them?
Q6:
They eventually merged. Now there are like thirty teams in the NBA.
And if that’s too few, yet another league can come up.
RL:
The crucial point is that in the Austrian definition of competition
it’s not number of competing firms, it’s the free entry. As long
as it’s possible to start another one, that can have the same effect
as actually doing it.
Q6:
In addition to the dissolution of a cartel, you can have other cartels
competing against the first cartel.
RL:
Did the XFL have any good effect? [laughter]
Q6:
I wanted to ask a question. In your answer to the first question,
where you said you were appointing him as your guide – does this
mean you take my side –
RL:
No.
Q6:
– on alienability?
RL:
No, no. That’s why I said he was the employee rather than the owner.
I believe in inalienable rights.
Q6:
He’s an employee, yet you can’t fire him…
RL:
No, I can fire him. He’s my advisor, I always will follow him –
but I haven’t given up my right to fire him.
August
19, 2004
Roderick
T. Long [send him mail]
is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Auburn
University; author of Reason
and Value: Aristotle versus Rand; Editor of the Libertarian
Nation Foundation periodical Formulations;
and an Adjunct Scholar of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute. He received his Ph.D. from Cornell in 1992,
and maintains the website Praxeology.net,
as well as the web journal In
a Blog's Stead.
Copyright
© 2004 Mises Institute
Roderick
T. Long Archives
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