Quote Originally Posted by crunker View Post
There's certainly a difference. If a number of a different providers become essentially indistinguishable from one another, it is because they're all making their subscribers happy. For example, are there differences between Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Citibank, PNC, and Capital One? Sort of, but not really--but that's because they're all doing a good job. If Bank of America, for example, becomes an entity that's no longer as good as its competitors, it will go out of business.
There's no causal link between a company still running and whether or not the subscribers are happy. You're trying to tie in customer satisfaction, but the bottom line is still profit. In Ontario, the telecom industry is basically a choice between Roger's, Bell and Telus. There is no real discernable difference in product provided (they all do the same thing), and not a significant difference in pricing between each company. These telecom giants, few in number, have an effective monopoly and are currently pulling some weight lobbying for questionable legistlature to continue their stranglehold. The question with them, providing a necessary service, is not whether or not their customers are happy - it's whether or not they're pulling in enough cash to continue to do what they're doing. My point is that, given a similar circumstance with this retarded security insurance, the same sort of thing will happen. There's no incentive to provide a good product vs. maintaining proper income (through patronage, which will likely happen as security is something that has a little more import and power than phone service). "Doing a good job" is irrelevant and vague.

If Bank of American goes out of business, it's not because it's not as good as its competitors at providing a service, it's because it's not as good as its competitors at maintaining cash flow through whatever business deals it's engaged in.

Defense organizations pursue profit by being fair, because if they are unfair, no one will buy from them. So do courts--the more biased, unethical, or unwise a given court becomes, the less respect it gets. In that manner, it will also receive less business.
They don't pursue profit by being fair. They pursue profits. How they do so could be by being fair and providing a good service, but it's naive to assume that will be the only way they acquire money. In terms of maintaining face, these companies just have to avoid public scandal. Smaller injustices will be smoothed over and ignored completely, especially because there will be no effective oversight of the companies you're talking about.

Are you really trying to suggest that there's not a great deal of corporatism (or soft fascism as some call it) in most nations today? At least in a system without coerced monopoly, people have a chance to change services. The richest around already can afford to lean on regulatory agencies, and yes, law enforcement and justice agencies as well.
Ok. And if you make a series of smaller organizations to offer the same services, what's stopping these richest from doing the exact same thing to smaller, easier to manipulate groups?

I don't think we can compare a theoretical free market defense industry with current insurance industries in the US and Canada. Both are heavily regulated by the state, and there are mandates on the individual to purchase insurance as well.
What you're talking about with security is insurance. It doesn't matter how you dress it up, it's an insurance setup. The comparisons to be made will have relevance.

Consumers have plenty of power over insurance agencies. Insurance agencies gain and lose money as well as customers all the time. They exist only because they please their customers. You have plenty of power over an insurance agency, because you can threaten or actually switch services, thereby removing an asset from them.
This is what I mean about quality of insurance. Well-off people will have plenty of assets they want protected and enough means to pay the extra to have all of these insured. Because income is more importance than customer satisfaction, high paying customers will be wooed and small time people will get screwed, precisely because they are not as valuable to the insuring company as richer people are. 1 person with 2 houses, 6 cars and a boat insured is worth as much as 2 average customers. Extemely wealthy people will have far more say as a customer than individuals such as yourself. You are deluding yourself if you think otherwise.

A watchdog agency that loses respect loses profit. It's certainly possible, and even likely that a given group will attempt to buy out those keeping track of them. Profit motive, however, will entice watchdog agencies to be honest. Dishonest agencies will drive their subscribers away, whereas in the current system, we can't really force the FDA into bankruptcy.
There is no way that market forces alone will keep watchdog agencies honest. a good PR account will maintain the minimum amount of respect required to stay in business and after that point, it is just a matter of following wealthy customers. let's be real here - respect alone will not ensure business. There is a minimum to be maintained, but having more than that will have diminishing monetary returns and so will not be as heavily invested in. Let's not forget that there will be a relative level of respect, and so long as most companies stay away from the bottom, they won't need to be as well respected as the so called best in a watchdog industry.

In a free market defense system, defense agencies will have a very strong motive to boot out bad employees. Bad employee = bad business decision. Whereas in a monopolistic law enforcement system, there's a motive to retain aggressive, violent employees, because it increases the perceived power of the police and because it also desensitizes the populace to the idea of being increasingly policed, thereby solidifying the monopoly.
There's a need to fill slots on a payroll, and a lack of proper individuals to fill them. Also, without having an appearance of power, even with aggressive dickwads who shouldn't be cops, who will respect the laws or police in the first place. Who else would be drawn to be employees in such an insurance structure anyways?

There's a very strong motive for a given police agent in an an-cap system to be fair. Being unfair increases the chances of him being fired (or shot).
ah, yes. Frontier justice. That solves everything and certainly had no corruption.

It might well be that just a few policing agencies end up surviving in a free market system, but that's alright if they're making their customers happy. The moment they cease to make their customers happy, their customers will switch, and if there's cronyism going on, someone will start some new defense agency. Whereas the state owns you, and no matter how pissed off you get at the actions of the military or police, they can fund themselves and force you to foot the bill.
Are you talking about the actions of individual police officers? Those people will get punished for breaching policies they have to work by, sooner or later. Your system only works when there's a large number of companies providing services so they can compete against each other. Sooner or later, a few will gain control and once there's only a handful, you have a monopoly of a few companies (a la telecom in Ontario) rather than monopoly of one company that's heavily regulated by several branches of government. There are only really superficial differences between them.


Replace person with organization, then, and my example stands. Wealthy groups apparently do have a motive to go after drug dealers--look at the status of the world today. The federal government is the wealthiest group in the US by far, and if at some point it lost its economic clout it could simply tax every individual and business in the country to regain lost power. Furthermore, the federal government also leans heavily on other governments to ban drugs as well.
The federal government is not the wealthiest group in US. Are you talking about total assets after the fact? Several international industries are more profitable than the government. The government's real value is that it legislates laws that regulate industries where companies operate.

Regardless, wealthy business groups have as much reason to go after drug dealers as they do going against other businesses in fields where neither compete.

Let's assume that a given agricultural company manages to set itself up at the top and begins to--let's be extreme here--hire assassins to go after competitors. Well, first off, they'd have to pay through the nose to do so, they'd have to take serious risks by trusting such unsavory individuals, and they'd have to avoid detection or face a great deal of violence on the part of their intended targets, and any pro-competition bystanders, so to speak. I don't see how this near-conspiratorial scenario is precluded by the existence of a state, though--could you explain that? At least in an an-cap system, those that want to wage war have to bear the costs, instead of taxing other people to do so.
What are you talking about? Are these police groups also mercenaries for hire? That's even dumber than what we've been internet armchair intellectualizing over already.

Despite the stigma, "Blackwater" contracts out bodyguard services, and not much else. I don't even see what you're trying to say here. Why on Earth would a military organization in an an-cap system go after drug dealers (or competing farmers, or what have you)? Only if it is both paid handsomely, and it doesn't have an ethical sense. This means that quickly, a military organization enforcing a monopoly or oligopoly would de facto or actually become a fully-owned subsidiary of the monopolistic or oligopolistic entities. They'd have very, very risky positions, and again, I don't see how this doomsday scenario is precluded by the existence of the state. If the state were eliminate enforcers of monopoly, it would doubtlessly enjoy great popular support. I don't see why the state is necessary to facilitate a war of this nature. Let willing soldiers or police find causes and leaders as they see fit.
What do these security people do? Is it just policing? Because you're talking about waging war etc. and I'm asking what kind of agencies will do this kind of work and, last I checked, Blackwater has soldiers for hire. This whole tangent is retarded and getting confused - policing on a local level (what you're talking about) has nothing to do with 'waging war' and tying the two together is pointless.

I am certain some collectives would end up selling crack, heroine, and all sorts of other things if the state didn't make drugs illegal. Collectives seeking to use violence to end the sale of drugs would have to justify the war to their shareholders and employees, which makes me think that they'd have a very, very very uphill battle to fight before even starting a war!
this has nothing to do with what I'm talking about. You're getting caught up in the specifics and ignoring the driving forces behind them. What do collectives selling drugs have to do with comparing effective paramilitary assets between two different groups.

If there's little risk of being caught, there's only morality that prevents an individual or collective from stealing.

This is true in a monopolistic law enforcement system as well...
so the only difference here is your personal preference. Certainly a great reason to change.

I suppose if anarcho-capitalists successfully end the state and a free market defense industry is created rather than a monopolistic one, there are going to be a few people who think that no government means that they can steal without worry. They'll quickly end up punished, either by their victims, or the defense/justice systems representing their victims.

It's possible that a few communities dedicated to stealing might pop up, but they'd have to keep to themselves or risk all-out invasion by several other communities. Peaceful communities and individuals have a clear stake in eliminating theft, even with violence.
I don't think you understand how organized crime works. Empowering civilians to fight back with vigilante justice (allowed by a security system that only works for the well off) is just as questionably moral as stealing in the first place (you're still allowed self-defense and protection of property in our current system, so that's not even an issue). What you will be doing is increasing casualties and empowering criminals by having a weaker legal system.

First off, there would be no "national level" by definition, as the nation itself would cease to exist. Your point stands, however, so I'll address it.

Institutional corruption and poor service, even when it comes to the most important of things, already exist in the US. In an anarcho-capitalist system, no one would be locked into a given institution or be forced to fund it or suffer its poor services.
My point is that there's no guarantee that the alternatives will be any better, and watering down a justice system to a point where it's only enforcable on a significantly smaller regional basis allows larger level criminals far more liberties in their business dealings.

If you're talking about top-down theft--that is, a monolithic entity sending men with guns to take money from individuals and poorer businesses--well, then your doomsday scenario is already realized. In fact, all of your doomsday scenarios are already realized or not precluded by the existence of a state!
Why you're right! Except I have a voice in who runs my province/state/country. Under your system, the only voice I'm allowed is switch which cock I'll have to inhale to make sure my shit doesn't get stolen and I don't get killed. That's a much better alternative, isn't it?

Large entities that steal money are propped up by the state. An-cap system = no state.
Large entities that steal money exist independant on the existence of a state. It's part of how people organize on a primal level. An-cap system does not solve this problem.