| | Again, please excuse me for addressing everyone in a single post.
One thing should be made very clear before I get to the individual posts: I am not an anarchist. I understand government is important (and why), that it must have a monopoly on retributive force (and why), and that objective laws are necessary (and why). I believe in individual, natural rights; that it is in Man's nature to be rational, have a rational philosophy, and live his life only as a rational animal can. I believe a Man lives only for himself, and must make his way by his own mind and body - that he is a tool of no one and no one is his tool. It didn't really occur to me to make this clear from the start because my question doesn't really hinge on an anarchist's, or collectivist's argument. I don't believe I'm adopting any anarchist tenets by asking the question I asked. Nor, I believe, am I promoting any Hobbesian point of view. I'm just asking how a LFC system can exist when confronted with the reality that laws must exist, and law is coercive force which interferes in the market.
Jordan - you wrote:
Frederic Bastiat is helpful here. He views law as "the collective organization of the individual right to lawful defense." Not all force is equal. Under laissez-faire, initiated force is bad; force in response to that initiated force is okay. So self defense, organized or otherwise, is just peachy.
Okay, so laws aren't an interference, they're like self-defense codified? If a guy walks up to me on the street and starts beating on me, I'll return the favor - I'll defend myself. If a guy walks up to me on the street while I'm standing next to a cop and starts beating on me, the cop will probably return the favor - he'll defend me for me. The law is the codification of that which allows him to act - the principle of the right of self-defense. The law is not a threat, it's just a codification of what's going to happen if you do "X."
John Armos - you wrote:
Jeff it seems you regard responding to an initiation of force as an initiatory action?
No. What I was arguing is that the law, simply because it exists, is initiatory force. A law exists before the crime, therefore even if the crime occurs, the law existed prior to try and coerce the criminal into not committing the crime. For example, we can agree there should be a law against murder, so we write a law against murder. What we're saying is that if anyone commits murder, we're going to do something to them. We're basically saying, "Do X, and we'll do Y." If it coerces anyone from not doing "X," then we have applied force - we have initiated force.
If, however, we consider the law we wrote to simply be a codification of what is going to happen if someone does "X," if we're saying, "Hey, don't want to pressure you, I'm not saying you'd ever do this, just wanted to let you know, if you do X, then we'll do Y. We're not threatening you." As long as "X" falls under self-defense of any natural rights, then we're not coercing anyone - we're just letting them know what the consequences are for violating the rights of another. It's like arguing, "If you lie naked in the sun all day, you'll get burned."
Another thing just occured to me. This is different from the mugger's initiation of force - his attempt at coercing you into giving up your money - because the mugger is demanding positive action. His choices are positive - you do this, or you do that - you must act one way or the other. Objective law is negative - you don't have to do anything in order to comply. It's only when you act that the possibility of violating the law, and therefore suffering the consequences, becomes a concern. I'm not sure I've flushed that out entirely.
Do laws interfere in the free market? Do they coerce men? Do they force men into particular actions?
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