Re: Nozick's Minimalism

From: Dan Fabulich (daniel.fabulich@yale.edu)
Date: Tue Dec 15 1998 - 11:25:02 MST


Michael Lorrey wrote:
>> This seems like a fine idea, (presuming I didn't mind, in this example,)
>> but doesn't the concept of a PPF sort of undermine the whole point of
>> anarcho-capitalism? I mean, this is my real problem/question. If there's
>> only one PPF making the laws, how can we expect the laws to be formed
>> fairly under legal market principles? Isn't the PPF a government at this
>> point? (This was Nozick's argument.)
>
>Well, anyone who voluntarily lives in a PPF territory that recognizes no
>right-to-carry is basically agreeing to become governed in my book,
because they
>recognize that they are slaves to the group, or are at least brainwashed
into such
>groupthink. Such people really are a threat to sustainable ungoverned
society,
>they may not actively want a government, but their own mental laziness and
>irresponsibility imply a need for one.
>
>Only those who insist that their PPA recognize their right to self defense
at any
>level will remain ungoverned. Its a basic choice of being a man or a mouse.

This doesn't seem to cohere. For a good portion of America's history the
United States had no gun laws. It was still a gov't, wasn't it? Wouldn't
it still be a gov't if it "respected the citizens' right to defend
themselves?" What exactly would that entail?

What exactly is the difference between a local gov't and a local PPF?

-Dan

        -GIVE ME IMMORTALITY OR GIVE ME DEATH-



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 14:50:01 MST