{"id":1146,"date":"2011-07-16T14:22:25","date_gmt":"2011-07-16T18:22:25","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.peoplevstate.com\/?p=1146"},"modified":"2011-11-13T16:49:51","modified_gmt":"2011-11-13T20:49:51","slug":"instead-of-a-blog-post-by-a-man-too-lazy-to-write-one","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.peoplevstate.com\/?p=1146","title":{"rendered":"Instead Of A Blog Post, By A Man Too Lazy To Write One"},"content":{"rendered":"
[with apologies to Benjamin Tucker<\/a>]<\/p>\n PART I. My final comment<\/a> responding to another commenter in a thread on an Althouse post<\/a> quoting Glenn Greenwald’s reaction to Althouse’s distortion<\/a> of something Greenwald said about the Drug War:<\/p>\n PART II. Karl Hess on the Left \/ Right spectrum<\/a>:<\/p>\n The overall characteristic of a right-wing regime, no matter the details of difference between this one and that one, is that it reflects the concentration of power in the fewest practical hands.<\/p>\n Power, concentrated in few hands, is the dominant historic characteristic of what most people, in most times, have considered the political and economic right wing.<\/p>\n The far left, as far as you can get away from the right, would logically represent the opposite tendency and, in fact, has done just that throughout history. The left has been the side of politics and economics that opposes the concentration of power and wealth and, instead, advocates and works toward the distribution of power into the maximum number of hands.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n PART III. Norm Pattis, reviewing a novel<\/a>, The Oregon Experiment<\/em>, about a “not-so-young college professor with a professional interest in anarchism [who] puts his theory into practice in Oregon”:<\/p>\n My heart belongs with anarchists everywhere. I can’t quite shake the sense that government is a hoax, especially now, when I see right and left posture about the debt ceiling. While these fools bob and weave and avoid any pragmatic sense of compromise, the rest of us sit helplessly by, watching, paying taxes and, at least for the believers among us, praying that the it all doesn’t come crashing down around our ears. Some part of me says bring the crash on. I’ve an active apocalyptic gene.<\/p>\n But I am also late-middle-aged, a man with mortgages, children now out of college, employees, a vast network of commitments in a social web that seems forever out of control, but just serviceable enough to provide an anchor. Like the politicians I abhor, I have become vested in a world that doesn’t work. I behold anarchy with something like a pleasing sense of horror: I want to see what happens when the walls come tumbling down; I just don’t want one of those walls to fall on me or my family.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n PART IV. Albert Jay Nock’s essay “A Little Conserva-tive,” published in the Atlantic Monthly<\/em> in 1936<\/a><\/p>\n PART V. Kevin Carson at the Center for a Stateless Society<\/a> on “counter-economics”<\/a>:<\/p>\n\n
\n