Archive for December, 2009

Can’t Get Enough Ensiferum

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

Oppression Anywhere…

Monday, December 28th, 2009

Star Power

Sunday, December 27th, 2009

There are only a few days until The 2009 Molinari Society Symposium. On Tuesday night, Roderick Long and Charles Johnson will join Thinking Liberty to discuss the Molinari Society, Alliance of the Libertarian Left, intellectual property, and whatever else the conversation leads to.

Ryan Olander In Israeli Prison, Facing Deportation

Saturday, December 26th, 2009

American activist Ryan Olander is currently being held at a deportation facility in Ramle. According to International Solidarity Movement,

Ryan was visiting the al-Kurds in the tent the Palestinian family built in their own backyard, after the recent setter take-over of a section of their house. At 1.15pm, on Friday 18 December, 6 Israeli police walked into the tent, where Ryan was talking to the family members and drinking tea, and took him for questioning at the Russian Compound police station in west Jerusalem…

Ryan was released without charges the following Saturday, 19 December, before the beginning of a trial with 26 Israeli activists arrested in Sheikh Jarrah, only to be illegally re-arrested by immigration police right outside of the same police station that told him he was free to go. Now Ryan is facing illegal deportation after being held in Israeli prisons for a week.

ISM asked supporters to contact the US Embassy in Tel Aviv, contact the Israeli Minister of Interior, or consider donating towards Ryan’s legal costs. (See this link.)

I know Ryan and he’s a great individual. I hope this goes the best way possible for him.

There Are Currently Secret Prisons In America

Monday, December 21st, 2009

As if Immigrations and Customs Enforcement’s secretive detention system and Joe Arpaio’s personal Gestapo throwing Hispanics into a desert concentration camp weren’t bad enough, The Nation recently reported that ICE confines people in “186 unlisted and unmarked subfield offices”. ICE official James Pendergraph is quoted boasting that the agency can make people “disappear”.

National borders are the turf boundaries that powerful criminal gangs draw to designate who has control of which people. They are usually created by conquest, and force – even when it doesn’t involve the kind of oppression Americans would rightly criticize East Germany for – is the only way to uphold them. Border enforcement is purely authoritarian at every level. There is no possible way one can be libertarian while supporting the border politics of the most powerful empire on the planet.

Related:

How Borders Work
On Borders
Ant-Border Stencil
International Apartheid Pamphlet
Immigration Subversion Squares

Metal And Boats!

Monday, December 21st, 2009

I haven’t done a Metal Monday post for a while, so here’s a three-pronged attack of waterborne heaviness!

It Isn’t Just Contradiction

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

An argument is a connected series of statements to establish a definite proposition.

Adjectives

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

Anarchism, the philosophy that seeks to abolish rulership or the authority of one person over another, is generally both individualist and collectivist.

Anarchism is individualist because it seeks to maximize individual liberty, and sees its preferred social arrangement as the most realistic way to do so.

Anarchism is collectivist because anarchists prefer people who will be involved in implementing decisions to be involved in making the decisions, with a collective agreement as the goal. Though one individual or group of individuals may take the lead in certain areas by investing more energy or experience, final decisions are generally made in a way that requires consent from, and encourages participation by, everyone taking the action. Although some form of hierarchy can be written into most group activities, anarchists do not establish a hierarchical structure as people are not locked into ranks. Therefore the relationship is not necessarily authoritarian. Collective decision making enables each individual who enters an arrangement to retain some level of autonomy and influence in group decisions she cares about.

But there are reasons to distinguish my anarchism as more individualist than others by adopting the label “individualist anarchist”.

1) I generally prefer individually owned enterprises whenever possible. Think of networks of self-employed people, possibly with membership in a guild or union. Instead of being tied to one career, they might engage in whatever work they want to do, as an economy that is generally more egalitarian, prosperous, and free will make it easier to stay alive, so comparative advantage and maximal efficiency may become less valued in proportion to self-expression and enjoyment. I don’t think this arrangement will be optimal in all cases, which is where an element of collectivism must step in. But in general my ideal sees a greater percentage of things owned by individuals than more collectivist anarchism would.

2) Collectives need to possess concern for the individual and have competition from other arrangements concerned with the individual if they are to be useful in maximizing individual liberty. A collective is only as good as the individuals who comprise it, and any structure is only as libertarian as the ideas that shape it. Focusing specifically on the individual’s liberty above any proposed organization will help ensure that organizations are shaped by the idea of liberty.

3) My focus is individualistic. I begin with the need of the individual for maximum freedom of action, not in class conflict. Though this often leads to the same places as more collectivist forms of anarchism and I may classify people into categories when it is advantageous to do so, there is a different focus.

I certainly could be described as a market anarchist: I favor an actual free market of people exchanging things they desire without coercion or hierarchical structures. Peaceable competition between social arrangements is a necessary part of my ideal. I think some kinds of monies will need to be used on a regional level for society to function (though I expect currency to diminish in importance on a personal level as wealth is seen less as a quantifiable status symbol and more as a means to individual and collective flourishing). But “individualist” sounds like a more accurate label than does “market”. My anarchism was never based in economic examination, but in a focus on individual freedom. If the adjective used is “market” rather than “individualist”, the different emphasis in the label suggests different emphasis in thought or practice. I also think it’s more excusable to mistake market anarchism for an order in which everything must be bought and sold than to mistake individualist anarchism with atomism or rule by individuals.

I do think it would be inaccurate to call me an anarcho-capitalist, as I do not favor most things that go by the label capitalist or capitalism. However, self-described anarcho-capitalists that I’ve interacted with off of the internet are generally good folks, and I’m not afraid to take from Rothbard or Von Mises.

As for sectarianism, I think that as long as we base our actions in mutual consent with those who treat us with the same respect, are willing to learn from each other, and oppose authoritarianism with proportionality and mutuality in mind our efforts will bring us close enough to the freest world possible (which should always be improved and never static anyway). Words do matter, because words have meaning and carry thoughts with their use. And every action has ideas behind it. But so long as the goal is maximizing individual liberty, we should be able to work out our differences consensually.

related:
Examining Principles
Stateless Socialism: Anarchism by Mikhail Bakunin
State Socialism and Anarchism by Benjamin Tucker

[edited a typo - "may I" to "I may"]

ALLiance Issue 4

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

LibertyActivism.info has the latest issue of ALLiance available for web viewing or downloading as a pdf. It includes a short essay by myself concerning elections. I look forward to reading the rest of the issue.

Kevin Carson’s Making the State Irrelevant commentary is another good read on the topic of political action.

“I Love Symposia!”

Saturday, December 5th, 2009

Some cool folks are throwing a symposium this month in Manhattan.

Tuesday, 29 December 2009, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m.
Molinari Society Symposium: “Intellectual Property: Is it Legitimate?”
New York Marriott Marquis, 1535 Broadway, Room TBA

I look forward to the panel and meeting Charles and Roderick Long again. Check Roderick’s Austro-Athenian Empire blog for the room assignment. It should be posted sometime around the 29th.