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However, politicians and economic planners, when trying to direct the economy from a hegemonic center of power, face an insurmountable challenge: they do not possess the dispersed and inarticulable information that individuals manage in their daily decisions. Friedrich Hayek called this “the knowledge problem,” and Feynman, with his brilliant analogy, takes it to the extreme: if electrons were as unpredictable as humans, physics would be absolute chaos.
In economics, that “chaos” is precisely what socialist planners (of all parties) face. They attempt to impose a rigid structure on a system that, by nature, is fluid and spontaneous. Escohotado diagnosed it masterfully: “Centralized socialist planning is like decreeing a massive cerebral infarction.”
Does all this mean that a pure free economy is the only stable system? Here
Rothbard weighs in, answering:
Praxeologically, yes; psychologically, the issue is in doubt. The unhampered market is free of self-created economic problems; it furnishes the greatest abundance consistent with man’s command over nature at any given time. But those who yearn for power over their fellows, or who wish to plunder others, as well as those who fail to comprehend the praxeological stability of the free market, may well push the society back on the hegemonic road.
And Rothbard continues:
Such are the laws that praxeology presents to the human race. They are a binary set of consequences: the workings of the market principle and of the hegemonic principle. The former breeds harmony, freedom, prosperity, and order; the latter produces conflict, coercion, poverty, and chaos. Such are the consequences between which mankind must choose. In effect, it must choose between the “society of contract” and the “society of status.” At this point, the praxeologist as such retires from the scene; the citizen—the ethicist—must now choose according to the set of values or ethical principles he holds dear.
Does anyone still wonder why all of the mixed economies and directed economies are having difficult times? The directors do not have enough information to make the spontaneous free market-like calculations that actually make the economy run somewhat smoothly. Only the spontaneous free market solves the chaos problem because there is no chaos injected by know-it-all busybodies right into the veins of the economy.
The only ones that suffer when the market is free are those that want extra-market goods, like power. The market does not do a good job of supply and demand for power. It is not very marketable.
I often think about Hoppe's "technical problem" description of these kinds of people. That is exactly how we have to think.
People who want to coexist peacefully and resolve their disputes without resorting to violence can all live under a libertarian market order.
Everyone else is a technical problem for us to mitigate against, just like bad weather, disease, and wild animals.
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People who want to coexist peacefully and resolve their disputes without resorting to violence can all live under a libertarian market order. Everyone else is a technical problem for us to mitigate against, just like bad weather, disease, and wild animals.
Nope, they are not just a technical problem to mitigate against because they are vastly different from the problems you mentioned (is bad weather, especially man-made bad weather) something to mitigate against? It is very difficult to mitigate against those psychopaths and sociopaths that are the power seekers in society. They will seek power, one way or another, no matter the barriers and mitigation strategies you try to use. After all, they are human, too, no matter how you would deny that.
If we could separate them from us on, let’s say, a tropical island, you may just be forging a monster out of the competition on the island of horrors. The escape would be a rude awakening to the peaceful, voluntary free market society.
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I think "technical problem" is widely misunderstood.
The point is that we recognize that such people will exist (just like bad weather and disease) and we take whatever measures we need to to reduce their damage (just like we do with bad weather and disease).
Clothes, shelter, insurance, levies, etc. protect us against nature.
Medicine, hygiene, insurance, and doctors protect us against disease.
Guns, security services, insurance, etc protect us against rights violators.
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Guns, security services, insurance, etc protect us against rights violators.
I guess that also means the laws preventing self-defense have to be removed and the castle doctrine put in place for everyone, plus no retreat laws. It is hard to see in places where these laws are already in effect. The local tyrants seem to have the self-defense, especially against them all shut down.
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Well, yeah. We're talking about a Hoppean property rights based society.
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I always thought that Hoppe’s ideas were hopium. Those with the power and money, like the Rothschild and etc. Don’t really want to be separated from all that raw power and pelf. The only way we could get from here to there would be ugly, IMHO.