In
a Free Society...
by
Manuel Lora
by Manuel Lora
DIGG THIS
Imagine
a free world where there is no state. This is a society where security,
the provision of law, contract enforcement, and courts and other
institutions of justice are available on the market. In such a situation,
almost everything we hear on the news would sound ridiculous, inefficient
and even criminal.
As
there would be no taxation, anyone standing on a podium promising
handouts, subsidies, tariffs, quotas or anything of that sort would
be considered a buffoon.
In
a free society there would be no institutionalized politics that
would affect every one; there would be no legislation and no legislators.
Instead of politics there would be company policies
and contracts that establish the relationships between groups. Thus,
there would be no government lobbying. The state is like a piñata;
those able to extract power and influence from it obtain a special
advantage at the expense of everyone else.
Because
education would no longer be managed by governments, there would
be no district superintendent (or even a school district), no budget
fights or voter approval on the budget. And of course, property
tax would not exist.
Though
the right of collective bargaining would be respected, unions would
have no special "group rights" of their own. Employers
would not be forced to deal with union representatives.
Giant
conglomerate companies could probably exist, but would be unlike
what we see today (think Big Oil). They would not have exclusive
monopolies or special treatment. Any land that they wanted to use
they would have to purchase legitimately on the market (say good-bye
to the thievery called eminent domain). If they wanted to dispose
of chemicals they would have to do it on their own land as there
would be no state to grant them pollution permits. When externalities
are reduced through the enforcement of property rights, resources
can be allocated more efficiently.
In
a free society there would be no medical cartels. Instead of having
a government monopoly in medical education and certification, there
would probably be a variety of decentralized organizations handling
health care. Hospitals and clinics, for example, to attract customers,
would want to hire employees with good qualifications and education.
Further, because most hospitals would be insured, insurance requirements
might mandate that professionals met certain criteria such as certification
and experience. This would be handled by the market.
But
best of all, there would be no such thing as a politician (much
less a career politician). People who would propose wars and intervention;
praise socialized medicine; support manipulation of the money supply
and interest rates; control the layout of parking lots and the amounts
of water that must come out of toilets per flush – all these people
would be thought of as being out of their minds and potentially
criminals. Indeed, in an environment when towns and cities are protected
by patrol and restitution services, the thought of taxing society
at gunpoint to protect them from people who would steal from them
(also at gunpoint) would at once seem stupid. (Another advantage
to getting the state out of the police business would be the dramatic
reduction in police brutality and taserings. How long do you think
a company would last if it killed its customers?)
Go
to any major news web site or watch the nightly television news.
Most of what is reported is directly or indirectly an act of the
state. From wars and intervention to the global subprime crisis
and inflation – these are nothing but horrible and evil acts of
governments. It doesn’t stop there, however. Keep watching. Protestors
and drug users and arrested are jailed and a happy prosecutor claims
that he is cleaning up our lives. The censors pat themselves on
the back for having kept dangerous content from the children (yes,
it’s about the children every time!). Airport inspectors claim to
keep us safe but reports say that bombs and guns go through security
quite often. The various government agencies that control what can
we eat suddenly reverse themselves! And so it goes on in an endless
cycle of abuses, scandals, cynicism and corruption.
Though
I am a "free marketeer" for ethical reasons first (the
state is evil), sometimes I yearn for a free society just because
the transition period would be a delight to watch. I can imagine
world leaders scrambling to find honest employment. Directors of
giant government programs might have to work for a living and actually
produce goods and services that others want. Even the local police
department will have to openly compete with new security companies.
What fun that would be.
December
17, 2007
Manuel
Lora [send him mail]
works at Cornell University as a TV and multimedia producer. Visit
his blog.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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