THB: Anarcho-capitalism
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Full resolution: This house advocates for anarcho-capitalist political/economic philosophy in which all states are abolished.
Definitions
• Anarcho capitalist - Anarcho-capitalism (colloquially: ancap or an-cap) is an anti-statist, libertarian political philosophy and economic theory that seeks to abolish centralized states in favor of stateless societies with systems of private property enforced by private agencies, based on concepts such as the non-aggression principle, free markets and self-ownership.
• State - A nation or territory considered as an organized political community under one government which is funded by taxation and is, amongst other functions, the sole arbiter/provider of certain goods and services (e.g, police, writing of law).
• Advocates - actively supports or favors a cause
Qualification
• As agreed to prior, this debate concerns whether a stateless society ought to be advocated over a society with states - it does not concern whether such a world is currently feasible.
Rules
1. Apply the principle of charity
2. Only Savant may accept
- Why ought the State be evicted?
- Philosophically unjustified
- Taxation
- What Statelessness can do.
- Evict the State monopoly
- Defence and security
- Trade monopolies
- Conclusion
- Argumentation ethics
- To demonstrate why the State is a hindrance, I will first justify a libertarian framework of ethics, deriving the NAP and property rights a priori, and then showing how this is incompatible with the existence of a state.
- What ingredients are necessary in proposing a sound ethic? First, I propose Hans-Hermann Hoppe’s Argumentation Ethics. As he states -
- In other words, Hoppe recognises that the act of proposing an ethic (argumentation) contains normative presuppositions. These norms therefore must be accounted for in an ethic, for if one's proposal fails to accommodate these considerations, they will be performing a dialectic contradiction.
- Arguments are a persuasive activity. They seek to investigate some matter and calibrate its results towards truthfulness. This project is aided by a non-coercion clause - suppose two interlocutors are in argument, and one agent assaults the other, resulting in a concession. In such an instance, argumentation is forgone truth is not obtained. Thus, a normative precondition of argumentation is non-aggression (herein after the NAP)
- Another precondition for argument seems to be the right to exclusively control and consume external resources - indeed these things are necessary for life itself. Naturally, one must also have the right to occupy a given amount of physical space with his body before he may be able to argue at all. Thus, another normative precondition of argumentation includes property rights.
- What is the mechanism for acquiring property rights? Consistent with libertarian ethics and the, the only way to do such would be original appropriation (homesteading) or voluntary trade.
- Hoppe’s shows that these principles are naturally derived in the following representation;
- justification is propositional justification - a priori true is - statement;
- argumentation presupposes property in one’s body (NAP) and the homesteading principle - a priori true is - statement;
- then, no deviation from this ethic can be argumentatively justified - a priori is - statement.
- Justification schema
- In addition to the NAP and property rights being praxeological presuppositions, a further justification schema can be applied to test its cogency. Three categories are commonly used to test for an ethics soundness.
- Universalizability - Kantian categorical imperative
- Practically achievable
- Cannot conflict with the norms presupposed in discourse (argumentation ethics)
- Notably, both libertarian principles pass the three requirements. There is no contradiction in everyone abstaining from aggression and occupying some space, these states are very much achievable and they do not conflict with the norms of argument.
- Decision making
- The State holds the exclusive right to arbitrate the outcomes of private conflicts. Yet, any uninvited initiation of force is disavowed by the NAP, hence, the States unequivocal force is illegitimate.
- Rule enforcement
- The State intrudes the private lives of individuals, historically dictating what gender people can sleep with and what substances they can consume. These violations of bodily autonomy are then enforced with might, and hence violate the NAP.
- Taxation
- The issue with taxation will be expanded on below, but in brief, taxes appropriate ones property (their earnings) without consent, and hence violate both the NAP and property rights.
- Property
- With the only ways of acquiring property being original appropriation and trade, it is clear that the State has done neither, outside of merely declaring such to be so. Thus, the States jurisdiction on property which is not theirs is unfounded.
- Taxation is slavery
- One's income ceteris paribus arises from labour. Thus, for the state to nonconsensually expropriate some part of this income is for them to take part of one's labour, which is akin to slavery. At the very least, in the circumstance that one disallows it, taxation is the theft of one's property. Regardless of what good the money is being spent on, that taxation nonconsensually takes some income is still theft. Thus the State ought to be evicted from its unequivocal use of crime.
- Taxation slows civilisation
- All societies have time preferences for certain goods or services.
- A high time preference can be understood as wanting some item immediately, whereas a low time preference can be understood as being able to hold off on wanting the item (perhaps in the form investing money for future returns as opposed to spending it immediately). Two things are of note
- Often, those with lower time preference have a greater supply of present goods, hence they have excess resources to dedicate into the future.
- Often, a society with high time preference is less advanced, because it moves towards bare subsistence and immediate satisfaction, as opposed to having concern for more than the mere future.
- Taxation most heavily impacts those homesteading, producing and trading in large quantities (property, business).
- Because these activities require prior supply of goods, these activities are often done by those with low time preference.
- Thus, taxation heavily affects those activities pursued by low time preference activities, thereby promoting high time preference activities, which is necessarily decivilising.
- The States perpetuation of tax thus ought to exempt it from consideration within society.
- Economics
- In addition to the moral violations, the existence of the State is pragmatically unbeneficial for the people.
- The majority of economists agree that monopolies are deleterious to consumers, given they blockade the “free entry” into a line of production and prevent quality improvement.
- Here, monopolies are understood as an apparatus with near exclusive privilege in the production of a services or product.
- The function of the State is to be the sole provider of certain amenities, such as the writing of law and its enforcement, security, infrastructure developments and the distribution of taxes into fields of research and expansion.
- Because the States function satisfies the definition of a monopoly, it must be so that the State is thus not beneficial to the people.
- Incentive
- Because the State can never be evicted, it has no incentive to provide desirable goods or services to individuals. No matter how poorly and untimely the police respond, it has no external pressure of eviction, and hence no real imperative for improvement. Contrast this to a provider on the free market, who would be negatively impacted if such an attitude was adopted.
- Currently, the State is the sole provider of the sort of defence and security which can perform their job without being reprimanded (contemporary private security are afforded far less flexibility to perform their job than the police). This monopoly faces huge issues.
- Economic calculation problem
- Because D&S is paid for via compulsory taxation, there exists no market price for individual sectors and pursuits, meaning the state lacks an accurate pricing mechanism which evaluates the profitability of its operation. Thus the State cannot calculate the cost of producing each service, thereby necessarily wasting resources, failing to represent what people want, and being inefficient.
- What is worse is that the State bears no incentive at all - because they are fuelled by taxes, and hold a monopoly of power, they can provide as bad a service as they desire, whilst maintaining the same level of income.
- What does incentivise the State is the maintenance of power ie re-election. Thus, because the State holds ultimate authority over the law and the means for its enforcement, it is not difficult to imagine an exchange of favourable policy decisions and campaign funding between special interest groups and the government.
- The State is contractless
- The State offers no guarantee of providing any services to you - they face no legal repercussion if your call for emergency services is denied, or if they offer inadequate services to you. This is because the relationship with the state is contractless, with the only thing being certain is that you must pay them taxes for the service. As Hoppe put it, the offer on hand is as follows - “I will not contractually guarantee you anything. I will not tell you what specific things I will regard as your to be protected property, nor will I tell you what I oblige myself to do if, according to your opinion, I do not fulfil my service to you but in any case, I reserve the right to unilaterally determine the price that you must pay me for such undefined service”
- Privatisation of D&S
- Unequivocally, the stateless solution of privatisation necessarily solves the issue of incentive, the economic calculation problem and the issue of contracts. All agencies clearly have an incentive, they are priced within the market and offer contracts guaranteeing some service.
- In addition to sidestepping the above issues, a privatised model would come with huge benefits.
- Because these agencies themselves want profit, and their business is the safety of people, all of their actions would be calibrated towards the maximum safety for the people. Some actions taken may include
- Incentivise people to live in safe and easily defensible areas.
- Incentivise good behaviour by offering higher and lower prices to those poorly and well behaved.
- Incentivise people to be defensively capable, thereby promoting general safety.
- Contrast this to the State, who would actually profit from you being harmed and hence pursuing action in the costly legal paradigm which they so happen to own. The Stateless solution thus not only provides superior service, but also promotes good conduct.
- One major concern which is frequently raised is whether a Stateless society would result in uncontrollable monopolies, who act as a defacto fascist state which has the ability to arbitrarily control prices, enforce edict and ideology, and violently hold their dominance with arms.
- Ironically, this description matches that of the current State - thus, the critique amounts to disregarding a stateless society because it will result in the status quo.
- However, there are multiple reasons to suppose this would not happen.
- Lack of state intervention
- In a truly free market, the absence of aggressive barriers to entries, as are currently issued by the state, will create a larger threat of competition.
- Worst case
- Even consider what happens if the worst case actualises - a water company unjustifiably triples their rates because of their monopoly.
- Such a state is unsustainable - suppose you have achieved a monopoly. These bankrupted parties will sell their equipment for low prices, allowing new competition and undamaged investors to capitalise on the opportunity to undercut the monopoly
- People will adjust their lifestyles and be more conserved with the water they have whilst utilising water tanks, hence minimising the demand for water and lowering profits for companies.
- If original rates are not restored, competing companies will enter the market with more competitive prices.
- Future customers will be deterred from moving into this dominion, which results in a loss of business.
- Even if original rates are restored, people may have adapted, and the demand for the water would have permanently dropped.
- For the monopoly to even be achieved in the first place, the company would have needed to gain the trust of consumers. This would mean throwing away all the efforts that had gone into creating this image, which is far more valuable than brute money.
- Argumentation ethics
- "Is-ought fallacy"
- Two responses
- As shown in r1, no ought statements are made in Hoppe's rendition - rather the conclusion is arrived at by two a priori descriptive statements - no ought derivation is necessary.
- I propose bridging the is-ought gap is possible. Either one must follow the NAP or they mustn't - this is true via the law of excluded middle. We know that argumentation presupposes certain libertarian values (NAP, homesteading), and so to argue one mustn't follow the NAP would be to commit to a dialectic contradiction which is necessarily false. Syllogistically;
- P1. It is either the case that “I ought not follow the NAP” or “I ought follow the NAP”
- P2. It is not the case that “I ought not follow the NAP”
- C1. Therefore I ought to follow the NAP
- Because Savant only offers one criticism to this section, readers must assume they agree with the entailments of such an ethic outlined in r1. It thus stands that the anarcho-capitalist framework and by extension its subsequent incompatibility with the state are true.
- Justification schema
- "Universalisability vs self defence"
- The NAP is the prohibition of the initiation of aggression (you can retaliate), thus it remains universalisable, for it is possible that all individuals abstain from initiating aggression against other people.
- "Stealing to save a starving child"
- Partaking in such an instance may seem to be beneficial in the short run, yet negates the long term harms. Such a phenomenon is known as dynamic inconsistency, where what is deemed to be optimal in the present may not be so in the future. Savants proposition is short term, yet if adopted at a societal level, would justify stealing to mitigate all uncomfortable circumstances.
- "Anarcho-capitalism is not achievable"
- Savant mistakes the conclusion for the premises. PRO simply put forth two principles (NAP & property) and found them both to pass the schema. Given the cogency of these (premise), it follows that the State is incompatible (conclusion). Savant must either argue that non-aggression and self-ownership is somehow not achievable, or deny the entailment on the State.
- “Decision making/Rule enforcement”
- Savant introduces the necessity of the State in defending its citizens. It ought be noted that PRO's point was that the State impede the established NAP and property rights through these two avenues. This point stands irrespective of the anarcho-capitalist solution.
- Taxation is slavery
- "Taxation is owning someone"
- As aforementioned, income is ceteris paribus obtained through labour. By hypothetical syllogism, if income is a transformed labour, and one non consensually expropriates income, they are conversely non consensually expropriating their labour, which is slavery.
- Even if I were to concede this point, it stands unequivocally that taxation is at absolute best theft.
- "It's for the common good"
- Often, the money is not going to the common good. The United States has sent 150 billion dollars to Israel, despite half of the population disagreeing with such a decision.
- Stealing is the act of taking something without intent of returning it - this is so irrespective of where the money is going.
- Taxation slows civilisation
- "R&D tax savings"
- Often these are hardly obtainable, involving many hurdles such as having an accepted permitted purpose, be technological in nature, eliminates uncertainty and have had process of experimentation.
- Even if all people can obtain a tax saving, such often write off under half, meaning that companies still pay a huge amount of taxes (thereby the issue of time preference is still present.
- Even if they are, it remains so that "savings" is relative only to the initial taxable income - it is still the case that there is taxation and hence decivilisation.
- "Taxes help mitigate smoking"
- Just like the contractless nature of the state, there is a contradiction at play - the proposal is essentially "I will take your money without asking, and use it to fuel my ability to then take more money from you when you want to engage in free trade with some individual that is not me"
- Similar to the "stealing for the hungry" paradigm, the use of such force, even if for the good of people, is dynamically inconsistent. Why is it that stealing, as opposed to education or personal accountability is the option for amelioration?
- Thus, it remains the case that taxation necessarily promotes low time preference activities and is hence decivilising.
- Not only is taxation decivilising, but fundamentally serves the same purpose as slavery and theft - two acts which are necessary in forming the State and it's allegedly good actions.
- Economics
- "Not all monopolies are bad"
- This is definitely true by way of the economics of scale, however, the monopolies which arise under the State are certainly the sort which are bad. Monopolies which are good are those arise naturally and innovate in ways which allow for more efficient uses of resources and lower consumer cost whilst driving competition to work. However, most monopolies are not like this because of the State who impose aggressive barriers to entries, intervention into the free market (purchasing the bonds of failed banks) thus normalising callous risks, the monopolies which actualise are both unnatural and harmful.
- "A state is not a monopoly because laws... are not commodities"
- A monopoly is simply the scenario where there exists an overly dominant sole distributor of a given good or service. It is a matter of tautology that the State fulfils such a definition, in their sole providence of law and its enforcement, security, and the distribution of taxes into fields of research and expansion. Thus, if Savant wishes to initiate the critique that anarcho-capitalism will lead to mob like monopolies, they must explain how such an entity does not currently exist in the form of the State.
- Incentive
- "The States incentive is to keep the people happy"
- Savant equivocates political parties for the State apparatus. Although delegates can be democratically elected, the holistic system of governance cannot be overthrown. As such explained in r1, irrespective of whether the governments services such as the police are adequate or inadequate, they will always receive their pay check through through taxes and never risk replacement. Contrast this to an anarcho-capitalist organisation, in which poor service is directly correlated with poorer performance and risk of extinction.
- Economic calculation problem
- N/A
- Savant doesn't offer a critique to the proposed issue. To reiterate, the calculation problem renders planned economies impossible. There is simply no way in which resources can be distributed efficiently without some guiding pricing mechanism which reflects the interest of the people. Because the State is the sole provider of D&S and by extension lacks any market directions, the State has no way to know whether their resources are rightly distributed, nor the ability to distinguish which services are successful and which are not.
- The State is contractless
- N/A
- Savant doesn't respond to this particular issue. Given it's importance, I am compelled to cite Hoppe's characterisation of the folly in contractless services - “I will not contractually guarantee you anything. I will not tell you what specific things I will regard as your to be protected property, nor will I tell you what I oblige myself to do if, according to your opinion, I do not fulfil my service to you but in any case, I reserve the right to unilaterally determine the price that you must pay me for such undefined service”
- Privatisation of D&S
- "Free rider problem"
- First, the free rider problem exists in the status quo - access to roads, emergency services and public spaces can all be enjoyed even if someone doesn't pay their taxes.
- Second, given how important security is to all people, it is undoubtedly the case that the free market, who dislike free riders because of their economic implication, will identify a solution, which may resemble the following.
- Agencies provide customers with identifiers or trackers if they wish, in exchange for lower premiums, and also the ability to be located when in danger.
- Business' require proof of affiliation with agencies. This benefits the business who are insured and serve as incentive and advertisement for agencies, who can use the security of such business as testimony of their success.
- "Vacuums have seen the rise of ISIS"
- First, this is an example of State failure. The reason such organisations grew in prominence was because of the police corruption, extortion, and theft that was present in the Hussein administration.
- Second, this is an unrealistic expectation for the anarcho-capitalist philosophy. Proponents of the theory do not believe that all instances where the State removes its intervention will lead to a positive society.
- Consider living in Mao's China, and having the ability to press a button which instantly creates the necessary preconditions for fair elections and progressive/egalitarian to be imposed. Does it follow that because such a transformation will be met with dismay from a disillusioned population and inevitably failure that democracy and equality is bad?
- Simply put, good ideas need to be accompanied with good execution. The state of Iraq faced far more systemic issues brought about by the failed monopoly of the State that simply abolishing the State is not sufficient in ameliorating the circumstance.
- In a true anarcho-capitalist state, that is, a state which hasn't priorly been ravaged by the failures of the State, creating cartels which Savant describe is not practical. To put in perspective, the United States spent 300 million dollars a day occupying Afghanistan. Even if the richest billionaires wishes to tyrannically control some land, it would be economically unsustainable.
- "Personal preference"
- As illustrated priorly in the "Mao's China" example, preference is not equivalent to what is good. Per the description, this debate does not consider whether a transition to anarcho-capitalism is feasible, but rather which system is better and hence be advocated for.
- "Public education improves GDP"
- Education left to the market will be more affordable, not only because of competition, but because there would be an absence in mandated regulations, occupational licensing requirements, curriculum mandates, et al.
- We can see this is true in the microcosm of the anarchy - the internet. By 2014, one could enrol in a Bachelor degree's worth of courses entirely for free from MIT, Stanford, Harvard and numerous other prestigious institutions which host their lectures online absolutely free.
- Further still, schools operating in a marketplace have the incentive to acquire as many bright students as possible so as to appear more attractive to a slew of financially-able parents and guardians. The poor, yet bright, student would benefit by gaining access to high-quality facilities and teaching faculty and the school would profit by being able to more effectively solicit its services as a training ground for inquisitive minds.
- "Police Hiring Reduces Crime"
- This is not mutually exclusive to the State model. The reduction in crime is simply because there is a presence of security. An ancapistan model does not remove this, rather it streamlines the system such that only the best security deserves to serve the people.
- Furthermore, even if Savant is correct, we can know that via the calculation problem, the reduction in crime is achieved in a wasteful manner - there is no way for the State to know what it is they are doing, besides pouring money, which is yielding the benefits.
- "Failure of defund the Police"
- As expressed in the "Mao's China" example, certain preconditions are necessary for absolutely all theories. The ancap theory does not believe you can have a State apparatus and marginally defund one facet to see benefits. This is not ancap in any way- there still exists a plethora of policy, taxes and societal expectation which are incompatible with the thesis.
- Across the United States, many neighbourhoods saw the vacuum and employed private security [1][2][3}. We can presume then that if removal of the police was accompanied with the removal of what citizens pay them, that this vacuum will be filled.
- "Safety nets and food stamps"
- This point has been largely addressed in the "stealing to feed the poor" section. Normalising stealing to be the solution to poverty and hunger (as opposed to education or work) treats individuals as means to others ends. It is unfortunate that individuals are hungry, but just like how I have a right to spend money on my happiness instead of donating it hungry people in the third world, I ought to have the same right over donating to hungry people in my own country.
- But what about those who are simply in a bad place, where hard work cannot help, isn't this unfair?
- It is not clear redistributing wealth helps in the long run, given equalising forces will reduce that efficiency of allocating scarce resources through the economic calculation problem.
- The subsidy trap, in which subsidising X creates more X is accepted by almost all economic schools, and would see that because welfare subsidies the poor, the state of being poor will be multiplied.
- Anarcho-capitalism isn't a utopia - inequality and poverty is ugly in every system - the philosophy merely proposes a free approach as the most effective and just.
- Argumentation ethics
- "making an argument =/= arguing is good."
- No claim of goodness is required. Hoppe's argument underlines the necessity of certain norm, wherein objecting would result in a dialectic contradiction, which is false. Savant asking "what if I'm willing to do bad things "doesn't work, because the very argument required to sustain such a position already necessarily presupposes libertarian principles which forbid such actions.
- "False dilemma"
- It is simply true that Pro's premise is a real dilemma. One can only follow, or not follow the NAP. The syllogism proposed in r2 therefore stands.
- "NAP, only if it doesn't contradict the greater good"
- This is an instance of the issue outlined in "burdens" - akin to saying "I like the calculations of the NAP until I don't". Savant must define what overarching theory they are using when identifying acceptance and denial of the NAP.
- "NAP and self defence"
- Savant construes allowing self defence under the NAP as a radical interpretation, when it simply is not [1][2][3][4][5] (are we really to assume that all libertarian thought has been so careless so as to forget about self defence?). All interpretations allow for retaliation, to equalise the aggression which has been committed on you.
- On these grounds, argumentation ethics stands. Readers must be made known just how crucial this argument is in this debate. The success of it finds that the NAP and property rights are necessarily true in all ethics, and by extension, because the State is incompatible with these ideals, that it is impossible to justify. Thus, by way of necessity, the resolution is comfortably upheld.
- Justification schema
- "Not all things which pass the schema are good"
- Savant notes egosim as an example. Without any reasons, it is unclear why egoism - a complex and rich philosophy - is actually wrong. For even under their "moral theory" such an ethic would work - people are self interested and see the common good as best improving their lives, thus acting selflessly effectively satiates self interest.
- Taxation is slavery
- "Slavery is owning someone"
- Savant repeats the same argument, so I am forced to reiterate. Income is transferred from labour, so if one nonconsenually takes your income, they are, by hypothetical syllogism, nonconsenually taking your labour which is slavery. Again, Savant hasn't acknowledge that at best, taxation is still theft.
- "150 billion dollars to Israel is a small fraction"
- Even if it the percentage is small, the real number remains high and Savants initial point - that taxation goes to the "common good" - is still false. The money sent to Israel does not represent the common good.
- Thus, it remains that taxation is slavery at worst, theft at best and often used to fuel projects which people do not want. Because these are the entailments of taxation, and the State necessarily requires taxation, the State is by extension an immoral apparatus.
- Taxation slows civilisation
- "Both high and low time preference activities are taxed, but the latter is taxed less"
- This argument is akin to saying "both standing up and sitting down will result in me being electrocuted, but if I sit I will be electrocuted less, therefore I should advocate for standing". The core issue is that there is electrocution in the first place. Likewise, even if Savants argument that taxation promotes low time preference activities, the systemic issue of taxation still remains - its existence necessarily expropriates scarce resources.
- "Tax credit increases R&D"
- This faces the same issue as above - the ostensible increase in R&D is relative to full taxable income and not no taxable income. Even if we concede Savants argument that lowering tax has increased R&D, there would seem to be a correlation between lowering taxes and increased innovation which was my entire initial point.
- Furthermore, Savant lauds the 6.6 billion saved in taxes, whilst ignoring that almost half a trillion dollars was payed in corporate taxes.
- Thus it stands that taxation slows civilisation, and because the State requires taxation, that therefore the State slows civilisation from development.
- Economics
- "The State intervenes in a good way"
- Savant advocates that States must intervene because of harmful monopolies, yet such deleterious monopolies only arise under the State, where aggressive barriers to entry are imposed, and the market is artificially manipulated. As I proposed, there are many ways in which a completely free market battles harmful monopolies and predatory pricing (refer to r1 Trade monopolies: worst case). In short, natural monopolies occur when an entity price gouges or invoke predatory pricing - the former is battled by competition who can perform the same action cheaper, whilst the latter is unstable and battled by consumer activity.
- Sources which suggest buyouts are good therefore "solve" a problem which the State creates.
- "The State isn't a monopoly because monopolies are businesses that sell things"
- Savants own source specifies that a monopoly "assumes a dominant position in an industry or a sector." Again, it is absolutely undeniable that the State assume this position with respect to law and its enforcement, security, and the distribution of taxes. Because of this, the State is the worst kind of monopoly - the sort with absolutely zero competition, zero possibility of eviction irrespective of performance and zero monetary repercussions.
- "Laws cannot be sold"
- Such a topic is too complicated for Savant to dismiss with a single sources. Academics have proposed that a market for law would be superior to the status quo.
- Incentive
- "Leaders can be replaced"
- Again, this fails to address the core issue, being that the State apparatus will never be replaced (characteristic of monopoly), and because they will never be replaced, there is no beneficial incentive. Suppose there is an ice cream shop everyone must buy from, which cannot be replaced nor allows for any other ice cream shops to be open. Let's even assume that the owner of the shop can be democratically voted in. The fundamental issue is the very ontology of such a structure - that if people want different ice cream, or don't want to buy ice cream at all, they will be violently pursued and violated.
- Economic calculation problem (ECP)
- "public safety is not subjective to a single individual"
- Neither is eating food or drinking water. Yet, if we adopted a State distributive model of food, the EPC renders such a project unoptimal. Likewise, there being no pricing mechanism for the police makes them unable to understand the market forces, or even if they are allocating resources properly
- Ultimately, all people currently pay for D&S. The difference between Savant and I, is that the former advocates for a system where you must pay a set amount to one sole provider, whereas the latter advocates for the liberty in choosing which provider to deal with.
- The state is contractless
- "There is still incentive to appease people because of leadership changes"
- If Savants proposal really works then why is such a naive system not used in the market? Instead of my lawyer issuing a contract of what services they owe me, why not just remove the contract and use the threat of "a change of lawyer"? Simply because such a force is absolutely inefficient, and any lawyer who doesn't offer a contract would be thought of as inadequate or unconfident. Thus, it stands that the State, as a contactless apparatus, owes you nothing, except the promise of violence when you fail to pay them.
- Privatisation of D&S
- "Taxes stop free riders"
- Savant agrees that free riders exist in both systems. Their mechanism for stopping them is forcing compulsory payments to be made from everyone, whereas Pro's mechanism is simply not allowing them the service they didn't pay for. As detailed in r2, in a free market, where profit is the priority, we can presume that free riders will be eliminated as they cause a decrease in profits (mechanisms presented in r2).
- "Everyone can say they have private security"
- Just like how everyone can tell home invaders or potential muggers they are armed. Does this mean gunless individuals are "free riding" off the firearms institute?
- Bluffing is possible in all scenarios - yet as explained in r2, there are many reasons why individuals would actually want security.
- "Many crimes occur to people not business"
- The initial point I made was that business can require proof of private security and that this benefits them as their space is safer, and also the security firm, as they can use the safety of the organisation as proof of their acumen. The point is thus unaddressed.
- "Vacuums are filled by ISIS"
- When realising that such occurs because of police corruption (the state), Savant argues it is because police were inefficient. Here we agree. Because the State offers only one security to people which cannot be replaced by citizens, terrorists only need to corrupt one force, knowing that this force has an absolute monopoly in the market of defence. Contrast this to an ancap society, wherein competing firms would reject corruption, or else face disastrous implications on their reputation and profits, and terrorists would have to bribe many companies, as oppose to just one.
- Personal Preference
- Savant argues that many under the Mao regime simply lived in fear. No doubt this is true, but it must be conceded that the majority actually believed in their government. This sort of patriotism can be seen across history, including the case of Nazism. My initial point is simple - that individuals do not always know what they want. That even though Mao rejected democracy, and that Nazism rejected Jewish rights, that such rejection cannot be taken as statements of what is good. Thus, it does not follow from contemporary individuals rejecting anarchy that it is a bad system.
- Education
- An important point is to be made - Savant seemingly construes my position as rejecting education. Simply, my position is contrasted to theres insofar as they wish for mandatory payments to be made to one single organisation (the state), whereas my position allows for money to be distributed where people want it to go.
- Savant asks "what about the poor people". As I have already argued
- MIT, Harvard and Stanford have Bachelor degree's worth of courses for free on the internet - here, the web can be understood as a microcosm for anarchy.
- Schools have incentive to teach people who have potential and are smart - irrespective of if they are poor.
- Foster care
- Without the government, the exact same business would be providing the exact same service, except without the interference of the State and taxation etc. Savant must establish some necessity clause between the State and caring for orphans.
- Police hiring
- Savant simply ignores the argument of r2. Yes, reducing the police's allocated funding causes crime to spur because the reduction of police funding isn't correlated with a reduction in citizen payment. People are still paying the same amount for the police even if they are being defunded.
- Savant attempts to construe my position as not wanting any security. This is false - the only thing I do not advocate is one single provider of security who can force you to make payment, who are not in a contractual obligation to owe you any service. Contrary to their characterisation, I would prefer many providers of security, whereas they only want to have one.
- "Individuals can be ends to other's means for the "common good"
- Again, common good does all the heavy lifting. Who's common good? Per the ancap, the common good would be preserve all people's negative rights and uphold ideals of the NAP and property. Savant relies on the intuition regarding what they feel is good.
- "Justified for the hungry to steal"
- Throughout this debate, Savant issues philosophically complex statements like these which are backed only by the layman's moral intuition. As illustrated in the last round, our intuition is a terrible way for making moral judgements. Consider the following circumstances.
- "It is not my responsibility to pay for hungry homeless people in my state"
- "It is not my responsibility to pay for hungry homeless people in third world countries"
- Notice how Savant has intuition on their side in that feeding your countries homeless is good, yet the exact same intuition they rely on produces a completely different outcome for people who happen to be far away from you. Absent a framework, Savant has no explanation for this difference.
- "Food stamps subsidize hunger relief, not hunger itself.
- This point is purely semantic - in subsidizing hunger relief, hunger itself becomes unproblamatic, and therefore hunger becomes replicated given it's negative contingencies are removed.
Based on my previous observation and reading of past debates, Bones is a rhetorical & linguistic heavyweight. Savant is a walking encyclopedia and an expert on subject matter, so I came into this expecting Savant to give Bones a run for his money and Bones pulling through.
However, Savant wins this in my opinion. Here's why.
Pro's side makes a lot of unsubstantiated claims and exaggerations. Savant's framing of the debate sets the stage for more concrete impacts with specific examples. In a simplified version, this debate is about the obligations of freedom versus the mutual stability of the human population. Pro argues that the State is a system of evil, using arguments that they violate bodily autonomy by limiting gender selection in marriage, their use of law enforcement is ethically inconsistent & hypocritical as they penalize people for not following the rules while certain people are exempt (as in above the law.), and that taxation is slavery because the government forces people to give up their wages after volunteering their hard labor. Con counters this by stating that whether abolishing the state is ideal is whether the proportional pros/cons result in a global net positive for the human population. Con goes into a lot of detail about the need for the state, such as that Pro's suggestion for private agencies are ill-equipped and unprepared to handle the violation of human rights compared to a powerful organization like the Police Force. That a stateless society is bad for the economy because private companies are unable to provide children with the adequate skills for the workforce or basic education, and that an organized society (The State) handles this easily. Con also mentions that taxation is not slavery because slavery is defined as the owning of an actual person, but he concedes that taxation could be theft. However, Con argues that taxation is an exception, an acceptable form of theft in order to assist people with disabilities and the poor, even using examples that they were privileged enough as children to get the help they needed and without it, they would not have survived. The argument goes back and forth from here and Pro continues to refer to the State as an evil organization, still insisting that taxation is slavery without pushing back against Con's definition, thus dropping it. Con's arguments have a more solid consistency with real-world accounts justifying them that ultimately makes them superior to Pro's arguments that appeal to philosophical reasoning. Which is enough for me to give Con the point for arguments.
This was very fun and interesting to read. In summary, CON's framework of the common good seems easier to measure and apply. The argumentation ethics seems tailor-made for anarcho-capitalist arguments and are not as rigorous and undeniable as PRO wants them to be. CON has many clear impacts of where the state improves society immensely. PRO on the other hand cannot point to a single example of where anarcho-capitalism improved society. In fact, nearly all instances of statelessness appear to have been catastrophic for the people. Even if anarcho-capitalism is philosophically justified, I didn't get nearly enough evidence to be convinced that it could do the things PRO claimed it could do. That left me with the impression that anarcho-capitalism is currently NOT something that should be advocated for. As for sources, CON had more sources that constituted actual evidence of state boons as contrasted with PRO mostly citing websites that merely explain what the words he used meant. But I don't feel like it would be fair to award Savant that point also, because Bones did really well with what he had at his disposal.
Took a few days to write this, here is the full RDF:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ncqm8-eXToaD2P1F5GRQE6NHsrV1dsflkRHsfBDx0XI/edit?usp=sharing
I dont know why Pro didnt mention armed population as an actual alternative instead of security services. After reading this debate a couple of times, I feel like it definitely left a lot unmentioned. But in the end, while it definitely did succeed in describing state as harmful and a violator of rights, the transitioning to an alternative system (anarchy) seemed to be left mostly blank other than "if all people choose it, it will happen".
I am hoping that I see another debate in the future with similar topic. I know most people arent anarchs, but anarchy is one of the rare systems which actually isnt based on dictatorship of majority but on equal rights of one and all.
This has gotten away from me, but I'm hoping to get back to it this weekend, so I'll get my thoughts up eventually even if it's not my usual long RFD.
I'm curious how you would have voted on this one.
I think this should have had more rounds or more characters. Reading about anarchy is fun now that I support anarchy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pENUV9DLa2g
Yeah... I'm not going to be able to bust out a full RFD in time, not while I'm at work. I will still get a vote up, as promised, but I'll finish it over the weekend.
I still hope to have time to get up a vote before time runs out (it's been a busy few weeks), though it doesn't seem like my vote would change the outcome regardless of which side it's cast for. Even if time runs out, I will still write out a vote and post it here in the comments at minimum. Apologies for the delay.
"These sorts of contests should have at least three votes from competent people."
I know, but I dont have 3 accounts and I dont even have time to vote.
Thanks for voting!
These sorts of contests should have at least three votes from competent people.
Thanks for voting!
He has two of them: https://www.debateart.com/members/whiteflame/medals
You should get an award for the number of votes you churn out.
I should be able to get to it, going to have to take this one slow.
I know you just got done voting on my other debate, but if you get the chance to vote on this one too, that would be great!
Interested to get your opinion on this! Feel free to vote if you get the chance.
Plz vote!
Good luck defending a system which never worked anywhere, as you are gonna need it.
Guarantee HOF.