Feed 44
Ron Paul: Thick or Thin? on Feed 44

C4SS Feed 44 presents Cory Massimino‘s “Ron Paul: Thick or Thin?” read by Christopher B. King and edited by Nick Ford.

And what is underlying this respect for human rights? Paul rightfully says it’s tolerance, “…liberty is liberty and it’s your life and you have a right to use it as you see fit.” In other words, the driving factor of a belief in non-aggression is being tolerant of others’ choices.

Writing in 1929, Mises understood this well, “…only tolerance can create and preserve the condition of social peace without which humanity must relapse into the barbarism and penury of centuries long past.”

Explaining why non-aggression necessarily involves other beliefs, Lew Rockwell writes, “…no political philosophy exists in a cultural vacuum, and for most people political identity is only an abstraction from a broader cultural view. The two are separate only at the theoretical level; in practice, they are inextricably linked.”

What Paul, Mises, and Rockwell understand is what Charles Johnson describes as “strategic thickness.” Strategic thickness is the view that certain ideas and values are useful for promoting, implementing, and maintaining the morality of non-aggression in the real world. After all, there are obviously going to be some ideas that are more complementary to non-aggression than others.

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Portuguese, Stateless Embassies, Stigmergy - C4SS Blog
Relatório da Coordenação de Mídias em Português: Outubro/Novembro de 2014

Como afirmei em setembro, nós passaríamos por um momento de apertar os cintos na embaixada em português do C4SS. É claro que isso não significa que vamos cessar todas as nossas atividades, mas apenas que não estamos trabalhando no ritmo frenético em que vínhamos desde fevereiro.

De 26 de setembro a 25 de outubro, publicamos apenas 6 artigos. Em outubro, nosso blockbuster foi o panfleto de Kevin Carson O punho de ferro por trás da mão invisível, que recebeu até uma introdução especial para o público brasileiro pelo próprio Carson.

Já de 26 de outubro a 25 de novembro, publicamos 9 artigos, três deles originais. Valdenor Júnior falou sobre o separatismo brasileiro e sobre a consciência negra. Já o convidado Eduardo Lopes, por ocasião do Dia da Consciência Negra (20 de outubro) falou sobre como a Lei de Terras, sancionada durante o Império no Brasil, impediu os negros de ascenderem socialmente.

Em outubro, conseguimos 476 curtidas em nossa página no Facebook. Já em novembro, mais 227, ultrapassando a marca de 3000 curtidas. No Twitter, chegamos a 99 seguidores outubro e permanecemos no mesmo patamar em novembro. Não registrei o número de republicações que tivemos neste mês, que ficarão para o mês que vem, quando farei um resumo das atividades de todo o ano.

Você pode nos ajudar! Doe!

Erick Vasconcelos
Coordenador de Mídias
Centro por uma Sociedade Sem Estado

Portuguese Media Coordinator Update: October-November 2014

As I stated in September, we would be tightening our belts in our Portuguese stateless embassy. It obviously does not mean that we will cease our activities, but that we will not keep the rhythm we had since February.

From September 26 to October 25, we published 6 articles. But during that month our blockbuster was Kevin Carson’s The Iron Fist Behind the Invisible Hand in Portuguese, with a special introduction to Brazilian readers, written by Carson himself.

From October 26 to November, we published 9 articles, three of them originals. Valdenor Júnior talked about secessionism in Brazil and about black awareness. Invited writer Eduardo Lopes, for the ocasion of the Black Awareness Day (November 20th) talked about the Law of Lands, that was sanctioned during the Brazilian Empire and prevented black people from reaching economic independence.

In October, we got 476 likes in our Facebook page, while in November we had 227 likes, surpassing the 3,000 likes mark. On Twitter, we reached 99 followers and remained at the same level in November. I did not register the number of pickups we had this month. I will do so this month, when I will do a retrospective for the whole year.

You can help us! Donate!

Erick Vasconcelos
Media Coordinator
Center for a Stateless Society

The Sheldon Richman Collection
Tackling Straw Men is Easier than Critiquing Libertarianism

Maybe I’m being unreasonable, but I think it behooves a critic to understand what he’s criticizing. I realize that tackling straw men is much easier than dealing with challenging arguments, but that’s no excuse for the shoddy work we find in John Edward Terrell’s New York Times post, “Evolution and the American Myth of the Individual.”

In his confused attempt to criticize libertarians (and Tea Party folks, whom I’ll ignore here), Terrell gets one thing right when he says, “The thought that it is both rational and natural for each of us to care only for ourselves, our own preservation, and our own achievements is a treacherous fabrication” (emphasis added).

Indeed it is. Unfortunately for Terrell’s case, it’s his treacherous fabrication.

Terrell targets the Enlightenment and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, which is doubly funny. Libertarians don’t claim Rousseau as a forebear; he was an advocate of imposing the “general will” — ascertained through democratic procedures — on dissidents as a means of forcing them to be “free.” Does that sound libertarian to Terrell?

As for the Enlightenment, last I checked Adam Smith was a principal of the Scottish wing of that intellectual movement. And he never would have claimed that “it is both rational and natural for each of us to care only for ourselves, our own preservation, and our own achievements.” (I’m not aware of French Enlightenment economists who thought that either.) Has Terrell never heard of Smith’s The Theory of Moral Sentiments, published in 1859 — 17 years before The Wealth of Nations and revised throughout his life? Or is he in that group of scribblers who think The Wealth of Nations was all that Smith had to say about the human enterprise? (Of course, The Wealth of Nations also does not embrace the view that Terrell ascribes to libertarians.) For Terrell’s edification, I’ll point out that The Theory of Moral Sentiments is an extended discussion of “fellow-feeling,” that is, our natural sympathy for others.

Smith would laugh at any portrayal of the isolated, allegedly self-sufficient individual as the summit of human development. No less than the great Greek philosophers, Adam Smith understood how inherently social the individual person is. The self itself is a product of social life. People, he said, seek praise from their fellows and, importantly, aspire to be worthy of praise.

“What so great happiness as to be beloved, and to know that we deserve to be beloved? What so great misery as to be hated, and to know that we deserve to be hated?” Smith asks. The reason, he makes clear, is not merely that a good reputation produces material benefits. As he writes on page one,

How selfish soever man may be supposed, there are evidently some principles in his nature, which interest him in the fortune of others, and render their happiness necessary to him, though he derives nothing from it except the pleasure of seeing it.

By coincidence, just before reading Terrell’s post, I had listened to Russ Roberts’s EconTalk interview with Vernon Smith, the Nobel laureate who is steeped in the economics tradition of Adam Smith and F.A. Hayek. The topic of discussion was The Theory of Moral Sentiments, which is entirely appropriate considering that Roberts and Vernon Smith are two of the small group of professional economists who are intimately familiar with the book. (Another is Dan Klein, with whom Roberts held a multipart book-club discussion. Check out Roberts’s new book about The Theory of Moral Sentiments: How Adam Smith Can Change Your Life: An Unexpected Guide to Human Nature and Happiness.)

At one point in the interview, Vernon Smith notes enthusiastically,

[Adam Smith] says, imagine a person, a member of the species being brought up entirely isolated.… He says that person can no more understand what it means for his mind to be deformed than for his face to be deformed. And Smith says — I’m paraphrasing — bring him into society and you give him the mirror he needed before. In other words, the looking glass in which we are able to see ourselves as others see us.

Thus society is indispensable for the proper development of the person.

Vernon Smith has also written (in “The Two Faces of Adam Smith,” 1998) that Adam Smith’s two published works both describe

one behavioral axiom, “the propensity to truck, barter, and exchange one thing for another,” where the objects of trade I will interpret to include not only goods, but also gifts, assistance, and favors out of sympathy.… [W]hether it is goods or favors that are exchanged, they bestow gains from trade that humans seek relentlessly in all social transactions. Thus, Adam Smith’s single axiom, broadly interpreted … is sufficient to characterize a major portion of the human social and cultural enterprise. It explains why human nature appears to be simultaneously self-regarding and other-regarding.

Does it sound as though either of the Smiths would be inclined to deny, as Terrell puts it, that “evolution has made us a powerfully social species, so much so that the essential precondition of human survival is and always has been the individual plus his or her relationships with others”?

Has Terrell not heard of Adam or Vernon Smith? Or F.A. Hayek or James Buchanan (two Nobel laureates, so their names have been in the papers)? Or Russ Roberts? Or Dan Klein? And while we’re at it, let’s drop the name Herbert Spencer. As Spencer wrote in Social Statics (1851):

The increasing assertion of personal rights is an increasing demand that the external conditions needful to a complete unfolding of the individuality shall be respected….

Yet must this higher individuation be joined with the greatest mutual dependence. Paradoxical though the assertion looks, the progress is at once toward complete separateness and complete union. But the separateness is of a kind consistent with the most complex combinations for fulfilling social wants; and the union is of a kind that does not hinder entire development of each personality. Civilization is evolving a state of things and a kind of character in which two apparently conflicting requirements are reconciled.

He anticipated “at once perfect individuation and perfect mutual dependence.”

If Terrell has never encountered these thinkers, how much research could he have done before he opined about libertarianism? Why should we take Terrell seriously?

I wish I could understand intellectuals who seem to form a priori notions about their opponents, do no empirical research to see if these notions hold up, and then go public with criticisms that should embarrass them badly. If I may say something in the spirit of The Theory of Moral Sentiments: I am embarrassed that a fellow member of the human race has written something so ridiculous.

What people like Terrell don’t realize — or perhaps realize too well — is that the fundamental point in dispute is not whether the individual is a social animal or a creature best suited for an atomistic existence. No libertarian I know of subscribes to the latter notion. The point in dispute is whether proper social life should be founded on peaceful consensual cooperation or on compulsion. (See my “What Social Animals Owe to Each Other.”)

Terrell asserts a dubious distinction between thinking of society as natural and thinking society as a matter merely of convention. I says it’s dubious, and of doubtful significance, because the conventionalist (David Hume, perhaps?) still believes that given their nature, only a social existence generated by certain conventions is appropriate for human beings.

But if for argument’s sake we accept Terrell’s distinction and his preference for naturalism, we still must ask: if society is natural, why must we be compelled to be social? Why is aggressive force — the initiation of violence, which robs persons of their dignity and self-determination — acceptable when free and spontaneous cooperation — voluntary exchange and mutual aid — ought to work reasonably well?  Do the Terrells of the world believe that society would fail without violence?  That, I submit, is bizarre.

It is precisely because human beings are social by nature that physical force should be banned except to repel aggressors and to effect restitution for torts.

I welcome the day that someone writes a serious criticism of liberalism/libertarianism that reflects a real understanding of what is being criticized. Terrell and like-minded folks would expect that of their critics. How about applying the Golden Rule, guys? Go home and do your homework. Then come back and give us your best shot. I promise I’ll be waiting.

Feature Articles
Abolish the Wage System, not Wage Labor

Right libertarians tend to be brilliant defenders of wage labor, but often overlook the wage system. They are right as far as they go about wage labor, but ignore the structural inequality that affects the kinds of employment opportunities that people have — the kind that relies on political power. Wage labor is fine. The wage system needs to go.

Wage labor is merely the act of working for wages, usually for an employer. There is nothing inherently wrong with this. Any freely made exchange is, by definition, mutually beneficial since the parties involved wouldn’t trade if they didn’t think they would be better off. The voluntary decision of someone to work for wages is no different.

After all, many people prefer to work for an employer. They might find the idea of “being their own boss” too challenging. Or they might lack the capital to start their own business. Or maybe they just want another source of income so they choose to work for an employer on the side. It doesn’t matter the motivation — there is no reason to think that wage labor, the act of trading labor for wages, is, in and of itself, problematic.

Where right libertarians go wrong is in their leap from the defense of the idea of wage labor to a defense of wage labor as it currently exists in the real world. And the way it actually exists, the circumstances under which people actually choose wage-paying jobs instead of alternatives, is riddled with state violence. That is, the situation under which people currently choose their line of employment is a wage system.

As far as exchanges are freely chosen, they are mutually beneficial. But the instant force is introduced and the exchange is no longer free, the relationship becomes one of exploitation instead of shared gains. This is the key insight of free market economics. When people are free to make their own choices with their own property, a kind of spontaneous order is created that allows people to improve their lot as they choose. When the state interferes in the market, it distorts it. It disrupts the free exchange of goods and services, making people worse off than they would have been otherwise.

The wage system is an economic system that is dominated by state intervention, which artificially makes wage labor more prominent (and alternatives like self-employment and worker-cooperatives less prominent) through policies that increase barriers to entry in the market and increase the average person’s dependence on a group of individuals, possessing strong political power and controlling the large majority of the means of production: capitalists. The wage system is what happens when the government interferes in the market.

The state artificially ratchets up the cost of capital through inflationary monetary policy that disproportionately harms the lower classes; zoning requirements, licensing restrictions, and capitalization requirements that make it harder to compete with larger, already existing companies; intellectual property law that protects politically entrenched innovators from competition, and so on. We don’t live in a free market. We live in one riddled with violent, state interference.

All this state involvement is what creates the wage system. Class exploitation exists. But contra the Marxists, its origins aren’t found in the inner working of a market — that’s impossible since we don’t have one! We have a rigged market where the government intrudes on every voluntary transaction with endless regulations and rules. Where the rich use the state to create barriers to entry, impediments to competition, and legislation that outlaws alternatives. It’s no surprise that government regulations are so often created and/or supported by wealthy capitalists: the laws benefit them by making the lower classes depend on them.

Calls to abolish the wage system aren’t calls to use violence against employers or force to take away capital. It isn’t a call to abolish wage labor, which would exist in a freed market (though probably to a lesser extent). It’s a call to end the use of force. To abolish the system that is founded on and sustained by massive state violence. To eliminate all the instances of coercion throughout the economy. It’s a call to end the “statist quo” and open up leviathan corporations to real market competition and allow individuals to freely choose their line of employment without being forced to earn the elites’ approval every step of the way.

Wage labor will remain after the revolution. After all, every person is different and some prefer it (and using force to prevent an employer from hiring an employee would be as bad as the acts of force that uphold the wage system currently). But as the state is whittled away, the wage system will suffer the same fate. Good riddance.

The Sheldon Richman Collection
The Ferguson Distraction

Ironically, the shooting death of unarmed black 18-year-old Michael Brown by white Ferguson, MO, police officer Darren Wilson is a distraction from the racist police brutality that ravages America.

Whether or not Wilson shot Brown unjustifiably, and whether or not Brown provoked the shooting by grabbing for Wilson’s gun, the police — and the government officials who employ and arm them — are a big problem in this country. (The Eric Garner chokehold killing has none of the ambiguity of the Brown case.)

Unfortunately, it takes a shooting such as the one in Ferguson to spotlight the problem. And that presents its own problem. The claim that the police are routinely dangerous to innocent people — mostly blacks and Hispanics — appears to stand or fall with the headline case of the week. But that can’t be the correct way to judge the bigger issue. As Jason Lee Byas writes,

The way people are talking about this case seems to imply that if Wilson’s use of force was not in necessary self-defense, the police are out of control — and if it was, everything’s fine.…

Even if Darren Wilson turns out to be a near-perfect moral exemplar, the police are out of control.

Reuben Fischer-Baum writes that the shooting in Ferguson has “drawn attention to a remarkable lack of knowledge about a seemingly basic fact: how often people are killed by the police.”

The national government purports to keep count of “justifiable” police homicides, but that’s apparently all. “‘Unjustifiable homicide by police’ is not a classification,” Fischer-Baum notes.

Among the problems with the collection of data,” he writes, is that the “FBI’s Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) program, which compiles the SHR [Supplementary Homicide Report], relies on voluntary involvement of state and local police agencies — a fact that may raise some questions about the integrity of the data.”

Thus, he concludes, “the SHR’s ‘justifiable police homicide’ number [400] is not a useful approximation of how many people are killed by the police.”

The Wall Street Journal agrees:

A Wall Street Journal analysis of the latest data from 105 of the country’s largest police agencies found more than 550 police killings during those years were missing from the national tally or, in a few dozen cases, not attributed to the agency involved. The result: It is nearly impossible to determine how many people are killed by the police each year.

The Journal quotes Columbia University law professor Jeffrey Fagan: “When cops are killed, there is a very careful account and there’s a national database. Why not the other side of the ledger?”

Data do show that blacks are more likely than whites to fall into police clutches for drug and gunoffenses, even though whites are more likely to commit these victimless so-called crimes. Does anyone doubt that young black males walking down the street are more likely to have a police encounter than young white males are? If you doubt this, you’re not paying attention.

The ultimate cause of this problem is that the police are the domestic armed troops of America’s rulers — falsely called “representatives” — and the rest of us are the ruled. They know it, and we are increasingly coming to know it. Most of the “laws” they enforce against us violate our natural rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. The chasm between rulers and ruled exists everywhere in the country, but it exists on a spectrum from the barely noticeable to the extreme. Obviously, it’s most extreme in poorer black communities, where race and class prejudice sit atop the general disdain for the ruled. (St. Louis County, MO, has gone to outrageous lengths, as Radley Balko shows.)

Some critics of police brutality and racism assume that ending prohibitions on drugs and guns — both worthy ends, of course — would eliminate or reduce police abuse. I’m not convinced. Too many young blacks have been harassed or worse by cops claiming that the “suspects” appeared to be casing a store or engaging in some other suspicious activity having nothing to do with drugs or guns.

Repealing victimless-“crime” statutes is imperative, but we also must rethink the top-down model of policing. After all, London didn’t get a police force until 1829. We could declare the experiment a flop and move on.

Commentary
An Anarchist Response to the UK Autumn Statement

Major political parties in the United Kingdom are so far divorced from market anarchism as to render them a homogeneous mass of irrelevance. That said, it’s worth examining the policy announcements in Wednesday’s Autumn Statement by Chancellor George Osborne, if only to clarify the anarchist position and provide a critique of what many Brits incorrectly perceive to be “free-market” policies.

Realistically, anarchists cannot expect much from the Coalition government. Reducing the size of the state occurs only rarely, and usually as a means to election victory rather than as a statement of sound ideological intent.

Nonetheless, perhaps one cheer may be given to several reforms in the Autumn Statement. In the wake of the Thatcherite fetishisation of home ownership, Osborne’s overhaul of stamp duty (changing stamp duty tax bands from absolute to marginal) will rejig state intervention in the British housing market to benefit less well-off buyers. It’s even been lukewarmly welcomed by the staunchly anti-Tory Guardian. Of course, the Chancellor has completely ignored the most pressing issue for the housing market: Government strangling supply.

Other measures introduced by Osborne include a further rise in the tax-free allowance, which follows increases in previous budgets to provide an important boost to the incomes of the poorest. Another freeze in fuel duty will translate into a real fall in costs for motorists, but enthusiasm needs to be tempered with considerations of how privileging car culture in the taxation system may not send the right message.

There’s plenty in the Autumn Statement that’s incontrovertibly bad news too. The Coalition has unsurprisingly continued to fatten Britain’s sacred cow — dedicating an extra £2 billion per year to NHS spending. As Kate Andrews from the Adam Smith Institute commented, “no one is willing to have a serious conversation about the reforms that could make the NHS financially viable for the next ten years, let alone for future generations; like charging small fees for non-emergency visits.”

Meanwhile, a new “Google Tax” on multinationals diverting profits away from the UK is also cause for concern. It will most likely be ineffective at raising revenue, harmful to business investment and above all a distraction from the reasons why these firms are so powerful and prevalent in the first place: such as intellectual property law and state-sponsored gigantism.

Unsurprisingly, Osborne heavily emphasised progress on reducing the structural deficit during his speech. His deficit reduction program does at least put spending under greater scrutiny, but a sovereign default on national debt would be preferable: Removing our reliance on intergenerational theft to finance a bloated government.

Some of the aforementioned concrete changes are to be welcomed with muted, apathetic applause. But for the radical free marketer, Osborne’s political gambits are little more than a distraction from the need for more fundamental structural change. This is unlikely to come from politicians. Organic, grassroots changes in civil society are ultimately going to be more effective at moving towards anarchism than piecemeal state reform.

Life, Love And Liberty, Stigmergy - C4SS Blog
Antiwar.com Needs Your Support

Antiwar.com is having its annual fundraising drive right now. And it’s well worth contributing to. You won’t easily find a better and more comprehensive news source. The site also features great in house editorial writers like Lucy Steigerwald and Justin Raimondo. Not to mention providing links to many op-eds around the web.

The site is something I visit everyday to enjoy the above features. It keeps me abreast of the latest machinations of the warfare state. This has led to a few blog posts on war related current events. If you’d like to see those posts continue; one way to help is to donate to the fundraising drive.

Another reason to contribute is that the financial deck is stacked against the forces of anti-militarism and anti-imperialism. The war party has the whole U.S. treasury at their disposal. Both of the two major party establishments are committed to a policy of statist interventionism. A way of countering this imbalance is to make contributions to sites like Antiwar.com.

In addition to the reason above; Antiwar.com is also worth making a contribution to because of the timely importance of the issues it addresses. In light of further U.S. military intervention in Iraq and continuation of drone strikes; its message is more relevant than ever. We can’t afford to lose a valuable source of information on the warfare state’s policies at a time like this.

As the destructive impact of said policies spreads; we need to keep abreast of developments more than ever. Knowledge is part of challenging oppressive militaristic power structures and the fruits they bear. Antiwar.com does a real service in furthering this aim. An aim that can save countless lives around the globe.

The immense loss of life from U.S. military policy in particular justifies special attention and focus. We can’t afford to lose sight of the importance of battling the evils of U.S. military interventionism. Antiwar.com is an invaluable resource for furthering this agenda. It deserves our support and attention.

The war party responsible for the above doesn’t sleep and neither does Antiwar.com. News is updated daily and new op-eds from around the net appear on a daily basis as well. If you have any extra cash to spare; do consider helping Antiwar.com continue to do this. You will be rewarded many times over by the information and opinion it gives you access to. If you can; please donate today. Don’t put if off. Antiwar.com needs your support today.

Feature Articles
The Warning of Animal Farm: Inequality Matters

Recently, in a comment on my short piece, “The Libertarian Road to Egalitarianism,” philosopher and prominent libertarian Tibor R. Machan cited George Orwell’s Animal Farm as an example of what happens when we attempt to do something about inequality. To Machan, inequality is a “fabricated problem,” and Orwell’s fairy story is a cautionary tale on the dangers of trying to remedy it. Upon reading his comment, I was somewhat nonplussed, for it had never occurred to me to read Animal Farm in such a way. Indeed, since reading the novel for the first time, I have understood it to offer a warning almost antithetical to that of Machan’s reading.

It seemed to me then, as now, that Orwell’s Animal Farm in fact counsels on the problems with inequality, the results of granting special rights and privileges to some politically connected ruling class. Orwell skillfully illustrates the fundamental problem with political authority, its inherent conflict, that confronted with the incentives which favor abuses of power, lofty philosophical ideals are readily discarded. Orwell’s whole point is that the pigs never actually take their rhetoric about equality and reestablishing the farm on fairer terms seriously — that they almost immediately begin to take advantage of their distinctly unequal position on the farm to exploit the rest of the animals and hoard the luxuries for their own private use and enjoyment. Animal Farm thus succinctly demonstrates the connection between political power and economic power. When inequality in the former is instituted as a matter of legal fact, inequality in the latter follows unavoidably. Free market libertarians are often uncomfortable with the left’s condemnations of economic inequality, arguing that in principle libertarianism can take no issue with inequality itself.

After all, if we favor individual rights, open competition, and private property, we ought to accept whatever results they yield. Strictly speaking, that’s all true enough. It seems to me, however, that a thoroughgoing libertarian critique of society as it is today must include a critique of economic inequality as a symptom of the lack of economic freedom and the persistent interferences of political power to favor and enrich a rich elite. In his biographical study of Thomas Hodgskin, historian David Stack describes Hodgskin’s belief that “the worker could be liberated by the full application of bourgeois morality.” For Hodgskin, Stack writes, “Inequality and misery, social order and the anti-peace” were all functions of the law, artificially imposed and not the result of “any inherent inequalities in the system of production.” If existing economic injustices flowed from the operation of positive law, then “socialist strictures against laissez faire were mistaken.” Hodgskin lived and wrote in a time when it was easier to articulate a view that was both liberal and socialist. The underappreciated legacy of thinkers like Hodgskin makes the case (frequently made at the Center for a Stateless Society today) that libertarians ought to be wary of embracing the term “capitalism,” and trumpeting it as a thing that we favor.

Like Hodgskin, today’s market anarchists do not object to the mere fact that capital is compensated for its part in the process of production. The worry — which can only finally be allayed by observing a now hypothetical free market and finding out — is that capital is overcompensated due to a position of privilege which the State confers on it. “One is almost tempted to believe,” wrote Hodgskin, “that capital is a sort of cabalistic word, like Church or State, or any other of those general terms which are invented by those who fleece the rest of mankind to conceal the hand that shears them. It is a sort of idol before which men are called upon to prostrate themselves . . . .” Among Hodgskin’s central insights, habitually overlooked by most free marketers, is the idea that the fact of exchange in and of itself does not prove the absence of exploitation. Unequal exchange is exploitative insofar as one party to the exchange has an unfair advantage, one gained from the coercive prevention or restriction of competition. Considered on the micro level, unequal exchange might manifest in, for example, the employment relationship or an agreement for consumer goods or services. On a larger scale, unequal exchange analyses may aid our understanding of the way that the poor, developing world interacts economically with the rich and developed West.

In the world of Animal Farm, the pigs employed violence as a way to preserve their position of power; the other animals worked increasingly long hours for less and less, with the pigs ruling as lords of Animal Farm — the name of which was eventually changed back to its original name, Manor Farm. The original mantra, “All animals are equal,” is gradually, almost imperceptibly supplanted by the idea that “some animals are more equal than others.” Machan’s interpretation of Animal Farm forgets that Orwell was a socialist, and as Orwell scholar Craig L. Carr observes, the famous novel is straightforwardly warning about the “betrayal of the egalitarian ideal.” Following the pigs’ revolution, the ouster of Mr. Jones, “[a]n economic system that legitimates material inequality remained in place.” Orwell is interested in the use of language. In all his work, including Animal Farm, political fustian is the mechanism through which the noble goals of the revolution are “rendered consistent with the privilege and superior position of the upper class.” The language of libertarianism and free markets is analogously important to the beneficiaries of economic privilege. Without it, people would recognize corporate power for what it is, a creation of political violence and coercion, a class system as real, observable and quantifiable as any before it. Criticizing inequality ought to be important to libertarianism to the extent that we take our own free market ideas seriously and see the political economy of today as far removed from our model. Libertarians should accordingly welcome socialism and class analysis as found in the work of leftists like Hodgskin and Orwell. It’s time we start emphasizing liberty and equality, not liberty or equality.

Portuguese, Stateless Embassies
A polícia deveria estar na frente das câmeras, não por trás delas

Câmeras nos uniformes de policiais estão na moda. O ativista pelos direitos civis Al Sharpton quer usá-las para monitorar as atividades dos policiais. A comentarista política Ann Coulter deseja usá-las para “calar a boca” de Al Sharpton. A Casa Branca quer implementá-las porque, bem, elas são uma forma de ser “duro com a violência policial” e “duro com o crime”, gastanto US$ 263 milhões em uma nova tecnologia.

Quando Al Sharpton, Ann Coulter e o presidente dos Estados Unidos concordam em algo, minha reação imediata e visceral é de ceticismo extremo. Neste caso, os fatos conhecidos dão suporte a esse ceticismo.

É absolutamente improvável que o uso disseminado de câmeras em uniformes de policiais reduza a incidência ou a severidade da violência policial injustificada. Nós já vimos quais foram os resultados de várias “soluções” tecnológicas para esse problema.

A introdução de sprays de pimenta e tasers como armas para a polícia estimulou uma atitude confrontativa com os “suspeitos” (“suspeito” é policialês para “qualquer um que não seja um policial”). Sua suposta não-letalidade facilitava a substituição das conversas pacíficas por ações violentas.

A introdução de armas e veículos militares para a polícia também não produziu uma diminuição da violência. Pelo contrário: agora nós podemos testemunhar departamentos policiais em todo o país fazerem suas reencenações da ocupação nazista de Paris em muitas cidades.

E quanto às chamadas “dashcams”? Essa é a comparação mais óbvia. As dashcams, porém, parecem sempre estar com defeito ou os departamentos de polícia misteriosamente perdem as gravações quando surge uma denúncia de abuso policial.

Por outro lado, é absolutamente certo que o uso disseminado dessas câmeras aumentaria o escopo e a eficácia da vigilância autoritária estatal.

A proposta da Casa Branca pede a aquisição inicial de 50.000 câmeras. Alguém duvida que as gravações sejam utilizadas e analisadas em comparação com os bancos de dados policiais (que incluem bancos de reconhecimento facial) continuamente?

Se uma câmera fica presa a um policial específico por um período de oito horas diárias (em vez de ser usada por vários policiais continuamente durante o dia), são 400.000 horas por dia de buscas aleatórias sem mandado que podem ser usadas o tempo inteiro em busca de causas prováveis para investigar e prender pessoas. Nem a Polícia do Pensamento em 1984 de George Orwell carregava câmeras portáteis em todos os lugares!

A tecnologia de vídeo certamente é parte da solução para a violência policial, mas essa solução deve permanecer nas mãos de pessoas comuns, não do estado. Mais e mais indivíduos diariamente conseguem acesso a tecnologias de gravação de vídeo, juntamente com serviços de armazenamento na internet que não podem ser destruídos ou alterados pelas autoridades. Os policiais precisam aparecer em câmeras que não controlam.

Parte da solução, porém, é somente parte da solução. Mesmo quando as câmeras pegam policiais violentos, abusivos e criminosos em ação — como, por exemplo, quando câmeras de segurança filmaram os policiais Manuel Ramos e Jay Cicinelli de Fullerton na Califórnia espancando o sem teto Kelly Thomas até a morte em 2011 –, é incrivelmente dificil condená-los ou mesmo abrir processos contra eles.

A ubiquidade do monitoramento em vídeo dos agentes estatais é um começo. Mas a única possibilidade real de garantir o fim da violência estatal é acabar com a polícia estatal — e, na verdade, acabar com o próprio estado.

Traduzido por Erick Vasconcelos.

Stigmergy - C4SS Blog
I’m sorry Eric Garner. I don’t know what else to do.

“I am that whore. I do confess. I put you on just like a wedding dress and run down the aisle.” I’m listening to Wedding Dress by Derek Webb. I go to this song when I’m sad.

I’m sad. Beyond angry. Brokenhearted. The Staten Island Grand Jury chose not to indict the officer who choked father of six Eric Garner to death on the street while attempting to arrest him for selling untaxed cigarettes.

They chose not to make the officer even stand trial. Despite video. Despite the fact that chokeholds are illegal. Despite the coroner ruling the death a homicide. Despite everything. They found no evidence to indicate a crime may have been committed. But they did indict the man who filmed the killing. And they tell us cameras on cops will make a difference.

This is a hard day. It’s been a hard week. A hard month. A hard year.

You get to that point when you’re not angry anymore. When you read the NYPD Tweet, “The #NYPD is committed to rebuilding public trust. #Wehearyou,” and just sit there with your mouth agape, thinking, “How could you?”

The NYPD Commissioner joked about it.

How could you?

This is what the police are saying.

How could you?

#BlackLivesMatter? Like hell they do.

But, then, how could I? I am complicit. I have not yet burned the fucking system to the ground. The system that allows police to kill young black males twenty-one times more often than their white counterparts. The system wherein people respond to that stat with lies about black criminality. The system where white men Tweet at me, “Why is this about race?” The system which buys cops tanks but never offers consequences for breaking the law, starting with the one that requires them to report on how many people they kill every year. This is the racist, corrupt, lawless, and totally unaccountable system I build and support and allow through my complacency and it is a system for which I must be called to account.

I’m going to the White House tonight. It’s not enough. It’s not even close to enough. It’s so far from enough that, to quote a friend, “A part of me wants to crawl into a hole and never emerge again.” But I’m going. I don’t know what else to do.

Feed 44
Paul Krugman: “Leave Obama Alone” on Feed 44

C4SS Feed 44 presents Trevor Hultner‘s “Paul Krugman: “Leave Obama Alone”” read by Christopher B. King and edited by Nick Ford.

http://youtu.be/eBs0x9ieCp8

Krugman believes that the president has “[changed] the country for the better,” despite bitter opposition from the GOP in Congress and people from the left, right and center on the outside.

Krugman believes that the supposedly positive incremental changes the president has made are better than nothing. “No president gets to do everything his supporters expected him to,” he writes.

Reading Krugman’s assessment of the Obama presidency, one must assume that the president’s hands are tied on some issues, that he sometimes necessarily stands by, helpless to do anything while the machinery of the state churns onward, unrelenting. But the policies the Obama administration has carried out have not passed under his nose unnoticed. He is not ignorant of some of the most egregious civil liberties violations his government has perpetrated. It is true that the president is merely one man, but he is a man who stands atop a structure that relies on violence and pain to continue its existence, and he took the position knowing full well that that was the case.

Feed 44:

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Feed 44
Blue or Red, They’re All About the Green on Feed 44

C4SS Feed 44 presents David S. D’Amato‘s “Blue or Red, They’re All About the Green” read by Christopher B. King and edited by Nick Ford.

To glimpse the true relationship between big business and the State, we need only briefly examine the data on how the political action committees (PACs) of the nation’s largest and most influential companies spend their money. Consider a handful of examples from 2010: That year, major defense contractor Raytheon’s PAC gave 56 percent of its money to Democrats and 44 percent to Republicans. Aerospace giant Boeing’s PAC split its donations almost down the middle, shelling out 53 percent to the Dems and 47 percent to the GOP. Colossal agribusiness firm Monsanto gave 46 percent to Democrats and 54 percent to Republicans.

These divisions between donkey and elephant of course vary from election to election, depending on everything from the composition of congress to the likelihood of incumbent victory. And certainly marginal differences between individual candidates and even parties themselves may present themselves in a given election. The point, though, is that corporate entities are very much like the state itself, ultimately nonpartisan, interested only in power and self-aggrandizement.

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Italian, Stateless Embassies
La Lotta Libertaria del Movimento dei Neri

Nota: Questo articolo è stato scritto in occasione della Giornata della Consapevolezza dei Neri in Brasile.

Negli anni sessanta, nomi famosi del movimento libertario americano entrarono in contatto con i movimenti di mobilizzazione della Nuova Sinistra che, al contrario della Vecchia Sinistra, era caratterizzata da diffidenza verso le strategie di uno stato centralizzato con ampi poteri, e dal desiderio di accogliere le minoranze emarginate. Per la Nuova Sinistra, risolvere le questioni razziali e di genere era tanto importante quanto mettere fine alle aggressioni militari.

Le sue tattiche comprendevano la disobbedienza civile di massa, l’azione diretta, e l’organizzazione in proprio di comunità e quartieri tramite istituzioni che agivano fuori dallo stato. Tutto ciò aveva origine nella citata sfiducia nella politica istituzionalizzata: Come diceva il libertario socialista brasiliano Mario Ferreira dos Santos, in una politica democratica, “come pare che sia la regola, i mezzi diventano più importanti dei fini, anzi tendono a sostituirsi a questi ultimi, così che lottare per la libertà significa sfidare questi mezzi.” La Nuova Sinistra cercò di evitare questi passi falsi.

Murray Rothbard cercò di stabilire un contatto tra libertarismo e Nuova Sinistra con il periodico Left and Right: A Journal of Libertarian Thought. Tra gli articoli pubblicati, uno dei migliori è certamente “The New Left and Liberty”, dello stesso Rothbard, che dimostra come la filosofia della libertà fosse già radicata nei metodi della Nuova Sinistra.

Secondo Rothbard, il genere di democrazia partecipativa propugnato dalla Nuova Sinistra era una vera e propria filosofia antistatale e antiautoritaria: Ogni individuo, anche il più povero e marginalizzato, deve avere la stessa padronanza della propria vita. Si tratta, come di recente ha scritto Kevin Carson, di un paradigma economico e organizzativo basato su reti orizzontali e stigmergiche in cui tutto è fatto nell’interesse degli individui o dei gruppi, che più di ogni altro sono motivati e qualificati per svolgere un dato lavoro senza dover chiedere un permesso. Così gli attivisti possono decidere da sé quali obiettivi sono importanti per la comunità con cui lavorano, quali problemi comportano, e quale è la loro urgenza.

In occasione della Giornata della Consapevolezza dei Neri Brasiliani, il venti novembre, è bene anche mettere in evidenza ciò che Rothbard disse del movimento dei neri negli Stati Uniti: Un movimento essenzialmente libertario nei metodi e nelle ragioni. Erano i tempi della lotta per i diritti civili e contro le leggi segregazioniste. Rothbard disse allora che la nuova e la vecchia sinistra erano come olio e acqua.

La Vecchia Sinistra voleva riforme, contributi all’edilizia per i neri, contributi federali per l’istruzione, leggi che garantissero l’assistenza sociale. Era una tattica incentrata sulle lobby.

La Nuova Sinistra, per contro, sosteneva un attivismo militante che orbitasse attorno a questioni che potessero essere trattate con la disobbedienza civile di massa: La segregazione razziale, le restrizioni al voto, la brutalità della polizia con i neri. Quest’ultima, in particolare, era una delle preoccupazioni principali tra i neri, non solo al sud ma anche negli altri stati. Era un problema molto più pressante della mancanza di campi da gioco nei quartieri popolari o delle condizioni dei quartieri stessi.

Rothbard concluse che, concentrandosi su quelle aree in cui uno stato governato dai bianchi opprimeva i neri, la Nuova Sinistra aveva trasformato il movimento nero in un autentico movimento libertario.

Lo stesso valeva per la sfera economica. La Nuova Sinistra giustamente non si fidava degli sforzi del governo per un “rinnovamento urbano”: La Nuova Sinistra non credeva che trasferire i neri dalle loro case andasse a beneficio di tutti; semmai ci vedeva un semplice regalo all’industria delle costruzioni e ai gruppi immobiliari. I programmi di “lotta alla povertà”, poi, erano considerati un modo per i burocrati di manipolare le prospettive economiche della popolazione nera.

Rothbard spiegò come, diffidando dello stato, gli attivisti della Nuova Sinistra collaborarono con le comunità nere, aiutandole ad uscire dall’apatia e organizzandole in associazioni di mutuo soccorso in grado di aiutare i poveri in maniera molto simile alle attuali cooperative. L’applicazione pratica di questi principi portò alla nascita delle scuole libere alternative alle scuole pubbliche.

Opponendosi all’accettazione acritica dei vecchi sindacati della Vecchia Sinistra, inoltre, la Nuova Sinistra lanciò loro l’accusa di aver messo bianchi e neri l’uno contro l’altro, di essersi serviti delle influenze sulle imprese per limitare la presenza dei neri sul posto di lavoro, e di aver rafforzato la loro esclusione. Ovviamente, non per questo la Nuova Sinistra si opponeva alla libertà sindacale: Nel Mississippi nacque un sindacato alternativo che dava voce ai lavoratori neri, sfidando il monopolio dei sindacati razzisti nelle vertenze contrattuali.

Il movimento nero brasiliano affronta sfide simili, anche se in un contesto diverso in cui molte delle controversie coinvolgono tanto i neri quanto i poveri in generale delle periferie urbane. Ovvero: Brutalità della polizia, evacuazioni forzate, programmi di edilizia popolare che in realtà promuovono la carenza di abitazioni e la segregazione, mancato riconoscimento dei diritti di proprietà collettiva delle terre delle comunità quilombola (insediamenti tradizionali dei discendenti degli schiavi fuggitivi), e mancato riconoscimento dei diritti di proprietà delle abitazioni “irregolari” come le favelas e i condomini. C’è poi un carico fiscale che ricade pesantemente sui poveri più che dei ricchi, e in particolare sulle donne e i neri più che sugli uomini e i bianchi. E ancora, la lotta alla droga che alimenta l’insicurezza e gli omicidi tra i neri, e non ultima la persecuzione delle religioni afro-brasiliane.

Ecco, i neri dovrebbero essere turbati da uno stato che spezza i legami famigliari e comunitari per avocare a sé il compito di provvedere al benessere. Ancora di più dovrebbero essere turbati dagli aiuti di stato alle imprese e alla classe media, che abbassano ulteriormente il valore del loro lavoro.

I neri devono affrontare queste sfide. Possono farlo se sono dotati di una coscienza libertaria ispirata al lavoro della Nuova Sinistra.

Traduzione di Enrico Sanna.

Portuguese, Stateless Embassies
Direito constitucional na ordem anárquica

Um dos maiores desafios à desestatização completa da provisão do direito, com livre concorrência entre agências provedoras de serviços de segurança e arbitragem, é a possibilidade de conluio entre essas entidades contra seus clientes.

A observação econômica é a de que os consumidores perderão algum dinheiro enquanto, temporariamente, o conluio entre empresas no mercado de bens e serviços estiver em vigor, tendo em vista a relação quantidade x preço que estas ofertarão sob o cartel. Isso talvez não seja tão grave, uma vez que, no livre mercado, tais acordos seriam instáveis. Além disso, as empresas não têm poder sobre os direitos das partes, que continuariam os mesmos, alterando-se apenas os preços e quantidades ofertados ao consumidor.

No caso de agências não-estatais de provisão do direito, a situação muda de figura. O conluio entre as agências que possibilitam a definição dos direitos de cada um poderia levar à alteração na própria estrutura de direitos dos seus clientes, com efeitos muito mais permanentes, mesmo após a dissolução do cartel. Manipular o sistema jurídico pode levar a sérios prejuízos contra as vítimas específicas.

Uma solução defendida por alguns é a de que deveria existir um estado constitucional para realizar supervisão antitruste dessas agências. É a conclusão de Robin Hanson (que defende a privatização completa da provisão do direito) e de Gillian K. Hadfield (que defende a privatização apenas do direito comercial).

Apesar de esses autores não detalharem como essa supervisão antitruste seria realizada, parece-me que, para além da convencional proibição das práticas anticompetitivas e a nulidade (ou mesmo proibição) dos contratos de cartelização, deveria haver um mandato constitucional especificando os limites do que as agências podem oferecer (por exemplo, a inadmissibilidade de detenções provisórias sem procedimento específico) e proibindo arranjos secretos que possam conduzir à alteração lesiva da estrutura de direitos dos clientes. Assim, restrições constitucionais salvaguardariam os direitos das pessoas contra manipulações das agências em conluio.

Essa seria a conclusão minarquista. Mas e sob o anarquismo? Como o anarquismo de mercado superaria essa barreira?

Primeiro, precisamos entender o que é uma restrição constitucional. Sob as democracias constitucionais, essas normas servem ao propósito de vedar que os atos emanados do legislativo, do judiciário e do próprio executivo venham a ter determinados conteúdos ou realizados sem cumprimento de certos procedimentos. Por exemplo, no Brasil, uma lei que estabeleça a pena de morte é inconstitucional e, portanto, inválida perante a constituição. Logo, restrições constitucionais estabelecem aquilo que não será aceito como regra mesmo que venha a ser aprovado pelas instâncias que têm competência para decidir as regras.

O que seria análogo às constituições políticas em termos de direito privado? Os estatutos de associações. Assim como as constituições criam a ordem jurídica do estado, os estatutos de associações criam as associações respectivas. Assim como as constituições estabelecem restrições sobre as instâncias decisórias do estado, estatutos de associação fazem o mesmo em relação às diretorias e assembleias da associação. No caso específico dos condomínios no Brasil, a lei estabelece que os condôminos devem elaborar a convenção de condomínio (que seria seu estatuto) e aprovar um regimento interno do edifício ou do conjunto de edifícios.

O anarquismo de mercado permite organizações como estas. Embora o modelo mais conhecido de policentrismo legal seja o de Murray Rothbard e de David Friedman, onde a opção pelas agências de provisão do direito é realizada diretamente pelos indivíduos, o modelo de Michael Huemer em The Problem of Political Authority: An Examination of the Right to Coerce and the Duty to Obey (em português, “O problema da autoridade política: Um exame do direito de coação e do dever de obedecer”) visualiza a predominância da aquisição coletiva dos serviços de provisão do direito por meio de associações de moradores ou de condomínios. Essas associações contratariam agências de segurança e poderiam estipular um código legal que os árbitros aplicariam nas transações realizadas sob sua jurisdição.

Esse modelo de compra coletiva por meio de associações de moradores ou de condomínio abre espaço para a estipulação, na convenção ou no estatuto de cada associação, de regras que especifiquem as regras mínimas que a associação seguirá quando contratar serviços de segurança ou arbitragem. Ou seja, especificando que a associação não contratará agências que não sigam determinados limites (por exemplo, a já citada inadmissibilidade de detenções provisórias sem determinado procedimento específico) e que estejam autorizadas a fazer arranjos secretos com outras agências ou empresas.

Essa dinâmica é tanto mais interessante porque induz as agências a preverem em seus estatutos regras que especifiquem limites e proíbam arranjos secretos. Portanto, a tendência é que a constitucionalização explícita das associações influencie a constitucionalização das próprias agências a serem contratadas.

Veja que a segurança jurídica é maior ao ser realizada a contratação da agência por meio de uma associação de moradores ou de condomínio: a pessoa poderá invocar a nulidade de uma decisão arbitral ou de um procedimento adotado pela agência caso o ato esteja em desacordo com o estatuto ou convenção da associação, uma vez que cláusulas contratuais entre associação e agência que firam as cláusulas do estatuto ou convenção seriam inválidas, “inconstitucionais”.

Obviamente, as associações de moradores ou de condomínios não teriam o papel de supervisionar a competitividade geral do sistema, mas, por intermédio das restrições que cada uma estabelece em sua própria interação, contribuiriam para que os abusos dos conluios pelas agências fossem evitados e vigiados, de baixo para cima ao invés de cima para baixo.

Portanto, ordem anárquica de mercado não levaria a um mundo sem constituições, mas a um mundo de grande diversidade constitucional local, com a vantagem de que o “ambiente de escolha constitucional”, na terminologia usada por Patri Friedman, seria competitivo, descentralizado e aberto à entrada e à criação de novas entidades, onde a escolha individual pela associação é a garantia da liberdade individual e a contratação coletiva da(s) agência(s) por meio da associação é a garantia de maior segurança nas transações no mercado de provisão do direito.

Feature Articles
Affirmative Consent: Yes and No

Recently, a law was passed in California that redefines how sexual relations happen on college campuses. The law states that affirmative consent must be given throughout sex. Past relationships between the two individuals cannot be taken as consent and neither can consent be presumed when people are incapacitated from drugs or alcohol, unable to communicate, or asleep or unconscious in some way.

Affirmative consent as per this law is defined as “…affirmative, conscious, and voluntary agreement to engage in sexual activity

There has been considerable uproar over this law, from Reason to NYMagTimeThe Nation and more.

One of the biggest arguments against this law are questions of justice in the procedure itself.

First, let’s make sure that everyone here understands one thing: this law only applies to college campuses in California. It cannot be used to send anyone to jail and can, at most, be used to expel a student for presumably raping or sexually assaulting another student. Though, good luck with that.

Detractors say that this law will force all men into being considered rapists, makes everyone a rapist, shifts the burden of guilt, or it simply won’t do anything against real rapists.

Regardless of these objections, the correct view seems to me to be: affirmative consent is good as a cultural norm, but bad as a law.

Affirmative Consent as a Cultural Norm: Yes

It should be well understood by libertarians and anarchists that laws usually don’t end up where the grassroots supporters want them to go. A good example of this (one that Nathan Goodman noted back in May) is the USA Freedom Act. An act that was supposed to remove big features of the surveillance state, yet ended up being compromised and severely weakened before it was passed.

But laws are not the same as cultural norms. Laws are things that address issues that we believe are justifiably preventable by force. Cultural norms can be things that we believe are either justifiable in some way, but don’t necessarily have to be. They are things that shouldn’t just be left up to the individuals in a given relationship, instead a general community can help formulate standards that will cultivate a given environment for its members. Having affirmative consent as a guiding principle or cultural norm, then, is very different from having it as a law.

As a cultural norm it becomes a bigger conversation between equals. It becomes possible to challenge, revise and reorganize our lives in accordance with this norm. When we suggest to our friends that they should aim for affirmative consent, or hold an impromptu protest, invite a public speaker on the matter, hang up signs or integrate this principle into our daily lives, then we are trying to cultivate a norm about consent and how we deal with its absence.

For example, there’s a difference between wanting affirmative consent as a standard and wanting it to be the law.

As Tara Culp-Resser of ThinkProgress writes,

Affirmative consent isn’t based on the idea that every sexual encounter is a rigid contract between two parties. No one is suggesting that college students need to run through a checklist before unbuttoning each other’s shirts. Instead, it’s more about broadly reorienting about how we approach sex in the first place. …

Under an affirmative consent standard … both partners are required to pay more attention to whether they’re feeling enthusiastic about the sexual experience they’re having. There aren’t any assumptions about where the sexual encounter is going or whether both people are already on the same page. At its very basic level, this is the opposite of killing the mood — it’s about making sure the person with whom you’re about to have sex is excited about having sex with you.

Making sure someone else is enthusiastic about what you’re doing with them requires you to consider their wants and needs, think about how to bring them pleasure, and ultimately approach sex like a partnership instead of a means to your own end.

It should also be made clear that non-verbal cues are treated as a legitimate method of obtaining affirmative consent under this law. If, for example, you ask someone if you can kiss them and they respond by passionately kissing you, I don’t think you or the person you’re involved with, or any disciplinary board is going to take that seriously as an example of “sexual assault”.

There are concerns that affirmative consent, even as a norm or a standard, will make sex “unsexy” or make the whole experience not fun.

Shikha Dalmia, a senior policy analyst at Reason.com writes,

The truth is that, except in the first flush of infatuation, both partners are rarely equally excited. At any given moment, one person wants sex more passionately than the other. What’s more, whether due to nurture or nature, there is usually a difference in tempo between men and women, with women generally requiring more “convincing.” And someone who requires convincing is not yet in a position to offer “affirmative” much less “enthusiastic” consent. That doesn’t mean that the final experience is unsatisfying — but it does mean that initially one has to be coaxed out of one’s comfort zone. Affirmative consent would criminalize that.

It’s difficult to see exactly where Dalmia wants us to go with these conclusions. Is equal excitement presumed by advocates of affirmative consent? Does affirmatively and enthusiastically consenting to sexual acts from your partner mean that you’re always into it as much as they are? I don’t recall anyone suggesting this or the norm requiring it. So what does this really have to do with the idea of affirmative consent?

Nevertheless, I find it plausible that talking a lot could kill the mood for some people, but that’s, perhaps, why they rely on non-verbal cues. But, as I said before, this is perfectly allowable: both under the law and, so I’d presume, for advocates of the norm generally. Explicitness in sexual relationships is awesome, but it isn’t everything and, for people who are good with body language and long-term partners who understand each other and know each other well, it could probably work with even less explicitness.

Even then, let’s say you have two people who are fairly neuro-typical, they’re both well-intentioned and they’re both sober and drug free, the worst thing that’s probably gonna happen (via an emphasis on body language and facial movements, less explicitness in general, etc.) is a simple mistake.

But in that ideal situation it is still a good idea to use affirmative consent; partly because it’s too easy to just say, “oh I didn’t understand you didn’t want X” as a way to justify violating someone’s boundaries. To be clear, if this happened only once and they took steps to ensure it didn’t happen again, that’s different.

The problem here is that rapists can easily use a very non-explicit system to take advantage of people that do not say what turns them on. It’s also an easy way to, generally, get away with rape when facing reprimands from a given system. You can simply claim that they said no at first, but you “convinced” them otherwise. Or they didn’t say no after you did X.

And this is an ideal situation with totally vanilla sex. It gets more complicated with any form of BDSM or slapping where it’s pretty much mandatory to talk stuff out beforehand.

Sure, the affirmative consent model isn’t perfect and people who want to exploit others can still get around it (and have), but it’s a lot harder to gaslight when you’ve talked a little about things first. Talking, instead of everyone just presuming what’s cool or leaving it mostly up in the air, can also make things go a lot smoother — sexually speaking.

So while I understand the spontaneous nature of sex is important if making sure people’s boundaries are being respected during a sexual encounter is killing the “sex appeal” for you, then my suggestion would be to re-examine how you see sex.

A lot of how you re-examine sex is to look at consent 101 and how you can use affirmative consent in a myriad of ways, not just boringly ask, “do you want to have sexual intercourse with me on this fine evening?”

This isn’t the main point, though. Whether affirmative consent is “sexy” or not really shouldn’t matter in the end. It should matter how it (as a cultural norm or a law) affects the prevalence of rape. As of now there isn’t much data on how these sorts of campaigns affect rape. There was a campaign in some Canadian provinces that discouraged rape and encouraged affirmative consent with one city seeing a decrease in rape but another seeing an increase.

Where the effectiveness is concerned critics have pointed to a study done in 2002 by David Lisak and Paul Miller that, according to them, proves that rapists are a minority and that they aren’t people who innocently miscommunicate or just don’t understand they’re rapists.

Yet, even if this true, I believe that the critics overstate how much this proves. Even if it’s completely true that the majority of rapists are repeat offenders and people who understand what they’re doing, this doesn’t preclude them from not seeing themselves as rapists in every situation. Though it can certainly be the case that they do know they’re rapists. It also doesn’t stop there from being a non-negligible minority of people who do not understand what they’re doing is rape.

A closer look at this study reveals that the questions make it difficult to see where affirmative consent came into those relationships. We only know from this study that these sexual encounters ended in rape or sexual assault. So we cannot presume from this study alone that the affirmative consent model would hold no negligible effect on rapists.

It’s worth noting that the study asks questions about doing things that are very easily identifiable as rape. So it’s not clear how this study would have been able to include people who did things that they didn’t realize were non-consensual.

It’s not clear how this study shows anything at all about whether or not affirmative consent could prevent rape. Because if the person had committed rape in a way that affirmative consent could have prevented, it’s perfectly possible that they could go on not realizing that they had done so.

Now, we don’t have the data necessary to know the results of this norm as law will have. And it’s possible the norm could do more damage than good. But with such little data either way it also seems irresponsible to not let the universities declare their own methods of trying to deal with sexual assault on campus. If we are to figure out how to minimize the role of assault and rape in student’s lives, then experimentation should not only be allowed but encouraged.

Finally, the alternative of “no means no” seems to result in an implication being made about how consent works and furthermore acts as a tax on (predominately) women as Amanda Taub at Vox writes,

The law didn’t come out of nowhere. It emerged as a response to a status quo that has proved to be an all-too-powerful tool for sexual predators, because it enables them to claim to see consent in everything except continuous, unequivocal rejection. That status quo puts women in the position of having to constantly police their own behavior to make sure that they are not giving the appearance of passive consent. That’s not only exhausting; it’s limiting. It reinforces power imbalances that keep women out of positions of success and authority.

There are plenty of other problem Taub highlights with the usual way of thinking. It leads to situations where people could justify fairly clear signs of refusal as acquiescence. This in turn puts a big burden on the women to refuse a man who is, often times, much stronger than her.

That’s all leaving aside the problem of the police and how they often can’t help or sometimes flat out refuse to help survivors or question them the whole time instead of taking them seriously. And yes, false reporting is actually a really really rare occurrence. Compound this with massive under-reporting and low prosecution rates (both on campus and generally) and I doubt that women are going to be using this as a weapon or all men turned into rapists.

We need to change the culture of how people understand sex as well as rape. We can’t do that by standing by while our current model of “no means no” proves ineffective. Let’s at least give different norms a chance to play out and see how they affect the reality of rape culture.

Affirmative Consent as a Law: No

None of the above is meant to deny that there are legitimate criticisms of this law as a law.

The law actually includes a section where it says that,

This bill would require the governing boards of each community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the governing boards of independent postsecondary institutions, in order to receive state funds for student financial assistance, to adopt policies concerning sexual assault, domestic violence, dating violence, and stalking that include certain elements, including an affirmative consent standard in the determination of whether consent was given by a complainant.

This isn’t a part of the law I’ve seen people critique, but it’s basically what makes this law a law and not just a cultural norm. The state is engaging in economic manipulation. If the institutions of higher education in California don’t want this affirmative consent standard for disciplinary actions then they may be denied funding from the state.

That’s the real part of this law that is troubling. Because the question must be asked: Are these institutions abiding by this standard because they genuinely want to and moreover understand what’s happening on campuses? Or are they doing it to merely appease the state and get more funding? Even worse, most campuses will say “of course we want this standard with or without the money” but time will tell how effectively or honestly they actually care about this standard or enforcing it on campuses.

Another problem with this law is the problem of having feminism and the state working together as Laurie Essig, an associate professor of sociology and gender, sexuality and feminist studies helpfully points out,

Feminists work hard to show that the state is both racist and sexist, and yet some feminists imagine that very same state making the world a safer place for them.

If feminists want to help survivors then it’s best not to rely on the state whose main agents, the police, are notorious for not believing survivors. Survivors often don’t report and there’s plenty of good reasons not to or at least not insist that they should. As anarchists if we don’t trust cops with the basic job of protecting our streets or protecting our property, then why would we expect them to protect the bodies of survivors? There are also neurological reasons why cops simply won’t believe survivors in many cases.

There is a general problem with trying to codify sexual relations instead of leaving them up to the individual people. There’s obvious problems with the current framework of “no means no” and the focus on women having to say “no” instead of both people needing to get a “yes”. But even so there’s going to be situations where enthusiastic consent is murky or the situation is going to be a lot more gray than the people who wrote this law thought about. And unlike community standards and norms, laws aren’t able, by their very nature, to change as quickly or effectively in response to public demand.

Cathy Young in her “The Problem with ‘Yes Means Yes‘” notes that,

Nonverbal cues indicating consent are almost certainly present in most consensual sexual encounters. But as a legal standard, nonverbal affirmative consent leaves campus tribunals in the position of trying to answer murky and confusing questions — for instance, whether a passionate response to a kiss was just a kiss, or an expression of “voluntary agreement” to have sexual intercourse. Faced with such ambiguities, administrators are likely to err on the side of caution and treat only explicit verbal agreement as sufficient proof of consent.

While I’m not convinced of what the standard reaction to non-verbal agreements would be (I think the passionate kiss example is a clear case of enthusiastic non-verbal consent), I do think that Young and others are on to something when they criticize this law for trying to codify sexual relations.

I’m simply not convinced that sexual relationships are “easy” or that “everyone understands non-verbal cues” as some of the defenders of the law have stated. I wish that was the case, but plenty of people have trouble with reading people’s facial expressions, body movements, social norms and general cues that are non-verbal. The issue of drinking and drugs, which can be agreed to ahead of time, in addition to sex makes things a bit more puzzling. Trying to force one single model on everyone in all sexual relationships, generally sounds like a bad idea.

Young and other critics have noted that whether this law actually sends people to prison (it doesn’t and can’t) or not, this still sets the precedent that the state can get involved in the sexual relations of people. Which, as we know from laws involving marriage or prostitution getting the state involved is always a good idea to get power-hungry law-makers to extend state power even more in the future.

But one of the biggest problems is a problem that blogger Fredrik de Boer points out,

…I feel strongly that explicit consent laws actually undercut the absolute ownership by the individual over her or his own sexual practice.

One of the most important parts of the feminist project is insisting that women own their own bodies. This has application to abortion, where the pro-life movement seeks to take physical control of women’s bodies away from them. And it has application to rape.

The insistence of those who work against rape is that only the individual has the right to define appropriate and wanted sexual practice. With the informed consent of all adult parties, no sexual practice is illegitimate. Without that consent, no sexual practice is permissible.

This is a humane, moral standard that has the benefit of simplicity in application and clarity in responsibility. But it stems first and foremost from the recognition of individual ownership. To define the exact methods through which individuals can request and give consent takes away that control and turns it over to the state, or even more ludicrously, to a dean or some academic grievance board. We should be expanding the individual’s control over their own sexual practice, not lessening it.

To the extent that this law puts more power into the hands of the state to define what makes or breaks sexual relationships, anarchists should oppose it. But to the extent that this cultural idea, as a cultural norm, gains traction and helps build beautiful, harmonious and sexually fulfilling relationships, then anarchists should advocate it — but advocate it decoupled from the state.

We don’t need the government in our bedrooms any more than it is, whether direct or indirect.

The question of our sexual autonomy is old. We demand our bodies — now.

Feed 44
Obama to GOP: Our Billionaires are Better Than Yours! on Feed 44

C4SS Feed 44 presents Kevin Carson‘s “Obama to GOP: Our Billionaires are Better Than Yours!” read by Christopher B. King and edited by Nick Ford.

That’s not to say that the plutocratic constituencies of the two parties are identical, or that life might not be more tolerable for working people under one party’s agenda than the other’s. But the difference between the two parties is which particular corporate and plutocratic interests their agendas serve, not whether they serve such interests. And the extent to which life is more or less unpleasant for workers under one party or the other is a side-effect of promoting the interests of its corporate masters.

From the New Deal onward, the Democrats have been the party of large-scale, capital-intensive, exported industry and finance capital. The Republicans have been the party of medium-sized corporations and labor-intensive or extractive industries (the old National Association of Manufacturers coalition), and the Sun Belt country club elites who mostly derive their wealth from such sources. The latter include mining, logging, oil, cotton belt plantation agribusiness and New South real estate. Until recently the Democratic coalition was for globalism and reduced tariffs, and the GOP was comparatively protectionist (reflecting the interests of the domestic textile industry represented by figures like George Wallace and Strom Thurmond); but that mostly went away when the last textile mills moved offshore.

Feed 44:

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Commentary
Police Should Be On, Not Behind, Cameras

Police body cameras are all the rage lately. Al Sharpton wants them used to monitor the activities of cops. Ann Coulter wants them used to “shut down” Al Sharpton. The White House wants them because, well, they’re a way to look both “tough on police violence” and “tough on crime” by spending $263 million on new law enforcement technology.

When Al Sharpton, Ann Coulter and the president of the United States agree on anything, my immediate, visceral reaction is extreme skepticism. In this case, the known facts support that skepticism.

It’s exceedingly unlikely that widespread use of police body cameras would reduce the incidence or severity of unjustified police violence. We’ve already seen the results of numerous technology “solutions” to that problem.

The introduction of mace and tasers to police weapons inventories encouraged a hair-trigger attitude toward encounters with “suspects” (“suspect” being law-enforcement-ese for “anyone who isn’t a cop”). Their supposed non-lethality made it safer to substitute violent action for peaceful talk.

The introduction of military weaponry and vehicles to policing hasn’t produced de-escalation either. Quite the opposite, in fact — now we get to watch small-town police departments stage frequent re-enactments of the Nazi occupation of Paris in towns across America.

And police car “dash cams?” That’s obviously the most direct comparison. But the dash cam always seems to malfunction, or the police department mysteriously loses its output, when a credible claim of abusive police behavior arises.

On the other hand, it’s absolutely certain that widespread use of police body cameras would increase the scope and efficacy of an increasingly authoritarian surveillance state.

The White House proposal calls for an initial rollout of 50,000 cameras. Does anyone doubt that the output of those cameras would be kept, copied, cross-referenced and analyzed against law enforcement databases (including but not limited to facial recognition databases) on a continuing basis?

Assuming a camera attaches to a particular officer with an eight hour shift (rather than being passed around at shift changes for 24-hour use), that’s 400,000 hours per day of random warrantless searches to be continuously mined for probable cause to investigate and arrest people. Even George Orwell didn’t go so far as to have 1984‘s Thought Police carry portable cameras everywhere they went!

Video technology is certainly part of the solution to police violence, but that solution should remain in the hands of regular people, not the state. More and more of us every day come into possession of the ability to record video on the spot, while instantly porting it to Internet storage so that it can’t be destroyed at the scene or tampered with after the fact. Cops need to be on cameras they don’t control.

But part of the solution is still just part of the solution. Even when cameras catch violent, abusive, criminal cops in action — as, for example, when business security cameras filmed Fullerton, California police officers Manuel Ramos and Jay Cicinelli beating homeless man Kelly Thomas to death in 2011 — it’s incredibly hard to get prosecutions and even harder to get convictions.

Ubiquitous video monitoring of state actors by regular people is a start. But the only real way to guarantee an end to police violence is to bring an end to state “law enforcement” — in fact, to the state itself.

Italian, Stateless Embassies
Come le Leggi Fondiarie Hanno Tenuto Soggiogati i Neri Brasiliani

Nota: Questo articolo è stato scritto in occasione della Giornata della Consapevolezza dei Neri in Brasile.

La schiavitù in Brasile, l’ultimo paese americano indipendente che a quei tempi aveva ancora questa istituzione, fu abolita ufficialmente il 13 maggio 1888. Certo non fu una legge firmata dall’aristocrazia a risolvere i problemi della popolazione nera che, per secoli, era stata derubata della dignità e del frutto del proprio lavoro. L’avvenimento era stato preparato per quarant’anni così che l’abolizione potesse procedere nel modo più tranquillo possibile… per gli schiavisti.

Cedendo alle pressioni che venivano dall’Inghilterra, il Brasile andava in direzione dell’abolizione da tanto tempo. La più famosa e inefficace tra le cosiddette “leggi da mostrare agli inglesi” (un’espressione che ancora oggi indica una legge perfettamente inutile ma che suona bene) fu la legge Feijo, promulgata nel 1832, che dava la libertà nominale agli schiavi che lavoravano la terra. Il commercio di schiavi, però, non fu abolito prima del 1850 con la legge Eusebio de Queiros. L’abolizione sembrava ad un passo, ma alcuni atti ne estesero la durata.

Nel 1871 fu approvata la legge detta “Legge dei Nati Liberi”. La legge liberava i figli degli schiavi affidandoli alle “cure” dei loro padroni o allo stato fino all’età di ventun anni, in quella che era di fatto una condizione di schiavitù. La Legge dei Sessantenni, del 1885, che “liberava” gli schiavi con più di sessantacinque anni, in realtà dava ai loro proprietari la facoltà di sbarazzarsene. L’“abolizione” avvenne finalmente con l’approvazione della Lei Áurea.

Facile immaginare che misure come quelle citate mantenessero lo status di privilegiati per i bianchi, ma nessuna si avvicinava ai livelli di disumanità raggiunti oggi con la meno nota Legge Fondiaria.

Approvata appena due settimane dopo la Legge Eusebio de Queirós, la legge numero 601 del 18 settembre 1850 decretava la fine della concessione di terre pubbliche in usufrutto: Nessuno poteva più acquisire la proprietà di una terra occupandola e trasformandola con il proprio lavoro, ma doveva acquistarla dallo stato. Le terre già occupate erano soggette a certi requisiti d’uso. In caso contrario, dovevano tornare allo stato, che le avrebbe vendute a sua discrezione.

Questa legge non solo impediva agli ex schiavi di prendere possesso di una terra con il proprio lavoro, ma concedeva aiuti di stato ai colonizzatori che venivano dall’estero, favorendo l’importazione del lavoro e svalutando la manodopera dei neri.

Dopo l’abolizione, i neri furono lasciati alla loro sorte, senza indennità, risarcimenti né terre (va detto però che niente avrebbe potuto risarcire l’ingiustizia di una vita in schiavitù). Non potevano lavorare la terra né avevano i soldi per comprarla direttamente dallo stato (che, in ogni caso, aveva il potere di scegliere a chi venderla, e i neri non figuravano in cima alla lista). Ai neri non rimase altro che scappare verso le città, vivere in casermoni e vendere il proprio sudore, in condizioni precarie, a stipendi da fame.

Lo zeitgeist (spirito del tempo) di allora chiedeva la fine della schiavitù. Ma il Brasile fece di tutto per mettere i bastoni tra le ruote del movimento abolizionista. Questi bastoni tra le ruote limitavano le possibilità dei neri e perpetuavano i privilegi dei bianchi.

In questa Giornata della Consapevolezza dei Neri ci guardiamo attorno e vediamo che il colore della pelle dei poveri, degli emarginati e degli sfruttati della nostra società è diverso dal colore della pelle delle élite. Non è un caso: È il risultato di una serie di misure pensate per tenere i neri in condizioni di sottomissione.

Nella sua autobiografia del 1900, il grande abolizionista e libertario Joaquim Nabuco scriveva: “La schiavitù resterà ancora a lungo una delle peculiarità nazionali del Brasile.” Proprio così.

Traduzione di Enrico Sanna.

Stigmergy - C4SS Blog, Weekly Libertarian Leftist Review
The Weekly Libertarian Leftist and Chess Review 58

David S. D’Amato discusses equality and libertarianism.

David Vine and Nick Turse discuss U.S. bases in the Middle East.

David Stockman discusses how the war party won.

Doug Bandow discusses why North Korea should be talked to.

Grant Babcock discusses non-violence and modern libertarianism.

Jacob G. Hornberger discusses Max Boot’s plan for Iraq.

Lawrence Wittner discusses whether wars defend American freedom or not.

Brian Terrell discusses drone strikes and protests to stop them.

David S D’Amato discusses top down anti-poverty efforts.

Glenn Greenwald discusses who the victims of drone attacks are.

Stephen Kinzer discusses why sending troops will not fix Iraq’s problems.

Steve Coll discusses drone warfare.

Dave Lindorff discusses the metasizing of the police state in America.

Sheldon Richman discusses Hilary Clinton and Henry Kissinger.

Faiza Patel discusses the recent Obama admin statement on torture.

Sheldon Richman discusses natural law and immigration politics.

Lucy Steigerwald discusses the torture report.

Gwynne Dyer discusses how Western militarism fuels blowback.

Grant Babcock discusses breaking away from conservatism.

Spencer Ackerman discuses drone strikes and accuracy.

Kathy Kelly discusses Obama’s expansion of war in Afghanistan.

Jason Brennan discusses the morality of killing government agents.

Tom Engelhardt discusses Iraq War 4.0

Kevin Carson discusses how state justice failed Michael Brown.

Lucy Steigerwald discusses the Hunger Game movies and war.

Dave Lindorff discusses Michael Brown’s killing.

Najdorf beats Averbakh.

Najdorf beats anonymous player.

Commentary
Corporate Leninism

Dilma Rousseff, in her bid for re-election to the presidency of Brazil, stated that opponent Marina Silva intended to “give away to the bankers” control of the Brazilian economy. Dilma’s electoral bluff assumed that voters would believe that bankers are nowadays unable to dictate the path the national economy should take.

Not even Dilma believes this lie: A mere two months later, with her second term guaranteed, she announced Joaquim Levy as the new Minister of Finance. Levy is a director at Bradesco, one of the largest banks in Brazil, and worked at the IMF during the 1990s. The same IMF that, according to Dilma’s electoral ads, would resume its control of Brazil’s economy should also-candidate Aecio Neves be elected.

Not content, Dilma will put Armando Monteiro in charge of the Ministry of Development. Monteiro is a strong name among employers unions and business associations: He presided over the National Confederation of Manufacture (CNI) and the Federation of Manufacturers of the State of Pernambuco (FIEPE). During his failed bid for the state government of Pernambuco in 2014, Monteiro repeatedly lamented the alleged lack of a consistent “industrial policy” in the state.

Besides those two, Katia Abreu, former member of the conservative party DEM, leader of the so-called rural caucus in the Senate, president of the National Confederation of Agriculture, should be the new name at the helm of Ministry of Agriculture. Abreu was part of the nominal opposition during the Lula administration. During the Dilma years, she has gradually realigned herself, initially interested in dictating the terms of the new port policy — that is, she wanted to control government investments in seaports, thereby subsidizing agribusinesses’ exports.

The naming of these three as part of the Dilma government shows the lack of scruples of the Workers’ Party (PT); the government is not worrying because it will lead us down the path of some sort of bureaucratic socialism, as some conservative critics fear. Rather, their unscrupulousness is troubling because PT is perfectly comfortable inside the power structure of the state and does not intend to break this structure’s balance. Just like the tsar and the Russian aristocracy did not allow the construction of new railroads in the empire, fearing that a new distribution of economic power would undermine their political power, groups that are so incrusted in the state cogs such as PT do not intend to make radical changes to a political structure that benefits them.

Joaquim Levy, Armando Monteiro, and Katia Abreu collide head on with the nominal ideology of Dilma’s Workers’ Party — not only by their supporters, but by their nucleus. They represent banks, manufacture, and agribusiness. Their private interests, symbiotic to the corporate state, are in clear opposition to the “workers” to whom the PT pays lip service. They are individuals, however, that do not stand opposed to PT’s broader project of preservation of power through the maintenance of the present social structure, of the perpetuation of the existing distribution of economic power and hence the existing distribution of political power at the same nodes. Therefore, the presence of sectoral leaders in the government, such as Armando Monteiro and Kátia Abreu, are not surprising: they are expected, given structural incentives.

The state, after all, is a rich people’s game. Rising fist rhetoric and red-tinted TV ads may convey the impression that it has changed its nature: In fact, it is always the same. Being Bolivarian, Caudillista, Varguista, or Peronista is just the marketing fad of the moment in Latin America. In the same way that Hugo Chavez and Nicolas Maduro are but a continuation of the Venezuelan oligarchy, Lula’s and Dilma’s PT are no more than a continuation of the Brazilian oligarchic system.

Karl Marx observed that the state is a committee for managing the affairs of the bourgeoisie, and, in that sense, the PT is a full expression of Marxism: Its 12 years of dominance over national politics have been characterized by a close relationship with “bourgeois” corporate policy. Despite general perceptions and cultural polarizations in the recent elections, there has not been a rupture; as Raymundo Faoro stated, Brazil has always had a “politically oriented capitalism,” directed and redirected according to the wishes and perceptions of the “bureaucratic stratum” that controls the state.

There is a sense, nevertheless, according to which the PT remains distinctly Leninist: Their nucleus still judges itself as a revolutionary vanguard and conflates their success with national success. The militants form a force field that defends the party from outside criticism. Valid criticism are only internal. According to PT’s founding ideology, much like other Leninist parties, if they go well, the country goes well, and the revolution is on track. Maybe it is true. After all, between the Brazilian bureaucratic capitalism and Soviet-style bureaucratic centralization, the gulf is not that big.

Translations for this article:

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