What do you mean by "coercive" in this context? If you simply mean the initiation of force, then your point is tautological, since, in that case, every "coercive" monopoly would involve the initiation of force, by definition.
I am differentiating between a monopoly gained through efficiency, and one achieved via legislation.
The real question is, is every monopoly on force coercive? Does every monopoly on force involve the initiation of force? The answer is, no. A monopoly on force can, and should, be restricted to the use of defensive or retaliatory force. If a government forcibly prevents a lynch mob from executing a suspected murderer, is it initiating force against the lynch mob? No, it's simply defending the right of the accused to a fair trial. Its use of force in this case is defensive or retaliatory, not initiatory.
Ok, but I fail to see how that is relevant. If the government forcibly prevents anyone other than the government from stepping in and preventing the lynch mob from executing said suspect, that is an initiation of force, and that is more relevant to our discussion. I would agree that "force can, and should, be restricted to the use of defensive or retaliatory force." But I don't agree that any one person or institution can or should hold a monopoly on defensive or retaliatory force.
Indeed, for the government to allow each and every individual the right to enforce his own view of justice -- his own view of what constitutes retaliatory force -- is to abdicate its own right to do so. Since the government -- or any agency of retaliatory force -- must decide what constitutes appropriate retaliation and punishment, it cannot permit the use of force at odds with its own standards of enforcement. Any such unauthorized use of force must be judged as tantamount to the initiation of force and prohibited by law.
I'm afraid you're knocking down straw men here. Where did I say every individual has the right to enforce his own view of justice? I cannot recall advocating that or anything similar. I agree there is one objectively right set of laws, that certain things are just, and others unjust. I just don’t think any one person or institution can claim the exclusive right to administer justice. Justice is just (by definition), no matter who enforces it. If we know that X is wrong, and Y is the appropriate punishment, then it matters not whether A or B administers justice.
Any such unauthorized use of force… In other words any initiation of force…
…must be judged as tantamount to the initiation of force and prohibited by law. I agree, I just don’t agree that anyone has the right to claim a monopoly on prohibiting this force.
Anarchism is thus logically incoherent, because it involves the contradictory notion that the enforcement of different standards of justice must be permitted to operate within the same legal jurisdiction.
Bill, do you wear boxing gloves when knocking down straw men? ;-)!
Ok, so I am no scholar when it comes to anarchist theory, but I am not arguing for “different standards of justice.” Rather, I am arguing for different (competing) institutions enforcing the same (objectively right) standard of justice.
But either one has the right to enforce his own view of justice, in which case, he cannot permit others to enforce a different view, or others have a right to enforce a different view, in which case, he has no right to prevent them from doing so and thus no right to enforce his own.
See my explanations above.
The only way to avoid this contradiction is for an enforcement agency to deny other agencies with a different view of justice the right to operate within its own jurisdiction, in which case, it assumes a monopoly on the use of retaliatory force.
Agency X is initiating force.
Agency Y forcibly restrains Agency X and prevents this.
You claim this "assumes a monopoly on the use of retaliatory force."
That is simply not true, unless Agency Y prevented Agencies A and B from restraining X.
Let's say I need a plumber. If I choose Plumber X, does this mean that Plumber X has "assumed a monopoly on providing plumbing services?"
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