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- From: abell@netcom.com (Steven T. Abell)
- Newsgroups: alt.philosophy.objectivism
- Subject: Re: Evidence for the market
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.084249.9635@netcom.com>
- Date: 27 Jan 93 08:42:49 GMT
- References: <C1Ft7t.Gn6@acsu.buffalo.edu> <1993Jan26.185439.5786@netcom.com> <C1HuL7.2uD@acsu.buffalo.edu>
- Organization: Netcom Online Communications Services (408-241-9760 login: guest)
- Lines: 74
-
- sulkom@ubvmsb.cc.buffalo.edu (Mark Sulkowski) writes:
- >abell@netcom.com (Steven T. Abell) writes:
- >>Defense of a country against an external enemy is not something that can
- >>be carried out by individuals until the enemy has successfully invaded.
-
- > Hmmm. Consider a defense employee looking at satellite photos
- >for signs of potential enemy troop movements. Isn't that defense as
- >much as firing missles? But I suppose you mean that we cannot evaluate
- >how well the job is being done until an actual invasion attempt.
-
- Not impossible, but hard. Also, by the nature of such operations, if you
- can find out how well your defenders are doing, so can your enemy. This
- is doubleplusungood.
-
- >>External defense doesn't provide anything that enhances life under what we
- >>like to think of as normal circumstances (fails constructiveness test).
-
- > Are you saying that if defense does not enhance our lives, it
- >is impossible to measure its value?
-
- Strictly speaking, defense doesn't enhance our lives. At best, it allows us
- to maintain them. I'm not saying this isn't valuable.
-
- >>And while defense can help maintain quality of life, there's no feedback
- >>channel to maintain quality of service during peacetime because the system
- >>isn't being tested in a way that individuals can immediately perceive (fails
- >>service-to-individuals test). Because of these two non-features, rational
- >>people don't build private markets in external defense.
-
- > Hmmm. I suppose all of your argumentation shows that rational
- >individuals do not build competitive markets in defense in the same
- >sense that they build markets in butter. It would be difficult to
- >choose between defense company A and defense company B because there
- >would be little opportunity to find out which was the more effective
- >company in practice. However, it would be easy to choose between two
- >different brands of butter because they could be sampled immediately
- >after sale and the customer would buy her favorite brand from then on.
-
- > However, let me propose the following.
-
- > 1) Rational individuals realize the need for defense.
-
- > 2) In the absense of government defense, which may be rejected
- > out of a distrust for it, rational individuals will choose
- > instead to create private alternatives which are funded in
- > a purely voluntary fashion.
-
- This can result in factional warfare. Currently, when the US goes to war,
- the US goes to war. Under your system, you will have multiple organizations
- capable of waging war, controlled by people of varying opinions and beliefs,
- maintained in places that may be beyond the reach of US law.
-
- In most situations, I trust the corporate boys a lot more that the
- gummint boys. This is an exception. A competitive market in the projection
- of force will get out of hand in about a nanosecond. If you don't believe me,
- go look at your local junior high school, or maybe a street corner in East LA.
- It's better for the factions to have to work something out between themselves
- before they start shooting at someone else. And with a government military,
- the factions have a harder time "working something out" with bullets.
-
- Which brings up another point. The rest of your discussion assumes the world
- is full of rational people. Nice dream. If it were true, we wouldn't need a
- military at all.
-
- Nope, this is a case where I'm willing to be taxed to obtain a public good,
- as long as I can exercise my right of free expression, and can own weapons
- comparable to those carried by an infantryman. Any meaningful defense begins
- with self-defense. If you want to contribute to the national defense, I
- suggest that you go join up. The military is always in need of rational
- people.
-
- Regards,
-
- Steve abell@netcom.com
-