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ft.com

9 points by antr 4 years ago · 21 comments

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Comevius 4 years ago

It's 500 people on a tiny island demonstrating that 500 people don't need a government to function as a community. They say they can just make agreements between themselves, which is the purpose of the government, to solve that problem at scale. If one of them needs help I'm sure the rest of them would try to help, which is what wellfare is when millions of people are involved.

I'm guessing that if I go there and start a business dumping waste on the island (which would be very profitable for me, it is increasingly costly to get rid of waste in most countries because of the stringent regulations) the people there would have to learn what taxes and regulations are for.

  • homonculus1 4 years ago

    If you piss off 500 people on an island with no police force I suspect YOU are going to learn how informal governance works!

  • s1artibartfast 4 years ago

    Anarcocapitalist and Libertarian frameworks can still have methods of dealing with such problems. At best they have laws, contracts, and private police and you would be sued. At worst, they might shoot you.

    • Comevius 4 years ago

      I have a feeling that my waste dumping company would have a better chance at owning that private police, and the people making the laws. And the media. There would be many ways to distract and exploit the people. Creating uncertainty and a conspiratory political culture would capture most by offering a simplified, stabilized world and a sense of community.

      Exploiting distrustful people is the biggest industry there ever was unfortunately, including causing them to become distrustful, uncertain, isolated. It's how terrorists are made. It's how voters who vote for political extremism are made.

      Ironically all of this would only work at scale, 500 people on a tiny island would be harder to control, I'm guessing due to their closeness, or quality of their interactions. You could play them against other communities, but not against each other. We have a lot of brain stuff to ensure the viability of small communities. It's all built-in, taken care of. The problems only start at scale, when everyone is isolated. You have to be inventive at scale.

      • s1artibartfast 4 years ago

        The media and public sentiment shouldn't have anything to do with it.

        The key to all this is if you have rights to where you are dumping/storing waste.

        If you own the land and aren't damaging others, then you get to do it.

        If you dump on someone else's property, they might shoot you.

        Then entire selling point of libertarianism is that the opinions of others are irrelevant because there it minimal government power.

        • Comevius 4 years ago

          You kind of trivialized this by saying that if there is no problem there is no need for a solution. But in real life we are interdependent in non-obvious ways, and need more sophisticated solutions than shooting each other.

          The need for sophistication is obvious. Protecting your land is an easy case, but wouldn't you want to protect your future interest too and have a say in what I'm allowed to do on my own land, if that is something that could permanently damage the ecosystem in the long run. Or if I start selling unsafe, addicting products, the libertarian approach would be to let everyone decide for themselves, and subsequently fend for themselves. But isolated people are more suspectible to manipulation, and children too, everyone can be. The libertarian approach would be to leave people behind in the name of self-governance.

          The question isn't even should self-governance be our goal, the question is whether it can exist at all. It's kind of an oxymoron, because nobody can protect their rights just by themselves. Building a trust infrastructure is perhaps more important.

        • dTal 4 years ago

          >Then entire selling point of libertarianism is that the opinions of others are irrelevant

          Beautifully put. It should be on a t-shirt.

          But then, the very concept of a "right" is defined by mutual agreement. Who is to say what "rights" you do or don't have?

          • s1artibartfast 4 years ago

            You need a constitution to define rights and to stick to it.

            It is a contract and can't be whittled down or imposed on by public opinion. If own the rights to land, you can do with it what you want. If you want to put a garbage dump next to a playground, that is their problem if you aren't physically hurting them.

            Libertarians absolutely believe in laws that uphold rights, and legal precedent describing how rights interact.

            • saganus 4 years ago

              What happens when there's no immediate "physically hurting them", but instead long-term damage that is not immediately obvious?

              I ask because dumping waste could potentially be "not hurting others" in an immediate sense, but still e.g. contaminating the dump area.

  • fknorangesite 4 years ago

    See this is where that libertarian-paradise-town in New Hampshire went wrong: if you put yourself on an island, you are less likely to be overrun by bears.

  • JoeAltmaier 4 years ago

    Yeah doesn't scale.

jl2718 4 years ago

> anarchy doesn’t scale

Fair argument, but mostly a strawman against peaceful progress.

Call it “nonviolence”. Define the broad goal of civilization as eliminating coercion, and these experiments seem useful.

imtringued 4 years ago

I don't know if this works for you but if I visit the article through twitter I get past the paywall.

https://twitter.com/FT/status/1517077628712275969

kalupa 4 years ago

I feel like I know this story plot ...

ehutch79 4 years ago

Is it ironic that it's behind a paywall?

poulpy123 4 years ago

Must be nice to be a parasite

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