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Frédéric Bastiat wrote:“The worst thing that can happen to a good cause is, not to be skillfully attacked, but to be ineptly defended.”
Lootifer wrote:Sounds boring. Can't you just tell us what to do?
BigBallinStalin wrote:Frédéric Bastiat wrote:“The worst thing that can happen to a good cause is, not to be skillfully attacked, but to be ineptly defended.”
So, the OP is an example of inept defense, but given the constraints of YouTube attention spans, I'll partially excuse the video. I disagree with some of his claims, but I'm here to bolster the defense, so if you have any qualms, I'm here to answer and ask questions.
Lootifer wrote:Sounds boring. Can't you just tell us what to do?
BigBallinStalin wrote:Frédéric Bastiat wrote:“The worst thing that can happen to a good cause is, not to be skillfully attacked, but to be ineptly defended.”
Dukasaur wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Frédéric Bastiat wrote:“The worst thing that can happen to a good cause is, not to be skillfully attacked, but to be ineptly defended.”
I know. <big sigh>
BigBallinStalin wrote:Frédéric Bastiat wrote:“The worst thing that can happen to a good cause is, not to be skillfully attacked, but to be ineptly defended.”
/ wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Frédéric Bastiat wrote:“The worst thing that can happen to a good cause is, not to be skillfully attacked, but to be ineptly defended.”
So, the OP is an example of inept defense, but given the constraints of YouTube attention spans, I'll partially excuse the video. I disagree with some of his claims, but I'm here to bolster the defense, so if you have any qualms, I'm here to answer and ask questions.
This is a rather interesting debate; let’s assume we did somehow abolish the government without instantly becoming slaves to another country’s government due to the absence of a systematically competitive and regulated military to protect us, and move on.
/ wrote:- How would the free market decide on TV/ Radio stations? I’m not talking about what to air on a station, but the right to broadcast a signal using one of the finite numbers of frequencies so as not to overlap with whomever else might want their broadcast their songs on "channel 99.3" or whatever.
/ wrote:- One of the major challenges facing first world nations is cyber security. Say a hacker wants your credit card number, what is your defense against this? Perhaps you could install anti-virus software, however, what prevents the antivirus company from installing the virus? Perhaps even in the absence of an official investigatory agency individual experts could say “Hey guys, that’s a virus!”, but word of mouth testimony is unreliable when there is no reason not to think those same experts aren’t just working for an opposing company trying to put a rival out of business.
/ wrote:-What would be the standard for currency and how would it be distributed? Counterfeiting is getting increasingly advanced, without an organization invested in making a reliable currency, how would the average citizen know what’s in their pocket? Many advocate gold, but even that is highly subject to unreliability without professional scrutiny.
/ wrote:- How would natural resources be handled? Basic necessities like water, something everyone needs. Is it owned by whoever manages to build their house next to a river first? Whose responsibility is it to keep it clean, or to keep the pipes maintained? I live in a desert and water needs to be carefully rationed, if enough idiots keep their hoses running out into the streets, local farms might die and people could starve.
/ wrote:-How would liability and safety be handled? Let’s say you eat bread made with a chemical that eventually makes your arms fall off years later. In the absence of an official court or law enforcement system, how is justice handled? The company has done you harm, but there’s no proof it wasn’t the juice you drank or the insulation in your house. Without that evidence there is no reason to invade the factory as it is the personal property of the owner, so where is the line drawn between unlawful snooping and lawful investigation?
BigBallinStalin wrote:/ wrote:- How would the free market decide on TV/ Radio stations? I’m not talking about what to air on a station, but the right to broadcast a signal using one of the finite numbers of frequencies so as not to overlap with whomever else might want their broadcast their songs on "channel 99.3" or whatever.
Who knows, but the FCC won't be in charge. You can perhaps pay people to stop interfering with your wavelengths at varying distances--use courts and what not. Who knows, I can't predict spontaneous order.
If you care about the FCC, he's someone that's much more knowledgeable about it:
http://knowledgeproblem.com/2004/06/07/is_the_fcc_obso/
BigBallinStalin wrote:/ wrote:- How would natural resources be handled? Basic necessities like water, something everyone needs. Is it owned by whoever manages to build their house next to a river first? Whose responsibility is it to keep it clean, or to keep the pipes maintained? I live in a desert and water needs to be carefully rationed, if enough idiots keep their hoses running out into the streets, local farms might die and people could starve.
Through very complex arrangements. This is a long topic, so there's Elinor Ostrom's Governing the Commons, which analyzes how certain communities succeed in governing their own common-pool resources (water, etc.).
Prices organize the underlined problem. Currently, State governments and the Federal government set the prices on water extremely low to please voters, which in turn induces us into using exorbitant amounts of water. One of the greatest environmental problems regarding the use of water is actually strongly encouraged by government today. If anything, we should be concerned about that since it's occurring everyday. (Governments also subsidize farmers on their water expenses--e.g. they let them have water at 1/10th the price, so that they can expand agriculture into less efficient (drier, more arid) lands. It's very wasteful, and without letting prices work, then consumption can 'get outta whack'.)
My apologies for framing the scenario in an unfair light; as a skeptic, I suppose my mind naturally tends to the worst case scenarios.BigBallinStalin wrote:How would 10,000 court companies handle liability and safety? Depends---just as how would >1 million shoe companies create shoes?
2nd question: well, it may be handled how it is today--i.e. either ignored (statute of limitations), or not if the case is strong enough. This is an age-old problem that isn't resolved with government-provided courts---just sayin'. For the other questions, I can invent particular scenarios (of today's government) where people would balk and... reject government? "No, that doesn't sound right," but it's what you're doing. 'Let's set the assumptions, so that a case is extremely difficult to resolve'
Which form of organization is better equipped at innovating in order to overcome the (knowledge) problem? Markets or central planning based on revenue through coercion?
/ wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:/ wrote:- How would natural resources be handled? Basic necessities like water, something everyone needs. Is it owned by whoever manages to build their house next to a river first? Whose responsibility is it to keep it clean, or to keep the pipes maintained? I live in a desert and water needs to be carefully rationed, if enough idiots keep their hoses running out into the streets, local farms might die and people could starve.
Through very complex arrangements. This is a long topic, so there's Elinor Ostrom's Governing the Commons, which analyzes how certain communities succeed in governing their own common-pool resources (water, etc.).
Prices organize the underlined problem. Currently, State governments and the Federal government set the prices on water extremely low to please voters, which in turn induces us into using exorbitant amounts of water. One of the greatest environmental problems regarding the use of water is actually strongly encouraged by government today. If anything, we should be concerned about that since it's occurring everyday. (Governments also subsidize farmers on their water expenses--e.g. they let them have water at 1/10th the price, so that they can expand agriculture into less efficient (drier, more arid) lands. It's very wasteful, and without letting prices work, then consumption can 'get outta whack'.)
That actually sounds like a very interesting read.
I can agree with that, it is best to be mindful of the Earth's natural limitations than to focus on expansion.
Though to a certain extent, water seems like it should be a basic human right, at least enough to survive and stay clean, so I can also agree with the government on making it affordable for the average citizen.
Perhaps the water could be priced on a tier based level. Cheap to a certain point to cover basic needs, then market price past that.
/ wrote:My apologies for framing the scenario in an unfair light; as a skeptic, I suppose my mind naturally tends to the worst case scenarios.BigBallinStalin wrote:How would 10,000 court companies handle liability and safety? Depends---just as how would >1 million shoe companies create shoes?
2nd question: well, it may be handled how it is today--i.e. either ignored (statute of limitations), or not if the case is strong enough. This is an age-old problem that isn't resolved with government-provided courts---just sayin'. For the other questions, I can invent particular scenarios (of today's government) where people would balk and... reject government? "No, that doesn't sound right," but it's what you're doing. 'Let's set the assumptions, so that a case is extremely difficult to resolve'
Which form of organization is better equipped at innovating in order to overcome the (knowledge) problem? Markets or central planning based on revenue through coercion?
I suppose the main think I've never really understood is, what exact is the law in "anarchy"?
I really can't wrap my head around the idea of what a privatized court is; like if I'm working for BP or something, and we cause a horrible disaster, what is my incentive to defer to the judgement of "Walt Disney's Magical Court of Law" when they are just another company without any logical authority over me?
I'm not sure if we're talking about a de facto government in place of government, mob rule, an army of mercenaries hired to arrest whoever their boss says is a law breaker, or what.
Anyways, my thanks for taking the time to discuss.
Lootifer wrote:They are predisposed to plunging the depths of one anothers mothers; namely me plunging your mums depths.
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