![]() |
Strike The Root |
|
There are a thousand hacking at the branches of evil to one who is striking at the root. |
|
|
|
|
How
the World Would Work Without Government by
Doug Casey
Some
of these questions reflect beliefs as quaint and silly as those of
inner-city children who believe that milk naturally comes from cartons.
But since much of all news concerns the doings of government, and since
various levels of government control close to half the economy, it’s
understandable how Americans have come to see the state as a permanent
fixture in the cosmic firmament, “naturally” and “necessarily”
responsible for almost everything. Americans have become almost as
myopic as the Soviets were in that regard. Some believe that if the
government didn’t build the roads, we would still have no
industrialization or infrastructure. Similarly, some Soviets had a hard
time figuring out who would build cars, if not their government. Actually,
an inability to understand how the world would work without government
shows an inability to understand how it works right now. What holds
society together isn’t the coercive power of the state; it’s peer
pressure, social opprobrium, moral approbation, and, especially, self
interest. Few people would argue that the reason diners pay their
restaurant checks is fear of the police, just as few would argue that
the only reason diners do not stand on table tops, disrobe, and create a
scene is because of some ordinance prohibiting it. The coercive power of
the state has almost no part in forming the glue holding society
together. Does
government have any rightful place in society? One argument is that,
since the state holds a monopoly on the legal use of force, its logical
function is to protect individuals from force. That implies a defensive
military to protect you from force originating outside the
government’s jurisdiction; a police force to protect you from inside
its jurisdiction, and a court system to allow you to adjudicate disputes
without resorting to force. But
only a small and decreasing fraction of government resources actually go
toward these legitimate goals, and it is spent with pathetic
inefficiency. The military is a gigantic pork barrel program; the police
harass as much as they protect; and even if you can afford it, it is
nearly impossible to get into court and equally difficult to get out
once you are in. In
fact, an excellent case can be made that defense, police and courts are
far too critical to the smooth functioning of society to be left to the
type of person predisposed to working for the government. When it comes
to the police, I’d prefer a Mike Hammer or Thomas Magnum trying to
solve a crime, rather than the typical cop, whose main skill is writing
his quota of traffic tickets. Private
arbitration agencies, who would have to compete based on the fairness
and cost-effectiveness of their decisions, would be a big improvement
over often corrupt, glacier-like and politically motivated courts, who
must decide cases based on arbitrary stature law. How
would criminals be tried in the absence of statue law and punished
without government prisons? For one thing, there would be a lot less
illegal activity if victimless crime were abolished. For another, the
first concern of a justice system should be making the victim whole, not
arbitrarily punishing the miscreant. Sentences should therefore be meted
out in terms of monetary damages to the victim—plus the costs of
apprehension, trial and supervision on whatever level appropriate.
Felons would have an incentive to become productive, in order to regain
their freedom. And victims would not be doubly penalized by having to
pay tax to incarcerate those who had already harmed them. In
general, government judicial systems are far more concerned about crimes
against the state than crimes against the individual. In China, as the
Tiananmen Square revolt demonstrated, the gravest crime consists of
agitation for democracy; in the United States, it consists of nonsupport
of the government by refusing to pay taxes or obey regulations. And in
all cases a show of humility, a respectful attitude, and the
renunciation of politically incorrect ideas are required. The
sentencing of the Chinese students who incited the Tiananmen riots in
1989 was based mainly on their attitudes. One leader, Ren Wanding, was
given the longest sentence because he hung tough, refused to apologize,
and showed no regret. Others, guilty of more serious “crimes,”
received shorter sentences because they played the game of “self and
mutual criticism.” Everyone
in the United States claimed to be outraged at what happened to the
students, especially Ren. But few acknowledged the extent to which
punishment disproportionate to the crime committed is routinely imposed
here in the US. Tax protesters regularly get more hard time than violent
criminals. Some
would say that a few abuses are a small price to pay for having a
national defense. That, too, is questionable. The US government actually
created much of the danger the USSR once presented. As pathological as
it was, the USSR would have had no reason to attack North America if it
were just a grouping of 250 million individuals, entirely apart from the
fact it would have been 1,000 times more costly than their ill-fated
adventure in Afghanistan. How cold they possibly invade a country where
they would have to conquer each citizen as an individual? It is a
different matter entirely if they need only force another government to
surrender. In any event the Soviets would have collapsed long before
they did, had not the US government funneled billions in aid and loans
to them. Although
even these “natural monopolies” of government do not really exist,
it might be acceptable if government was strictly limited to ensuring
national and domestic safety and to adjudicating disputes. Without a
legislature, regulatory agencies, and the taxes it takes to enforce
their dictates, the economy would really blossom. In a decade the US
would be as far ahead of, say, Japan, as Japan is ahead of Romania.
Anything that needs to be done can and would be done more efficiently by
entrepreneurs, at a profit. In the perverse “real world” of today, however, the police, courts and the military are among the least significant parts of government; moreover, government fails to produce quality products in any other worthwhile area it pursues, such as education. Indeed, its main products are taxation, regulation, inflation and wealth redistribution, which all eventually destroy their supposed beneficiaries as surely as they do those who are taxed overtly. Doug Casey graduated from Georgetown University in 1968, where he was a classmate of Bill Clinton. He’s best known for his books: The International Man, Crisis Investing, Strategic Investing and his most recent, Crisis Investing For The Rest Of The ‘90s. He currently writes International Speculator, a monthly investment advisory focusing on precious metals, stocks, commodities and real estate. Entering its 23rd year of publication, Doug Casey’s International Speculator is read worldwide by industry professionals and individual investors alike. Casey has appeared on hundreds of radio and TV shows, including Donahue, Letterman, Regis Philbin, Charlie Rose, Merv Griffin, NBC News and CNN. He’s been the subject of articles in People, US, Time, Forbes, The Washington Post, and numerous other publications. He is currently a trustee of Northwoods University, The Eugene B. Casey Foundation, The Liberty Foundation and the Fully Informed Jury Foundation. He is active in venture capital, mainly in mining and telecommunications. He serves as a director to Executive Security International and Heartland Capital, and an advisor to Kenneth J. Gerbino & Co., Day Assets and passport Financial. Casey has lived in seven countries and has visited more than 150, most several times. His main sport is polo, but he has been active in skydiving, martial arts, scuba, auto racing and competitive shooting. |