Kshartle,
force is an unavoidable component of life on earth as everything thing we do involves us exerting some sort of force on our surrounding environment - You think that because humans exert force in nature to their benefit this proves that we must choose to use force in our interactions with each other and this is somehow inevitable or something other than a choice. This is a flase conclusion drawn from an obvious truth.
Exerting force on the world around you, especially if you start building fences and shooting trespassers, is a de facto exertion of force on others. ESPECIALLY if you had to shoot Indians off the land to build the fence.
If that were the case, then 7 billion people on this tiny earth could probably function according his society of perfect freedom. Again, if what I didn't say which is obviously false were true then something else would happen.
You assert that a Free Society* will be far more peaceful, productive, and robust than our fragile statist house of cards, and all the other fragile statist houses of cards around the world. It is implied, at least as far as I can tell, that you're saying we could all benefit from that proposed social arrangement.
However, being that this is not the case and that this premise regarding human nature (while something to strive towards) is fundamentally not true, then his conclusions about how to organize society do not follow. You are projecting. You are the one who wants to organize society, not me. I point out the obvious that will do what's in their best interest and violence doesn't solve problems, it creates new ones. Peaceful negotiation results in win-win and people (with exceptions) will eventually reject the false concept that there can be virtue from violence.
The problem is you DO want to organize society, but you just don't realize it. You want to have us abandon our state, which is a political choice that involves transitionary decisions (that libertarians love to hand-wave), and you're asking us to respect your idea of what constitutes legitimate private property, which is a HUGE element of social organization.
His logic is sound, its just that the logic is being applied to a fictional set of assumptions about the nature of reality. What fictional set of assumptions are these? Are they the assumptions you've fictitiously attributed to me?
- Perfect Freedom* is logically consistent.
- Perfect Freedom* is robust.
- Perfect Freedom* is desired by many.
Those three alone indicate massive misunderstandings about human nature, and economics (humans interacting with each other for economic benefit.
On a more technical level:
- About everything relating to the relationship between the Treasury, Fed, and Member Banks.
- The underlying cause of hyperinflations.
- The idea that an entire economy can "live beyond its means." It's impossible.
- The motivations of actors in the economy given certain stimuli (expected inflation, demand, tax expectations, swapping a medium of exchange for a liquid bond of equal value from a "rigged entity, the motivations of savers when they save money sans interest as a benefit).
- That the idea that "demnd is unlimited" can manifest itself in all cases in a monetized non-barter economy (whether that money is gold or fiat).
- The idea that the government can "buy votes." Voting is irrational. I lose money by doing it no matter what a politicial promises me.
"Men did not make the earth. It is the value of the improvements only, and not the earth itself, that is individual property. Every proprietor owes to the community a ground rent for the land which he holds."
- Thomas Paine