Stigmergy - C4SS Blog, Weekly Libertarian Leftist Review
The Weekly Libertarian Leftist And Chess Review 44

Pepe Escobar discusses why Obama is bombing ISIS.

Alex Kane discusses 11 facts about police militarization.

Philip Giraldi discusses the GOP.

John Maxwell Hamilton discusses how WW1 led to modern propaganda and surveillance.

Charles Davis discusses how America helped make the Islamic state in Iraq and Syria.

Joshua Cook discusses blowback in Iraq.

Ted Snider discusses the pattern on display in the U.S. response to ISIS.

David Lindorff discusses police militarization.

Medea Benjamin discusses the U.S. funding of repression in Egypt.

Alex Kane discusses the use of humanitarianism as an excuse for U.S. intervention abroad.

Sheldon Richman discusses attacks on liberty during WW1.

Immanuel Wallstein discusses the caliphate vs everyone else.

Lucy Steigerwald discusses police militarization and the Michael Brown case.

Kevin R.C. Gutzman discusses Lynne Cheney’s book on James Madison.

Michiko Kakutani discusses a book on women soldiers.

Thaddeus Russell discusses alliances between libertarians and leftists.

Justin Raimondo discusses how today is like the sixties.

Conor Friedersdorf discusses the memo allowing for drone assassination of American citizens.

Ralph Nader discusses Hilary the hawk.

Ivan Eland discusses U.S. interventionism in Iraq.

David Swanson discusses how militarism is a public safety issue.

Elliott Colla discusses ceaseless escalation in Iraq.

Falguni A. Sheth discusses torture and Obama’s comments on it.

Gilbert Mercier discusses how the war culture has come home to roost.

Peter Suderman discusses the events in Ferguson, Iraq, and the legacy of 9-11.

W. James Antle the third discusses American defeat in Iraq.

William Astore discuses the U.S. fetish for bombing.

The Washington Times discusses the “nanny state” in New Jersey. I prefer the term patriarchal state.

Reuben Fine defeats Arthur William Dake.

Vladimir Akopian defeats Vladimir Kramnik

Odds & Ends
Good-Bye to FEE

The Foundation for Economic Education has an enviable history. For over half a century, it has sought to share the conviction that society can and should be organized on the basis of peaceful, voluntary cooperation. It has treated the key terms in its name, economic and education, with appropriate breadth — focusing not only on the contribution of unfettered exchange to human well being but also on the philosophy underlying a commitment to voluntary cooperation in the economic realm and the historical, social, and political context of the quest for freedom, while seeking to enhance understanding of the idea of freedom in a broad range of ways.

FEE founder Leonard Read famously summed up the Foundation’s vision in a simple, straightforward, powerful phrase: “Anything that’s peaceful.”

Peaceful conduct may be foolish or immoral, of course. But people have no business interfering with it by force — protests, boycotts, and educational efforts are perfectly OK, of course. Accepting a commitment to peace as the minimal requisite of decent human interaction, so that people can be expected to cooperate on the basis of persuasion rather than coercion, doesn’t solve any and all social problems. It points, however, to a context within which those problems can be addressed reasonably by free people.

Read, who wondered in retrospect whether the name he’d selected for his Foundation was unnecessarily narrow, saw that freedom was a single piece of cloth. To understand the meaning and justification of what he termed “the freedom philosophy” was to see that peace had to reign in all aspects of human life. It’s arbitrary to think about freedom narrowly in the economic realm; dedication to economic freedom makes sense in tandem with dedication to civil liberties and to peace in the international arena (and also, I believe, to a society marked by the absence of arbitrary authority of whatever sort and to solidaristic mutual aid). To talk about free trade without also talking about free immigration or the war on (some) drugs or the prison system or unjust violations of property rights by well connected corporations is ultimately senseless. While not an anarchist, Read embraced an extremely limited conception of the just reach of state power and actively promoted the cause of peace and openness to the world in the face of militarism and nationalism.

Leonard Read must be spinning very rapidly in his grave.

Even as it abandons the famous Irvington-on-Hudson headquarters Read established, FEE is apparently seeking, pointlessly, to abandon the mission Read developed, too. An organization that once fostered widespread embrace of the freedom philosophy now intends to provide basic instruction in economics to 16-to-24-year-olds. This means FEE won’t be delivering the summer seminars in advanced Austrian Economics that once enabled it to connect with graduate students. It won’t be targeting people at multiple stages of their lives seeking greater understanding of the grounds and implications of belief in freedom. And it can be expected to limit dramatically the content of The Freeman, the flagship FEE publication once edited (before its acquisition by FEE) by Frank Chodorov, shying away from discussions of peace, open borders, the involuntary confinement of “mental patients,” the drug war, cultural issues, and the history of corporatist mischief. As a result, the very 16-to-24-year-olds the Foundation wants to serve will be ill-prepared to meet the challenges they will confront in their classrooms and in conversations with their friends, as will ordinary working people in search of ammunition that will help them communicate the freedom philosophy in their homes, congregations, and workplaces.

This change in course is doubtless not a product of mischief. It may well reflect a genuine desire to see FEE vibrant and strong. But it is, I believe, a profound and quite unnecessary mistake.

FEE has a unique brand. It has sought neither to be hip nor to be reactionary; it hasn’t taken sides in freedom movement faction fights. Refusing to accept the legitimacy of inside-the-Beltway policy debates, it hasn’t focused on the construction of policy analyses. Declining to engage in technical, accommodationist wonkery, it has emphasized big ideas—and their backgrounds and applications—in ways that ordinary people of all ages could understand and appreciate, that could simultaneously enlighten novices and stimulate old hands. FEE should clarify and promote its distinctive brand rather than diluting or abandoning it.

But—for the moment, at least—that doesn’t seem to be in the cards.

No longer fostering noninterference with “anything that’s peaceful” by anyone and everyone, even as it bids adieu to long-time ace Freeman editor Sheldon Richman, the Foundation will encourage regard for peace only within a limited range of human encounters, and do so only in a narrowed variety of venues and vocabularies. Giving up on its currently stated commitment to articulating “the most consistent case for the ‘first principles‘ of freedom: the sanctity of private property, individual liberty, the rule of law, the free market, and the moral superiority of individual choice and responsibility over coercion,” FEE will effectively ignore the links between freedom in different aspects of our lives and the reality that it makes the most sense to be pro-choice about economics when one is pro-choice about everything, across the board. I hope those who are as saddened by this development as I am will help to foster the growth of institutions and the organization of events that will share, as FEE will no longer do, a comprehensive, multi-layered vision of peaceful, voluntary cooperation as the only defensible foundation for a good society.

Commentary
The United Police States of America

Ferguson, Missouri’s police department has released its report on the August 9th shooting death of teenager Michael Brown, a redacted document that ACLU attorney Tony Rothert says violates Missouri’s Sunshine Law by omitting key information.

Brown’s death at the hands of a Ferguson police officer provoked impassioned demonstrations and debates on police brutality and the very nature of policing in the United States, leading many observers to wonder if Americans are now living in a full-fledged police state.

But what is a “police state?” The phrase has become an almost commonplace feature of our conversation on police violence and militarization, a convenient way to give voice to growing fears about deteriorating civil liberties. The history of the phrase offers insight into its contemporary usage, a way to analyze the current situation in the United States and decide whether indeed we Americans now live under a police state.

Historian and political scientist Mark Neocleous explains that the “term Polizeistaat, usually translated as ‘police state,’ came into general English usage in the 1930s,” increasingly used at that time to describe totalitarian governments such as those of Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia. Still, Neocleous is quick to clarify that, notwithstanding this popular twentieth century usage, it presents a “historical problem” to the extent that it suggests a certain inappropriate picture of “the original ‘police states.’” Those original police states were, rather than brutal, totalitarian regimes like Nazi Germany, early predecessors to the modern welfare state, or Wohlfahrtsstaat.

Given these historical connections between the welfare state and the police state, we might revise our understanding beyond the twentieth century definition, broadening the concept to include not only the most extreme and draconian twentieth century tyrannies, but most, if not all, contemporary “administrative” states. Once we begin to understand these connections and the growth and development of the total state during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, phenomena such as the murder of Michael Brown become easier to understand. Whether we call it the welfare state or the police state, the reality is that we live in an environment completely dominated by regimentation — coercive control over and regulation of almost every aspect of our lives.

Historically and theoretically, it is impossible to disentangle the welfare aspects of the modern total state from its police functions. Just as the progressive, administrative state gave rise to a growing class of professional bureaucrats, so too did it increasingly professionalize — and correspondingly militarize — police forces. The language of expertise, efficiency and specialization provided the rationale for the modern state’s systematic establishment of professional police. Such professional police forces, unlike earlier forms of community protection, were intentionally quasi-military in character, instructed to occupy, study and control the policed communities, to make policing a fully developed science with its own methodologies and techniques.

Market anarchism is an argument for a more free society, one in which power is divided to the greatest possible extent and provision of important services such as defense is not monopolized, but left to the peaceful push and pull of voluntary trade and cooperation. Monopolies, insofar as they are exempt from competitive pressures, lend themselves to abuses of power like the contemptible crime that took Michael Brown’s young life. Brown’s murder is not an aberration susceptible to remedy through better police training. It is rather a predictable symptom of the underlying disease that is the United States’s authoritarian police state, the treatment of which is to eliminate professional policing as a coercive monopoly and thus to end the impunity that officers currently enjoy.

Portuguese, Stateless Embassies
Por que o papa não está tão errado assim a respeito da desigualdade

As observações recentes do papa Francisco sobre a pobreza, a desigualdade e o capitalismo em sua missa aberta em Seul não foram muito bem recebidas em muitos círculos conservadores e libertários de inclinação direitista. O discurso do papa incluiu críticas ao crescimento da desigualdade e um apelo para “ouvir a voz dos pobres”.

Entre aqueles que discordaram está Keith Farrell, um coordenador do Estudantes Pela Liberdade na Universidade de Connecticut (“Why the Pope is Wrong on Inequality“, City A.M., 21 de agosto). Ele acusa o papa de “usar os ricos como válvula de escape da pobreza mundial” e credita a Karl Marx a ideia de que “o sucesso de alguns prejudica os outros economicamente e que os ricos apenas se tornaram ricos às custas dos pobres”. Farrell cita um sul-coreano: “Se alguém ganhou uma fortuna por conta própria de forma justa e tem muito dinheiro, eu não acho que isso deva ser condenado”.

É uma hipótese interessante, mas quanto da concentração de renda da elite econômica foi adquirida “de forma justa”? Ao longo de seu artigo, Farrell implicitamente iguala o sistema sob o qual vivemos agora com a “liberdade econômica” e a “livre empresa”. É um exemplo do que eu chamo de “libertarianismo vulgar”, a defesa do capitalismo corporativo existente como se fosse um livre mercado, com a retórica da livre competição usada para defender a riqueza e o poder econômico que os capitalistas corporativos conseguiram através de um sistema esmagadoramente estatista.

Marx não foi o primeiro a perceber que em uma sociedade de classes, governada por um estado classista, os ricos se tornam ricos às custas dos pobres. Provavelmente essa percepção já era óbvia a algum camponês sumério ou chinês que trabalhava de sol a sol para pagar os impostos aos clérigos. E muitos pensadores radicais de livre mercado — Thomas Hodgskin, Benjamin Tucker, Franz Oppenheimer — chegaram às mesmas conclusões mais recentemente. O sistema capitalista sob o qual vivemos é o herdeiro linear aos sistemas classistas estatais de milhares de anos de idade.

O “livre mercado”, longe de definir estruturalmente o capitalismo, opera em suas margens apenas até o ponto em que é compatível com os interesses das classes proprietárias que controlam o estado. Mesmo o suposto “laissez-faire” do século 19 dos Estados Unidos era uma superestrutura erigida sobre séculos de roubo — os cercamentos e a desapropriação dos camponeses, primeiro durante a industrialização do Ocidente e depois no mundo colonial, as restrições massivas ao movimento e à associação dos trabalhadores na Grã-BRetanha, o trabalho escravo e a tomada da riqueza mineral global. Hoje em dia, muitos dos frutos desses roubos, como títulos absenteístas a terras não-utilizadas, a propriedade corporativa dos recursos naturais do terceiro mundo e o monopólio do crédito e da moeda pelos donos da riqueza roubada, ainda são protegidos.

O capitalismo corporativo atual depende de ainda mais estatismo — “propriedade intelectual”, cartéis regulatórios e outras carreiras de entrada, além de subsídios massivos diretos como os do complexo militar-industrial, da aviação civil e dos sistemas rodoviários.

É verdade, como afirma Farrell, que os padrões de vida tenham aumentado em termos absolutos apesar do aumento da desigualdade. Mas as vantagens do progresso tecnológico são governadas pelo mesmo parâmetro de precificação de todos os monopólios: as corporações gigantes usam as patentes para cercar o progresso tecnológico e permitir que apenas parte dos benefícios em produtividade cheguem às classes trabalhadoras, para que ainda seja atraente para elas continuar a comprar, se apropriando do resto das rendas monopolísticas.

A afirmação de Farrell de que “o capitalismo levou liberdade e abundância” à Coreia do Sul também merece atenção. O capitalismo sul-coreano foi construído sobre as bases da ocupação militar americana por um regime militar instalado pela ocupação, que subsequentemente liquidou a sociedade semianarquista de comunas e fábricas autogovernadas que emergiu após a saída dos japoneses em 1945. Esse regime levou os anarquistas e os esquerdistas de todos os tipos para túmulos coletivos. Suas décadas de domínio não foram exatamente amigáveis à “liberdade econômica” de, digamos, trabalhadores coreanos que desejavam se sindicalizar.

É interessante que Farrell compartilhe uma premissa errônea com o papa Francisco: a de que a redução da desigualdade requer a “redistribuição de riquezas” pelo governo. Os dois estão errados. O que temos agora é o mesmo que uma redistribuição de renda para cima, com “impostos” sobre as classes produtivas na forma de rendas monopolísticas estatais que pagamos aos senhorios e capitalistas. Não precisamos da intervenção estatal para redistribuir renda para baixo. Precisamos da revolução para impedir o estado de redistribuir renda para cima.

É hora de os defensores do livre mercado pararem de agir como mercenários em defesa do sistema atual de poder e passarem a utilizar suas ideias de livre mercado para defender a verdadeira justiça econômica.

Traduzido por Erick Vasconcelos.

Life, Love And Liberty, Stigmergy - C4SS Blog
Is There an Immigration Problem?

Rand Paul has spoken of an alleged “immigration problem”. This is a reference to the considerable number of “illegal” immigrants living in the U.S. The solution proposed to this supposed problem is to secure the border. A secure border would allegedly lead to less “illegal” immigrants crossing it.

This framing of the immigration issue is entirely wrong. It rests on the assumption that an inflow of “illegal” immigrants is a bad thing. The notion stems from a belief in the morality of nation-states and border control. If we abandon this idea, we can see that the real immigration problem pertains to border enforcement. It’s also related to miserable conditions in other countries. This horrific context is what leads many people to immigrate.

It’s definitely a problem when force is initiated against people simply crossing an imaginary line on a map. That’s one aspect of the real immigration problem. Another is the aforementioned miserable conditions. These consist of poverty and violence. Both of which contribute to people choosing to immigrate. If they lived in a better context, they may not feel the need to do so. This is not to say there is a moral issue with their choice to immigrate though.

This violence is partially the fault of U.S. foreign policy. The U.S. recognition of the coup government in Honduras is one example. Another is the past terrorist wars waged by Reagan in Central America. This is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to violence unleashed by U.S. foreign policy. It’s the most relevant though.

A just resolution of the problems surrounding immigration would involve ending imperialist U.S. violence around the world. It would also involve opening the borders. These are the positions consistent with radical libertarianism and anarchism. In contrast, the present framing of the issues by politicians is non-libertarian or non-anarchist. The latter statist take is morally grotesque.

One way to go about helping this solution along is to pressure politicians to declare safe havens in areas under their control. Another related approach is to have non-governmental institutions harbor or help refugees from other countries. One could also donate to organizations that push for illegal immigrants to receive legal defense in court like the ACLU.

All of these options are important for furthering freedom of immigration. This principle of freedom of movement follows naturally from the non-aggression principle. Let’s work to implement the above solutions! All we have to lose is our chains. The time to act is now.

Feed 44
Public vs Private Dualities and Contextual Analysis on Feed 44

C4SS Feed 44 presents Natasha Petrova‘s “Public vs Private Dualities and Contextual Analysis” read and edited by Nick Ford.

It’s certainly possible for a non-government controlled space or institution to meet the criteria above. An example is a privately owned local library called Linda Hall Library that is nonetheless open to the public. This example also shows the problematic nature of the dualism between private and public. You have an entity that is privately owned in the sense of non-government owned and yet accessible to the general public. This shows the importance of contextual analysis in deciphering what is private and public under what definitions. It depends on the context. In one context, public may be a reference to government ownership, but that’s not what it means in the context of anarchy.

Feed 44:

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Commentary
Why the Pope is Less Wrong Than Keith Farrell

Pope Francis’s remarks on poverty, inequality and capitalism — most recently at his open air mass in Seoul — don’t sit well with many conservatives and right-leaning libertarians. The Pope’s remarks include criticism of growing economic inequality and a call to “hear the voice of the poor.”

Among those who take issue with the Pope’s statement is Keith Farrell, a Students For Liberty campus coordinator at the University of Connecticut (“Why the Pope is Wrong on Inequality,” City A.M., Aug. 21). He accuses the Pope of “scapegoating world poverty on the wealthy” and credits Marx with first coming up with the idea “that the success of some hurts others economically and that the rich have only gotten rich at the expense of the poor.” Farrell quotes a South Korean: “If someone has made a fortune for himself, fair and square, and has a lot of money, I don’t think that’s something to be condemned.”

An interesting hypothetical, but just how much of the economic elite’s growing concentration of wealth actually was made “fair and square?” Throughout his op-ed, Farrell implicitly equates the system we live under now with “economic freedom” and “free enterprise.” But that’s an example of what I call “vulgar libertarianism,” defending actually existing corporate capitalism as though it were a free market, and using “free enterprise” rhetoric to defend wealth and economic power which corporate capitalists have actually amassed through an overwhelmingly statist system of power.

Marx was hardly the first to figure out that in a class society, ruled by a class state, the rich get rich at the expense of the poor. It probably dawned on some Sumerian or Chinese peasant busting his hump with a hoe trying to produce enough to live on after paying rent to a temple priesthood. And plenty of radical free market thinkers — Thomas Hodgskin, Benjamin Tucker, Franz Oppenheimer — have drawn the same conclusion more recently. The capitalist system we live under today is the lineal heir to the state-enforced class systems of thousands of years ago.

“Free markets,” far from structurally defining capitalism, are permitted to operate on its margins only to the extent that they’re compatible with the propertied interests controlling the state. Even in the supposedly “laissez-faire” nineteenth century, “free enterprise” was a superstructure erected on a foundation of centuries of massive robbery — the enclosure of land and dispossession of the peasantry, first in the industrializing West and then the colonial world, massive restrictions on the free movement and association of working people in industrial Britain, slave labor and the seizure of global mineral wealth. Today many of the fruits of that robbery, like absentee titles to vacant land and corporate ownership of Third World natural resources, and a monopoly on the supply of credit and the medium of exchange by the owners of stolen wealth, are still legally enforced.

Corporate capitalism today depends on even more statism — “intellectual property,” regulatory cartels and other entry barriers, and massive direct subsidies in such forms as the Military-Industrial Complex and the civil aviation and Interstate Highway systems.

It’s true, as Farrell says, that standards of living have increased in absolute terms despite the rise in inequality — true as far as it goes. But the advantages of technological progress are governed by the same targeted pricing that governs all monopolies: Giant corporations use patent monopolies to enclose technological progress and let just enough of the benefits of increased productivity trickle down to the working classes to make it worthwhile for them to keep buying, while appropriating the rest as monopoly rents for themselves.

Farrell’s statement that “capitalism has brought freedom and abundance” to South Korea bears similar looking into. South Korean capitalism was built on the foundation of US military occupation and a military regime installed by the occupation authority, which subsequently liquidated the quasi-anarchist society of self-governing village communes and self-managed factories that had emerged after the Japanese pullout in 1945. This regime put anarchists and leftists of all kinds in mass graves, and during its decades in power wasn’t exactly friendly to the “economic freedom” of — say — Korean workers who wanted to unionize.

Interestingly, Farrell shares one erroneous assumption with Pope Francis: That reducing inequality requires government “redistribution of wealth.” They’re both wrong. What we have now amounts to an upward redistribution of wealth, with “taxes” on the producing classes in the form of the state-enforced monopoly rents we pay to landlords and capitalists. We don’t need state intervention to redistribute wealth downward. We need revolution to stop the state from redistributing wealth upward.

It’s time for free marketers to stop acting as hired prize-fighters for the present system of power, and start using free market ideas to defend actual economic justice.

Translations of this article:

Portuguese, Stateless Embassies
Cortes internacionais vs. estado nacional

A Anistia Internacional declarou que a sentença da Corte Interamericana de Direitos Humanos, em caso no qual as autoridades guatemaltecas não investigaram o trágico assassinato de uma adolescente, transmite aos governos do mundo inteiro a enérgica mensagem de que não será tolerada a inação a respeito da violência contra as mulheres.

Maria Isabel Veliz Franco tinha 15 anos quando foi agredida sexualmente, torturada e brutalmente assassinada na Guatemala em 2001. Sua mãe lutou para que a justiça fosse feita, e, em 28 de julho deste ano, a Corte Interamericana de Direitos Humanos concluiu que as autoridades guatemaltecas não haviam investigado adequadamente o assassinato, tratando-o com negligência em um ambiente de sistemática violência e discriminação contra a mulher.

Sebastian Elgueta, pesquisador da Anistia Internacional sobre a Guatemala, afirmou que “[as] lições deste caso só serão aprendidas quando forem levadas a sério as mortes de todas as mulheres e meninas assassinadas na Guatemala, e quando forem tomadas medidas concretas para prevenir a violência contra as mulheres e para criar uma sociedade segura e respeitosa para todas as pessoas”.

Esse trágico caso julgado pela Corte Interamericana de Direitos Humanos representa de que modo a criação de jurisdições internacionais que avaliem se estados estão respeitando obrigações que eles assumiram de respeitar os direitos das pessoas sob seu poder é muito importante para a liberdade humana.

O primeiro caso que pesquisei da jurisprudência da Corte Interamericana de Direitos Humanos foi um caso também da Guatemala, Meninos de Rua (Villagrán Morales e outros) vs. Guatemala.

Eu já era libertário à época e me impressionou que o caso de 5 meninos de rua sequestrados e mortos pela polícia, que com certeza teria sido esquecido para sempre se dependesse do estado guatemalteco, tinha sido trazido ao conhecimento internacional para que um tribunal independente pudesse julgar o caso e condenar o estado a compensar as famílias daqueles meninos, investigar e punir os responsáveis e tomar medidas para evitar que isso acontecesse novamente.

A importância da emergência desses tribunais é que eles permitem um controle independente sobre os estados e desafiam a concepção de que o estado é o árbitro final sobre nossos direitos e liberdades. Ao invés do poder estatal ser a instância máxima, em casos de direitos humanos os próprios Estados têm de sentar-se no banco dos réus, diante da denúncia de um indivíduo, perante tribunais que seguem parâmetros legais respeitosos aos direitos individuais.

No caso brasileiro de um paciente deficiente mental, Damião Ximenes Lopes, que havia morrido – por negligência – em uma casa de repouso ligada ao SUS, o estado brasileiro foi condenado pela ausência de investigação do ocorrido. Outro caso foi o dos desaparecidos da guerrilha do Araguaia na época da ditadura militar brasileira, em que Corte entendeu que a Lei de Anistia brasileira, que perdoou as graves violações de direitos humanos cometidas pelo estado ditatorial, era ilegal, o que já comentei em outra ocasião.

Da perspectiva de um livre mercado radical, essas cortes arbitrais internacionais permitem que argumentemos que o Brasil viola direitos humanos por não admitir liberdade sindical para seus trabalhadores.

Essa possibilidade existe porque a Corte Interamericana de Direitos Humanos pode avaliar casos de violação de direitos previstos na Convenção Americana de Direitos Humanos, que trata de direitos civis e políticos, mas também pode examinar alguns dispositivos do Protocolo de San Salvador, que trata de direitos econômicos, sociais e culturais. Dentre estes, destaca-se:

Artigo 8 Direitos sindicais
1. Os Estados Partes garantirão:
a. O direito dos trabalhadores de organizar sindicatos e de filiar‑se ao de sua escolha, para proteger e promover seus interesses. Como projeção desse direito, os Estados Partes permitirão aos sindicatos formar federações e confederações nacionais e associar‑se às já existentes, bem como formar organizações sindicais internacionais e associar‑se à de sua escolha. Os Estados Partes também permitirão que os sindicatos, federações e confederações funcionem livremente;

Desde Getúlio Vargas, a liberdade sindical dos trabalhadores brasileiros foi roubada pelo estabelecimento da “unicidade sindical”, um monopólio legal onde é permitido apenas um único sindicato para representar a categoria em determinado território. Por isso, as maiores instituições sindicais do país, a CUT e a Força Sindical, estão alinhadas ao capitalismo corporativo brasileiro.

Isso inclusive é um dos motivos pelos quais o Brasil não ratifica a Convenção nº 87 da Organização Internacional do Trabalho. A OIT em sua constituição já estabelece a primazia da liberdade sindical, mas ratificar esta convenção em específico faz com que o país se comprometa explicitamente com este princípio nas relações trabalhistas. O artigo 2º estabelece que os trabalhadores, sem nenhuma distinção e sem autorização prévia, têm o direito de constituir as organizações que estimem convenientes, assim como o de filiar-se a estas organizações, com a única condição de observar os estatutos das mesmas. E resta clara a proximidade do art. 2ª da Convenção 87 da OIT com o art. 8.1.a do Protocolo acima, ambos consagrando um princípio de interação sindical livre que o Brasil viola.

Se conseguíssemos uma condenação do Brasil junto à Corte Interamericana por ter impedido a operação de um sindicato livre, fora da estrutura monopolística criada pelo estado brasileiro, pela violação da liberdade sindical, seria um importante passo para chamar atenção da população, especialmente dos trabalhadores, do absurdo que é o governo continuar a negar seu direito de associação livre na busca de melhores condições de trabalho em negociações coletivas.

Portanto, seja para não deixar esquecidos os casos de meninos de rua mortos por policiais ou de uma adolescente cujo assassinato brutal não foi investigado pela polícia, seja para denunciar como o estado privou trabalhadores de liberdade sindical, passando por uma série de outras possibilidades, a existência de tribunais internacionais de direitos humanos apresentam um conceito radical: o de que o estado não pode ter a última palavra, de vida e de morte, sobre nós e nossos direitos.

O ativismo legislativo não vai nos conduzir para a liberdade, mas existe uma lei a nosso favor e devemos tirar máximo proveito dela.

Stigmergy - C4SS Blog
The Culture of Anarchism

State ideologies require an underlying cultural disposition, if they are to stand the test of time. This cultural disposition is inevitably tied to the core concepts of an ideology. Nationalism subordinates the individual’s values to those of their national community, while numerous strands of socialism focus upon the lives and pastimes of the proletariat. Romantic conservatism paints an idyllic vision of pastoral simplicity, all watched over with love and grace by a landed aristocracy. But what of anarchism? Where is the shared culture of a movement that rails against such concentrations of power?

At first glance, the question may appear oxymoronic. Indeed, it is true to say that anarchists of all stripes disagree on “fundamentals” such as wage labour. What then makes anarchism a distinct mode of interpreting the world? A vague aversion to the State will not do: such a disposition is necessary but insufficient. The State is just one of numerous power structures (e.g. patriarchy and institutional racism), and any anarchist worth their salt is concerned with hierarchies in general.

Note that I say “concerned with” rather than “automatically opposed to”. As Austrian competition theory explains, freed markets allow concentrations of economic power to ebb and flow like the tide. Competition is a state of flux and dynamism, with firms, workers and entrepreneurs constantly adjusting to a changing world. It is inevitable that — in some cases — power structures will emerge. The anarchist concern is to ensure such structures are beneficial and are not entrenched to our detriment. To be an anarchist is to commit to constant evaluation of power structures; our damning verdict of the State, as the instigator and catalyst of oppression, is a product of this commitment. Paul Goodman sums it up cogently:

[The] relativity of the anarchist principle to the actual situation is of the essence of anarchism…It is always a continual coping with the next situation, and a vigilance to make sure past freedoms are not lost and do not turn into the opposite, as free enterprise turned into wage-slavery and monopoly capitalism, or the independent judiciary turned into a monopoly of courts, cops, and lawyers…

The anarchist culture of scepticism towards power structures is key to human flourishing. On an individual level, this manifests in critically examining our everyday habits. Samuel Beckett reminds us that “the pernicious devotion of habit paralyses our attention, drugs those handmaidens of perception whose co-operation is not absolutely essential”. Our unwavering collective devotion to entrenched power structures paralyses society, and blinds us to the evils that plague it. Embrace change and the possibility it provides.

Feed 44
Why We Do Not Vote

C4SS Feed 44 presents Dyer Lum‘s “Why We Do Not Vote” read and edited by Nick Ford.

But, it is alleged, that as both sides resort to fraud, the chances are equal. That is, politics is a game of cards, in which only the best trumps win. Like a game also “we the people” are needed to constitute the rest of the pack, so that the gamblers may be enabled to deal out stacked hands. Suppose we refuse to be longer shuffled for their amusement! The hollow pretense would collapse at once; the court cards couldn’t carry on the game alone. But if we stay away the less number will settle the election! “O, ye of little faith!” Abstention from the polls would also have other effects.

Feed 44:

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The Kenneth Gregg Collection
The Engineer of the American Revolution

The young Tadeusz (or Thaddeus) Andrzej Bonawentura Kosciuszko (pronounced KOS-CHOOS-KO, 2/4/1746-10/15/1817), born near Brest (now in Belarus) studied military engineering in Paris with the intent of serving in his native Poland. However, in 1772 Prussia, Austria and Russia had partitioned Poland, seizing around 30% of its territory and forcing governmental changes through bribes, threats and arrests. There was no place in the Polish Army for Kosciuszko, and he left in 1775 to France where, at some point in late 1775, he heard about the American rebellion against the British and was recruited by Silas Deane and Benjamin Franklin.

Like many young Europeans of his time, he was enthralled with the Revolutionary activity in the New World. Shortly after arriving in Philadelphia in 1776, Kosciuszko read the Declaration of Independence and he recognized everything in which he truly believed. When he discovered Thomas Jefferson was responsible for drafting the Declaration, he had to meet him. A few months later, while moving south with the Continental Army, Kosciuszko stopped in Virginia to meet with Jefferson. The two men spent the day comparing philosophies and became the best of friends.

The colonists were desperate for engineers, even those who had only just arrived from abroad with no knowledge of America, and on October 18th 1776 Kosciuszko became Colonel of Engineers, Washington’s chief engineer and strategist. The thirty-year-old began planning forts along the Delaware. His first duty was to help fortify Philadelphia from naval attack. Kosciuszko centered the defenses on a new fort, Mercer, while setting up aquatic blockades designed to force British ships closer to both the shore and bombardment. Kosciuszko moved on to help with the defense of Fort Ticonderoga. Partly due to disregard of Kosciuszko’s advice, Ticonderoga was toppled. Kosciuszko’s forces felled pine trees and flooded fields to slow the pursuit of the British. This gave the rebels time to prepare for their first major victory of the war: Saratoga. At Saratoga, Kosciuszko fortified Bemis Heights overlooking the Hudson. His ingenious design contributed to the surrender of 6,000 troops under General John Burgoyne.

Kosciuszko then undertook the defense of the Hudson at West Point in 1778. So thorough were his fortifications, that the British never mounted an assault. One of the more imaginative links in the colonel’s defensive plan was a 60 ton chain stretched across the Hudson to block British ships. Kosciuszko went on to lead troops and, by 1783, he had been promoted to Brigadier General. Of the foreign subjects who came to the revolution’s aid, Kosciuszko’s contribution was perhaps only second to Lafayette (with Charles Lee and von Steuben far behind). Kosciuszko learned how to win battles with a militia of untrained and poorly equipped men, as well as how to apply his years of study, often quite brilliantly, in the field, abilities he would use in his later career.

Kosciuszko developed a strong dislike for slavery and serfdom based on his belief in individual rights and Republican government. These applied not just to the newly independent colonies, but to his homeland.

Following the Revolutionary War, Kosciuszko returned to Poland to fight for independence from the occupying Russians. In 1789, he became Major General of the Polish forces. The reforms of the May Constitution of Poland, the first modern constitution in Europe and second in the world after the American, were seen by the surrounding powers as a threat to their influence over Poland. In, 1792 a Russian army of 100,000 crossed the Polish border and headed for Warsaw, now that Russia and her imperial allies were no longer battling the Ottoman Empire; thus began the War in Defence of the Constitution. the Polish Army was well-trained and prepared for the war. After the betrayal of Prussian allies, the Army of Lithuania could not stop the advancing Russians. The Polish Army was too weak to oppose the enemy advancing in the Ukraine and withdrew, regrouped, counter-attacked, and was victorious. In the ensuing battles, Kosciuszko repelled the numerically superior enemy and became the most brilliant Polish military commander of his time. In 1792, King Stanislaw joined the Targowica confederation and surrendered to the Russians and, in 1793, Prussia and Russia signed the Second Partition of Poland. Such an outcome was a blow for the Targowica Confederation who saw their actions as defence of centuries-old privileges of the upper classes, now regarded by the majority of Polish population as traitors. After the partition, the Targowica confederation evaporated.

Kosciuszko prepared a plan of an uprising and led the Polish-Lithuanian uprising of 1794 (known as the Kosciuszko Rebellion), winning key conflicts before being defeated by the vastly superior forces of Prussia, Russia and Austria.

Kosciuszko drew popular support from peasant classes as well as nobles and magnates. Wounded during the battle of Maciejowice, Kosciuszko was taken prisoner. After two years’ incarceration, the Czar granted him amnesty on the condition he never return to Poland.

He set off once more to America in 1797. Throngs of Philadelphians lined the wharves to welcome their Revolutionary War hero back to the United States. The mob carried him on their shoulders while bands played and cannons fired fusillades of homage.

Yellow Fever was ravaging Philadelphia, so Kosciuszko left to visit with friends in New York. Upon return to Philadelphia, Kosciuszko convalesced while receiving admirers daily. Jefferson came by frequently and Philadelphia ladies had their pictures sketched by Kosciuszko himself. Kosciuszko was awarded back pay from Congress and 500 acres of land along the Scioto River in what is present-day Columbus, Ohio.

Restive, Kosciuszko left in 1798 for Europe, involved in agricultural pursuits near Paris. Still devoted to the Polish cause, Kosciuszko took part in creation of the Polish Legions. He remained active in the Polish emigré circles and in 1799 was a founder of the Society of Polish Republicans (precursor to the Polish Democratic Society). In 1806, Napoleon asked for him to join in the invasion of Poland, but he refused. He distrusted Napoleon and would not fight for him, despite the Emperor’s offer of command of the Polish Legion. Kosciuszko instead demanded a commitment to Polish sovereignty, believing Napoleon only sought French domination. Consequently, Kosciuszko was not involved in the Grand Duchy of Warsaw, a puppet state set up by Bonaparte in 1807.

He was invited to the Congress of Vienna, the great gathering of European leaders which redrew Europe in the aftermath of Napoleon’s defeat. Here, Emperors courted Kosciuszko, and Tsar Alexander planned a Poland under Russian dominion, possibly headed by Kosciuszlo, which he refused.

The idea of revolution drove Kosciuszko, and he wrote several texts on rebellion, analyzing uprisings and guerilla warfare. In 1815 Kosciuszko moved to Switzerland, dying of a fall in 1817.

He was a hero of both the American Revolution and European republican movements. The American Revolutionary War’s success changed the modern world and, while the revolution in Poland failed, the monarchical forces diverted to the destruction of the Polish Republic gave the French Revolution sufficient time to establish more durable institutions. After the final partition in 1795, the Polish Commonwealth ceased to exist. It was not until World War I after the Allied victory in November 1918 that Poland was able to regain its independence, only to later lose to the Soviet Union. The renaissance of Poland has much to do with the efforts of those like Kosciuszko.

Portuguese, Stateless Embassies
Pela abolição da polícia

O caos e os protestos em Ferguson, Missouri, que se seguiram à morte de um adolescente desarmado, estimularam uma discussão sobre o poder da polícia e até que ponto ele deve se estender. Para os anarquistas, a resposta é simples: o poder da polícia não deveria existir.

“Mas o que você faria com os psicopatas e as demais pessoas violentas?”

Essa é, talvez, a pergunta mais comum apresentada aos anarquistas. Afinal, a maioria das pessoas vê no estado e em seu monopólio sobre o uso da força a maneira pela qual a sociedade limita as ações das pessoas violentas. Para responder à pergunta, devemos primeiro analisar a atual “solução”: a polícia.

A situação em Ferguson é exemplo das medidas mais extremas e absurdas tomadas pela polícia. Porém, uma compreensão do tipo de cultura promovida pelo estatismo leva à conclusão de que Ferguson se trata, simplesmente, de um sintoma de uma doença maior que toma os Estados Unidos.

O estatismo normaliza a iniciação do uso da violência e a violação dos direitos humanos mais básicos. As eleições, que servem as propriedades e liberdades civis de milhões de pessoas em uma bandeja para os grupos de interesse, torna a destruição dos direitos humanos um fato corriqueiro. O complexo militar industrial, que cria ódio e estimula o racismo, a xenofobia e o nacionalismo no exterior, em casa promove bombardeios literais como parte do cotidiano. E o pior de tudo: a militarização da polícia cria gerações de servos obedientes que têm medo de estranhos que andam pelas ruas com roupas escuras e que lembram gangues, portando armas que podem explodi-lo em um só tiro… ou pior.

A polícia de Ferguson está acabando com o direito de livre expressão, impondo toques de recolher e ameaçando manifestantes e jornalistas com violência. E eu pensei que a anarquia era o caos.

Por que isso continua a acontecer? Simples. Porque eles têm a maior parte das armas – porque têm um monopólio.

A polícia não é eficiente porque não depende do apoio voluntário dos consumidores. Não é responsabilizada criminalmente porque não tem qualquer ameaça séria de perda de poder. Os policiais cometem abusos porque os cidadãos só têm duas escolhas: obedecer ou sofrer as consequências. A polícia é militarizada porque não opera em um sistema de lucros e prejuízos em um mercado livre e tem uma fonte infinita de dinheiro roubado dos pagadores de impostos.

Se o monopólio policial fosse quebrado, a polícia que conhecemos não mais existiria. Agências privadas de defesa, associações comunais, vigias comunitárias e sociedades de auxílio mútuo assumiriam o lugar da “defesa” estatal. Embora elas fossem servir para proteger os cidadãos, como a polícia afirma fazer, essas organizações provavelmente teriam um caráter muito diferente das polícias atuais.

As forças policiais são isoladas atualmente da competição, das pressões de mercado, do mecanismo de preços e do sistema de lucros e prejuízos. como monopólios, têm incentivos para gastar demais, cobrar demais, subproduzir e, geralmente, trabalhar em oposição aos interesses dos consumidores e em favor do seu próprio.

Mas as firmas e organizações que espontaneamente surgem no mercado livre através das trocas voluntárias estão sujeitas às forças de mercado todo momento. Elas devem servir aos interesses dos consumidores, criando um produto adequado a preços realistas ou sendo engolidas pela concorrência. No ramo da proteção, os conflitos violentos devem ser minimizados em favor de soluções pacíficas e baratas, caso contrário surgem organizações concorrentes que servem melhor aos interesses do público.

Uma vez que essas organizações estariam sob constante ameaça da concorrência, seus métodos e táticas seriam completamente diferentes dos empregados pela polícia. Teriam que incluir o respeito aos direitos dos consumidores ou perderiam seus clientes e membros. As agências que melhor protegessem os direitos individuais seriam as mais lucrativas e aquelas que mais os violassem seriam empurradas rapidamente para fora do mercado.

E o que faríamos com todos os psicopatas e criminosos violentos? Nós não daríamos a eles uma plataforma isolada da competição do mercado que permitisse que eles ameaçassem, prendessem, espionassem, torturassem, agredissem e controlassem as outras pessoas. Ou seja, não teríamos uma polícia.

Traduzido por Erick Vasconcelos.

Feature Articles
A Revolution is Needed

It is easy to criticise a government. Apologists and supporters defend it by claiming that they are doing the best they can, and they point to small token victories as evidence of progress. “Look at what this government has done for you”, they say, but my response is always, “is that it?” The ease of criticism is supported by the necessity with which it needs to be made. Without speaking out against your government, you are giving silent approval to the actions they conduct.

This criticism is made all the more easier when you are not present within the nation that is being governed. An outsider’s perspective, where only the bad news makes headlines, and only the tragedies live long in the memory. This is the position I find myself in currently with more news reaching us in the UK of the atrocious manner in which Obama and his administration continues to conduct business.

The hope that Obama was a bright new future for the American people faded almost as soon as he was inaugurated. His policies at home and abroad, no matter what he may say and feel personally, prove that he is only a continuation of a long line of puppets. Away from the bright lights of the oval office sit the real masters, and they have Obama dance a similar tune to that of the previous President.

The importance of this show cannot be overstated. The US is the world’s only superpower, as much as Russia would hate to admit it. With its position within the world, the US lays at the centre of a tangled web of international geo-politics and decisions. Phonecalls cannot be made in Germany without the US listening in, papers cannot be signed in the UK without its nod of approval, and rockets cannot be fired in Israel without the supply arriving from North America.

The US appears to be at the centre of most things. The doctrine of “follow the money” inevitably leads you back to those in and around the White House. It is because of the US’s global position, and because of its impact, that if real change is to be made in this world, it needs to begin within the United States.

The war crimes committed by Israel recently are simply another offence to add to the rap sheet of that criminal state. UN resolutions have been continuously broken, economic blockades have been put in place, human rights have been violated, and illegal settlements are springing up at an alarming rate.

Palestinian resistance to this is often no more than throwing rocks at tanks and bulldozers as they roll through their towns and villages. The futility of that action is not just evident by the fact the rock causes no damage to the tank, but also that the tank is the wrong target.

Israeli action in Palestine is a direct result of decisions made above the White House. They say that the White House is the “highest office in the land”, but I can assure you there are many who look down upon on Obama. The real enemy of the Palestinian people is not the Israeli oppressor, but is in fact the people who support, fund and defend Israeli action. Attacking Israel is attacking the effect, and it is vital that you get to the cause.

With Gazan Twitter users sending advice to those Americans in Ferguson, it is this realisation that struck me. Though one is based in Palestine, fighting an Israeli oppressor, they both face the same enemy. Palestine’s struggle against Israel will never end in victory unless the people of the United States partake in a similar struggle against their own oppressors, the US government.

As disgusting as the events of Ferguson are, the real disgust should come in the knowledge that this is not an isolated incident. These scenes and these actions are relatively common on US soil, and each one further reinforces the fact that the US government views its own people as enemies.

Robert David Steele, a former marine and member of the CIA, recently presented a paper which was based on the findings from his latest book. He told the gathered audience “that all the major preconditions for revolution… were now present in the United States”. With everything in place, there needs only to be a spark to ignite the flames of revolution. A revolution which is long overdue, and much needed.

Commentary
Abolish the Police

The tragic chaos in Ferguson, Missouri following the shooting of an unarmed teenager and massive protests has prompted a discussion police power and how far it should extend. For the anarchist, the answer is simple: police power shouldn’t exist.

“But what would you do with all the psychopaths and violent people?”

This is perhaps the most common question posed to anarchists. After all, most people view the state and its monopoly on force as the method by which society handles the psychopaths and violent people. To answer the question, we first have to analyze the current “solution”: The police.

The situation in Ferguson is an example of some of the most extreme, egregious measures taken by police as of late. But an understanding of the kind of culture statism promotes leads to the conclusion that Ferguson is merely a symptom of a growing disease that is sweeping the United States.

Statism normalizes the initiation of violence and the violation of people’s most basic human rights. Elections that serve millions of people’s property and civil liberties on a platter to the biggest special interest group makes the destruction of human rights commonplace. A military industrial complex that creates hate abroad and encourages racist, xenophobic nationalism at home makes literal bombings just a part of every day life. And worst of all, the militarization of police creates generations of obedient serfs who live in fear of strangers roaming the streets in dark colored outfits reminiscent of gangs with weapons that can blow you away in one unaccountable, shot … or worse.

The Ferguson police are crushing the right to free speech, imposing curfews and threatening protesters and journalists with violence. And I thought anarchy was chaos.

Why does this continue to happen? Simple. Because they have the most guns — because they have a monopoly.

Police are not efficient because they don’t rely on customers’ voluntary support. They aren’t held accountable because they face no serious threat of losing power. They are abusive because citizens have two choices: Obey or suffer the punishment. They are militarized because they don’t operate on the profit and loss mechanism of the freed market and have an endless trough of stolen taxpayer money to waste.

If the police monopoly was broken up, the police as we know them would no longer exist. Private defense agencies, communal associations, neighborhood watch groups and mutual aid societies would take the place of state “defense.” While they would serve the end of protecting citizens, like the police claim to do, these organizations would likely look far different from modern local police forces.

Police forces are insulated from competition, market feedback, the price mechanism and the profit-loss system. As monopolies, they come with incentives to overspend, overcharge, under-produce, and generally work in opposition to the consumers’ interests and in favor of their own.

But firms and organizations that spontaneously arise on a freed market out of voluntary exchange are subject to market forces every step of the way. They must serve the consumers’ interests – they must produce a worthwhile product at an affordable cost or be crushed by competition. Being in the business of defense, they must minimize costly, violent conflict and pursue cheaper, peaceful solutions or else be out-competed by other organizations that better serve their customer’s interests.

Since these organizations would be at constant risk of losing business to competition, unlike the police, their methods and tactics would be completely different. They would have to respect their customers’ rights if they ever want their business. The agencies that better protect rights would be the most profitable and the ones that violate peoples’ rights would be quickly pushed out of the market.

So what would we do with all the psychopaths and violent criminals? We wouldn’t give them a platform insulated from market competition that allows them to threaten, arrest, spy on, torture, aggress against, and control other people. Namely, we wouldn’t give them a police force.

Portuguese, Stateless Embassies
Paul Krugman e as fantasias libertárias

Em artigo recente para o New York Times, Paul Krugman criticou os libertários por “viverem em um mundo de fantasia”, afirmando que há, normalmente, bons motivos para os burocratas ignorarem o julgamento individual em favor de suas próprias preferências. Quando alguém afirma que se opõe a um livre mercado pleno, o que essa pessoa na verdade diz é que quer decidir quais trocas e formas de cooperação pacíficas devem ser permitidas. Uma vez que eu não considero que um grupo especial de pessoas deva ter o direito arbitrário de chefiar ou dominar as outras através da violência, naturalmente eu não acredito na restrição das trocas voluntárias que beneficiam todas as partes interessadas e não prejudicam mais ninguém. Porém, espera-se que sempre aceitemos o Julgamento dos Especialistas, então ao que parece eu devo ser pouco esclarecido ou no mínimo antissocial por não aceitar limites e regulações “razoáveis” (razoabilidade essa definida, é claro, por burocratas especializados) às trocas entre adultos em mútuo consentimento.

Paul Krugman, provavelmente inconscientemente, se movimenta de forma interessante sempre que articula sua visão sobre o que guia as ações dos agentes do governo em oposição a atores do mercado. Quando ele fala sobre estes últimos, ele presume, talvez corretamente, que sejam motivados puramente pelo interesse pessoal, pela ganância e pelos benefícios particulares que podem ser conseguidos, a despeito de quem seja prejudicado, com a poluição de recursos naturais ou com a venda de produtos perigosos aos consumidores, por exemplo. Tudo bem, mas ao considerarmos as motivações dos burocratas do governo, deveríamos ter as mesmas premissas, certo? Não exatamente. Veja bem, de acordo com a visão de mundo de Krugman, simplesmente não há motivos para pensar que os pensadores da escolha pública realmente tenham feito contribuições significativas ao nosso entendimento das maquinações políticas, que devamos olhar para a política “sem romance” e considerar as motivações dos poderosos no governo da mesma forma que as consideramos nas empresas. Não importa o trabalho de gente como Butler Shaffer, que mostrou que as grandes empresas há muito tempo fazem campanhas em favor das regulamentações para “obter benefícios que não eram capazes de conseguir por conta própria”. Para uma empresa ou para qualquer outro ator dentro do mercado, a falta de flexibilidade e capacidade de resposta às mudanças significa entropia.

Shaffer demonstrou que empresas estabelecidas e bem conectadas que não desejem sofrer mudanças, é mais fácil tentar mudar o ambiente da competição, transferindo sua entropia para os concorrentes. Os meios legais e regulatórios se apresentam. No mundo de Krugman, porém, em que o estado benfeitor nos foi dado pela Graça Divina, é inconcebível que os reguladores possam ter intenções diversas do mais puro altruísmo. Em sua cabeça, uma vez que já estamos próximos a um mercado desregulado atualmente, precisamos de mais intervenções benevolentes advindas dos burocratas do governo em Brasília, que são superiores moralmente a nós. Krugman é incapaz de ver que seu cabresto ideológico esconde o fato de que já vivemos sob um estado corporativo centrista (ou seja, fascista) e que esse estado foi incapaz de agir da forma que ele deseja.

Krugman, portanto, é o fantasista utópico com quem ele próprio tanto se preocupa. Sua fé na benevolência do poder centralizado é tão grande que supera todas as suas crenças sobre as tendências do interesse particular sem freios. Os Krugmans do mundo ainda não aprenderam que os burocratas do governo pensam da mesma forma que os agentes do setor privado, os gerentes corporativos que são os vilões na narrativa social-democrata. Grandes instituições burocráticas, tanto “públicas” quanto “privadas”, com ou sem fins lucrativos, inculcam uma ortodoxia essencialmente hierárquica, uma deferência às decisões centralizadas e ao julgamento superior dos especialistas. No livro Bureaucracy, de 1859, Richard Simpson explicava a mentalidade burocrática:

“[A] ideia de burocracia não está completa até que acrescentemos uma presunção pedante de capacidade de dirigir nossas vidas, saber o que é melhor para nós, mensurar nosso trabalho, supervisionar nossos estudos, prescrever nossas opiniões, responsabilizar-se por nós, nos colocar na cama, cobrir, colocar um gorro em nossa cabeça e nos alimentar com uma papinha. Esse elemento não parece ser possível sem a ideia por parte do poder governante de que ele possui o segredo da vida, o conhecimento real de toda a ciência política, que deve dirigir a conduta de todos os homens ou ao menos de todos os cidadãos. Assim, qualquer governo que estabeleça como seu objetivo o bem maior da humanidade, o defina e dirija todos os seus esforços para alcançá-lo tende a se tornar uma burocracia.”

Nossos governantes dependem de apologistas como Paul Krugman, os intelectuais públicos que realmente acreditam neles e que são sinceramente incapazes de entender a natureza criminosa da autoridade política. Como descentralistas e libertários, não devemos esperar convencê-los. Mas podemos demonstrar que as fantasias não são dos libertários, cujas ideias nunca tiveram espaço. Com todas as suas advertências perturbadas sobre os libertários, são as ideias de autoritários como Krugman e David Brooks que repercutem nos EUA há muito tempo, defendendo uma burocracia que domina todas as áreas da vida. Individualistas de esquerda e descentralistas entendem que não há pessoa ou organização que possua o “segredo da vida”. Assim, devemos resistir à tentação de dar o poder arbitrário e coercitivo ao estado, que, por natureza, não pode jamais ser altruísta ou ter preocupações genuínas com o povo.

Traduzido por Erick Vasconcelos.

Life, Love And Liberty, Stigmergy - C4SS Blog
Liberal and Libertarian Conceptions of Policing: Response to Armanda Marcotte

Armanda Marcotte recently wrote about the supposed refutation of libertarian arguments represented by the Ferguson protests. She acts surprised that a “few libertarian types,” other than Radley Balko, are attempting to sound consistent on police power in Ferguson, as if most libertarians had previously been endorsing this kind of policing response.

She also goes on to accuse libertarians of thinking that civil liberties violations allegedly created by Bush are actually the invention of Obama. A baseless charge for which I am aware of no evidence. As if that weren’t bad enough, she postulates that libertarians are just “ass covering”. A notion implying that they aren’t really seriously opposed to this stuff.

All that aside, the meat of the piece revolves around a contrast between the liberal and libertarian conceptions of policing. Her central piece of empirical evidence for the liberal conception is what happened when Liberal Democratic governor, Jay Nixon, got involved. She specifically mentions him putting the head of highway police, Ron Johnson, in charge, and his marching with the protesters.

The central problem with this line of reasoning is that Jay Nixon recently declared a state of emergency along with a curfew in Ferguson, Missouri. He also recently sent in the National Guard. There are also police abuses still occurring such as the threatening of reporter, Chris Hayes. Ron Johnson broke a promise to not enforce the curfew with military style trucks and tear gas. He also ordered the arrest of journalists. It appears that the old approach is still in effect.

Another major part of her thesis is that non-violence has proven itself more effective than violence. This is ironically combined with mentioning that Ronald Reagan cracked down on blacks carrying guns in the form of the Black Panthers. Not to mention that there is no unifying libertarian view on the use of violence against government as a form of protest. We can grant truth to her argument without believing it’s refuted libertarianism.

The final part of her piece worth addressing pertains to her queer view that libertarians view police as inherently authoritarian. This implicitly means all libertarians believe this. The fact is that some libertarians do oppose all police while others want to have private policing. Not all libertarians even think government police are inherently authoritarian. There are minarchists who support them.

That having been said, her liberal conception of government police as serving in an accountable “serve and protect” function ignores a number of factors. The factor of officer friendly belonging to a monopolistic organization. This means people can’t escape abuse easily. Another issue is that the government police may only be officer friendly for respectable members of the community who aren’t violating any unjust laws deemed socially necessary.

The final problem with her analysis is that all government relies on the initiation of force to survive. Officer friendly will eventually have to be unfriendly to anyone seeking the services of a non-government protective association. In the context of most governments, they also have to eventually be unfriendly to those evading compulsory taxation. Her goal of police who genuinely serve communities is better realized in left-wing market anarchy. One way to go about creating rights protection outside of government is to encourage things like non-government sanctioned neighborhood watch and jury nullification. Both of which can serve to protect rights without the state. The first by deterring violent crime through citizen watch and the second by freeing people unjustly headed for imprisonment. Please get started on this vital task today!

The Sheldon Richman Collection
Liberty in America During the Great War

There’s always plenty for libertarians to complain about in our troubled world, but in many respects, things could be much worse. I’m thinking particularly of how the U.S. government punished dissent before, during, and even after America’s participation in World War I. Although it will be a few years before we observe the centenary of Woodrow Wilson’s idiotic decision in 1917 to plunge the country into the Great War, this seems like as good a time as any to review his administration’s, Congress’s, and the courts’ shameful conduct.

My source here is David M. Kennedy’s Over Here: The First World War and American Society (paperback, 2004), especially chapter 1, “The War for the American Mind.” (Also see Joseph Stromberg’s “Remembering with Astonishment Woodrow Wilson’s Reign of Terror in Defense of ‘Freedom.’”)

Wilson of course was reelected president in 1916 after a campaign that reminded voters, “He kept us out of war.” But as Kennedy tells it, most of the public did not need to be dragged into war. (Germany’s resumption of submarine warfare must have had something to do with this.) Resistance did not appear widespread, and efforts to suppress dissent (and activities having nothing to do with dissent) were more virulent at the grassroots level than in Washington. At some point, American nativism kicked in with a vengeance, and the prowar fever was easily exploited to turn up the heat on immigrants and workers.

The propaganda campaign was remarkable, the repression more so, as though the policymakers feared that a little dissent could turn the whole country antiwar. “Woe be to the man or group of men that seeks to stand in our way.” That was Wilson’s warning to the war opponents two months after he asked an obliging Congress for a declaration of war on Germany. “They had no small idea, as yet, just how much woe was to befall them,” Kennedy writes.

Kennedy believes that suppression of dissent was made easier by a traditional American striving for agreement. The government’s public school — known in the 19th century as the common school — won favor out of a desire to homogenize the religiously and ethnically diverse population. The “melting pot” was a popular notion. “Those deep-running historical currents,” Kennedy writes, “darkly moving always beneath the surface of a society more created than given, more bonded by principles than by traditions, boiled once more to the surface of American life in the crisis of 1917–1918.” Social stability was seen as requiring “sameness of opinion … commonality of mind.”

It was in the preparation for war and during the war itself that the notion of “100 percent Americanism” was forged, Kennedy adds, and most people were suspicious of anyone who seemed less than 100 percent American.

Kennedy notes that Wilson was well suited for the role he assumed

He had all his life been a moralizing evangelist who longed with a religious fervor to sway the public mind with the power of his person and his rhetoric. The war furnished him with a wider stage for the ultimate performance of the act he had long been perfecting.… He subverted the more or less orderly processes of politics by stirring and heating the volatile cauldron of public opinion. Therein lay both his great political genius and a major source of his eventual downfall.

But Wilson’s public reversal on the war caught many people by surprise — particularly the Progressive intelligentsia, which, led by John Dewey and the New Republic, converted to war-boosterism with relative ease — to Randolph Bourne’s horror. (See Murray Rothbard’s classic “World War I as Fulfillment: Power and the Intellectuals.”) But, Kennedy adds,

some of those persons of sensitive conscience would indeed find the passage from neutrality to war impossible to negotiate. The steadfast pacifists — like those who held to the original anti-war principles of the American Union Against Militarism — increasingly found themselves isolated in a wilderness of opposition from which nearly all their countrymen had fled by the end of 1917.

Just as the Eastern Progressives hoped that they could harness the unpleasantness of war to their reformist aims (Progressives further west were skeptical), conservatives and others also “sought to invest America’s role in the war with their preferred meaning and to turn the crisis to their particular advantage,” Kennedy writes. “All, of course, mantled their activities in the raiment of patriotism. But that loose garment could be stretched to many sizes and shapes, and the struggle to define the war’s meaning often cloaked purposes far removed from Wilson’s summons to a crusade for a liberal peace and democracy.”

Thus the demand for solid support for the war bolstered groups that were already suspicious of immigrants and workers showing an interest in unions. Thus opponents of war could be further stigmatized as foreigners and socialists. (Recall that avowed socialists condemned the Great War as a “capitalist war” in which the world’s workers had no interest.)

Washington’s efforts to disseminate a particular view of the war — democracy versus German authoritarianism — reached into the schools, and local school officials obliged by stepping up the effort, for example, by outlawing the teaching of German. “Ninety percent of all the men and women who teach the German language are traitors,” Kennedy quotes one Iowa politician as saying.

By executive order, Wilson created the innocuously named Committee on Public Information, a propaganda mill headed by Progressive muckraking journalist George Creel. Kennedy portrays Creel as a man who believed that the American way of shaping opinion “shunned coercion and censorship.” But apparently not everyone agreed.

Kennedy finds parallels between the American propaganda effort and themes found in George Orwell’s 1984.

The American experience in World War I … darkly adumbrated the themes Orwell was to put at the center of his futuristic fantasy: overbearing concern for “correct” opinion, for expression, for language itself, and the creation of an enormous propaganda apparatus to nurture the desired state of mind and excoriate all dissenters. That American propaganda frequently wore a benign face, and that its creators genuinely believed it to be in the service of an altruistic cause, should not obscure these important facts.

At the grassroots level, vigilantism — including lynching — was not uncommon and too often was more or less countenanced by people in power and prominent members of the of legal community, including a future U.S. attorney general, Charles Bonaparte.

The Justice Department under Attorney General Thomas Gregory encouraged citizen surveillance through its link to the American Protective League, “a group of amateur sleuths and loyalty enforcers,” in Kennedy’s description. Said Gregory, “I have today several hundred thousand private citizens — some individuals, most of them as members of patriotic bodies, engaged in … assisting the heavily overworked Federal authorities in keeping an eye on disloyal individuals and making reports on disloyal utterances.” Kennedy says that by the end of the war, the APL had 250,000 members.

This was also the period in which the United States got the Espionage Act and amendments known as the Sedition Act. Under the authority of the Espionage Act, Postmaster General Albert Sidney Burleson banned publications from the mail or stripped them of their second-class mailing permits for even suggesting that Wall Street or the arms industry controlled the government. Criticizing the government was regarded as aiding the enemy.

Wilson, Kennedy writes, meekly and privately objected to the heavy-handedness of his underlings on occasion but never did anything about it. His true feelings were revealed after the war, when he advocated a new sedition act to take the place of the soon-to-expire wartime amendment.

The courts were no friendlier to dissenters and government critics. Kennedy says the

courts construed the [wartime censorship] laws broadly, convicting persons, for example, for even discussing the constitutionality of conscription, or, as happened in New Hampshire, for claiming ‘this was a Morgan war and not a war of the people’ (a remark that earned its author a three-year prison sentence).

An antiwar speech could get you indicted, tried, and sent to prison. Socialist leader Eugene V. Debs went to prison for delivering a speech against the war, although he did not call on young men to defy conscription.

“The Supreme Court,” Kennedy writes, “did not review any Espionage Act cases until after the Armistice. By then, of course, the damage was done.”

When District Judge Learned Hand ordered Postmaster General Burleson to stop closing the mails to dissenting magazines, an appeals court overturned the order and the Supreme Court let the appellate decision stand. In 1919 the high court heard three cases brought under the Espionage Act. In one, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. declared that in wartime, speech or written work that is “such a hindrance” to the government’s effort may be prohibited.

It was in this opinion that Holmes enunciated the “clear and present danger” standard for when speech and press may be controlled. But Kennedy notes that Holmes and his fellow justices violated their own standard. For example, the court refused to overturn the conviction of a German-American “who had published articles questioning the constitutionality of the draft and the purposes of the war.”

Holmes also sustained Debs’s conviction, writing ominously, “if a part of the manifest intent of the more general utterances was to encourage those present to obstruct the recruiting service … the immunity of the general theme may not be enough to protect the speech.” Kennedy found only one case in which Holmes, in dissent, used the “clear and present danger” test to oppose a conviction.

Holmes, strangely, has a reputation as a great civil libertarian. One perceptive observer was not fooled; H.L. Mencken demolished the renowned jurist in a 1930 book review that reminded readers of Holmes’s wartime opinions.

We are indeed fortunate that speakers, writers, and publishers who today communicate antiwar messages are no longer treated as they were during World War I. That they were not so treated after the 9/11 attacks — considering the other appalling policies and practices the Bush administration engaged in — we might chalk up to the devout respect for freedom of speech and press that is nurtured by hardworking organizations and civil libertarians dedicated to protecting those freedoms.

Kennedy ends his chapter on a note that today’s progressives ought to heed. Eastern Progressives supported Wilson’s war hoping it would advance reform while avoiding the domestic excesses that war can produce. They miscalculated, however. Dewey was wrong. Bourne was right.

The devotees of Barack Obama, who has prosecuted more whistleblowers under the same Espionage Act than all previous presidents combined, still have not learned their lesson.

Commentary
Krugman on Libertarian Fantasies

In a recent piece in the New York Times, Paul Krugman arraigns libertarians for “living in a fantasy world,” telling us that there is usually a “very good reason” for bureaucrats to substitute their judgment for our own. When one asserts that he is opposed to an untrammeled free market, all he is really saying is that he wants to be able to decide which perfectly peaceful exchanges and cooperative forms will be deemed permissible. Since I don’t think that some special group of people should have the arbitrary right to boss around or lord over all other people using violence, I naturally don’t believe in restricting voluntary exchanges that benefit all interested parties and leave everyone else unharmed. We are, however, supposed to unthinkingly embrace the Rule of Experts, and so I must be unenlightened or just plain antisocial to the extent that I don’t accept some “reasonable” (itself defined, of course, by supposed expert bureaucrats) limits or regulations on trade between consenting adults.

Paul Krugman, unconsciously I’m sure, makes an interesting move whenever he articulates his view of what it is that drives the acts of government agents as opposed to market actors. When he’s talking about the latter group, he assumes, perhaps quite rightly, that they are motivated by unalloyed self-interest, by greed and the bottom line, regardless of who gets trampled on, whether it means polluting cherished, shared natural resources or hawking unsafe products to consumers. Well, all right, so when we’re considering the motivations of DC bureaucrats, the same assumptions ought to hold, right? Not exactly. You see, in the Krugman worldview, there is just no reason to fear that the public choice scholars actually made a meaningful contribution to our understanding of political machinations, that we should look at politics “without romance” and consider the motivations of the powerful in government just as we do the powerful in business. Never mind the work of people like Butler Shaffer, who has shown that big business has long agitated for regulation as a way “to obtain benefits it has been unable to secure by its own efforts.” For a firm or any other market actor, lack of flexibility and responsiveness to changing conditions means entropy.

Shaffer demonstrates that for entrenched and well-connected firms that don’t want to change themselves, it is often easier to attempt to change their competitive environs, to pass their entropy onto their competitors. Legal and regulatory means present themselves. In Krugman world, however, a world in which the cherubic state was given to us from heaven by Immaculate Conception, it is inconceivable that regulators could be anything but pure of heart in their altruism. In his mind, since we already have close to an unfettered free market today, what we need is more benevolent intervention from our moral betters in DC. For Krugman, ideological blinders occlude the fact that we already have his progressive, centrist corporate-statism (i.e., fascism), and that it has utterly failed to do anything remotely like what he wants it to do.

Krugman, then, is the utopian fantasist that he’s so worried about, his faith in the benevolence of centralized power overriding everything he claims he believes about the tendencies of unchecked self-interest. The Krugmans of the world haven’t learned that government bureaucrats are actually committed to a way of thinking almost identical to that of their private sector counterparts, the corporate middle managers who are the villains in a mainstream liberal’s morality play. Large bureaucratic institutions, whether “public” or “private,” whether for profit or not, inculcate an essentially hierarchical orthodoxy, a deference to centralized decision making and to the supernal judgment of experts. In his 1859 work Bureaucracy, Richard Simpson explained the bureaucratic mind:

[T]he idea of a bureaucracy is not fulfilled till we add the pedantic element of a pretence to direct our life, to know what is best for us, to measure out our labour, to superintend our studies, to prescribe our opinions, to make itself answerable for us, to put us to bed, tuck us up, put on our nightcap, and administer our gruel. This element does not seem possible without a persuasion on the part of the governing power that it is in possession of the secret of life, that it has a true knowledge of the all-embracing political science, which should direct the conduct of all men, or at least of all citizens. Hence any government that avowedly sets before its eyes the summum bonum of humanity, defines it, and directs all its efforts to this end, tends to become a bureaucracy.

Our overlords rely on the earnest apologetics of people like Paul Krugman, the public intellectuals who really mean it, and quite sincerely won’t ever understand the criminal nature of political authority. As decentralists and libertarians, we cannot expect to convince them. But we can demonstrate that the fantasies aren’t coming from libertarians, the ideas of whom haven’t ever actually been given a chance. For all his perturbed warnings about libertarians, it is the ideas of authoritarians like Krugman and David Brooks that have been winning the day in the U.S. for a long time, with bureaucracy engulfing every area of life. Left wing individualists and decentralists understand that no person or organization can possess “the secret of life.” We therefore resist granting arbitrary, coercive power to the State, which by nature can never be genuinely public-spirited or altruistic.

Portuguese, Stateless Embassies
Não, um policial-soldado em cada esquina não parece uma boa ideia

O editor da Hot Air Weekend, Jazz Shaw, acredita que denunciar a militarização policial  não só em Ferguson, onde acontecem os conflitos no Missouri, mas em todo lugar  é um “julgamento apressado e desprovido de contexto”. Ele se impressiona com o fato de que “uma perturbação local se transformou em uma exigência nacional pelo enfraquecimento da polícia”. Shaw alega que essa ideia é um insulto, porque “os departamentos de polícia em cidades de todos os tamanhos em todo o país já são equipados com equipamentos militares modernos há algum tempo e o resto dos Estados Unidos não parece ter se transformado em campos de extermínio”.

Ignorando a tentativa óbvia de Shaw de conversar levar a conversa por um caminho histérico, talvez seja uma boa ideia responder a suas objeções de forma caridosa, dando o contexto apropriado a elas, a começar por Ferguson.

A observação mais óbvia que se deve fazer é que atravessar fora da faixa de pedestres, pequenos furtos ou fugir de policiais não são crimes puníveis com morte em qualquer lugar dos Estados Unidos. O fato de Michael Brown foi morto por um desses três motivos é ultrajante e as pessoas ficaram justificavelmente revoltadas. Isso, porém, não é tudo que acontece em Ferguson. A composição demográfica da cidade diz muito.

De acordo com dados extraídos do Departamento de Recenseamento dos Estados Unidos e com algumas reportagens, cerca de 64% da população de 21.203 habitantes de Ferguson  ou seja, 14.290  é formada por negros. Seu prefeito, James Knowles, contudo, é branco; cinco dos seis membros do Conselho Municipal são brancos; seis dos sete oficiais da mesa diretora educacional são brancos; e dos 53 policiais do Departamento de Ferguson, três – três! – são negros.

Tem mais. De acordo com a Procuradoria Geral do Estado do Missouri, embora brancos em Ferguson tenham maior probabilidade de serem pegos carregando “contrabando” em buscas policiais que negros, há uma probabilidade seis vezes maior de que negros terão seus carros parados por policiais, 11 vezes maior de que sejam revistados e 12 vezes maior de que sejam presos.

O assassinato de Michael Brown serviu para catalisar as insatisfações de uma população intensamente perseguida, destituída e discriminada racialmente. E esse não foi um incidente isolado. Ao longo de 2014 houveram vários casos de alta repercussão de policiais que mataram homens negros desarmados e não-violentos, como Luis Rodriguez em Moore, Oklahoma, e Eric Garner em Staten Island, Nova York. Quatro casos ocorreram somente em agosto, de acordo com Josh Harkinson do site Mother Jones.

No entanto, Jazz Shaw acredita que os que lutam pela desmilitarização da polícia, como Radley Balko, Rand Paul e outros, simplesmente querem voltar aos bons e velhos tempos da polícia, “a era em que o policial caminhava tranquilamente, rodando seu cassetete e apontando o dedo para a criança levada que roubava uma máquina de doces”.

Ele quer que soldados o protejam de rebeliões como a de Ferguson (que ocorreu apenas em uma noite em uma semana de protestos e violência da polícia) ou os distúrbios em Los Angeles por conta do caso de Rodney King em 1992. Shaw quer proteção. Quer que soldados policiais patrulhem as ruas totalmente paramentados a todo momento, em todas as comunidades, para protegê-lo e proteger aqueles como ele de atiradores nas escolas, negros e qualquer outra pessoa que tenha ousado quebrar o contrato social conservador que ele criou para todos nós.

“Antes de exigir a ‘desmilitarização’ da polícia”, escreve ele, “talvez você queira se lembrar de quem é que garante que a sua vizinhança hoje em dia seja diferente da de Los Angeles em 1992”.

Nós lembramos. E por isso queremos a desmilitarização total, seguida da completa abolição, não apenas do Departamento de Polícia de Ferguson, mas de todas as polícias, em todos os lugares.

Traduzido por Erick Vasconcelos.

Missing Comma, Stigmergy - C4SS Blog
Missing Comma: #mediablackout

I’ll be honest, I used to scoff at the term “citizen journalism.” Why should any average Joe with a Twitter account be trusted with the same line of work for which I’m working on a bachelor’s degree?

But in recent years, with the introduction of GoPros, smartphones and accessible encryption techniques, a new kind of vigilante “journalist” (and I’ll get to why I used scare quotes in a second) has emerged. They’ve allowed us to watch live streams of worldwide Occupy Wall Street demonstrations, riots in Ukraine and most recently, the Ferguson protests after card-carrying journalists were reportedly purged out of police-occupied areas with tear gas. This is problematic in the growing blog culture of the new media landscape – people who don’t have the necessary training to handle themselves as members of the press make for even more misinformation coming out online, especially when they don’t properly contextualize situations such as the Ferguson riots.

The #mediablackout hashtag appeared on Twitter without any real contextualization; people were tweeting it in tandem with #IfTheyGunnedMeDown and similar hashtag campaigns but it wasn’t clear what exactly the #mediablackout entailed until the arrests of Al-Jazeera, Huffington Post and Washington Post journalists surfaced.

Outrage doesn’t.

Outrage isn’t a substitute for information. Sure, the public is taking notice on restrictions of journalism but a few attention-grabbing tweets aren’t going to reverse a media blackout. We need people on the ground like the affected journalists to get publicly angry, and even Obama took their side, albeit after some presidential jargon condemning violence against police:

There’s also no excuse for police to use excessive force against peaceful protests or to throw protesters in jail for lawfully exercising their First Amendment rights. And here in the United States of America, police should not be bullying or arresting journalists who are just trying to do their jobs and report to the American people on what they see on the ground.

All that aside, whether or not you believe that the Disney Channel purposely aired throwback episodes of old shows to distract youths from the news, I don’t need to tell you that press freedom is a myth in America. What’s most concerning about Ferguson isn’t citizen journalism, it’s, as Sandy Davidson, a professor of communications law at the Missouri School of Journalism weighed in:

… every piece of information Ferguson officials have tried to keep from leaking has come back to bite them. Despite vocal outcries from community leaders, Ferguson Police Chief Thomas Jackson has refused to release the name of the officer involved in Brown’s shooting, citing death threats against the officer. It’s a valid concern, and one Davidson said is supported by legal precedent. She cites a 1982 appellate case in her home state of Missouri, which held that public information can be withheld if releasing it would cause a “foreseeable risk of harm.” The Supreme Court let the decision stand in 1983.

But legal or not, withholding information has consequences, including a risk that those withholding the information will be perceived as having something to hide. “You can’t trust what you don’t know,” Davidson said. “Anytime a veil of secrecy is thrown on something, I think it leads to speculation, which can get more and more odious.”

As long as transparency isn’t the norm, information is going to suffer. This should be a no-brainer, but this makes it all the more important that we fight for press freedom and attempt to instruct people on how to conduct citizen journalism properly.

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