Barbara's message wrote:Hogeye - Taxes are the income of government - whose services you are so accustomed to using you forget who provides them. Just for starters, money itself - the medium of exchange that allows you to purchase your needs with the fruits of your labor - without having to go to each producer and barter however much they need of whatever you do to receive whatever you and they consider to be an equivalent amount of whatever they produce. Official measurements - which means when you acquire a pound of apples from producer A, it will be the same amount as if you acquired a pound of apples from producer B. Rules of interstate commerce - which, among many other things, means you and your goods won't be taxed just for crossing a state border. And, while I don't approve of the current size, nor what we are currently doing with the military (and I truly don't approve of the size of the military budget, nor the uses the money is being put to), to maintain our sovreignty, we need a military presence - otherwise while you wouldn't have to worry about taxation or regulation from the U.S. government, you would have taxation and regulations from some other government (probably Canada - or more likely, the northern states would come under Canada and the southern states, including AR, would be Mexican).
So how, besides taxes, are you going to pay for these, and many more services the government provides that you apparently think come from the good fairies?
Yes. There are two ways to get income: 1) production/gift/exchange, the economic means, and 2) plunder, the political means. The State, unlike everybody else but private criminals, uses the political means. Franz Oppenheimer defined the State as "the organization of the political means."Barbara wrote:Taxes are the income of government...
The point is that, to the extent I'm taxed, I pay for them whether I want them or use them or not, without my consent. And whether I'm taxed or not, I suffer from the inefficiencies of govt monopolies and the dangers of the govt beast, from imprisonment by drug nazis to foreign terrorists the government has created.Barbara wrote:... whose services you are so accustomed to using you forget who provides them.
Money preceeds government. Money is simply the most liquid commodity. It can be anything from salt to shells, but most cultures settle on gold or silver. Government from the beginning has debased money. Early kings would get their "seigniorage" by clipping, underweighing, or adulterating coins with base metal. In modern times, governments use fiat money so they can inflate at will, with no need for backing. Of course, history indicates that fiat currencies are unsustainable - basically a Ponzi scheme. Here's an informative PDF: History of Money and Banking in the USBarbara wrote:Just for starters, money itself - the medium of exchange that allows you to purchase your needs with the fruits of your labor...
You're kidding, right? Most systems of measurement came about through social interaction, invisible hand processes, the same processes that give us language, art, science, and so on. These emergent orders evolve without decrees from rulers and State planning.Barbara wrote:Official measurements - which means when you acquire a pound of apples...
Yes, that's a great example of voluntary alternatives to statism. The rules of commerce were developed from Law Merchant - a private legal system used by merchants in the sailing ship days. Another non-statist legal system was Anglo-Saxon common law. Then there's Celtic Ireland, the Thing system of Iceland, and the stateless law of the Not-so-wild American West.Barbara wrote:Rules of interstate commerce...
Yes, I look forward to a free market, without States engaging in protectionism and economic nationalism.Barbara wrote:You and your goods won't be taxed just for crossing a state border.
Good question. All the valid services currently provided by the State should instead be provided voluntarily, i.e. on a free market. Let's look at the services you brought up.Barbara wrote: So how, besides taxes, are you going to pay for these, and many more services the government provides
Money - There are many private currencies nowadays, thanks to strong cryptography. E-gold is the most popular digital currency, but there are many competitors. For local meatspace use, there is Liberty Dollar, as well as many labor-based local currencies like Ithaca Dollars, BREAD (Berkeley bucks) and LETS systems. Even airline travel miles are a form of private currency. Finally, there are silver rounds - privately minted silver coins - the poor man's hedge againt dollar-inflation.
Official measurements As noted, this is really a matter of customary practice, and sorts itself out pretty well. Probably for a lot of things, scientific and professionaly organizations would declare standards, rather than a government agency. Which to some degree is what happens already. We just skip the government blessing the result part. In other cases, the market settles it, as it does for digital media formats. It didn't take a govt order to have a standard CD or DVD format.
Rules of Interstate Commerce - Historically, States have been the major impediment to freedom of trade. Without States, I see highways between peoples flowing with goods, unimpeded by immigration nazis and customs agents stealing goods, preventing transport, demanding tolls, taxes and duties. Instead, the road companies would probably inspect enough to ensure their roads were relatively safe. An anarcho-capitalist society would leave commerce to the people who do it. Most decisions would probably be made by airline, train, and trucking firm owners, on the basis of what their customers wanted.