Feed 44
Market Anarchism for Network Mutualism on Feed 44

C4SS Feed 44 presents Grant A. Mincy‘s “Market Anarchism for Network Mutualism” read by James Tuttle and edited by Nick Ford.

The market anarchist seeks differing and competing modes of social organization. Market anarchism maintains replacing the state with a decentralized society is desirable because of the feasibility of, and the liberating principles innate to, left-wing free market economics. What better example of voluntary social organization exists than the vast networks emerging on the Internet?

Important here is the concept of information ecology. Information ecology is a system of people, practices, values and technologies in a particular environment (Nardi & O’Day 1999) or community. This idea of information ecology helps us better understand human communication systems and how information moves within them – how is information used, who needs certain types of information, who is impacted by access (or lack there of) of information and what does this mean for our communities? As communication continues its decentralized evolution in the age of the Internet more stakeholders will take active roles in community development, empowering people like never before (Mehra 2009).

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Commentary
Monopoly Privilege as “Individual Rights”

recent Pew Research study surveys 44 countries, revealing that the Chinese are even friendlier to free markets than Americans. Katie Simmons, a senior researcher at Pew, “notes that China has enacted numerous reforms to open up the country’s economy since the 1970s.” It probably shouldn’t surprise us that people living under the Communist Party of China’s rule are naturally less inclined to blame the free market for economic ills than are westerners. After all, any move in the direction of economic freedom offers potentially huge rewards to a country like China.

For the west, on the other hand, blaming “the free market” is often quite convenient. No one really seems to know what the phrase means, making it susceptible to several contradictory usages and flexible enough to subsume a wide range of economic systems. For example, the Pew survey seems to take it for granted that a free market system is simply the same thing as a capitalist system and that we should unquestioningly treat these as synonymous. But that is not at all clear. Ignoring the differences may in fact create more confusion, breaking down meaningful conversations about political economy before they even get started.

Market anarchists follow a tradition of libertarian socialism inaugurated by radicals like Josiah Warren and Benjamin Tucker, for whom capitalism was something very different from a legitimate free market. Examining the economic system of their day, they concluded that it was one fundamentally defined by monopoly. While it was passing itself off as laissez faire and paying lip service to open competition, it was actually a system that privileged the owners of capital, outlawing the most important forms of competition.

So-called “intellectual property” is one such monopoly, an anticompetitive privilege masquerading as a legitimate individual right. This month, China established a court devoted solely to intellectual property issues, ostensibly signalling its commitment to global corporate capitalism. But again, corporate capitalism is no free market, and “intellectual property” is no legitimate property right.

Patents and copyrights grant their holders a special, artificial right that no one could legitimately have — the right to dictate how all others may use their own property in perfectly peaceful and noninvasive ways. In an economy like today’s technology-driven Information Age, proponents of IP law cannot even pretend that they offer well-founded and reasonable protections to inventors.

The actual beneficiaries of IP today are giant multinationals, rich companies with proprietary business models they jealously protect from the competition from below that they so fear — true inventors and innovators. Corporate powerhouses devour patents and copyrights precisely because they forcibly prevent and impede innovation and progress. “Intellectual property” work sdirectly at odds with the rationale most often given in its defense — that it incentivizes new inventions.

The largest multinational companies sit on thousands of patents, holding the ideas they protect out of use, trolling to prevent others from using them and cutting in on their margins. IP does nothing so well as it protects corporate monopoly. To call such a monopoly system a “free market” is a bad joke.

Monopolists love the language of free enterprise, innovation, and competition. And why shouldn’t they? It sanctifies and legitimates their unearned and unjustified wealth and position within society. But the rest of us don’t have to accept their deceptive narrative, their claim to represent individual rights and freedom. Likewise, we needn’t accept coercive privileges like “intellectual property” as the embodiment of those principles.

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Support C4SS with Murray Rothbard’s “School Sucks”

C4SS has teamed up with the Distro of the Libertarian Left. The Distro produces and distribute zines and booklets on anarchism, market anarchist theory, counter-economics, and other movements for liberation. For every copy of Murray Rothbard‘s “School Sucks” that you purchase through the Distro, C4SS will receive a percentage. Support C4SS with Murray Rothbard‘s “School Sucks“.

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“SCHOOL SUCKS” was originally published as “Education,” Ch. 7 of Murray Rothbard’s For A New Liberty: The Libertarian Manifesto (1973), first published by Collier Macmillan, and later reprinted by Fox & Wilkes and the Ludwig von Mises Institute.

“Until the last few years there were few institutions in America that were held more sacred than the public school. The entire mass of the population has thus been coerced by the government into spending the most im­press­ion­able years of their lives in public institutions. What inst­i­tu­t­ion is more evidently a vast system of incarceration? The nation’s public schools are a vast prison system for the nation’s youth, dra­gooning countless millions of unwilling and unadaptable child­ren into the schooling structure. Why should we not expect vast unhappiness, discontent, alien­ation, and rebellion on the part of the nation’s youth?

“Acrucial fallacy of middle-class school wor­ship­pers is confusion between formal schooling and edu­cation in general. Education is a lifelong process of learn­ing, and learning takes place not only in school, but in all areas of life. Formal schooling is only a small part of the edu­cational process. . . .

“The libertarian prescription for our educational mess can be summed up simply: Get the government out of the educational process. The government has attempted to indoctrinate and mould the nation’s youth through the school system, and to mould the future leaders through operation and control of higher education. Abolition of compulsory attendance laws would end the schools’ role as prison cust­o­d­ians of the na­tion’s youth, and would free all those better off outside the schools for inde­pendence. The miasma of government, of moulding the youth of Amer­ica in the direction desired by the State, would be replaced by freely chosen and voluntary actions — by a genuine and truly free education, both in and out of formal schools. . . .”

Murray N. Rothbard (1926-1995) was an incredibly influential economist who helped to revitalize the tradition of Individualist Anarchism and is today commonly held as the founding father of Anarcho-“Capitalism.”

Stigmergy - C4SS Blog, The Weekly Abolitionist
The Weekly Abolitionist: Prisons and the Myth of Democratic Legitimacy

It’s election day in the USA. The mass incarceration nation is deciding which political opportunists will rule. On the state and local level, citizens are casting their votes on ballot initiatives that will determine the structure, specifics, or application of state coercion. Some of these ballot initiatives probably deserve support from prison abolitionists, specifically initiatives to reign in the disastrous war on drugs. Other initiatives create new prohibitions and restrictions on human liberty, and ought to be opposed.

But I think it’s worth looking beyond ballot initiatives and the particulars of this election cycle, and instead examining how elections intersect with the prison state. One obvious intersection is felon disenfranchisement. According to the Sentencing Project, “an estimated 5.85 million Americans are denied the right to vote because of laws that prohibit voting by people with felony convictions.” There are major racial disparities in this disenfranchisement, “resulting in 1 of every 13 African Americans unable to vote.” These disparities are exacerbated by what the Prison Policy Initiative calls prison-based gerrymandering. In many states, prisoners are counted on the census not for the communities or regions they have been forcibly taken from, but for the community in which the prison is located. This dilutes the voting power of black communities and other communities torn apart by mass incarceration. Moreover, it increases the voting power of communities that receive concentrated economic benefits from prisons, such as communities where prison guards live.

The result is that those most directly harmed by the state have no vote on how it is operated. Those who spend their lives not interacting in the voluntary sphere of communities and markets but under the constant power of the state’s prison guards get no vote regarding the government that controls the prisons. Those who have had their friends, family, and community members taken from them and locked in cages have their voting power diluted through prison based gerrymandering. And when prisoners are released, they typically remain disenfranchised. While the violence of the law has taken years of their life from them, and licensing laws restrict them from entering many professions based on their criminal records, they have no vote on the government that forcefully impacts their life. Clearly, the government does not operate with the consent of those who are most brutally governed by it.

My friend Ørn Hansen points out that this ought to seriously undermine arguments about every American having a duty to vote, writing:

Before you call people out for not voting or you call people stupid or worthless or privileged for not voting, remember that some of us people are legally prohibited from voting because of legal issues. Your system is a sham and cuts out a large portion of people from it because they have been convicted of certain crimes or because they don’t have certain forms of ID. Maybe that’s why we don’t trust your system: because they don’t want to hear from us.

The system excludes people from participating in its elections, and then the system’s sycophantic lapdogs blame and shame them for not participating in the state’s grotesque decision making rituals. Of course, it’s worth noting that even if everyone ruled by the U.S. government were permitted to vote, there would be no duty to vote, as Jason Brennan explains.

Just as mass incarceration impacts how electoral processes work, electoral processes have played a key role in the rise of mass incarceration. As the federal government gained control over sentencing policy and other criminal justice issues, crime became a key election issue. According to the National Research Council,  “The two parties embarked on periodic “bidding wars” to ratchet up penalties for drugs and other offenses. Wresting control of the crime issue became a central tenet of up-and-coming leaders of the Democratic Party represented by the center-right Democratic Leadership Council, most notably “New Democrat” Bill Clinton.”  These frenzies of punitive power tend to reach a boiling point in the lead up to elections. The National Research Council’s report notes that “the U.S. House and U.S. Senate have been far more likely to enact stiffer mandatory minimum sentence legislation in the weeks prior to an election. Because of the nation’s system of frequent legislative elections, dispersed governmental powers, and election of judges and prosecutors, policy makers tend to be susceptible to public alarms about crime and drugs and vulnerable to pressures from the public and political opponents to quickly enact tough legislation.”  Electoral politics likewise tends to make prosecutors and judges behave in more punitive ways. “In the United States, most prosecutors are elected, as are most judges (except those who are nominated through a political process). Therefore, they are typically mindful of the political environment in which they function. Judges in competitive electoral environments in the United States tend to mete out harsher sentences.”

So democratic participation in elections in a sense gave us mass incarceration, a policy that has disenfranchised and excluded many from participating in electoral democracy. Yet this disenfranchisement is one of the least destructive impacts of  mass incarceration. Rape, torture, murder, the caging and abuse of children, forcible denial of basic health care, the rich and well-connected stealing from the poor, and countless other atrocities mark the true costs of the carceral state. No election, no public opinion poll, no amount of political participation can make this just or acceptable. Even if all the prisoners and their families were given full voting rights, Lysander Spooner‘s words would ring true: “A man is none the less a slave because he is allowed to choose a new master once in a term of years. Neither are a people any the less slaves because permitted periodically to choose new masters. What makes them slaves is the fact that they now are, and are always hereafter to be, in the hands of men whose power over them is, and always is to be, absolute and irresponsible.”

Feature Articles
On “Economies of Scale” and Other Magical Incantations

There’s a certain kind of economic technocrat who tosses around the term “economies of scale” like a Young Earth creationist tosses around the Second Law of Thermodynamics. This is true of legacy liberalism, obviously, which is still defined by the mid-20th century mass-production paradigm of Joseph Schumpeter, John Kenneth Galbraith and Alfred Chandler. It’s also true of most Austrian economists in the tradition of Mises, who see capital-intensiveness or “round-aboutness,” as such, as the key to productivity. A recent example of this mindset — as it relates to development economics — appears in a Foreign Policy article by Daniel Altman, an NYU economics professor (“Please Do Not Teach This Woman to Fish,” June 29). The subtitle, appropriately enough, is “Why poor countries have too many entrepreneurs and not enough factory workers.”

Altman’s target is what he regards as an over-emphasis on entrepreneurship, supported by micro-finance, as a means of economic development in the Third World. The old approach, which he yearns for, was the direct one: you increase industrial employment by building factories, you increase agricultural output by giving farmers fertilizer, and you support industrial and agricultural growth by building roads and ports to get crops to the cities and export food and industrial goods. The new approach — which he attributes to “free market” advocates — is indirect. As an example, he gives British Prime Minister Cameron’s call to promote “conditions that enable open economies and open societies to thrive: the rule of law, the absence of conflict and corruption, and the presence of property rights and strong institutions.”

Just in passing, let me say that what Altman calls “free market economics,” with its lionization of the heroic “entrepreneur,” is actually a lot closer to the neoconservative parody of free markets spouted by Jack Kemp and Newt Gingrich. Any call for “property rights” that doesn’t address the issue of justice in acquisition — the fact that the overwhelming majority of arable land, oil and mineral wealth held by native elites or global corporations is stolen property — is a mockery of genuine free market principles.

And the same is true for “strong institutions” and “rule of law,” if by that is meant simply adherence to procedure — any procedure — without regard to who controls the institutions and makes the laws, and whose interests they serve. As I said a few years back,

a country characterized by what neocons call “rule of law,” with lots and lots of Weberian rationality and professionalism, can be a far more efficient plutocracy than the Latin American kind….

…[P]lutocracy, rather than being a function of the patron’s personal relations with the death squads and generals, can be built into the rules themselves.  And the more apparently “neutral” the rules and the expertise of the technocrats administering them, the more efficient the plutocracy at fleecing its victims without any unseemly bleating.

Further, for Altman to juxtapose this neoconservative pablum against the mass-production dinosaur model of our grandparents’ time, as the only available alternatives, is absolutely ludicrous.

At any rate, Altman says, this view of civil society — such as it is — dovetails with another “fad in the global development community: entrepreneurship.” And a major part of the model of entrepreneurship that assorted development aid organizations promoted was village-based small enterprise financed by micro-lending.

Altman goes on to criticize small scale economic activity — which he equates to the Kemp-Gingrich nonsense — on the basis of “economies of scale.”

How big can a business be in a rural village? There aren’t many customers there, and incomes aren’t very high either. A business would have to serve several villages to start creating jobs in any significant numbers. Now, consider rural women with families. They may be reliable repayers of loans, but they’re much less mobile than single men. Single men can move to cities, or at least cover a lot of ground in the countryside, in an effort to win new customers. By contrast, even women without children face constraints on their movements in plenty of countries.

Microfinance may have given a lot of people a little, but it was never designed to give anyone a lot. Unlike the microenterprises founded in rural villages, businesses that serve lots of customers take advantage of economies of scale in production and distribution. These economies of scale are essential for economic growth. After all, which economy is more productive — one in which every single person is an entrepreneur, or one in which a minority of entrepreneurs employ the majority of people?

Cameron’s legal and economic “reforms” (strengthened “property rights” and so forth) are an excellent idea, Altman continues — but only stripped of its excessive focus on entrepreneurship. What’s really needed is a legal and institutional climate that will open up a country to large-scale outside investment.

Eliminating corruption and strengthening property rights would be a green light for some of the world’s biggest investors, both domestic and foreign. These are the kinds of players who open massive industrial parks, agribusiness facilities, and research centers. With investments in the millions and billions of dollars, they create hundreds or thousands of jobs at a stroke.

Of course, these jobs won’t always go to the rural women helped by microfinance programs. Microfinance programs may be one of the best ways to help them, short of having their children take jobs in cities. Nor are these jobs necessarily the ones that fulfill the social goals in the mission statements of Western nonprofit organizations. But they are the kinds of jobs that brought hundreds of millions of Chinese out of poverty…. In these countries, the quickest way to escape poverty is likely to be via bus to the nearest city for a manufacturing job.

There you have it: an economy based on colonization by big-money foreign investors, dominated by giant, hierarchical, capital-intensive and high-overhead hierarchies, and focused on mass wage employment. Sounds just like The New Industrial State — or Brazil.

Altman’s unstated assumptions — and his stated ones backed by nothing save his own bare assertion — are far from the facts of nature he treats them as. Willow Brugh, whose critique of this article (“Teaching People to Fish,” willowbl00, Oct. 31) brought it to my attention, points to some of them. The first is that income is the main determinant of one’s subjective living conditions, rather than something that might — or might not — improve some aspects of those conditions. Things like agency and alienation — for example the lack of agency, and increased sense of alienation, involved in wage employment — are also real factors in whether life is good or bad.

Income is also very misleading as an indicator of well-being because a great deal of nominal income or GDP increase in the Third World reflects the forcible monetization of activities that were previously carried out — quite satisfactorily — in the informal, household or social economies. They were monetized only because 1) monetizing the social economy would make it more legible (in anarchist James Scott’s terms) to ruling elites, and thus easier to skim off the top, and 2) forcing producers into the money economy would compel them to accept wage employment and work as hard and cheap as the employing classes wanted (exactly as the Enclosures were designed to do in 18th century England).

Take a peasant family, successfully feeding itself from its share of arable land in an open field village, or subsisting off the common waste and common pasturage rights. If you expropriate those rights from them and instead compel them to become wage laborers to earn the money to pay for food on the cash nexus, their nominal income and the nominal GDP have both increased considerably. But are they better off?

Second is the assumption that hierarchy is inherently necessary, and that the economy is of necessity divided up into those who “provide jobs” and tell people what to do, and those who work at those jobs and do as they’re told.

I would add that Altman’s assumptions about “economies of scale,” in particular, are based on an understanding of industrial and technological history that’s been obsolete for decades (if it was ever valid).

Even at the height of the mass-production era, Ralph Borsodi observed that most of the alleged efficiencies of large-scale production were questionable if not spurious. That’s because the only real cost savings were in unit production cost, and were captured entirely at the factory itself. But those unit costs at the factory were only the first of many costs.

In the majority of cases, the cost savings at the point of production were more than offset by all the increased distribution costs downstream — most of them generated by the nature of mass production itself. Even before we leave the factory, we see enormous costs of bureaucratic overhead resulting from large scale, and from all the knowledge and incentive problems that authoritarian hierarchies give rise to. All the irrationalities of the Soviet centrally planned economy can be found, to some degree, in the large corporation.

But most of the increased costs result from the fact that, to achieve those “efficiencies” of unit cost of production within the factory, it’s necessary to use extremely large, expensive and specialized machinery, and then keep it running to amortize those enormous capital outlays over as many units as possible. This means that, to minimize unit production costs, production must be undertaken without regard to preexisting demand. Which means, in turn, that a very costly and inefficient distribution system must be created to guarantee that product will be consumed one way or the other. First off all, the increased scale of production requires a larger distribution area, a longer distribution chain, and greater shipping costs that offset much of the production cost savings. In addition, because the divorce of production from demand requires a batch-and-queue distribution system, there are enormous warehousing costs. And for the same reason, enormous investments must be put into high-pressure advertising, canvassing and the like.

Don’t forget, also, industrial “dumping” of surplus product overseas that can’t be sold at the cartel price, and the large military establishments and wars required to open up foreign markets to overproduced goods.

All these costs of bloated bureaucratic overhead, inventory, distribution and promotion, taken together, are usually more than enough to offset the savings from those “efficient” factories with their productive “economies of scale.”

When the offsetting distribution costs were taken into account, Borsodi said, many kinds of home production were more efficient on the whole than factory production. This was true of the total costs of growing and canning one’s own tomatoes, for instance, compared to the price of tomatoes grown on big mechanized farms and processed in canneries. Likewise, when all the costs of distribution and marketing were taken into account, an electric kitchen mill was far cheaper as a source of flour than the giant mills in Minneapolis. Not to mention, in the latter case, that the freshly ground flour contained wheat germ, whereas the shelf-life requirements of a batch-and-queue distribution system resulted in mummified, denatured flour designed for storage and transport rather than consumption. In both cases, home production was cheaper, despite the higher unit cost of the production machinery itself, because — when something was consumed at the point of production — production cost was the final cost.

But the same was true of manufacturing to a considerable extent. As Borsodi pointed out, the development of electrically powered machinery had removed much of the need for large factories. The large factory, in the age of steam and water power, had resulted from the need to conserve on power from prime movers. Because there were genuine economies of scale in steam engines, it made sense to build an entire factory around a large steam engine and then run as many machines as possible off drive shafts running from that engine. But the electric motor made it possible to build a prime mover into each separate machine, site the machine as close as feasible to the point of consumption, scale production flow to preexisting demand, and scale the machine to production flow. In other words what we today call lean, demand-pull or just-in-time.

Indeed Pyotr Kropotkin, in Fields, Factories and Workshops (available in a C4SS pdf edition, with introduction by yours truly) envisioned a future distributed economy of village manufacturing in artisan shops using electrically powered general-purpose tools. But instead of the Kropotkinian economy of agro-industrial villages we got the industrial Moloch of the 20th century — not because it was more efficient, but because the state intervened with subsidies and restraints on competition to make it artificially profitable. It’s too long to go into here, but I discuss it at length in Chapter Two of my book The Homebrew Industrial Revolution (available online here) if you want to know more.

But Galbraith’s “Industrial State,” all the state’s tipping of the scale notwithstanding, only delayed the triumph of more efficient Kropotkinian industry. The main direction of production technology these days is towards cheap, small-scale tools of an efficiency Kropotkin or Borsodi could never have imagined in their wildest dreams. A garage-size shop with $10,000 or $20,000 worth of open-source tabletop CNC machinery — cutting table, router, 3-D printer, smelting furnace, etc. — can produce most of the things a large-factory can, but on a scale geared toward the needs of a village economy. And it can do it in a local economy of worker-owned, self-managed shops. And it can do so without — unlike the technocratic Washington Consensus model Altman is so enamored of — the enormous distribution and marketing costs of a corporation, the monopoly price markups of a global corporation, the need for workers to leave their village, live in barracks and sell their souls to company management, or the requirement that the country’s economy become a neo-colonial outpost of global corporate Empire.

All the evils of the Dark Satanic Mill — the factory system and the wage system — resulted from a technological shift from individually affordable, general-purpose artisan tools to expensive specialized machinery that only the very rich could afford to buy, and hire laborers to work for them. The technological shift today is back in the opposite direction — toward cheap, high-tech artisan tools for local economies — and in the process it’s destroying the material basis for the factory system and wage system. The general-purpose computer, as an artisan tool, already bids fair to destroy corporate control of all forms of information production and replace it with peer production. The open-source hardware and micro-manufacturing revolution will do to corporate manufacturing what the computer and file-sharing have already begun doing to the music, publishing and software industries.

Although Altman’s model of development is especially horrific, both models he discusses — his industrial Moloch and the neoconservative vision of little “entrepreneurs” hustling in a cash nexus economy — are pretty bad. The fact that multilateral aid institutions and national foreign aid programs all promote some mixture of those two models just shows how irrelevant — or directly hostile — they are to the kind of genuine development that will actually enhance the lives of ordinary people. Fortunately, by the very nature of the technologies involved, the big-money finance of government foreign aid and corporate investment are becoming less and less necessary. The Kropotkinian successor economy of artisan shop manufacturing, village horticulture and commons-based peer production is ephemeral and low-overhead.

The old world of Daniel Altman, and all the corporate-state institutions and mindsets he represents, is dying. In the words of Bob Dylan, please get out of the new world if you can’t lend a hand.

Commentary
Changing the Narrative in India: What are Free Markets?

Discussing Prime Minister Narendra Modi in The Economic Times, businessman Gurcharan Das worries that “[t]oo many Indians still believe that the market makes ‘the rich richer and the poor poorer.’” Modi, Das argues, has an opportunity to “transform the master narrative around” free market reform, convincing Indians that a free market system helps ordinary Indians, not just the rich and powerful.

Das draws a connection between corruption, widespread in Indian government, and “political pricing,” highlighting the example of Coal India as a state-owned and -operated company “that is the root cause of the nation’s coal troubles.” Das rightly contrasts competition and “increased choice” for working Indians with centralized government control and the problems that arise when politicians and bureaucrats are allowed to pick the winners in the economy at large.

Das’s claim — that the free market is not the enemy of poor and working class Indians — is fundamentally correct. So why do libertarians, the free market’s champions, have such a hard time persuading underprivileged groups and labor? Central to the problem is the vague and confused rhetoric surrounding discussions of economics, imprecisions of language that most of us fall into when using phrases like “the free market” and words like “capitalism.”

Still, Das’s choice for ambassador of freedom is rather odd and inapt. The new Prime Minister’s controversial positions hardly represent the principles of liberty and tolerance.  His conservative Hindu nationalist vision has been described as a “right-wing, authoritarian corporate state,” “closer to the model in China” than to a hypothetical libertarian paradise. Modi’s conception of “free market” means more of the same corporate favoritism, including, among other things, transferring land holdings from small farmers to corporate developments, all because “Modi wants to clear the way forward for business.”

When progressives uncritically accept the myth that we already have a free market today — that unbridled freedom of competition is in fact the problem — they play right into the hands of labor’s oppressors and exploiters. Big business wants an economic environment scoured of all competition, carefully sanitized and regulated for the benefit of a favored capitalist class.

By blaming free market competition, which they mistakenly claim already exists, for today’s injustices and inequalities, progressives abet the economic ruling class by preparing the ground for still more government intervention — the source of the problem in the first place. The state has always been a class instrument at its core, a coercive tool used to monopolize resources and capture markets, strangling genuine competition. If indeed the state has ever seemed to help the poor or workers, it has only done so on the margins, after systematically incapacitating them and ruling out possibilities of self-sufficiency.

Market anarchists belong to the political left because we favor social and economic justice and criticize capitalism as a system of privilege, one that essentially licenses theft. But as advocates of individual rights and free markets, we also recognize that such a system of privilege is a far cry from the kind of free society prescribed by legitimate libertarian principles, applied consistently.

When business conservatives talk about lowering taxes and opening the way for free enterprise, we must agree with them, but only in principle. The confusion emerges because the system they defend, corporate capitalism, with its gaping chasm between a few rich and multitudes of hopelessly poor, is simply not the product of a free market — and to contend that it amounts to the claim that today’s multinational corporate giants just won fair and square.

In truth, corporate capitalism as it exists is the bastard progeny of theft and enslavement, heir to all the historical systems of class rule and subjugation that have never existed without the state. Let us at last clear up the confusion: Today’s globalized corporate capitalism is not a free market. Not even close. It has relied upon state power at every turn to feather the nests of the power elite.

For India and the rest of the world, genuine freed markets — freed, that is, from the strangling grip of a small ruling class, are the way forward. But remember, as the beneficiaries of the existing system, businessmen and politicians are of course not its true advocates.

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Support C4SS with Roy Childs’ “No Government”

C4SS has teamed up with the Distro of the Libertarian Left. The Distro produces and distribute zines and booklets on anarchism, market anarchist theory, counter-economics, and other movements for liberation. For every copy of Roy Childs‘ “No Government” that you purchase through the Distro, C4SS will receive a percentage. Support C4SS with Roy Childs‘ “No Government“.

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$1.00 for the first copy. $0.60 for every additional copy.

“IT IS MY CONTENTION THAT ‘LIMITED GOVERNMENT’ IS a floating abstraction which has never been concretized by anyone; that a limited government must either initiate force or cease being a government; that the very concept of limited government is an unsuccessful attempt to integrate two mutually contradictory elements: statism and voluntarism. Hence, if this can be shown, epistemological clarity and moral consistency demands the rejection of the institution of government totally, resulting in free market anarchism, or a purely voluntary society.

“NO ONE CAN EVADE THE FACT THAT, HISTORICALLY,the state is a bloodthirsty monster, responsible for more violence, bloodshed and hatred than any other institution known to man. Your approach to the matter is not yet radical, not yet fundamental: it is the existence of the state itself which must be challenged by the new radicals. . . . There are only two alternatives, in reality: political rule, or archy, which means: the condition of social existence wherein some men use aggression to dominate or rule another, and anarchy, which is the absence of the initiation of force, the absence of the initiation of force, the absence of political rule, the absence of the state. We shall replace the state with the free market, and men shall for the first time in their history be able to walk and live without fear. . . .”

Stigmergy - C4SS Blog, Supporter Updates
Investing in Anarchy

If left libertarians, individualist anarchists, mutualists, radical libertarians, and the like, ever needed to spontaneously order, this is the time. The Alliance of the Libertarian Left and the Center for a Stateless Society (C4SS) are seeking your help.

From November 13-16th in San Diego, California, the Libertalia Project will be hosting its annual Libertopia Festival. The weekend is aimed at creating a temporary, free community where people interested in the ideas of liberty can come together to learn, educate, network, and create. Now in its 5th year, Libertopia has become one of the biggest yearly gatherings of libertarians and anarchists.

Which is why the Alliance of the Libertarian Left (ALL), a project of the Molinari Institute, and a coalition of various left-leaning libertarians, is trying to get to Libertopia. ALL publishes books, magazines, and pamphlets, as well as op-eds syndicated to mainstream media outlets around the world, to spread the message of free markets without capitalist domination, and voluntary social order without the state.

$400 will get ALL a booth at Libertopia 2014 and give left libertarianism a voice at the festival. The opportunity to engage this year’s Libertopia attendees on the ideas of radical market anarchism and left libertarianism is priceless in the fight against statism.

In a separate, but equally important, event, C4SS, also a project of the Molinari Institute, and a left-wing market anarchist think tank is trying to become a sponsor of the 2015 International Students For Liberty Conference (ISFLC) from February 13-15 in Washington, DC. ISFLC is the year’s premier libertarian gathering, bringing together over 2000 libertarians last year alone.

Students For Liberty, and it’s annual International conference, are leading the way in the modern libertarian student movement – providing it’s hundreds of members with resources for libertarian activism and spreading the message of liberty to the thousands more in SFL’s global network. It’s no surprise, then, that C4SS is trying to sponsor this wonderful event.

C4SS utilizes academic studies, book reviews, op-eds, and social media to put left market anarchist ideas at the forefront of libertarianism and to eventually bring about a world where individuals are liberated from oppressive states, structural poverty, and social injustice. In only 8 years, C4SS has substantially grown into a successful think tank, making big waves among the modern libertarian movement, especially the students.

$500 gets C4SS sponsorship at ISFLC and each sponsor is guaranteed at least a table in the exhibit hall, 2 attendee registrations, and a listing in the program and webpage. Getting a significant market anarchist presence at the year’s biggest libertarian event is crucial to spreading these ideas and making anarchism a substantial, unafraid, and robust part of the liberty movement, instead of a timid minority.

While C4SS and ALL are barely a decade old, they have already achieved massive success with spreading left libertarian anarchist views. The market anarchist community is bigger and more vibrant than ever with our ideas spreading to other libertarians like wild fire. This fire needs to keep going and more wood needs to be piled on.

That’s where you come in.

Both the Alliance of the Libertarian Left and the Center for a Stateless Society are extremely close to affording sponsorship at Libertopia and ISFLC respectively but there is more to go. If you find these ideas worth exploring and you want a more diverse, intellectually stimulating libertarian community — whether you are a left market anarchist or you’re a conservative minarchist or you’re an anarcho-communist or anything in between — please share this post and donate if you can.

Every penny counts when we’re building the new world in the shell of the old

Fund the revolution at Libertopia!

Fund the revolution at the International Students For Liberty Conference!

Stigmergy - C4SS Blog
English Language Media Coordinator Update, October 2014

Well, I feel kind of dumb. For some reason it completely escaped my notice that a month had ended and that it was time for me to post our English language media numbers for October (I finally noticed when I went to record a new submission to newspapers and saw that I still had last month’s sitting there in the text file I use for such things.

So, here we go:

In October, I made 31,534 submissions of op-eds to 2,597 publications worldwide. That number is lower than usual — we’ve been fairly regularly topping 40,000 monthly submissions — because content creation slowed down a little this month and because more of our content was US-centric instead of stuff I could submit as relevant worldwide. I expect we’ll be back above the 40k mark this month and next.

In October, I identified 47 “pickups” of C4SS material in English language publications worldwide including “mainstream media” and select high-readership/prestigious media. We’ve been running in the neighborhood of 50 pickups per month, so this number isn’t surprising. My goal for 2015 is to get us into the 100 pickups per month range.

Some highlights:

How are we doing? Well, I mostly focus on “external media” metrics, and I try to be a stern self-taskmaster. We continue to get market anarchist material published in mass media, but I want more, more, more. What I usually don’t pay a whole lot of attention to is how well we are known and how welcome we are in the American libertarian movement. But I have a couple of data points on that to share.

In late 2013, I attended the Students For Liberty southeast US regional conference at the University of Florida in Gainesville. C4SS Senior Fellow Charles Johnson, aka Rad Geek, ran an ALL Distro table to sell left-libertarian literature. The reception was friendly, but few people seemed to know who we were or what we were about.

On October 25th of this year, Charles and I were joined at the same event by C4SS Fellow Cory Massimino. Same kind of table, same kind of literature … but this time everyone seemed to know at least a little about C4SS / left-libertarianism / market anarchism, and most people seemed interested in finding out more (anecdotally it looked to me like we had one of the busiest tables there).

Also anecdotally, the right-libertarian response to C4SS specifically and left-libertarianism / market anarchism in general seems to have greatly increased in tempo over the past year. We’re finding ourselves engaged — both in terms of agreement and positive mention on one hand and disagreement/attacks on the other — far more frequently and by more and more prominent writers.

So, I think we’re accomplishing things on a number of fronts. And I appreciate your support for our work!

Yours in liberty,
Tom Knapp
English Language Media Coordinator
Center for a Stateless Society

Feed 44
You Had One Job, UN on Feed 44

C4SS Feed 44 presents Kevin Carson‘s “You Had One Job, UN” read by Paola Delfino and edited by Nick Ford.

To paraphrase Lysander Spooner’s quip about the Constitution, either the UN was created to enable these crimes by the world’s largest and worst aggressor (in which case it is pernicious), or it has been unable to stop them (in which case it is worthless). The second alternative is damning enough. If the League of Nations is held in contempt for failing to stop Hitler, shouldn’t the UN be judged equally harshly for failing to stop the United States?

But I go with the first option. The UN was central to FDR’s and Truman’s vision of a postwar world order enforced by the United States and its allies. That postwar vision was to impose corporate rule on the world and punish any future power attempting to secede from that world order. That means the UN is evil and its stated purpose is a lie.

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Commentary
I’m Shocked — Shocked! — that the Ferguson No-Fly Zone was a Censorship Ploy

For nearly two weeks in August, the US Federal Aviation Administration imposed a “no-fly zone” over the streets of Ferguson, Missouri, where protests raged over the police shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown. The stated reason for the “no-fly zone” was that shots had been fired at a police helicopter.

Now, thanks to an Associated Press investigation, we learn that the real purpose of the airspace exclusion was to hamper media coverage of the protests. Commercial and law enforcement traffic flew unhindered over Ferguson, which lies across major flight paths into and out of Lambert-St.Louis International airport, a major hub. The helicopter shooting incident likely never happened: Per the AP account, “police officials confirmed there was no damage to their helicopter and were unable to provide an incident report on the shooting” and an FAA official described the incident as an unconfirmed rumor.

Surprised? You shouldn’t be. At every level of 21st century political government, secrecy is the watchword and disclosure comes slowly, partially and begrudgingly if at all. For US president Barack Obama’s “most transparent administration in history” in particular, every day is a Spongebob Squarepants re-run — the episode about “Opposite Day.”

A brief recap:

– Wikileaks founder Julian Assange remains imprisoned in Ecuador’s London embassy more than two years after taking refuge there to avoid extradition to Sweden, which he convincingly claims wants to extradite him to the US for punishment after he revealed embarrassing US state secrets (Assange has offered to acceded to extradition on spurious claims of sexual assault if Sweden promises not to hand him over to the US; the Swedish government refuses to so bind itself).

– Former US Army private Chelsea Manning languishes in a military prison at Fort Leavenworth under a 35-year sentence for leaking those secrets to Assange.

– Journalist and blogger Barrett Brown spent nearly two years in pre-trial detention on various trumped-up charges for his alleged role in promoting the hacktivist group Anonymous — the last year-plus under a gag order on both himself and his attorneys to keep you from hearing things the state doesn’t want you to hear.  In March of this year most of the charges were dropped. Brown faces a maximum sentence of 8 1/2 years under a plea bargain on the other charges. For talking. To you. About the government.

– Former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden is well into his second year of political asylum in Russia after exposing the NSA’s illegal domestic spying operations and fleeing to avoid becoming a political prisoner like Assange and Manning.

– Jeffrey Alexander Sterling stands charged with “espionage” for allegedly revealing details of a black-bag US intelligence scheme, “Operation Merlin,” to a reporter. That reporter, James Risen, stands threatened with jail unless he gives up Sterling (or someone else) as his source.

Yes, I could go on … but this is a newspaper column, not a book. Anyway, you get the point: “Your” governments want very badly for you to know very little about what they do.

Why? Because every detail available to you militates toward the conclusion that not only do you not need “your” governments nearly as badly as the politicians want you to believe, but that continuing to submit to those governments’ rule is a really bad idea. Time to abolish the state.

Distro of the Libertarian Left
Support C4SS with Sheldon Richman’s “Class Struggle Rightly Conceived”

C4SS has teamed up with the Distro of the Libertarian Left. The Distro produces and distribute zines and booklets on anarchism, market anarchist theory, counter-economics, and other movements for liberation. For every copy of Sheldon Richman‘s “Class Struggle Rightly Conceived” that you purchase through the Distro, C4SS will receive a percentage. Support C4SS with Sheldon Richman‘s “Class Struggle Rightly Conceived“.

class

$1.00 for the first copy. $0.60 for every additional copy.

“In light of Marx’s words, it’s worth exploring ‘the historical development of this class struggle’ as seen from the perspective of the classical liberals. At first this analysis of class may seem paradoxical. Free-market advocates have long emphasized that trade brings increasingly elaborate forms social cooperation through the division of labor and free exchange. As Ludwig von Mises pointed out, the realization that specialization and trade allow unlimited mutual benefits induces people to put aside their differences and to cooperate in the productive process. How could the classical liberals of the early nineteenth century have been interested in class struggle . . .?”

Stigmergy - C4SS Blog, Weekly Libertarian Leftist Review
The Weekly Libertarian And Chess Review 54

Nozomi Hayase discusses political prisoners.

Justin Raimondo discusses Rand Paul’s recent speech on foreign policy.

Murray Polner discusses the military draft.

Patrick Cockburn discusses the Sunni-Shiite battle in the Middle East.

Eric Margolis discusses foreign policy. His

Jacob Sullum discusses attempts to ban marijuana edibles and flavored e-cigs.

Jesse Walker discusses an interview with the North Carolina Libertarian Party Senate Candidate, Sean Haugh.

Alex Henderson discusses 9 events that led to an emerging police state.

Brandon Loran Maxwell discusses his odd libertarian journey.

Charles C. W. Cooke discusses whether black people have equal gun rights.

Maya Schenwar discusses mandatory rehab as a component of the War on Drugs.

Rory Fanning and Nick Turse discuss thanking the troops.

Henry Farrell discusses the liberal defenders of the national security state.

Laurence M. Vance discusses individualism and foreign policy.

Sheldon Richman discusses the IRS and income tax.

Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair discus racism as government policy.

Julian Adorney discusses the many types of taxation on the poor.

Cesar Chelala discusses human rights and democracy.

Nick Coughlin discusses the left-right paradigm.

Doug Bandow discusses the neocon moment.

Ivan Eland discusses remote threats.

Chris Floyd discusses the moral blindness of leading liberals.

David Swanson discusses the use of depleted uranium.

Carmelo Ruiz-Marrero discusses the CIA, the Contras, and drugs.

John Chuckman discusses terror.

Anthony Gregory discusses libertarian class analysis.

Jacob G. Hornberger discusses the national security state’s partnership with unsavory folks.

Richard M. Ebeling discusses Israel Kirzner.

Magnus Carlsen beats Maxime Vachier-Lagrave.

Magnus Carlsen defeats Alexander Riazantsev.

Feature Articles
On the Horizon: Quiescence and the Production of Uncertainty

New research, published in the prestigious Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, reveals that a large fallout plume of oil from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico is deposited on the seafloor. This is a significant finding because this 2-million barrels worth of oil was originally thought to be trapped in the deep-sea. We now know that the crude settled across a 1,250 square mile patch of rare habitat around the spot of the blow-out. Furthermore, the study notes the oil is concentrated in the top half-inch of the seafloor and is incredibly patchy. Research suggest this discovery marks anywhere between 4 to 31 percent of the oil lost from the Macondo well. The rest of the oil is likely deposited elsewhere, avoiding detection because of its patchy nature.

There is much discussion over the environmental implications of the BP disaster. Rightly so, the blowout holds rank among the worst industrial disasters in environmental history. However, there is little discussion on how such disasters, all across the globe, continue to occur. In the wake of such disasters, there appears to be a rift between the state and big capital. The public often looks to regulators for habitat protection, biodiversity conservation and to levy punishment on the corporate sector. Industrial disasters do create conflict between these institutions, but it is latent. The state-corporate apparatus has ensured big industry will maintain a lock on the energy market. Because of this, the national economy is dependent on large corporate institutions and the conflict is short-lived. The real story is how big capital and state power produce quiescence and uncertainty within the public arena during and after disasters.

What happened in the Gulf is another unfortunate portrayal of glaring inequality. Most coastal communities in the deep south, especially in Louisiana, exhibit a domination of an elite over the non-elite. Local markets are dependent on healthy coastal ecosystems for resource (fisheries) harvesting and beneficial ecosystem services such as flood mitigation, water purification, storm buffering and more. Big oil maintains a strong presence in coastal communities as well, however, creating numerous problems for locals. From “Cancer Alley” to coastal erosion via dredging, big oil wrecks local economies.

So where’s the rebellion? Why is it that such social deprivation and threats to public/environmental health have failed to yield democratic participation? Perhaps it is the existence of a positive feedback loop between power, capital and quiescence.

Quiescence is often used to portray the legitimacy of systems of power and domination. The state seeks social and economic stability and utilizes power to ensure such stability. Because of this, systems of power and domination are maintained not because of their legitimacy, but because of quiescence itself. This is the very nature of power: Maintain the existing order by further centralization. Sociologist John Gaventa, in his book Power and Powerlessness, discusses this phenomenon:

Power is exercised not just upon participants within the decision-making process but also towards the exclusion of certain participants and issues altogether… The most effective and insidious use of power is to prevent such conflict from arising in the first place.

In regards to natural disasters, the prevention of conflict is achieved by the production of uncertainty. This is important, because it is in discourse over ones own socio-economic environment that the true character of a power system is revealed. Anthropologist and disaster expert Gregory Button, in his book Disaster Culture, notes we live in a highly professionalized culture where public debate is pushed aside by privileged arguments. Button writes:

Lay questions, objections and attempts to resolve uncertainty are often dismissed as uninformed, lacking in scientific vigor, irrational, and at times, almost hysteric. One woman whose life had been changed by the TVA ash spill recalled an exchange with a TVA official who avoided answering her questions and dismissed her reasoning. In response, she said, “Why do you treat us as stupid, why do you reject our arguments while upholding yours as the only reasonable ones?” This frustration typifies the kind of rejection and frustration many disaster victims suffer in contesting official versions of reality.

The tools of uncertainty manufacture consent. From disasters such as the TVA ash spill, the BP Horizon incident, or any industrial disaster, the public arena is dismissed while government/industry scientists, state agencies and the corporate sector dominate the discussion. This allows systems of power and domination, as explained by Button, to both define and control the distribution and interpretation of knowledge, while community members are made to feel as if they are arbitrators of uncertainty. Furthermore, Sociologist Max Weber notes that power systems wish to increase the superiority of the professionally informed by keeping knowledge and intention a secret. This allows the elite to hide knowledge and keep their actions protected from criticism. The control of the discussion governs what is understood about disasters — manufactured uncertainty produces quiescence.

As for the BP Horizon blowout, the facts and uncertainties surrounding the disaster reflect these methods. The actual size of the spill is still unknown and until the PNAS publication we did not know the fate of the sequestered crude. The ecological impact of the spill, especially on rare species, such as migratory sea turtles, is now extended to the ocean dwelling habitat. If public discourse of the study ensues, however, some BP spokesperson will talk about how large spills like this are uncommon or pull out the big guns and call the spill “unprecedented.” There will be an ad campaign managed by BP that will discuss all the money and all the good they have done in the wake of the spill. The Environmental Protection Agency will boast a record of strict oversight. Even though the oil was thought to be in the deep ocean, the public will be ensured, by both state and corporate bureaucrats, that environmental contamination will be mitigated and public health will be protected. The same old song and dance that has occurred for the last four years, even though locals have continuously raised concerns over the official narrative. Of course, all of this ignores that oil spills are a very common occurrence and each raise public and environmental health concerns in their own right. Nevertheless, quiescence will remain because of the production of uncertainty.

There is much discussion in political circles, libertarian and otherwise, over the rise of freed markets and alternatives to fossil fuels. These are good discussions to have, and they are important to thrust into the public arena. It is important to keep the market as liberated as possible — this allows new technology and alternative institutions to develop. It is important to remember that recent shifts to adaptive governance and collaborative models for resource use/extraction are an option for local communities. There is much to be said about decentralization these days, and this is a good thing. It reminds us that social power is still in the fight, chipping away at systems of power and domination. It is equally important to know how entrenched authority manufactures consent and works to suppress social progress. On the road to the decentralized society we must understand power and its hurdles to transition.

Social power is the rebellion: it will lead to the end of uncertainty and thus the end of quiescence.

Books and Reviews
Introduction to the Portuguese Version of Iron Fist

The publication of “Iron Fist” in late 2001 was a milestone for me. Larry Gambone’s decision to publish it as a Red Lion Press pamphlet was an honor, and was the main thing that kicked off my career as a published writer (as opposed to the kind who writes angry letters to the editor and unpublishable manuscripts, which is what I did before). And now I’m equally honored by the translation of my first published pamphlet into Portuguese.

I finished the final draft and sent it to Larry a week or two before the 9/11 attacks, so my memories of the heady feeling of making it into print publication are mixed up with my memories of the post-9/11 atmosphere. The Seattle anti-WTO demonstrations in December 1998 and the subsequent protests against neoliberalism had filled me with a sense of possibility and hope (which, oddly enough, I associate with the last scene in The Matrix, where Neo announces his intention to challenge the false consciousness of virtual reality with the promise of a “world without limits). I’d first gone online the year before and discovered the Voluntary Cooperation Movement of Gambone, Dick Martin, Ed Stamm et al, along with a wide range of other anarchist, anarcho-syndicalist and libertarian leftist movements, and experienced the radical new possibilities of the Web. My elation was only reinforced by the news that I would soon be in print.

It was against that background that I woke up on a Tuesday September morning, prepared to enjoy a day off during the first real cool front of the Fall, and learned of the attack on the first tower. Younger and possessing a bit more bravado in those days, I saw myself as caught up in the beginning of a long-term conflict of world-historic proportions, between a dying system and its successor. Just how much carnage the old system would wreak on its way down, and how long the period of transition would last, I had no idea. But I figured — rightly it turns out — that it would involve a large expansion both of US military aggression overseas and of the national security state at home. Fearing the possibility of the gains of the post-Seattle period being destroyed by repression and public reaction, I wondered if we were headed into a long-term period of retrenchment and dormancy for the Left, like Jack London’s Iron Heel.

Now, thirteen years later, I can say I’m even more optimistic and exhilarated by the unfolding possibilities than I was before 9/11. We’ve seen the rapid proliferation and cheapening of the kinds of small-scale production technologies in micromanufacturing, horticulture and information that will be the building blocks of a new society outside the old corporate framework — the basis for the kind of “Exodus” that autonomists like Hardt and Negri have written about. And we’ve seen a new arc of networked resistance movements — the file-sharing movement, Anonymous, Wikileaks, the Arab Spring, M15, Occupy and its successors — that have built exponentially on the earlier contributions of the Zapatistas and the post-Seattle movement.

Erick Vasconcelos, the translator, asked me especially to make some remarks on the Third World. A little over a year before I wrote “Iron Fist,” I’d started reading Noam Chomsky, William Blum and Gabriel Kolko on the real history of Empire since WWII, and on the older colonial systems of power that preceded it. Although I’d assimilated some of these lessons and incorporated them into “Iron Fist,” if I could do one thing differently in writing it today it would be to integrate the history of robbery and exploitation in the West more explicitly into the larger context of colonial and neocolonial exploitation in the Third World, and devote more attention to the latter. I would have focused far more on the continuity of transnational corporate rule with older forms of imperialism and colonialism. I have since done so to a considerable extent in Chapter Seven of Studies in Mutualist Economy, which you can still find online at my old Mutualist.Org website.

And since this is likely to be read mainly by a Brazilian readership, I should probably add a few remarks directed primarily toward you. As overjoyed as I was to see Argentina, Brazil, and the rest of South America swept by avowedly anti-neoliberal regimes, that would no longer roll over for American power, it has been a great disappointment to see Lula’s Workers’ Party in power succumb to the same top-down, authoritarian tendencies that have characterized every other party of the Left once it has come to power. The same pattern Orwell observed in Spain, and Murray Bookchin described more generally in the revolutions of the 20th century in The Third Revolution, have been repeated in Brazil. The war of enclosure and demolition against favela dwellers (especially as it was done for the World Cup), the brutal attempts to “sanitize” the streets of homeless people, the war on street vendors — all of these actions, of the sort that would be associated with a stereotypical right-wing dictator, are utterly sickening from a governing body that presumes to call itself the “Workers’ Party.”

Finally, let me say how happy I am that C4SS’s Portuguese language readers are the world’s fastest-growing readership for our material. I thank Erick (as well as Murilo Leme, who has also done considerable translation) for his efforts in translating not only this pamphlet but many C4SS columns and articles. Thanks to all of you for your interest and support!

O punho de ferro por trás da mão invisível

The Iron Fist Behind the Invisible Hand

$2.00 for the first copy. $1.50 for every additional copy.

This essay, originally pub­lish­ed by Red Lion Press in 2001, was one of Carson’s first ground-breaking contributions to the revival of Mutualist ideas within today’s anarchist and libertarian milieus. It has been re-issued in a beautiful new printing by ALL Distro.

“Manorialism commonly, is recognized to have been founded by robbery and usurpation; a rul­ing class established itself by force, and then com­pel­led the peasantry to work for the profit of their lords. But no system of exploitation, including cap­it­al­ism, has ever been created by the action of a free market. Capitalism was founded on an act of rob­bery as massive as feudalism. It has been sus­tain­ed to the present by continual state inter­ven­tion to protect its system of privilege, with­out which its survival is unimaginable.

“The current structure of capital ownership and org­an­iz­ation of production in our so-called ‘market’ eco­n­omy, re­flects coercive state intervention prior to and ex­tra­n­e­ous to the market. From the outset of the industrial re­vol­ut­ion, what is nostalgically called ‘laissez-faire’ was in fact a sys­t­em of continuing state intervention to sub­sid­ize ac­cum­ulation, guar­ant­ee privilege, and maintain work discipline.

“A world in which peasants had held onto their land and property was widely distributed, capital was freely available to laborers through mutual banks, productive tech­nology was freely avail­able in every country without pat­ents, and every people was free to develop locally without col­on­ial robbery, is beyond our imagination. But it would have been a world of decentralized, small-scale production for local use, own­ed and controlled by those who did the work — as dif­fer­ent from our world as day from night, or freedom from slav­ery. . . .”

Distro of the Libertarian Left
Support C4SS with Kevin Carson’s “What Is Left-Libertarianism?”

C4SS has teamed up with the Distro of the Libertarian Left. The Distro produces and distribute zines and booklets on anarchism, market anarchist theory, counter-economics, and other movements for liberation. For every copy of Kevin Carson‘s “What Is Left-Libertarianism?” that you purchase through the Distro, C4SS will receive a percentage. Support C4SS with Kevin Carson‘s “What Is Left-Libertarianism?“.

wll

$1.00 for the first copy. $0.60 for every additional copy.

“We on the Libertarian Left consider it utterly perverse that free market libertaria­n­ism, a doctrine which had its origins as an attack on the economic privilege of landlords and merchants, should ever have been coopted in de­fense of the entrenched power of the plutocracy and big busi­ness. The use of the ‘free market’ as a legitimizing ideology for triumph­ant corporate cap­i­tal­ism, and the growth of a community of ‘libertarian’ propagandists, is as much a perversion of free market principles as Stalinist regimes’ co­opt­at­ion of rhetoric and symbols from the historic socialist movement was a perversion of the working class movement. . . .

“The industrial capitalist system that the libertarian mainstream has been defending since the mid-19th century has never even remotely approx­im­at­ed a free market. Capi­t­al­ism, as the historic system that emerged in early mod­ern times, was founded on the dissolution of the open fields, en­closure of the commons and other mass­ive ex­propri­ations of the peas­antry. Capitalism evolved into a world system through the col­on­ial occupation, expropriation and enslavement of the glob­al South. We of the Libertarian Left want to take back free mark­et principles from the hirelings of big business and the pluto­cracy and put them back to their original use: all-out assault on the en­trenched economic interests and privileged class­es of our day.

“We of the Libertarian Left also want to de­mon­strate the relevance of free market princ­iples, free assoc­i­at­ion and volunt­ary cooperation in ad­dres­s­ing structural forms of oppression like rac­ism, sexism, homo­phobia and trans­phobia. As libertarians we oppose all legal re­strictions but we should enthusiastically support direct act­ion to combat in­jus­tice in the social realm, like bus boycotts, lunch counter sit-ins and the Stonewall riots. In addressing all forms of injustice, we should take an intersectional ap­proach. . . .”

Feed 44
Open Carry or Open Submission? on Feed 44

C4SS Feed 44 presents Ryan Calhoun‘s “Open Carry or Open Submission?” read by Christopher King and edited by Nick Ford.

This is the story across America: If you are black and armed, you are a threat. And to get to the ugly bottom of it, that’s true, and it’s why blacks re-introduced politically conscious open carry.

Feed 44:

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Missing Comma, Stigmergy - C4SS Blog
Missing Comma: Looking Toward The Future

Hi everyone! This will be the last Missing Comma post of 2014. I’m pushing a lot of things back so that I can get my backlog of op-eds – which I’ve had since last September – out of the way. Once I’m done with those commentaries, however, I’m making Missing Comma my top priority. 2015 is going to be an amazing year.

But before I talk about what I’ve got planned, I want to make a personal plea. If you listen to public radio, you’ve doubtless already heard the “F”-word – Fundraising. It’s that time of year where every media organization not connected to a larger entity is asking its readers, viewers, listeners and other sense-data collectors for money to help the work along. C4SS is a completely member-run, reader-supported media organization. Unlike public media, or the Nation, or Reason, or any other of the dozens of media orgs that get support from massive foundations and advertisers, the Center for a Stateless Society survives month to month thanks to small donations. We don’t even get money from the Koch Brothers, and they supposedly give money to everyone!

In 2014, your donations helped C4SS expand its translation programs, keep a Tor node up and running, pay writers, start a podcast channel, and appear at major libertarian student conferences all over the place. (We’ve currently got two crowdfunding campaigns going to get C4SS to Libertopia in a couple of weeks and the International Students For Liberty Conference in early 2015, which you can help directly here and here.) We’d like to do so much more in 2015.

For just $5 a month, you can help C4SS keep doing this kind of work and more. For just $5 a month, you can help us bring market anarchism to wider and wider audiences, increasing the possibilities for a liberated future.

As for Missing Comma? Well, in order to help C4SS expand its other projects, this blog series aims to utilize a self-funding model in 2015. We’ll be setting up a Patreon account closer to January, but we’ve already got a list of tiered perks started:

  • $5 a month gets you hand-designed step-by-step guides to hack the media, from starting your own news blog to podcasting.
  • $10 a month gets you an honorary producer credit on the Missing Comma podcast, to be relaunched in January, plus above.
  • $25 a month gets you one Missing Comma t-shirt (design forthcoming), plus all of the above.

Your support will help us – and C4SS – have a fighting chance against major media outlets who would have you believe there’s nothing more important than the two-party political horse race and the view from nowhere. With your support, Missing Comma will be able to put out daily content, expand our social media presence and pay contributors. No matter what, we’re committed to teasing out the relationship between anarchy and journalism.

Thanks for reading, and I’ll see you in January.

Distro of the Libertarian Left
Support C4SS with Timothy C. May’s “Crypto Anarchy and Virtual Communities”

C4SS has teamed up with the Distro of the Libertarian Left. The Distro produces and distribute zines and booklets on anarchism, market anarchist theory, counter-economics, and other movements for liberation. For every copy of Timothy C. May‘s “Crypto Anarchy and Virtual Communities” that you purchase through the Distro, C4SS will receive a percentage. Support C4SS with Timothy C. May‘s “Crypto Anarchy and Virtual Communities“.

crypto

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One of the first extended presentations of the theory and practice of Crypto Anarchism, Crypto Anarchy and Virtual Communities emerged out of the Bay Area cypherpunks community, and argues for the revolutionary potential for the radical application of emerging technologies to by-pass channels of state surveillance, political control and social domination. The essay is of both historical interest and also ever-growing contemporary significance, whether to cypherpunks, hacktivists, counter-economists, direct-action security culture, or people working to build counter-institutions, dual-power and an alternative economy.

The combination of strong, unbreakable public key cryptography and virtual network communities in cyberspace will produce interesting and profound changes in the nature of economic and social systems. Crypto anarchy is the cyberspatial realization of [anarchism], transcending national boundaries and freeing individuals to make the economic arrangements they wish to make consensually.

Strong cryptography, exemplified by RSA (a public key algorithm) and PGP (Pretty Good Privacy), provides encryption that essentially cannot be broken with all the computing power in the universe. This ensures security and privacy. Public key cryptography is rightly considered to be a revolution.

… Governments see their powers eroded by these technologies, and are taking various well-known steps to try to limit the use of strong crypto by their subjects. The U.S. has several well-publicized efforts, including the Clipper chip, the Digital Telephony wiretap law, and proposals for “voluntary” escrow of cryptographic keys. Cypherpunks and others expect these efforts to be bypassed. Technology has let the genie out of the bottle. Crypto anarchy is liberating individuals from coercion by their physical neighbors–who cannot know who they are on the Net–and from governments. For libertarians, strong crypto provides the means by which government will be avoided.

Feature Articles
Why is There No War on Auto-erotic Asphyxiation?

Ask the average person on the street what kills more Americans – choking yourself to get off or evil terrorists? I haven’t done this myself but I suspect the results would be tilted quite far to the “evil terrorist” side.

And why wouldn’t they be? After all, America is engaged in an epic struggle against terrorists who hate us for our freedom. Ever since the United States was attacked on September 11, 2001, terrorists abroad are by far the biggest threat to American lives and that evil demands to be met with brute, good ol’ fashion, American military might.

We Americans have sacrificed a lot to defeat the enemy in the Middle East. We sacrificed 6 of the original 10 amendments in 2001 alone to “preserve life and liberty.” That included our right to be secure in our persons, houses, papers, and effects (IV), the right to a speedy trial (VI), the right to freedom of religion (I), the right to legal representation (VI), the right to freedom of speech (I), and the right to be confronted with witnesses against us (IV). But who said you shouldn’t sacrifice a little liberty for safety?

We also spent a whopping $6 trillion on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan saddling generations to come with colossal debt and interest payments, which will be paid for through inflation and taxation. But who said freedom was free?

Worst of all, we lost 6,617 American lives and 50,897 more were wounded. Not to mention the 177,149 veterans who have returned from combat with PTSD. Plus the tragic number of veterans who commit suicide, which is now estimated to be one every 65 minutes. These patriots have died for a good cause, though: stomping out the evil in the world and making it a safe place for Americans. The war on terror has been a costly one for Americans, but worth every bit of it.

Just kidding.

The war on terror has been costly, yes, as seen by the above statistics. But the war on terror was most definitely not worth it. It’s done more harm than good.

The above narrative dominates American politics, though. Thanks to a massive, government created fear mongering campaign and years of propaganda, the war on terror gained, and continues to garner, substantial ideological support. Do terrorists exist? Yes. Are they a significant threat to Americans? Not at all.

A more significant threat to American lives is the intentional restriction of oxygen to the brain for sexual arousal, AKA autoerotic asphyxiation. While terrorists killed 17 Americans worldwide in 2011, 1000 Americans died choking themselves for sexual pleasure. Gaspers, the term for people who are into erotic asphyxiation, were responsible for more American deaths than terrorists.

So, I ask, where is the war on autoerotic asphyxiation?

Being 59 times more likely to die being kinky than by a terrorist is an issue that the US government strangely ignores – and one that the average American is likely to be completely oblivious of. The effort on behalf of government officials to play up the “threat of terrorists” as if it was some sort of national danger, has overshadowed the much more serious threat of autoerotic asphyxiation.

This isn’t to say autoerotic asphyxiation is an actually serious threat that demands state action. By any rational approach, it shouldn’t be high on the list of national priorities. But by the same logic, terrorism should be 59 times less of a national priority.

But why wouldn’t Americans be willing to give up their Constitutional rights to privacy, religion, speech, a speedy trial, and legal representation to defeat the evil of autoerotic asphyxiation? Why aren’t Americans eager to spend $6 trillion and sacrifice hundreds of thousands of lives to stamp out the evil kinkiness? Statistically, they should be willing to spend 59 times that much and sacrifice 59 times that many lives in the war on autoerotic asphyxiation.

The reason is because the US government hasn’t undertaken a colossal BS campaign shoving patriotic slogans, bogus and/or misleading statistics, 9/11 specials, and commercials of soldiers heroically returning home to their family down Americans’ throats for over a decade in a war on autoerotic asphyxiation. That propaganda was used to create public support for the war on terror.

The war on terror is really just a war on reason (like all wars). It doesn’t exist because Americans are in danger of terrorists attacks (if it were, there would be an even bigger war on autoerotic asphyxiation). It exists because Americans have been played like puppets into doing the bidding for a relentless, murderous, and goliath sized military-industrial complex. It exists because the American government is composed of professional propaganda peddlers. It exists because the corporatist, mass-production economy and the leviathan, imperial state needs to keep the wheels of war turning to survive.

As the always astute Hyde from That 70’s Show explained, “The true three branches of government are military, corporate, and Hollywood.” While Hyde was merely a pothead hippie, we can draw something important from his likely pot-induced insight – the government is not some obviously identifiable, single entity. It’s a multi-faceted, layered system of control that attacks people from all different angles. Its methods are discreet and mutually reinforcing.

On your way to work in the morning, you see a couple “support the troops” bumper stickers. At work, you overhear co-workers gossip over some supposed tragedy overseas as you take order from a faceless higher-up for 8 hours. On your way home, you see some more inspirational bumper stickers. Once you get home, you turn on the “news,” run by another faceless higher-up, and hear about how the terrorists are destroying the American way of life. You go out to a movie that night and watch a story about a patriotic and brave soldier that lays it all on the line for his country, but miraculously lives to see his family in a tear-jerking finale. After the movie you come home, watch the 11 o’clock news to hear some more about the evil terrorists sprinkled with some lovely commercials glorifying the troops and you go to sleep. And you do it all again the next day. At the same time, your child goes to school, says the pledge in front of an American flag and learns about how great the government is.

The propaganda machine hits you from all different angles during every second of the day, no matter your age or your job. There is no escaping it.

Where is the war on autoerotic asphyxiation? The government never invented one. A public concerned with fighting kinkiness isn’t as useful as a public concerned with fighting the terrorists. So as 59 times more people die from choking themselves than terrorist attacks, the America public will remain in a fatal frenzy over the “war on terror.”

Anarchy and Democracy
Fighting Fascism
Markets Not Capitalism
The Anatomy of Escape
Organization Theory