Authoritarianism as Security Blanket

in #anarchy8 years ago (edited)

A common complaint about the idea of a stateless society is, “If there was no government, the bad people could just do anything they want!!!” This argument is 50% true, 50% false, and 100% silly.

It is partly true in that, yes, if there were no ruling class, bad people would sometimes still decide to do bad things. Just like they do now. I don’t mean to alarm anyone by stating the bleeding obvious here, but even with “government”—in fact, under every “government” ever—bad people still choose to do bad things. Aside from the horrendously bad things that people do when acting on behalf of “government,” common crooks still do bad things and “break the law.” The mere existence of a ruling class doesn’t make everyone be nice. Duh.

The reason the argument is partly false is because it implies that bad people could do bad things and there would be no adverse consequences to them if they do, if not for “government.” Such an assumption is incredibly juvenile. The implication is that if all cops, soldiers, bureaucrats and politics vanished today, it wouldn’t occur to anyone else to try to defend themselves from thieves and thugs, or to try to create any sort of deterrent to those who would victimize the innocent.

Incidentally, average armed citizens are already a deterrent to crime more often than the badge-wearing doughnut-eaters.

But consider the level of intellectual laziness that the argument requires. Setting aside self-defense, it basically implies that if whoever is “protecting” them right now stops doing so, then no one else ever will. It’s like saying that if the plumber you use today retires, no one will ever fix your plumbing ever again. Do they not notice how quickly people adapt to changes? Do they really think that all those millions and millions of people who want “government” protecting them would stop wanting protection if “government” didn’t exist? “Well darn, we wish we had some way to stop the bad guys, but without politicians bossing us around, we’re all just going to passively sit here being pouty, hoping someone saves our sorry asses.”

To proclaim that “the bad guys” could do whatever they want, and get away with it without suffering any adverse consequences, implies that: 1) you wouldn’t lift a finger, even to protect yourself from thugs and thieves; 2) you wouldn’t lift a finger to defend anyone else; 3) you think no one else, on their own or as an organized group, would bother to defend themselves or others from aggressors. And frankly, that’s just stupid.

This is a fine example of statists projecting their own immaturity onto others. They think like children in a classroom, who are at a loss for what to do, and get uncomfortable and scared, whenever the teacher isn’t in the room. The thought that they would have to figure stuff out and do stuff themselves is existentially disturbing to them. And they assume everyone else must be the same way. Why else would they think, even for a moment, that without politicians, no one else would create any deterrent to the thieves and thugs of the world?

And this applies to so many other fields of thought as well. When they whine about “muh roads,” do they really think that, if not for “government,” millions of people would just sit around wishing they had some way to travel somewhere, instead of doing something about it? Do they really think that all the people who vote for “government” to care for the poor wouldn’t actually do anything themselves for the poor without a ruling class forcing them to?

The scare-tactics are downright pathetic. From the left: “If not for welfare, millions will starve to death!” From the right: “If not for the military, terrorists would take over the world!” The truth is, if not for scared, immature, irresponsible, intellectually lazy state-worshipers who won’t give up the security blanket of authoritarianism, the world would be a drastically better place.

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I believe most people just babble what they have been indoctrinated to respond with, when somebody argues against the state. All answers are conjured by sophists for the sole purpose of shutting up those who asks questions. Thestate is based on fear and people have been taught to fear having 100% responsibility for their own life. So they will defend the state no matter how many dead bodies the have to pretend they are not walking over

Good post Lark! I wrote something very similar on facebook not too long ago concerning the 'security blanky' lol. Keep it up! ;)

I'm brand new to steemit but as soon as I figure out how to I'll go ahead and 'up vote it' as I've heard something about this.

Also, for yourself and anyone else feel free to join another pro-V facebook group "VAL Society". (for Voluntary Anarchist Libertarian Society) And have fun posting away there!

facebook.com/groups/FreePeopleForVALSociety

This is where most people are stuck, great article Larken

I like this post. I ran out of upvote juice (20 limit) so I can only comment. Great job by the way.

Great post as always, Larken. By the time I found your videos online, I had already completed a 20-year journey from small-government libertarian to anarchist, but the easy, compact way you present everything really crystallized it for me, and now I try to do the same.

One of the remaining hurdles for me is that statists are reluctant to see any flaw in themselves. Not as people, but as statists. They will acknowledge that, yes, I have my faults, like everyone else, yada, yada. But when confronted with their intellectual cowardice, laziness, reluctance to think their own positions through, or anything that challenges them on a philosophical level, that's when they throw their most intense verbal tantrums. When confronted in any way about things like consistency, principles, and ethics, statists will, as always, resort to any number of logical fallacies: projection, moving the goalposts, circular reasoning, arguing from authority, etc.

I just began martial arts instruction under a teacher whose teacher studied under Bruce Lee. Literally, just one lesson so far. I can tell it will be a long process, requiring much practice, but I'm confident in my capability to progress. The same goes with statist logical fallacies. It's not enough just to read about them, and identify them in conversation. It takes practice to point them out and refute them on the spot, rather than figuring out an hour later what I should have said.

I see the articles and videos that you (and others such as Sterlin Lujan, Amanda Rachwitz, and any other writer who quickly gets to the core of the issue) as anarchist martial arts instruction. With enough practice, perhaps the millions of debates we all get into will yield better results. All in all, I'm likewise confident in our ability to make progress.

Hopefully sooner rather than later.

Cheers.

Sorry for the shameless plug, but have a look at my stuff too. I only write until I've made my point, whether that's 500 words or 50.

Though I agree with what you've said here, I'll relay some arguments I've heard over the years to get your thoughts.

if there were no ruling class, bad people would sometimes still decide to do bad things. Just like they do now.

But would it be worse? That's the fear side of things I see. Pragmatic thinkers I know are convinced "bad things" would increase without government. They want to see evidence and proof this isn't the case. They want to see it working somewhere before they advocate for it.

The implication is that if all cops, soldiers, bureaucrats and politics vanished today, it wouldn’t occur to anyone else to try to defend themselves from thieves and thugs, or to try to create any sort of deterrent to those who would victimize the innocent.

Some argue the result of this would just be "government." I get that we use a different definition of government than they do (a monopoly on the use of force within a geographic region), but I think there's a deeper problem than that. Again, they want to see voluntary solutions working on a large scale (like in cities with millions of people packed together in a small place) before they will agree removing government is a good idea and effective solutions do exist which don't require violence. How can we show these pragmatic thinkers who desire empirical evidence that our ideas and philosophy actually lead to a better world?

Edit: and I'm also familiar with the "But who will pick the cotton?" response. For some people, that's unconvincing.

Pragmatic thinkers I know are convinced "bad things" would increase without government. They want to see evidence and proof this isn't the case. They want to see it working somewhere before they advocate for it.

In the 20th century alone, over 100 million people were killed by democide. These are real people with real families and real friends. Are we going to ignore those millions of people that governments have killed because "we just need the right people in charge"? Or are we going to say that perhaps the system is the problem?

Considering the mountains of bodies governments have piled up, the burden of proof should fall on the state, and I think we just need to convince them of that.

I've used the democide argument again and again, but it often falls on deaf ears, unfortunately. I guess they assume things like that would still happen without government or maybe something worse? I dunno. Steven Pinker's book, The Better Angles of Our Nature, argues for the Hobbesian Leviathan using deaths per 100k as a metric, but others critique his work to say his "anarchist" societies were nothing but. I recently read The Origins of Virtue and I think that makes a better argument that government does just break everything it touches.

State sanctioned terrorism appears much more palatable than the possibility of any other form. Let's vote for mandated coercion.

now thats a comment i never expected to read, very interesting.

lol, you don't expect sarcasm in comments to Larken's posts?

lol, ime just a naive old coffin dodger ( true story )

If you please, do not join government and leader. There are several forms of government and in each there are good and bad leaders.

There are ZERO forms of political "government" that are legitimate or moral. They vary in the level of destruction they create, but none of them are valid.

Sure... I've heard of personal services where you can pay people to beat you nicely.

much like decentralisation in banking and logistics, I agree the new age of technological interconnection will also enable decentralised policing. After all the best security has always been community based! Thanks for the post!

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