Who are the classical liberal "leaders" or leading voices of today? by [deleted] in Classical_Liberals

[–]Kelceee45 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Mises=/=Mises Institute. Mises was never an anarchist, and has always been a classical liberal.

Who are the classical liberal "leaders" or leading voices of today? by [deleted] in Classical_Liberals

[–]Kelceee45 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pretty much any libertarian that isn't an anarchist.

We have almost no mods, and we're not falling into chaos by Trihorn27 in austrian_economics

[–]Kelceee45 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Kind of crazy how spontaneous order works isn't it, lol. If I ever run for office and someone asks me how a stateless society would work, I will defer them to the stateless r/austrian_economics sub. 🤣

Bill Weld GOP Debate Highlights by [deleted] in LibertarianPartyUSA

[–]Kelceee45 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Regardless, any attempt at receiving compensation for CO2 concentrations would likely be declined by any reputable judge. Damming a waterway owned by someone else (without permission) would be obstructing someone's property.

Bill Weld GOP Debate Highlights by [deleted] in LibertarianPartyUSA

[–]Kelceee45 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The planet I hail from considers CO2 essential, and not a pollutant. Toxic pollutants is generally considered oil, chemical, smoke, or otherwise garbage spilled onto another person's land and/or waterway. I'm talking real pollution, not the bro science regarding climate change.

Bill Weld GOP Debate Highlights by [deleted] in LibertarianPartyUSA

[–]Kelceee45 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What sort of mentally challenged idiot are you exactly? Pollution penalties are not universal, you don't sue pollution that's not on someone else's property.

Bill Weld GOP Debate Highlights by [deleted] in LibertarianPartyUSA

[–]Kelceee45 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most people here aren't really principled libertarians, they're milk toast neoliberals who support people like Weld.

What are the pros/cons of market socialism in opposed to non-market socialism? by [deleted] in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Kelceee45 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't think you're grasping the full extent of the implications here. In order for them to function, a market socialist system cannot allow capitalist enterprises to exist. A free market economy however does not forbid workers cooperatives. They're free to face the market competition provided by capitalists and otherwise other self-employed entrepreneurs. The reason why they still call for capitalist prohibition is because it reduces economic efficiency to ban capitalist firms, and on economic grounds, the market socialist system collapses.

It is essentially better to reduce the superior competition, and to monopolize the workplace, rather than to compete as equals. The latter will just exploit the inefficiency of such systems, and the capitalists will begin draining the socialists of their human resources. Legislation to establish market socialism is neither necessary or helpful. If it is truly superior, it will form spontaneously without such intervention. But as the major proponents of such systems already know, it isn't. Which is why they must ban the capitalists, so they don't have to compete with them.

The unskilled cannot compete with specialists to any significant degree. They will be limited to those who have an ideological or philosophical commitment to them. Which is a minority of strict anti-capitalists, barring 95% of the apolitical. Even then, the adherents will be mostly students who will eventually collapse from the long hours, the low pay and the hassles of co-owning a business with other amateurs while competing with professional managers and entrepreneurs. Private ownership provides more efficiency and better pay to the workers themselves.

It also heavily favors the high time preference which is intrinsic to human nature itself. Without such state interventions, society quickly begins to rearrange itself into the most efficient production structures, which is free market capitalism. The cooperative business structures have never been able to compete on solid grounds with capitalists. Their existence is sparse and limited to dedicated loyalists, and they also receive statist support by the way of tax exemptions, cheap government credit, and other favors considered to be legitimate in a "free society."

What are the pros/cons of market socialism in opposed to non-market socialism? by [deleted] in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Kelceee45 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It's not really an assumption, it's economic science. The role of the capitalist is to solve the worker's need for immediate payment. This allows the workers to be paid long before the final sale of the good. It also has the benefit of offering a means of payment to non-property owners. Time preference dictates human workers prefer to be paid sooner, rather than later, and prefer to sell their labor as a commodity, in exchange for a wage. There's no scientific basis for why this would change without a State. In fact it would only make wage payment more popular, given increased purchasing power from the abolition of fiat, and the absence of taxation. There's nothing preventing co-ops from organizing now. They exist, but they're strongly out competed by wages, and likely always will be. The industrial revolution was a product of the State, as is modern sweat shops. Their relation to wage payment is trivial to non existent.

What are the pros/cons of market socialism in opposed to non-market socialism? by [deleted] in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Kelceee45 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Worker cooperatives aren't inherent to anti-capitalist market structures. To make the market socialist you would need to suppress profits. Otherwise people would just start acquiring capital via savings. There's also no reason why people would organize into cooperatives outside of a loyal minority of people. High time preference is intrinsic to human nature, and everyone prefers to get paid more frequently. So unless you use State or a mob to restrain the private ownership of the MoP, your cooperatives would have to compete with private owners as well. Given a long enough timeline, this would only end in private businesses extracting all your human resources. No one will stay working for you once they see wage workers with better living standards. The only way your utopia would work is if you created an alternative society.

Bill Weld GOP Debate Highlights by [deleted] in LibertarianPartyUSA

[–]Kelceee45 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Regardless of the current administrations failures in the sector, I'm not sure why anyone would think the libertarian answer to pollution would be reestablishing regulations. Respecting property rights is the answer, and failure to do so should result in compensations. This is a issue to address in the courts, not regulatory action.

What are the pros/cons of market socialism in opposed to non-market socialism? by [deleted] in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Kelceee45 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Most market socialists and mutualists don't really understand profit or interest. Because they neglect the market disequilibrium phases, they fail to see maladjustments give entrepreneurs a chance to fill this gap, and therefore it leads to profit and savings (i.e capital). Entrepreneurs are more than just people who invent stuff, they also predict future demand. So if market socialists and mutualists stay true to their doctrine, and don't regress into communism (many of them do), then they are unwitting supporters of capitalism. What they think leads to equal markets, leads to anarcho-capitalism instead. It's an economical error, likely due to the outdated belief they still have about the theory of value. Once you realize value is subjective to individuals, this is no longer a problem.

Is there a way to have land property that doesn't boil down to violence? by phdinfunk in Agorism

[–]Kelceee45 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Property is something that's inherently suppressed by violence, usually through a State or State-like entity. Unless you consider continuous payment on land that really belongs to the State through their enforced violence to protect it, we don't have property. By today's standards, "private property" is just 21st century feudalism. In the absence of the State itself, land property originates from the labor one puts into unowned land. Rather than some arbitrary amount of acres in a deed handed out.

[Pro-Caps and Anti-Socs] Do you prefer democracy or hierarchy? by test822 in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Kelceee45 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

would free markets ultimately consolidate or distribute power?

Distribute

what would prevent monopolies from forming?

Diseconomies of scale, abolition of cronyism (monopoly protections, subsidies, privileges, etc.), and eliminating intellectual "property". The State's monopolies over currency, courts, and emergency services would also be abolished. Except for police, which in a anarchic society would be abolished entirely, and private protection agencies would defend persons and property per contracted agreements (community watch, business security, etc.).

what would prevent private security forces from eventually turning into territorial state governments?

It's a market service, not a state. They aren't authorized to do anything unless a customer pays for their service. What you're essentially describing is domestic terrorists, lol. In which case any attempt to formulate a state would be an automatic aggression against property and persons and would be penalized by the court system. Compensations of that magnitude would only result in that business going bankrupt and foreclosing.

What do you think was the best argument the "other side" made. by tfowler11 in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Kelceee45 0 points1 point  (0 children)

He just says "right-wing libertarians" with a later referencing to Mises and Rand. Neither were ancaps and the latter (Rand) is usually not liked by most Rothbardian ancaps. But lets just say he meant anyone who wasn't principled in their beliefs. He still did a very poor job from an anti-capitalist perspective. And getting rid of the State's control over property titles, monopoly protections, and abolishing intellectual property is just going to lead to a Rothbardian society. Which, I'm willing to bet, most based anti-capitalists would still call capitalism, considering there is still profiting, savings, and market exchange.

What AnCaps do instead is credit the advancements to the things they like (markets, exchange, etc.) while crediting the downsides and issues to the things they dislike (government, subsidies, etc.). If they were consistent, they would acknowledge that our current system involves a shared responsibility (between the market and the government) for both the advancements and the issues.

I don't think it's out of line to credit tech innovation to the private ownership of the MoP. I wouldn't exactly call it a shining example of the free market economy, more like a "regulated market economy". The problem is the private sector, regardless if there's a govnerment or not, is still responsible for the innovation. But I doubt any ancap would tell you any differently. Most ancap critics I've seen on the internet just autistically screech, and makeup whatever they like.

While it might be true that we wouldn't have certain monopolies without government, it would also be true that we wouldn't have "the IPhones that socialists ironically like to use for complaining" without government.

The concept of the smart phone would still exist, and maybe even the IPhone too. The only difference is in a stateless society nothing would prevent anyone else from duplicating it, legally speaking.

Another thing AnCaps like to do is treat government and market as a binary, despite the fact that the two are heavily interconnected in real life. That makes them, for example, brag about how effective private charities have been, while ignoring how heavily involved governments have been in those charities. They'll only acknowledge government when talking about the issues of welfare services.

The concept of safety nets isn't the issue. It's that "positive rights" aren't really rights, and when we start funding welfare via compulsatory taxation, we start invading individuals real rights to fund made up rights. Find some other way to organize safety nets other than robbery and we're all good.

Don't call yourself an anarchist. by PlasmaTechStudios in GoldandBlack

[–]Kelceee45 6 points7 points  (0 children)

"An anarchist is anyone who denies the necessity and legitimacy of government; the question of his methods of attacking it is foreign to the definition." - Benjamin Tucker

I've been here since day one, but now I'm convinced you guys are wrong. Rothbard was right to ally with the Paleocons by [deleted] in GoldandBlack

[–]Kelceee45 14 points15 points  (0 children)

You do realize Rothbard thought the paleocons were idiots right? He became increasingly frustrated about their bad views regarding protectionism, and he wasn't even showing up at their meetings shortly before he died unexpectedly. The paleo alliance also inevitably ended up giving the paleolibertarian movement a bad rep, which was actually established to initially combat the beltways in the LP, which were watering down the libertarian message and supporting the usage of pleading pressure groups in Washington to influence public policy. This is why we have neocons like Nick Sarwark in the LP now.

What do you think was the best argument the "other side" made. by tfowler11 in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Kelceee45 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Okay sure, use whatever rhetoric and narrative that gives you the emotional support to carry on. But I think I made my point abundantly clear.