Archive for May, 2008

Remembering Those Who Perished

Tuesday, May 27th, 2008

Yesterday was Memorial Day, a day for remembering the proud men and women who selflessly risked (and gave) their lives for their great nation. At least, this is the official story of what this day is about. But even though Memorial Day was established by the State only to reinforce the myth of its greatness and how it is really just “us” – and that we should therefore sacrifice everything for it - there is reason to “celebrate” this day.

It actually makes sense even for an anti-government libertarian to celebrate Memorial Day. It is a day for remembering all the pointless wars fought by the State only to have people killed. These wars, like any war no matter if they were directed against “our own” or people from far away places, served their purpose: they caused destruction, suffering, and death. As a libertarian, I mourn the people who were enslaved by the State and their lives sacrificed for the “glory” of it. They died in vain, literally pushed to their deaths, and their deaths are nothing but proofs of the brutal and literally anti-life nature of the State.

From this libertarian position, however, I also feel a need to make a distinction between soldiers. It should be obvious that there are two distinctly different kinds of people who are enlisted for State-sanctioned murder: there are those who do not have a choice, who are forcefully and brutally enslaved – “drafted” – and cannot escape their being “hired” murderers no matter how desperately they want to. And there is also the kind that voluntarily sign up to “pay their dues” and “do the right thing” for “their country.”

I mourn the former and dedicate Memorial Day to these people – no matter their nationality, ethnicity, class, gender, or whatever – who were ruthlessly sent to their deaths by an untouchable class of political “leaders” who cared not for them, their lives, or their struggles. All wars have been waged for petty reasons; in each and every case a war has been fought to further the power of the ruling class (domestically or internationally), or for the prestige or the “need” for the “leaders” to “save face.” The wars have never been fought because they were necessary; the necessity of war is and has always been a lie, part of the propaganda the populations have been force-fed by their rulers in order to accept death in an inhumane struggle to see other people dead.

I do not mourn the latter, who have chosen to enlist according to the myth of the glory of the State that they have chosen to believe. There is no doubt in my mind that many of these young men and women who willingly put on the uniform and pull the trigger think they are doing the right thing, and there is also no doubt in my mind that many of them think so in utter ignorance. They are, indeed, victims of hundreds of years of government propaganda, of false and empty statements of honor and glory and freedom often repeated by close friends and relatives. How honorable and glorious and free are they not now that they have died in foreign lands while pursuing their quest to kill fellow human beings and destroy the results of human creation?

I do, however, mourn the fact that so many so willingly and eagerly choose to be killers with the State’s sanction. These soldiers are victims too, victims of their own ignorance and the social pressure of their gullible peers, friends and family. These were people who were falsely advised to take employment as murderers for the State thinking it is a glorious career, despite the fact that all people doing exactly so throughout history for losing States have always been condemned as nothing but murderers.

Only murderers on the winning “team” will see their horrible deeds forgiven and even hailed by the deceived and defrauded masses. This is a truth that we are taught in history books if we choose to think rather than just be fed opinions – the loser-killers were always to be loathed villains while the winner-killers would be celebrated heroes. Only ignorance can make you see the latter but not the former; only ignorance can make you believe you will be celebrated and not loathed.

I think about these willing murderers in a way that is very different from how I mourn their drafted colleagues; I pity them because they died for nothing, believing nothing was everything. They chose to believe in and live a lie, while the facts were readily at hand; they chose falsehood before righteousness, justice, and peace.

Memorial Day is a day for remembrance of the horrors of the State and the people executing its orders. It is a day to remember the millions who died for nothing, either ruthlessly enslaved or lured by the State to carry out its horrible deeds. This is a day to remember that the ruling class never have and never will care about the people, and that they consider us all as pawns in a game for power. They are never willing risk their lives or even their properties, but they eagerly send thousands, if not millions, of other people to their deaths only to better their reputation or reestablish the myth of glory for the leaders of the State.

This day is a day to remember those who perished under the yoke of the State and those who so eagerly sent so many to their deaths. Memorial Day should be celebrated to remember the ruthlessness of our rulers, be they claimed to be appointed by god, the people, or themselves.

Bigger is Better…?

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

It seems people generally consider strength as highly correlated with size. Big corporations are much more powerful than small firms or individual entrepreneurs, small states are “at the mercy” of bigger states, big people are more terrifying than small. Yet the wisdom of the ancient giants in structured thinking talk of size and strength as very different, even the Bible show how the “small” David beat the living hell out of the monstrous giant Goliath.

The instinct that size equals strength lives on, however, and seems to be something that we need to learn how to live with. But with size comes a large number of problems – there is a reason the dinosaurs, the giants who ruled the earth some 70 million years ago, died out, just like it is rather unsurprising that insects are generally thought of by experts as the most successful type of species. It would not be totally surprising if future theories of how the dinosaurs became extinct show how they were simply too big – how there simply wasn’t enough space, food, etc. for all of these giants.

The same goes for organizations. Extremely big organizations struggle with problems that almost cannot be solved – collective action and organizing problems, surveillance, control, and overhead costs, etc. A large organization is generally much more vulnerable than a small organization. Just like the case of dinosaurs, a large organization is difficult to change – it is simply too rigid, too inflexible, and too heavy for its own good. Small organizations have no problem, or at least very small problems, totally changing its purpose and internal processes – small firms can easily adapt to quickly changing environments or even move to new markets completely; large firms generally do not have this luxury.

But it is not only levels of flexibility and rigidity that differ between small and large organizations. Small organizations/firms can utilize individual employees creativity and strengths and thereby keep innovate and change, while large organizations usually have very fixed and specific job descriptions and do not encourage (in reality, even though they often do pay lip service) creativity and change – such things are “threats” to “how things are done.” The large corporation is not about production but about calculation – the production process is faceless and anonymous, just like the corporation’s employees. Any worker is but a part of the machinery and can easily be replaced, at least in theory.

Ludwig von Mises wrote about the problem of large-scale attempts to control people and streamline processes, even though the argument was mainly targeting socialism (as it existed behind the “iron curtain”). It is however equally applicable on any kind of large-scale, control-based type of organization, therefore also on the corporation and any other kind of large body of collective action.

According to the calculation problem and the examples given above, we should be able to conclude that small firms, just like any type of small organizations, are more likely to successfully survive than larger firms or organizations. Large corporations are destined to starve or suffocate due to their own size – they will not be able to keep up the change and innovativeness required in a market.

And this would definitely be the case unless large corporations were so heavily subsidized by the state. For instance, Sweden’s large corporations (LM Ericsson, SKF, ABB, Volvo…) usually pay zero taxes and are paid directly by the Swedish state to stay in the country. One would think such a great deal – paying no taxes but getting more benefits than taxpayers – should mean these corporations are highly successful and profitable. And they are, but only periodically – never over long time periods.

Back to the dualism of small-large. It should be noted that the news media often report on large industrial corporations “in trouble” that require government bail-outs to survive; we very seldom (has it ever happened?) hear about small firms having the same problem, or a whole market being wiped out as market conditions change. Part of the reason is that small firms that are unable to stay innovative and meet market demands may disappear from the face of the earth, but the impact of it is at best very small. A large corporation always has an enormous bureaucratic machinery with hundreds if not thousands of people pushing papers with the sole purpose of controlling the corporation’s production process. The impact of a large corporation going bankrupt is therefore greater and more visible.

But the problem here is not that firms go bankrupt – this has been the case since the very first firm was founded hundreds (thousands?) of years ago. The problem is that the regulated market is biased towards big, where the ignorant notion of “big is better” has been built into coercive policies of government – companies aiming to be big are much more interesting to the state than companies aiming to survive and stay innovative.

The reason for this is that the state is the greatest example of the calculation problem – it is a monstrously large bureaucracy trying to “fix” problems (which are usually caused by its very presence or previous policies) through increased control. The state requires the market to be static and oligopolist – it is much easier controlled if it is. A nightmare for political rule would be a true market, i.e. a market consisting of a large number of small firms constantly and continuously taking advantage of creativity, innovation, and using change as a tool to get better and provide better services. Such a market is literally impossible to control, foresee, and calculate.

If the state would step aside we would see the market change rapidly – the large corporations would almost immediately start falling apart and either disappear or implement highly decentralized organizational forms with rather sovereign organizational units. Without the privileges granted corporations by the state they would find themselves in an impossible situation – their costs would be too high, their production processes too rigid and slow, their overhead costs way too large. A freed market would be the end for the large, bureaucratic corporation – only a limited few might be able to survive, but it is unlikely that they would be able to survive for long.

David would not have been able to beat Goliath if the state tied his hands while injecting Goliath with energy. This is exactly what is going on in the market today, where regulations are supporting large corporations working as economic states with departments, policies, and bureaucracies. In a sense, the state recognizes its organizational brothers. But just like David was able to beat Goliath through using creativity and flexibility rather than brute force and reliance on size, the market rewards innovation and ingenuity if left untainted and alone.

Bigger is neither better nor stronger. Something big is much more likely to get stuck and is usually too big to find and take advantage of the multitude of opportunities. And if something goes wrong with something large, it has enormous impact. The fact is, smaller is superior.

The Name, Not the Act

Monday, May 12th, 2008

Psychology and “average Joe philosophy” is quite frustrating while at the same time interesting and, to say the least, bewildering. We all have thoughts and convictions that we take for granted are true, and we often react emotionally and with great certainty even though a fraction of a second’s rational thought would prove our reaction dead wrong. Yet a lot of people, if not all, have knee-jerk reactions that are in no way based in rational thought, logic, or even facts. They are nothing but reactions, which seem to hover without being attached to anything of value, floating through space yet being constantly at your service when you need them.

Such a reaction is the terrible yet very common reaction to police brutality. Most people, in this age of dependent – rather than independent – thought, react when they see someone ruthlessly attacked by another person. Even if we do not intervene, we react emotionally internally – we feel disgust, perhaps hatred. Yet this feeling is often dependent on who the perpetrator is. If a person with a badge, let’s call him or her a “police officer,” would ruthlessly attack a stranger most of us would not react.

If a neighbor gets his door broken down and his belongings stolen by someone we feel sorry for him and do what we can to help this poor neighbor. And if we get to see who did it we might react violently. This is not the case if people dressed in fancy militaristic uniforms (costumes?) carrying a badge – they may break into our neighbor’s house, steal his belongings and drag him out in his underwear with arms tied behind his back.

In this situation, the only difference to some other thug attacking someone you know being a badge and a label, how do most people react – “I wonder what he did?”

You might react emotionally to this statement, thinking I’m unfair – and I believe most people reading this blog post would react the same way. You instinctively think it is illegitimate and unfair to compare police officers to any thug breaking down your neighbor’s door in the middle of the night. But why do you react like that? I haven’t said anything to make you believe the situation is different; on the contrary, I’ve described the very same situation and the very same sort of crime. The only difference is who did it.

I claim the action itself, the situation, is what should be morally valued, not “who” did it. Killing a person is wrong no matter who does it, unless perhaps in self-defense, just like stealing is wrong no matter who does it. Or would you say some people have the right to kill, some have the right to steal – while others do not?

I believe you do – I think you condemn some people for carrying out certain actions while you praise others for doing the very same things. I would even be willing to claim most people have come to morally judge people not depending on what they do but depending on who they are. And this is the reason we’re in this unbelievable mess.

Let’s exemplify this thesis, using the same examples as above. Killing and stealing are illegitimate, morally despicable acts – they are simply wrong . Do you agree? I think you do. Then we should morally condemn anyone who kills and steals not depending on who does it, but depending on the act itself and the situation in which the act was carried out. We might have understanding for someone being directly attacked and in desperation and fear for his own life kills the attacker. He is still liable for the act of killing, but his crime was a necessity so we might be willing to let him go – or at least not judge him as hard as if he was the attacker.

The same goes for stealing, where we would consider theft a bad act no matter the situation. We would perhaps be willing to think it okay for someone to “steal back” that which had already been stolen from him. Some would even consider it “okay” for someone starving to steal food or shelter – because of the need in a desperate situation. Along the same lines we would probably be outraged if someone in the middle class would steal from people in the neighborhood, perhaps even more so if it was a rich person.

What if it was systematic theft going on on a day-by-day basis by the richest body of organized crime there is? We would be so mad we wouldn’t be able to sit down. Unless we called that organization a “State.” The same is true for killings – we don’t judge people killing in the name of government the same way we judge others. Some would even go so far as to say people working for the government have a “Right” to kill.

Consider again the thug, or perhaps a gang of thugs, breaking down your neighbor’s door in the middle of the night. They sneak up on your neighbor’s house and smash the door, running in shouting and with guns in their hands. Your neighbor wakes up terrified, reaches for whatever means of protection he has in his bedroom and uses it on the first one to enter the door. The thugs shoot back and literally fill the walls with lead. There isn’t much left of your neighbor.

This would be a terrible crime.

Now imagine the thugs were a lot faster and were able to break into his bedroom and tie him up before he could stop them. He was only able to hurt a couple of them, but didn’t kill anyone. The thugs carry him out in his underwear to their truck and tell all neighbors showing up that there’s “nothing to see” and that there is no need to worry. All they will do is take this neighbor with them and lock him up at their house – they promise he will get “fair” treatment, but since he harmed a couple of them he must be severely punished.

Unfair?

I would say it is. But this is a story that has happened a number of times the last few years in the United States, and every time the neighbors have reacted by thinking their neighbor must have done something wrong and that he “had it coming.” The reason? The thugs were waving badges and calling themselves “police officers.”

The automatic reaction of the neighbors were not “Oh my God! What are they doing!”, which would supposedly be the “normal” reaction, but “I wonder what he did.” The neighbor is not innocent until proven guilty, but rather immediately judged and forgot – by people who have known the person for years. All because the thugs carrying out the break-in were licensed by the State and therefore labeled “police officers.”

In many of these recent cases, which are all available on e.g. YouTube and in the blogosphere, there has been no reason whatsoever for the “police” to storm that specific house. In some of the cases, they have simply misunderstood the address; in others, they had received information from someone saying the person living in the house was committing a crime. In most cases, they suspected the person for having drugs such as marijuana – which obviously is enough reason to break down the door in the middle of the night and attack someone sleeping peacefully in his own bed.

Now you probably wonder what happened to the people involved? In most cases, the person being attacked by the “police” was charged with assaulting police officers, since they were hurt by the person trying to protect himself. The police officers were almost to 100% freed of all charges if they were at all investigated. The only thing we can learn from stories such as these is that the police can do no wrong, not even if they attack you in the middle of the night in your own home without any reason to do so, whereas you are in deep trouble if you try to defend yourself. Next time you are the victim of a burglar (or police officer), make sure to passively accept whatever is coming your way.

Now, this may seem unfair to the “poor” police officers attacking defenseless people in the middle of the night. But this is not an attack on the police or even on any individual police officer. This is an attack on you. The reason these things happen and will go on happening is because people like you react just like you do: when someone is brutally attacked you react in defense of the victim – unless the perpetrator is wearing a uniform.

Murder is wrong and both of us would probably be scared to death seeing a killer on our street, but you would cheer and feel pride if the killer was wearing the State’s uniform. I would not. Assault is wrong and we would be terrified if a gang of thugs would attack us or someone we love or hold dear, and we would take sides with the victim – but you would most likely choose to see the perpetrators as victims if they are wearing uniforms.

What is it with a uniform that makes a vice a virtue? Let me tell you a secret: there is nothing with a uniform that gives you the right to kill, pillage, destroy, and attack. The villain here is not only the person committing the crime – i.e., carrying out the attack – but to a great degree you. You are the problem with this world, for as long as you react not to the crime but what the perpetrator is wearing there is no hope for this world.

As I said, I’m not writing this as an attack on police officers even though they definitely are to blame for a lot of wrongs. This is about you, your crimes, and how your corrupt morality is destroying this world. You are an accomplice to murder, rape, and theft – unless you rethink your morality.