Before we greet 2016 with a hangover, it is helpful to first use our brains to think how culture has furthered the cause of liberty in 2015.
My book of the year is non-fiction but for those who cannot read anything without imaginary characters, or pictures for that matter, it is short; so short that it has the word 'short' in the title:
A Short History of Man: Progress and Decline by Hans-Hermann Hoppe
is an outstanding work which views the history of man from a perspective of private property, utterly shattering the glass floor of Marxism. You will feel confident enough to have a deep discussion with anthropologists and political scientists after reading this book. Containing Hoppe's brilliant essay, From Aristocracy to Monarchy to Democracy, the case against liberal democracies and for natural order is laid out powerfully. The best part? It's free!
(You can purchase a hardback copy here: http://amzn.to/1LzzuTQ)
The most Libertarian movie of the year is probably also the best movie of the year. You would be forgiven for asking what exactly is Libertarian about this movie:
Max Max: Fury Road
makes critics use words like tour-de-force. George Miller returns to direct and apparently had the story stewing in his mind for many years; truly, this is his best and the practical effects are white-knucklingly envigorating. But the plotline is what fascinates the most. If you haven't watched it, watch it! If you have, rewatch it! But I would recommend reading Hoppe's excellent book (above) before you do. Miller has apparently thought a considerable amount about human prehistory and how the State came into being. Immortan Joe is the villain who treats others as property, developing a superstition about himself in order to convince his primitive serfs that he has some supernatural power over life, death and the afterlife and, therefore, must exercise a monopoly over violence and control who has property rights, i.e. govern coercively.
The Feminist message is present but, ultimately, the female characters need Max to save them. However, he is no white knight and his character was despised by most women I discussed the film with. He is not a romantic character and does not help for sexual profit. The women have no gynocentric leverage with such a character and are entirely dependent on his whim. Instead, Max purely desires personal redemption, entering their lives, dominating the scene, and leaving to go his own way. The character is very masculine and not at all a husband/utility to be bagged by some damsel in distress. The irony is that he is titled and considered mad but self-described as driven only by survival, making him the sanest and most prudent one on the scene, though he hardly says a word. Max's heroism derives from the selfish impulses of his conscience.
If you can take the hints of Matriarchal, 'earth-mother equals good' imagery at the end with a pinch of salt, the movie is a visceral feast depicting the Libertarian message that Statism is a superstition and that even the wildest and most selfish of men behave and trade peacefully in a post-Neolithic Revolution situation.
As for gaming, we have to look for something which allows maximum liberty for the player and moral dilemmas with a plethora of consequences, politically or otherwise:
Fallout 4 ticks the boxes and is notorious for presenting a number of ideological groups vying for political power in an alternate nuclear-apocalyptic reality; their superfluous endeavours are the landscape you have to traverse as well as a gritty world so vast you could play it for a year and still find novelties.
Thursday, 31 December 2015
Sunday, 15 November 2015
What I Love/Hate About Conspiracy Theories
Questioning anyone or anything that claims to be an authority and
challenging the status quo are great western traditions and are these are in
sad decline as the ridiculous ideology of political correctness grows in
popularity. I love the fact that people
can recognise that there is something fundamentally wrong with the way we do
society. That’s why the classic sci-fi
film, The Matrix, struck such a chord with the audience, particularly the line, ‘there's something wrong with the world. You don't know what it is, but it's there,
like a splinter in your mind, driving you mad.’
Sure, asking questions is good
but, just as important, is where you get your answers from. What is your source? What I hate about conspiracy theories is
that, as a Libertarian, I am often compared to one. I am one who wants to be well-equipped with
knowledge of government activity to maintain what liberties I have from further encroachments and hopefully even to see the tide turned against
state coercion. However, when conspiracy
theorists theorise, they typically consult two kinds of poor source material:
1. a mystical sage; or 2. some ideologue with an axe to grind.
Let’s start by examining the sage: David
Icke, whilst he appears to be about as sincere as someone who at one time
claimed to be the return of the Messiah can be, he expects us to believe that
the world is controlled by lizard people.
Automatically, one would have to wonder why the elite of the world are
trying to stem global warming; lizards like it hot! If your theory included penguin people, then
you might have me curious. But where
does he get his information from? A
spirit guide; that is, voices in his head which he claims to be benevolent
aliens. Other people claim that the
world is controlled by Satanists and, again, they can tend to have purely
mystical sources. What this does is
makes another human being your source of truth.
As soon as you create some sage with authority, they can insist that you
believe things that defy empirical evidence and that you do things which defy
your conscience and rationale. This
phenomenon doesn’t just affect conspiracy theorists but is how entire religions
and societies function today.
Now, let’s look at the
second poor source used by conspiracy theorists – ideologists spreading
propaganda. For example, many truly
believe there is firm evidence that the Illuminati control the world, the
Illuminati being anything from satanic cabals to lizard aliens (or more
likely penguins).
The origin of the conspiracy theory that the Illuminati survived being
disbanded by the Bavarian government in 1785 lies ultimately with a French
Jesuit priest, Augustin Barruel. Life had become increasingly difficult
for Catholicism in France during the Revolution. Barruel fled France and found safety in
England. With militaristic Jesuitical zeal, he wrote against Napoleon and
the Revolution and sought to turn the British against the French, hoping Rome’s
enemies would eventually come to war.
As well as popularising theories about the Knights Templar, Barruel wrote Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism in 1797. He postulated that the Illuminati had continued, despite evidence to the contrary, and were working through Freemasonry in a conspiracy to establish governments which were antimonarchical as well as anticlerical, representing a threat to remaining monarchies of Europe. It was soon translated into English, German, Italian, Spanish, Russian etc. and became a transnational sensation. Even political figures began to take the claims seriously and public discussion became so unavoidable that Freemasons from across Europe began writing openly in their defence against the theory.
As well as popularising theories about the Knights Templar, Barruel wrote Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism in 1797. He postulated that the Illuminati had continued, despite evidence to the contrary, and were working through Freemasonry in a conspiracy to establish governments which were antimonarchical as well as anticlerical, representing a threat to remaining monarchies of Europe. It was soon translated into English, German, Italian, Spanish, Russian etc. and became a transnational sensation. Even political figures began to take the claims seriously and public discussion became so unavoidable that Freemasons from across Europe began writing openly in their defence against the theory.
The reality is that there was not any organised force behind the
enlightenment or the genuine desire to be free from oppression, whether it be religious
or otherwise.
As men became better educated during the Enlightenment and the
Renaissance, the desire was for a separation of church and state and,
furthermore, to question whether we should separate the state from ourselves
while we are at it. This was not brought about by any secret society but
by the public at large. The greatest
evidence for this was the birth of Classical Liberalism and the founding of the
United States of America.
Sadly, at exactly the same time, a Roman Catholic monk and secret agent,
Alexander Horn, who hated the French Revolution and the demise of his hope for
a Holy Roman Empire, personally provided the material for Scots Professor John
Robison to write Proofs of a
Conspiracy against All the Religions and Governments of Europe, carried on in
the Secret Meetings of the Free Masons, Illuminati, and Reading Societies. Robison’s book was equally successful and influential,
despite the highly questionable source of these ideas. In fact, an American pastor sent a copy to
President George Washington to learn his thoughts on the matter, to which he
responded:
‘It was not my intention to doubt
that, the Doctrines of the Illuminati, and principles of Jacobinism had not spread in the United States. On the
contrary, no one is more truly
satisfied of this fact than I am. The idea that I meant to convey, was, that I
did not believe that the Lodges
of Free Masons in this Country had, as Societies, endeavoured to propagate the diabolical
tenets of the first, or pernicious principles of the latter (if they are susceptible of separation). That
Individuals of them may have done
it, or that the founder, or instrument employed to found, the
Democratic Societies in the United
States, may have had these objects; and actually had a separation of the People from their Government
in view, is too evident to be questioned.’
George
Washington could see that the Secularist and/or Classical Liberal principles were
not unique to any secret society but were principles held to by many
individuals and organisations and even expressed by the principles of liberty
in the United States Constitution.
All the secondary sources used to supposedly prove the conspiracy
theories about the Illuminati, such as Nesta Webster and William Guy Carr’s
books, base their theories of the above two primary sources! Are these sources reliable? Obviously not, yet these and similar conspiracy
theories abound. If we
want to discover the truth and not be swayed by some sage or someone with an
axe to grind against some other group, we have to do our research. As a parent, I know we don’t all have the luxury
of time to do our own research and so
it is important that we only defer to those who sources and material are
reviewed by various independent bodies of other researchers and where healthy debate
in that field of research is the norm.
A good place to start on the subject of Illuminati conspiracy theories might
be the book Conspiracy in the French
Revolution from Manchester University Press. Because, come on, all the universities of the
world can’t have been taken over by penguins.
Everyone knows that they’ve been taken over by the Communists.
Thursday, 23 April 2015
How Libertarianism Could Save the Whales and the Rainforest
If you enjoyed Dances
with Wolves or the sci-fi remake, Avatar (dances with blue people),
you will believe that property rights are the evil ways of the white man. But if you’ve researched the history of that
time, you will find that it was, in fact, the practice of common ownership of
land and animals that was most harmful.
The natives could practice harmful agricultural techniques on the land
which affected more than just themselves and no one could rightly stop
them. And when the Europeans appeared
and heard that no one actually owned the buffalo herds, they took as much as
they could in far more effective ways than the natives were capable of,
technologically speaking.
You see, when you have common ownership of something, like a
pizza open in the middle of a table of a children’s party, there is greater
incentive to grab all you can, while you can; there is almost no incentive to
think about the future. If you don’t
take all you can, then someone else will.
So, compare the buffalo’s situation, a phenomenon which is economically
referred to as ‘the tragedy of the commons’, with the introduction of private property
rights and the plenitude of cows we continue to see today in North America.
What then of the cow of the sea, the whale? To be able to properly seastead and to actually own and/or farm whales would result in far greater numbers of whales and greater living conditions for them.
We can say with absolute confidence that Libertarianism could save the
whales.
But, furthermore, private ownership of any piece of land
creates an incentive to protect what you own.
For example, if you owned a piece of the rainforest, the economic
incentive would be to replant trees and even have the plants and life their
studied for potential medicinal or other productive means. As things are, there is a tragedy of the
commons situation with people clearing as many trees as they can, while they
can. So we can equally say with
confidence that Libertarianism could save the Rainforest too.
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