Showing posts with label state. Show all posts
Showing posts with label state. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Challenging Licensed Attorney Requirements for Elected Positions on 6th and 9th Amendment Grounds

      According to page 56 of the Illinois State Board of Elections's 2020 Candidates' Guide, candidates for State's Attorney for counties in Illinois are required to be licensed attorneys.

     However, I believe that it's possible that that requirement could be challenged; on the grounds that it violates either the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution for the United States, the Ninth Amendment, or both.

     I believe that the state doesn't have the authority to require a license in order to run for, or be seated as, the position of state's attorney, because the state doesn't have the authority to require a license in order to practice law in the first place.


     The Sixth Amendment recognizes a right to self-representation; i.e., the right to defend oneself in court. However, that right is not unlimited (in the eyes of the law), as the right applies only at trial, for criminal suspects, and not on appeal.

     Still, in civil proceedings, you are required to represent yourself. A state's attorney or district attorney would be representing the state, the public, and alleged victims of criminal misdeeds, rather than himself, of course.

     But my hope is that the legitimacy of licenses for attorneys (and professional licensing monopolies), in the first place, is what matters here, rather than the legal venue or the type of law being practiced.


     If there's any precedent that supports the idea that defending yourself in court – and exercising your right to self-representation - in any way counts as "practicing law", then it's possible that it could be successfully be argued that courts should find that nobody can be prevented from practicing law on account of lack of a license.

     Especially considering that, if a person cannot be prohibited from acting as his own attorney in criminal proceedings, there should be no reason why the same person should be prohibited from representing himself in any venue.


     Moreover, the 9th Amendment says that "the enumeration in this constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny nor disparage certain rights retained by the people". This has been interpreted to mean that the mere fact that a right isn't listed in the Constitution, doesn't necessarily mean that it isn't one of our rights.

     If something can't be done without a permit, then it's not a real right or a freedom; instead, it's being done by permission and privilege. The 9th Amendment recognizes our freedom to retain our freedoms, despite the state's efforts to turn those freedoms into paid privileges, which it sells for profit, and from whose sale it has the exclusive right to profit.


     Because of this problem – the turning of freedoms into privileges - the people should (and do) have a right and a responsibility to limit the state's authority to require a license or permit, in order to exercise a certain right, or to work in a certain profession.

     Because our limited right to represent ourselves in court without a lawyer is recognized, the idea that the state can or should require anyone to have a license in order to practice law, should be thought of as ridiculous, and as an obvious violation of the natural right to defend oneself in court.


     Requirements that a person must be a licensed attorney in order to run for, or be seated as, a state's attorney or district attorney, should be challenged on 6th and 9th Amendment grounds.
     The ability and skill which is necessary to determine whether a person should be charged with a crime, and whether a grand jury should be convened, results from the same types of learning, education, research, and training, which any person with a functioning brain are capable of doing from the time they become able to read; including persons who may be charged with crimes in the future.

     According to my interpretation, the 9th Amendment implicitly recognizes a pre-existing natural right to enter any profession (or, at least, to attempt to; so non-attorneys should at least not be precluded from running), and the 6th Amendment recognizes a pre-existing right of criminal suspects to defend themselves in court.


     There is no particular reason why anyone – criminal suspect or prosecutor alike - should not be able to act as legal counsel, provided that they comprehend the law of the relevant jurisdiction well enough. States can decide that the matter of how well they comprehend the law should be decided through a bar examination, but states could just as well decide that the people should be free to make that determination on their own, through an election.

     As long as the position is publicly elected, in an election that is transparent enough to allow voters to make a thoughtful judgment about whether the person is qualified to charge criminal suspects, the people should have the right to make that decision, instead of implementing attorney licensing systems. After all, the governor is not required to be a licensed attorney. So, then, why should the state's attorneys – whom are in lower executive positions than the governor – be required to do the same?
     It is each state's decision how (or whether) to regulate the licensure of attorneys, if they choose to require them to be licensed. But no state is obligated to license attorneys, because of the contents of the 9th Amendment (rights found in Constitution may not disparage other rights retained by the people) and 10th Amendment (“states' rights”).




Inspired by the ideas of a candidate for State's Attorney of Lake County, Illinois,

who wishes to remain anonymous




Written on September 24th, 2020

Edited and Expanded on September 29th, 2020

Published on September 29th, 2020

Monday, September 2, 2019

Ten Reasons to Consider Bioregionalism


     Bioregionalism is a set of views regarding how our politics, culture, and ecology should be shaped by our environment and surroundings; in particular based on “bioregions”. Bioregional politics is the idea that governments should make reforms which reshape government according to the previously existing bioregions which are found in nature.
     Perhaps the most important set of reforms which bioregionalists support, have to do with borders and boundaries. Bioregionalists suggest using to our advantage the mountain ranges and watersheds with which nature has already gifted us, to determine where political boundaries lie.
     Mountain ranges form the perimeters of watersheds, funneling all rain water into river valleys and towards the sea. Basins have mountain ranges as perimeters as well, although they do not funnel water towards the sea. Mountain ranges and seashores already tell us a lot about where the boundaries of these bioregions lie, and mountain ranges form natural borders, forming a natural protection against military invasion. So why not use mountain ranges as our borders?
     Here are ten reasons why making every watershed or bioregion into an independent nation – and replacing all currently existing “straight line” and river borders with mountain range and sea borders – will create a legally simpler, more ecologically sustainable, and all around better, world.


     1. SIMPLIFY BORDERS BY FOCUSING ON RIVER VALLEY POPULATIONS.
     The major civilizations around the world grew out of river valleys, and most populations (large or small) are centered on river valleys. River valleys – and the watersheds which bound them – just group people together conveniently. Bioregionalism would thus lead to increased political simplicity, in terms of where borders, boundaries, and jurisdictions are drawn. We don't have to guess about where the borders should be, nor do we have to suggest our own, if they already exist.

     2. SAVE MONEY, LIVES, AND EFFORT, BY AVOIDING MAKING BORDERS.
     Using mountain ranges as natural borders is more military and financially defensible than using rivers and lines as borders, and erecting physical borders. For one: building walls and fences takes work, when nature already did all the work for us which was necessary to create mountain ranges. When mountain ranges already exist that we can use for free, to do any more work creating borders would be an unnecessary waste of money, effort, labor, time, and resources.
     Mountain ranges form a physical barrier against military invasions, while river boundaries and “lines drawn on the ground by dead men” are much more difficult to defend against a military attack. Additionally, building-up physical defenses – such as walls and fencing – would be difficult to justify if our borders were mountains, than if our borders were to remain rivers and lines (like they are at the U.S.-Mexico and U.S.-Canada borders today), because the mountains already form physically huge barriers which are difficult for militaries to penetrate.
     Moreover, it is much more dangerous and difficult to climb a mountain range than it is to cross a river or a line on land; while people who are looking for a better and safer life for their families are much more likely to want to cross a river or a line than a mountain range (which means that people coming over a mountain range are much more likely to be attempting an invasion, than are people crossing a river or land boundary).
     Also, existing land borders are problematic for several reasons. Border walls unnecessarily restrict the flow of labor and capital, which has to move freely in order for trade to occur freely and without undue hindrance. Border walls are also unpopular, expensive, and sometimes resort to eminent domain takings. For those reasons, using the borders nature gave us - that is, mountain ranges - is just safer, more cost-efficient, and more labor-efficient, than making our own.

     3. REDUCE CONFLICT OVER RIVERS AND FRESH WATER.
     By ending the practice of using rivers as borders, a transition to bioregionalism will result in reduced conflict over sources of fresh water. As long as political and ethnic minorities are adequately represented and see their freedoms preserved, ending river boundaries will end the need for tribes to worry about rival tribes sneaking across the river and attacking them, or crossing the river to gain control over it.
     Reducing conflict over rivers – and affording full and equal human rights and legal rights, in the same political entity, to people on both sides - will also help reduce wars, terrorism, and kidnapping of members of one tribe by another, while increasing rates of intermarriage between tribes. In a bioregionalist independent state, all those who live in a river valley would be free to access it, and to control access to that river valley.

     4. SIMPLIFY & LOCALIZE ENVIRONMENTAL LAW.
     Grouping people together by river valley, can lead to increased political simplicity in terms of environmental policy and lawsuits, as well as in terms of borders. Water safety issues tend to affect people on the basis of the quality of “the local water supply”. So it only makes sense that political jurisdictions be broken down on the basis of which water supply affects which geographical community of people.
     Nowadays, watersheds are shared across multiple states; this state of affairs risks allowing the federal government to intervene in too many water pollution cases which could easily be resolved locally, within and by a single political entity occupying an entire watershed.
     Since mountain ranges funnel all water into a single river valley, anyone who is downstream of a water polluter will know that the tainted water came from the same jurisdiction (and the same watershed) in which they live. This will help people whose water is being polluted, track the source of their water pollution easily, because the source of water pollution will always be someone upstream who is in the same watershed. That means that in the vast majority of water pollution lawsuits, the plaintiff and defendant will be based in the same political jurisdiction, thus allowing the plaintiff to sue the defendant without creating a situation in which the outcome of the case could potentially affect the laws of two political entities. That helps bypass a potential conflict of interest between states, which only a higher authority (most likely a central government) could resolve with any finality.
     Bioregionalism will thus enable water pollution to be solved by the members of the community whom are most directly affected by it; whether as activists, as legislators on environmental policy, or as jurors in water pollution cases.

     5. MAKE WATERSHEDS SELF-CONTAINED & SELF-SUSTAINING
     Making watersheds self-contained in terms of environmental policy and military defense over borders, while using pre-existing mountain range borders to our full advantage, will increase the chances that an independent bioregionalist state could become
economically and financially self-contained.
     This could be done several ways: 1) through enacting clean water reforms, and then putting the state on a path to sourcing all water from within the state; 2) through enacting reforms to putting the state on a trajectory of becoming ecologically and financially sustainable at the same time. This could be done through “Agenda 21” and “Green New Deal” -type measures, which would involve “re-greening” and retro-fitting buildings to be environmentally sustainable. This will help ensure an equitable distribution of wealth across geography, without threatening encroachment upon animal habitats and lands in need of preservation.
     Perhaps fulfilling certain standards regarding environmental sustainability and economic equity could be used as a way to justify “fast-tracking” bioregionalist independence movements (such as Cascadia in the Northwest United States and Southwestern Canada) and securing their status as fully independent states.

     6. NATURAL BORDERS LAST LONGER AND DON'T NEED FORTIFICATION.
     Determining borders based on mountain ranges, made by nature, will result in borders lasting longer –
much longer – than they do now. As it stands right now, borders exist – and change - because of political instability, military conflict, and the need to micromanage and control people.
     To resolve to permanently base all borders on natural geological features, on the other hand – and to do it worldwide say, in the U.N., in an international court, or via some other method – could help guard against the risk of military invasion, through permanently ensuring that borders will never change.
     Ensuring that borders will never change, will especially help guard against the risk of a violent invasion, if full rights to control one's share of resources are afforded to any and all people who come into the watershed peacefully. That's because guaranteeing full voting rights and full right to access one's share of water and other resources, will reduce the likelihood that foreigners will resort to using force or violence in order to invade, or else resort to invading with intentions of overthrowing the government. Doing such things would be unnecessary to guarantee their safety, freedom, and ability to control the resource they need to survive.

     7. HELP PEOPLE AND INSTITUTIONS ATTUNE TO NATURE.
     As explained above, if borders were determined by mountain ranges, then borders would last a very long time. The only problem is what to do when there earthquakes take place, which drastically change the incline of the land and change the courses of rivers.
     Fortunately, however, earthquakes that make such significant change to the outline of the bioregion do not come around that often. Additionally – especially in the short term – earthquakes alter rivers' courses in a much less drastic manner than the manner in which they change the perimeters of bioregions (i.e., the general location of mountain ranges and seashores).
     But whether or not we experience geological events significant enough to affect and change borders during our own lifetimes, adopting bioregionalism will help put us on a track to being able to do that easily in case we ever have to. Bioregionalism is fundamentally about making sure that our ecology, culture, and politics follow nature's lead. “Taking nature's lead” in terms of what we do about borders and environmental policy is how we accomplish that, and basing borders on mountain ranges is the first step.
     But it's not as simple as just redrawing the borders; part of that first step has to involve planning for how to change borders in the manner which is least likely to result in conflict and competition over resources. Maybe when only earthquakes can change the borders, people will not only have a respect for nature's ultimate authority over our political affairs; maybe people will wonder whether God Himself is telling us when we need to change our borders.

     8. CREATE MORE OPPORTUNITIES FOR LAND REFORM.
     Re-focusing politics on bioregions and the needs of the ecology, could help restore attention to the need for improvement of environmental quality (such as our air, water, and land), and to the need to ensure that land can be distributed in an equitable fashion across the country and across the world.
Increased interest in, and popularity of, bioregionalism, could thus lead to increased attention to land reforms such as Land Value Taxation, and the representation of land in legislative branches and/or electoral processes. Land Value Taxation would reform landed property ownership, tenancy, economic rents, land allocation, taxation, welfare, and what to do about lands that fall into blight and unuseability; while representing land in legislative branches or electoral processes could help reduce the ability of elites in government to undermine the will of the people.
     The U.S. Senate (and the 100 votes in the Electoral College which represent it) exist because people are not supposed to be the only thing represented in legislative branches and elections. The Electoral College is structured the way it is – in an anti-democratic fashion – to make presidential candidates more likely to visit low-population states.
     However, in practice, the purpose of the Electoral College has lately been to balance-out the voting power of high-population states by giving power to elite superdelegates, often working in government, who choose our electors; while until the 17th Amendment the purpose of the Senate was to balance-out the voting power of high-population states by giving power to governors who appointed senators.
     Instead of using the power of the elite to balance-out the power of large populations, why don't we use land? Shouldn't we be more worried about making sure that people and the planet can co-exist, than about making sure that elites in government, campaign superdelegates, and elite landowners, have enough sway in policymaking?
     In the U.S. Congress, there is a Senate and a House of Representatives. Why not add a third house, to represent land area? Perhaps it could be comprised of environmental scientists, climate activists, environmental health specialists, food and agricultural scientists, etc.. Each state could decide independently whether those officials would be appointed or elected.
     A house representing land area could even replace the U.S. Senate, and probably should. Replacing the Senate with a literal “House of Commons” (that is, a house whose members represent not population, but parcels of “the commons”, i.e., common land) would not only reduce elite power in government; it could also help save operating costs. In particular, the entire budget of the U.S. Senate. Environmental experts would likely opt to receive much less than the $200,000 salaries to which senators are accustomed, so it's possible that such a “House of Commons” could even afford to have more than one hundred members (which could help represent land in Congress efficiently).
     Increasing the representation of land will hopefully also result in an increased attention to the needs of ranchers and farmers in large, low-population states, to use resources (including, possibly,
federal resources) to make the area habitable for population. Some farmers believe that the federal government should be paying ranchers directly to do the work that is necessary to make use of the land we have (without harming native species, of course).
     Increasing influence in Congress based on land area, will help represent
nature itself in the halls of Congress, while replacing the elite with nature as the only thing capable of bossing large populations around (as it should be).

     9. DIMINISH FAITH IN BORDERS AND END TWO-DIMENSIONAL THINKING, AND
     10. REDUCE CONFLICT OVER LAND AREA.
     Adopting mountain ranges as borders, will show that river borders and land boundaries don't work nearly as well as the pre-existing borders which nature gave us. This will help reduce faith in the current set of borders, which by and large is composed of river borders that
enable competition over water instead of reducing it, and of “lines on the ground, drawn on a map by dead men, to mark the places where their armies decided to stop fighting”.
     There is enough conflict over resources in the world, without conflict being viewed as a struggle for territory itself; this “two-dimensional thinking” only compounds the level of conflict and competition for resources. Nearly all resources which are useful to us, are three-dimensional, not two-dimensional; water, air, foods, consumer goods, etc..
     But land area is not a resource which we can consume. We can make use of land area, but monopolistic, sovereign control over two-dimensional land territory is not necessary; neither to secure one's safety, nor to subscribe to the services provided by a government.
     Suppose that, in a small ten-story building, one family occupies each level; and each family for some reason wants to be part of a different political system. That is possible, as long as they are not stopped from leaving the building by the people at the bottom floor, nor by anyone else. As long as government employees can logistically reach a group of people who want to subscribe to and receive that government's services, then there is no reason to limit such a government from doing so. There is especially no reason to require a government selected by one family in that building, to force all other families in that building to subscribe to its services (based on the idea that if all ten families live on the same parcel of land, they must subscribe to the same government, because statist governments are territorial). Neither the family at the top of the building, nor the family at the bottom, nor any government, ought to be free to stop any household from choosing which government it wants to be a part of. If free travel throughout the hallways, staircases, and elevators of the building can be secured – and especially if helipads can be set up on the roof – then there will always remain the potential for free association between different governments and different households at that address.
     There is no reason for governments to run based on territorial boundaries. Granted, changing where our statist borders are, and changing what they're based on, will not end the territorial nature of statist government. That is to say that it will not change the operation of the state based on the definition “an entity capable of wielding a credible monopoly on the legitimate use of force within a given territory” (“territory” being the operative word).
     But fortunately, reforming our borders will make more people question the set of borders which currently exists right now. And we can't envision the sort of “three-dimensional government” which I've described above, unless and until we see that the current set of borders isn't working.
     Fortunately, since bioregionalist reforms would likely result in adopting the kind of simultaneous ecological and economic reforms which I outlined in #6 above, mixed-use development (a type of zoning ensuring a mix of uses in a neighborhood) would probably become more popular and widespread. If areas practicing mixed-use development begin to devote different levels of buildings to different uses, then that will result in “multi-level mixed-use zoning” or “zoning with mixed use by level”. If that practice is successful and takes off, then in addition to having different economic uses on each level, more people would be able to conceptualize what “three-dimensional government” looks like, and communities could foster different political membership by each household or level of a building.
     “Three-dimensional government”, or “spatial government”, could mean panarchist proposals such as Functional Overlapping and Competing Jurisdictions, and National Personal Autonomy. These systems propose creating a sort of “government without borders”.
     Another thing that will help visualize three-dimensional government – as well as reduce conflict and competition over land area and territory – is “building up”. While making more efficient use of land area is important, making more efficient use of space is too. The most important way to do both of those (aside from to actually expand into space) is to build up and let people live on top of each other. “Building up instead of building out” will help us maximize the efficiency of use of the spaces which human settlements are already occupying, thus avoid the need to continue expanding outwards into surrounding areas. The fewer resources we want to devote towards the difficult process of economizing large amounts of land (all of which we might not need), the more we should focus on building upwards – that is, building on top of existing structures – without urbanizing any more land area (destroying forests and other environments in the process).

     I urge my readers to learn about bioregionalism, bioregions, the locations of the various watersheds and their mountain and sea boundaries, the movement for the independence of the Cascadia watershed, and the various bioregionalist and panarchist proposals which could potentially result in either the drastic reform of borders or else in their total abolition.
     I would also like to urge my readers to read my May 2013 article “Cascadia Proposal”, which contains a map and an outline of how a legislative body could be constructed for the bioregion. What I have referred to above as a “House of Commons”, is called a “Council on Natural Resources” in the “Cascadia Proposal” article. That 2013 article is available at the following link:




Written and originally published on September 2nd, 2019

Based on notes taken on August 31st, 2019

Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Rent, Profit, Interest, Usury, and Taxing Monopolies


Table of Contents


1. Introduction: Purpose of This Article
2. Rent
3. Profit
4. Wages
5. Wage-Theft is Real
6. Interest on Capital
7. Interest on Money
8. Usury and the Currency Monopoly
9. Usury = Rent x Profit x Interest
10. Exclusive vs. Semi-Exclusive Rent Collection Privileges
11. Conclusion
12. Post-Script: Taxation and Monopolies
13. Links and Additional Reading



Content

1. Introduction: Purpose of This Article


     The purpose of this article is to explain why rent, profit, and interest – and why the ownership of land, labor, and capital – are the results of laws and state-upheld monopolies.
     Herein I contend – as the anarchists, Mutualists, Georgists, Tuckerites, and others have contended – that: 1) excess rent is the result of monopolies on land and housing; 2) profit and wage-theft are results of monopolies on labor; and 3) interest and usury are the results of monopolies on capital, credit, currency, and money.
     They are the results of legally granted privileges to collect the various forms of economic rent; i.e., rent on land, profit off of labor, and interest off of capital (and loans, and money).







     I have already explained, in my March 2019 article “Why Rent is Theft: Against Economic Rents and Monopolies”, why this is so. Readers wishing to better understand my thoughts on these related topics can read that article for more information. The focus of the article is to explain why “rent is theft” from the perspective of some socialists, in addition to taxation being theft from the perspective of the Libertarians.
     For those who don't plan on reading that article, it will suffice to say that “rent is theft” because economic rent is theft. This is to say that rent, profit, and interest – which are all forms of economic rent – are either stolen, or else otherwise unjustly acquired, whether through semi-legal or extralegal means, or, if in the absence of law, then through violence, force, coercion, extortion, and manipulation.
     If and when the state registers and recognizes the legal ownership of all land, labor, and capital - and allows ownership of them only through permission - then all land, labor, and capital which is legally and legitimately owned, is owned only if and when the state and its enforcers agree to protect those ownership titles.
     In the act of enforcing exclusive claims to land, labor, and capital, those enforcers come to exercise some degree of the state's unique, exclusive privilege to wield a credible monopoly on the legitimate use of force within the territory. Thus, they exert the power traditionally wielded by the state, both in custom, and in definition (especially in the definition of the state which was developed and popularized by sociologist Max Weber).

     These facts have prompted the anarchists, Mutualists (etc.) to conclude that private property (inasmuch as it is protected by the state, and/or by violence) cannot, and could not, exist, without the threat of violence being levied against anyone and everyone who
     These facts, most importantly, have prompted the anarchists and Mutualists (etc.) to ask: “How could private property exist, then, without the state to recognize it and protect it? In a stateless or consent-based society, how could anyone wield monopoly over land (etc.) when everyone else is absolutely free to question and challenge the property claims of everybody else?
     “And with no ability to legally challenge property claims, and no ability to legally challenge occupancy-and-use norms in state courts (i.e., because there would be no state courts), how could a property claimant continue to exclude others from his property, without resorting to force? Without a legal privilege to commit acts of violence in order to protect property claims, how could ”

     The remainder of this article does not answer all of those questions, but it should help to provide some foundation questioning the legitimacy of ownership of labor, capital, and currency (in addition to landed property). I ask that my readers try, on their own, to ask the same questions of just ownership of labor, capital, and money, which I have previously asked about how land can be justly owned without the state.
     Readers seeking answers to the above mentioned questions, should read my March 2019 article “Private Law and Anarchism: Is Privatization a Solution to the State's Monopolies on Legal Services?”, and also read the works of Murray Rothbard, Hans-Hermann Hoppe, Stefan Molyneux, Walter Block, Roderick Long, etc..
     Of course, my answers will be much more critical of private property than the answers provided by these thinkers, save for perhaps Roderick Long. This is owing, in part, to the fact that I have spent so much attention to the various manners in which the rights of public and common actors (but not state actors) are unjustly ignored during the creation of most or all private property.




2. Rent

     Rent is the return to land. Rent is levied upon, and extracted from, buildings, and the land on which buildings sit. Landlords are granted exclusive monopoly rights (really, privileges) to collect rent on the lands which they own.
     This grant of privilege is performed by the state, through its unique (and self-granted) power to recognize and register landed property claims. The state registers landed property claims through apparati such as county Recorders of Deeds' offices. Thus, the ownership of land, under capitalists states, is not retained according to the active protection of the owner; on the contrary, it is a function of law, and of the force of the state.
     Excess rent (that is, “super-rent”) is landlordism, plantation slavery, and indentured servitude. Excess rent is therefore theft, if kept by the landlord, not reinvested into the community and/or its markets, and not reinvested into the tenants and their residences.



3. Profit

     Profit is the “return to management”. Profit is extracted from laborers, who work either in buildings which rest upon the land, or work directly upon the land (or even beneath it, as in mining operations).
     Profit is the “return to management” only because it is “returned” to management from labor. This is to say that profit is stolen wages, which are kept by management, instead of being returned to the laborers.
     Excess profit (that is, “super-profit”, “surplus profit”, or “excess surplus value”; extra-Mehrwert in Marx's and Engels's German) is the withholding of wages, benefits, and improvements in conditions, by management, from labor.
     Excess profit, stolen from labor and kept by management, is therefore theft, when it is not reinvested into the community and/or its markets, and not reinvested into workers.
     This reinvestment should be done chiefly for the purpose of: 1) improving the workers' benefits and conditions, including pay, and safety and health conditions; 2) helping workers to own their own tools, and to own shares of the means of their productivity and livelihood; and 3) allowing workers a realistic chance of buying-out the owner, and of creating a new (and, hopefully, self-managed, and more egalitarian) franchise, of the original firm, or perhaps even an entirely new company which has the full ability to freely compete against the original firm.



4. Wages

     Wages are the return to labor. They are the return of compensation to the laborer or worker, rather than to management.
     All wages, not returned to the laborer, are possessed mainly by either management, owners, or outside investors. Outside investors have little or no stake in the firm's long-term success, and management and owners have more stake but also a more realistic chance of thriving financially if they leave the firm as compared to workers.
     Wages are funds not reinvested into the firm in a way that directly benefits workers and their families, and are “returned to” managers, owners, and investors (whom cannot truthfully claim that those funds are actually returned to them, because they never possessed nor earned those funds in the first place). This is to say that all funds not stolen from workers and kept by others, and not reinvested into the community and/or its markets, are excess profit (superprofit), not wages.
     But those funds should be wages, and they should be returned – from management, owners, and investors – to the workers, so that the workers can spend those funds in the community and/or its markets.
     Wages are earned income, appropriately distributed and allocated; that is, wages are earned by workers, as compensation for performing labor. The idea that the worker's labor, is done chiefly for the benefit of himself and his family (and to a lesser extent, the community and its markets in which they will be spending those wages), stands in direct opposition to the notion that the laborer works chiefly for the benefit of managers, owners, and investors.
     Thus, the notion that labor entitles all that it produces, stands in direct opposition to the practice of profiteering from labor.



5. Wage-Theft is Real

     There may be some argument that “wage theft” does not exist, because while the laborer is a renter of capital, the capitalist is, just the same, a renter of labor. This is to say that owners and managers employ laborers, by “renting-out their hands” or renting-out their time.
     But the capitalists' “rent” of workers' time, talent, and physical effort, is never fully paid, and it never can be. That's because managers never compensate workers for the opportunity costs, and other indirect costs, which the workers bear before and outside employment.
     This is to say that few firms compensate new hires for all of the costs they undertook while seeking employment; few firms allow new hires to deduct, as work expenses, costs like the identification documents, clothing, sanitary items, paper and ink, printing costs, postage stamps, phone calls, and bus tickets, which they buy in order to apply for jobs and travel to job interviews.
     This occurs because, evidently, managers and owners feel that those costs are the workers' problems, and have nothing to do with the everyday operation of the firms, and especially nothing to do with the owners. But they could not be more wrong. A new hire – especially one who struggled for a long time before finally finding employment – will often spend months and months, even years, paying off debts and budgetary deficiencies created by those expenses.
     And the more a worker is thinking about where his next meal will come from, where he will sleep next, how his family will make ends meet, and what will happen if he gets sick or injured on the job, the less productive the worker (and, in turn, the firm) becomes. And thus, the less profitable it becomes to “rent” workers.
     So, in many ways, labor is not getting the full return from its effort, and wage-theft is real. Unless you believe that a worker is supposed to only earn as much as is necessary to keep him working another day, with nothing left over to develop himself, either through skills or education, even if he becomes more productive because of it.
     That increased production will only cause him to become self-sustaining, and independent; and thus less dependent upon others for what he needs to survive. Thus, increased self-management of workers, is not in the interest of managers because it puts them out of a job, and is not in the interest of owners because it makes workers less dependent upon owners, and more reliant upon themselves.



6. Interest on Capital

     Interest is the return to capital. Interest is extracted from capital investments, loans, and currency or money (which are not the same thing).
     Capitalists – that is, capital investors, lenders (and, less importantly for the purposes of this section, owners of labor, i.e., employers) – are granted exclusive monopoly rights to collect interest upon those loans and capital investments.
     Capitalists' ownership of those loans and capital investments, are secured through the state's legal recognition of the contracts which capitalists make. These include contracts wherein: 1) capitalists agree to employ laborers; and wherein 2) capitalists agree to rent and occupy buildings and/or land owned by others, and pay rent to those owners (and/or fees or taxes to state owners of land and buildings) for the privilege of occupying some of those lands and developments.
     Additionally, the continued ownership of capital assets, is secured (and securitized) to the owner – on either a temporary or permanent basis - through the state's power to grant L.L.C. status. L.L.C. grants allow owners of firms, and individual workers within them, to become both financially and legally irresponsible for their criminal actions. This is done through distributing and deferring the risk of financial culpability for lawsuits involving the firm.
     That these practices are acceptable, rests upon the premise of the “right of increase”, i.e., the right to acquire unlimited profits from investments, in perpetuity, forever. Most terrifyingly, the “right of increase” ethos now embodies itself in the pretended right of multinational corporations to sue national governments for passing laws which “limit their right to profit”, even when those laws are passed in order to protect workers, civilians, plant resources, and the ecology from being exploited by those firms.
     These capital investments, and loans, are further secured to their owners with the help of the state, through the various forms of wage-theft (and deprivation of improvements of benefits and conditions) which make workers more dependent upon loans, and upon employment by capitalists chiefly for the benefit of other people, than they otherwise would be (if they were independent, self-employed owners of their own means of production).



7. Interest on Money

     Leaving aside the issues of interest on capital investments, interest on physical capital, and loans to entities besides treasuries, and focusing only on interest on loans and currency (i.e., financial capital):
     For all intents and purposes, interest functions as a form of debt, when it is built-into currencies. Through inflation – whether accidental, or as a result of intentional “quantitative easing” of the monetary supply through the issuance of newly minted currencies – currency is imbued with interest, and with some measure of debt.
     The presence of this debt, causes the value of the currency issued, to be constantly decreasing. When done intentionally, the intent is that depletion of the value of the currency will lead its possessor to spend it earlier, and/or more quickly, than he otherwise would. This assures a prompt return to all those who invest in currency (i.e., bond-holders).



8. Usury and the Currency Monopoly

     Excess interest (that is, “super-interest”) is usury. Usury exists because of the exploitation of the demand for money, in order to increase the value of monetary assets already possessed by owners of money and currency.

     That the demand for money and currency is being exploited – and, at that, officially – should be obvious. Currency - which is not itself money, nor value, but a representation of value and money, and to some extent a representation of work – is created by the state. Through the state's self-granting of the legal privilege to designate an official currency, and to coin moneys and regulate their values, few transactions can be made without the use of the state currency to mediate the exchange.
     Thus, the state is able to cite these privileges – and also the supposed need to levy taxes upon potentially all transactions – in order to monopolize the creation and issuance of currency. This increases public demand for money and currency – that is, state-issued moneys and currencies – in order to perform most any and all of the tasks necessary to survive (i.e., labor, trading, etc.).
     If there were no monopolistic state to choose an official currency, regulate its value, and compel us to pay taxes on as many transactions as the state wants us to, then it would be difficult for most of us to imagine how useful such a medium of exchange could be for a free people.
     That's because free people would, more likely, use the value of labor, and human need, as more important indicators of the value of the compensation that someone is offering in exchange for work or items. Free people would not accept a currency with debt (that is, interest) built into it, unless they understood why, and under what circumstances, that debt is helpful (i.e., when that debt causes currency to be returned to a publicly-held issuer of currency or credit).

     Excess interest (i.e., usury) is bankerism, capital misallocation, and pernicious predatory lending. Excess interest is theft, whenever interest (and debt, and excess monetary value) are kept by the lender or the investor of capital.
     Whenever lenders do not allow borrowers to pay some of what they owe into a security reimbursement fund, for emergency purposes - and whenever the returns from investment and lending are not reinvested into the market and/or community, and into making loans available for those same borrowers as well as others – then a theft has occurred.
     This is no less “theft” simply because it does not appear violent on its surface. The dependence of the borrower upon the lender, only exists without challenge, when the lender is free to change the terms of the lending contract at will, without review by the lender. Each the state's recognition of the legitimacy of the contract while it changes, and lack of transparency into the justice of contracts on the part of community agencies or voluntary associations, can lead to borrowers being dependent upon lenders.
     And, of course, in the presence of the state and its official currency, few transactions (loans included) can be conducted without the state's approval, without using the state's official tool of oppression (i.e., its currency), and without paying taxes upon those transactions (in that official currency).



9. Usury = Rent x Profit x Interest

     While in the previous several sections, I have used the word “usury” to denote “excessive interest” (especially on capital and loans), usury possesses characteristics unique among the various types of economic rent. As such, “excessive interest” alone, does not constitute usury at its fullest and most pernicious extent.
     While interest on capital and loans is popularly referred to as “usury” when it is excessive, excessive interest on currency is a different animal altogether. That's because currency – the medium of exchange through which loans and capital investments are made – possesses characteristics more strongly associated with rent and profit than with interest.


Meme created by the author on November 30th, 2017;
first published here on May 22nd, 2019

     Think about it: the act of profiting off of the state issuance of official currency, results in misappropriation (that is, theft) of all three major types of economic rent: 1) interest; 2) rent; and 3) profit.
     First (and most obviously): profiting from currency results in excessive interest, because the debt which inflation imbues in our currency, results in pernicious levels of interest, because of the artificial, state-created, unnaturally high demand for acceptable media of exchange.
     Second (and second most obviously): profiting from currency results in excessive profit, through profiteering from the lending of that currency, and for the same purposes just described, pertaining to interest.
     Third (and least obvious of all): profiting from currency results in excessive rent, because in a way, users of currency (as well as those who borrow in official currency) are paying a rent on the currency they possess and use. This rent is levied upon bearers and users of currency, through – you guessed it – the imbuing of the currency with debt (caused by inflation).
     To summarize, to reap usury on money is to profit off of the rental of money at interest. It is to take maximum advantage possible of the artificial need for money; artificial, because it is compelled by the state, through the state's granting of a legal monopoly on currency to itself.

     Thus, usury is that most destructive and deadly of economic rents, because it is the best example of an economic rent, and the best example of how economic rents overlap and become almost indistinguishable. Especially when a monopoly currency, and monopolies on financial capital, are combined with a system wherein land, labor, and physical capital are owned according to the recognition and dictates of the state.
     If the above is an accurate assessment, then it may perhaps be fair to conclude that we must measure – and multiply together – all three economic rents (rent, profit, and interest), if we desire to come up with accurate measurements of the degree of “usury” (in its fullest sense) existing within an economic system.



10. Exclusive
vs. Semi-Exclusive Rent Collection Privileges, and a Note on Emergency Funds

     If what I have said above, and also what the anarchists say on these topics, is correct, then in state-capitalist and protectionistic economies (forms of economic governance which feature monopolies heavily), to claim property ownership, and to get it recognized in a manner which is monopolistic, monolithic, unquestionable, unchallengeable, and final, requires a lot.
     It requires either: 1) the state and its violence to uphold the claim and keep people out; 2) the use of violence, to do the same, without the use of the state; or else 3) 100% approval by the remainder of society, that a person deserves and earned what he claims as his property.
     Furthermore, to claim ownership (in these economies) entails making a claim to an exclusive and exclusionary right (or privilege) to access and make use of certain lands, buildings, or other assets (even including, unfortunately, other people's labor).
     The tangible outcome of the practice of exclusive and exclusionary private property ownership, is that people are met with violence, for attempting to “squat” on a property (“engage in adverse possession”, in fancier terms), even if they pose no threat of physical harm to the property's claimant(s).

     But must we suffer this? Can we suffer this? Absolutely not.
     We cannot survive much longer if, every time we try to use one of what we thought were our own possessions, we are obligated to pay that possession's actual owner (from whom we are merely borrowing, renting, or accessing and using the things which we possess but don't own). We cannot survive much longer, if we are not allowed to fully own any of the things that we use every day; if we have to pay and ask permission every time we want to use one of “our own” possessions.
     Although, in a sense, for everyone to be able to fully own their possessions, constitutes universal, ubiquitous ownership of private property; this would not grant those owners “private property” in the same sense in which the anarchists, Marxists (etc.) have traditionally conceived of private property.
     This is to say that private property owned for the sake of owning and using, is fundamentally different in purpose, from private property owned solely for the sake of producing more value therefrom. For everyone to own property - and for everyone to be able to acquire it through their own efforts and defense - would not result in depending upon others to acquire property; for precisely the reason that if everyone had property, nobody would have to please anyone else (through paying or begging) in order to acquire property.

     I do not wish to give the impression, through this essay, that all forms of rent, profit, and interest, result from perfectly exclusive ownership of property, nor from grants of total rights to exclude others from accessing property.
     The returns of rent, profit, and interest, are, however, certainly, greatly increased, the more exclusive, exclusionary, and monopolistic that ownership gets. For example, if a renter has no realistic opportunity to buy his residence from his landlord, then the renter will pay rent for a much longer period of time than he otherwise would.
     Likewise, if a laborer has no realistic opportunity to own his tools and a share of the company, and no opportunity to buy-out his company and start a new franchise, then the laborer will end up working for a much longer period of time than he otherwise would. And, to repeat, if a borrower has no chance of recouping any sort of emergency funds paid to the lender, because the lender kept them, then the borrower will end up owing the lender for a much longer period of time than he otherwise would.
     This means that – through trust, mutual obligations, and a mutual desire for all parties involved to be prosperous and eventually own property – it is possible to lessen the exploitative effects caused by legal recognition of ownership titles to land, labor, and capital.
     Such exploitative effects could additionally be lessened through increasing the prevalence, and variety of form, of emergency security disbursement funds - for not only the lender/borrower relationship, but for the landlord/tenant and employer/worker relationships as well. Security deposits on housing rent could be paid into a fund which is held in a neutral territory, which landlord or renter may only access upon absolute verification and agreement that the landlord's and/or tenant's expenses justify the expenditure of part or all of the security deposit. Such funds would be subject to total transparency, and this could be done with the help of blockchain technology, or through any number of practices involving multiple forms of verification.
     Setting up more worker-managed firms, or allowing communities to offer tax incentives to businesses in order to transition their model of private ownership into a collective one - for example, E.L.M.F.s (Egalitarian Labor-Managed Firms), or W.S.D.E.s (Workers Self-Directed Enterprise) - will also help increase the number of firms that have funds set up for their employees in emergency situations.
     Additional solutions to the lack of emergency funds of all of these borrowers, may be found through firms offering E.S.O.P.s (Employee Stock Ownership Plans). U.S. Senators Bernie Sanders and Kristin Gillibrand have supported proposals requiring the establishment of E.S.O.P.s in large companies. Sanders has additionally called for corporations to seat workers on their boards.
     Proposed and adopted programs similar to E.S.O.P.s and so-called "funds socialism" include: 1) the Meidner Plan in Sweden, calling for the establishment of "wage-earner funds"; 2) the American Solidarity Fund, proposed by the People's Policy Project; 3) the Norwegian G.P.F.G. (Government Pension Fund Global); 4) the U.K. Labour Party's proposed "Inclusive Ownership Funds"; and 5) the NSW Generation Fund in New South Wales, Australia.
     More solutions may be found through modifying Disaster Relief Emergency Grants, retainer fees, or emergency corporate legal funds and insurance plans, to something which is mutually acceptable to all parties to contracts involving financial trust.

     Emergency funds - whether accessible by all parties to a contract, or to none - should be set up for all borrowers. They should be set up for people who borrow land, labor, and capital alike. That's because the people of the proletariat, lacking land and capital, sell their labor. They own  nothing else, and thus have nothing else to sell. It should not be ignored, that, in selling their labor, they are selling the last thing they have, and thus have nothing else, save for what little compensation they receive from work. The security of that compensation should, at the very least, be transparent to the worker.

     What I am recommending, in general, is diminution and lessening of the monopolistic, exclusive, and exclusionary characteristics of property ownership. Thus, monopolist property owners would be turned into oligopolists.
     The propertyless become property owners, and the monopolists become oligopolists, at the very moment when renters, borrowers, and workers begin to receive sufficient amounts of exclusive property (and sufficient rights to that property) as compensation. That is, as compensation in exchange for the efforts they put into their relationships of financial trust with landlords, lenders, and employers.
     Once the privateers of the bourgeoisie (that is, the government, landlords, land speculators, lenders of physical and financial capital, and employers of labor) come to wield oligopolies on possession, instead of outright monopolies on ownership, then renters, borrowers, and workers (i.e., the proletariat) can increase their “market-share” of possessed assets, and increase its value relative to the value possessed by those who desire to be monopolists.
     Thus, through increasing their market-share of property, and the degree of their control over their property, the proletariat can lessen the degree of their exploitation, and lessen the monopolists' degree of control over their property claims; and in so doing, they make it easier for workers to work for shorter periods of time, in order to acquire their own slices of property.

     But – again – for proletarians to own such property, can only be rightfully described as the result of violence, if no constraints whatsoever are placed upon the owner's (landlord, boss, lender, etc.) ability to exclude others; upon the owner's ability to unfairly estop people from fulfilling their obligations (i.e., by buying the residence, buying the workplace, repaying loans, etc.).
     If those constraints exist, then the property is not fully private, because the exclusivity is not total, and, in effect, not fully exercised. And those constraints, by the way, do not even need need not be imposed by the state, but can be accepted as a matter of mutually beneficial contract; between the owners, and the workers and their associations.

     Finally, I must add that, to turn monopolists into oligopolists, would, by no means, result in universal property ownership by itself.
     It is not enough to resign ourselves to allowing “property ownership” to increase, simply by allowing current owners sub-contract and sub-let all their properties out to others. This is not ownership, but renting-out what's already being rented. It is rent upon rent; that is, compound rent. Creating hundreds of shell corporations within one-another, while the original firm gets all the profit - or sub-letting-out smaller and smaller portions of a residence, while the tenant is increasingly boxed-in – don't have anything to do with either anarchism, or a just conception of property rights that desires for all people the realistic potential to become owners.
     What is necessary – in addition to the practical opportunity to acquire property without either the hindrance or assistance of a state – is for workers to struggle.
     Not suffer, mind you, but struggle. Not work too hard, nor work their fingers to the bone, nor work themselves half to death. By “struggle”, I mean that workers – after they are freed from the legal constraints placed on their ability to acquire property justly – must also free themselves from the economic and social constraints which hinder them from acquiring property.
     What, exactly, it means to “free oneself from economic and social constraints on acquiring property justly”, is beyond the scope of this essay, so I will allow my readers to form their own ideas about what this means, and how it could be achieved.




11. Conclusion

     I hope I have made it clear, in the above, why I believe that rent, profit, interest, and usury all result, and thrive, due to monopolistic as well as oligopolistic ownership of property.
     Additionally, due to monopolistic and oligopolistic control of property rights; for example, through hiring privatized security forces to protect property claims, and through hiring lobbyists who petition the government for property laws which are favorable to people who already own property.
     If it weren't for the state, and its self-granted privilege to recognize exclusive title to land, then monopolies on labor and capital (which rest on that monopolized land) would not exist. It is because of the state's self-granted privilege – to recognize the monopoly privileges of all of its other favored marketplace actors – that other monopolies exist.
     If not for the state's recognition of the privilege of the owner to exclude, the privilege of the landlord to evict, the privilege of the boss to fire, and the privilege of the lender to collect – the vast majority of these privileges being completely unchecked by any agency other than those of the state – then people would acquire property and find work according to their own efforts, and according to what all parties to a contract believe is a fair (not just adequate) amount of compensation, in a manner which is beneficial to the mutual long-term interests of all parties involved.

     Finally, it behooves me to note that the above mentioned problems, are precisely why the state cannot be trusted to perform either its antitrust or its anti-usury functions. Because, as I have stated so many times in the past, the state creates monopolies, and thus cannot be trusted to do away with them. The state creates currencies, and all but compels people to use them (when they'd rather use money, which is backed by real value, unlike currency), and thus no other currency has a chance to compete against the state's “money monopoly”.
     Granted, firms which generate profit should be taxed at a higher rate than those which reinvest all would-be profits or generate no profit at all. [Note: This is to say that non-profit, cooperative, and egalitarian firms should not be taxed, provided that they don't receive any privileges to wield exclusive monopolies.] Moreover, firms which do not generate profit, should probably not pay taxes at all. But the only reason they should be taxed, is because the funds being taxed away were “earned” (acquired) thanks to the assistance of the state's monopoly powers.
     The reason, however, to tax those profits, should not be construed to imply that the state should collect those taxes. Granted, the state is the only entity which we perceive of as capable of collecting all those taxes in the first place (at least right now). But being theoretically capable of performing this task, does not make it morally deserving of the task, nor does it guarantee that the government will collect as much taxes as it intends to, nor that it will collect solely those taxes which are duly imposed for the privilege of financially benefiting off of the state's monopoly protections (which can even include extorting funds from taxpayers in order to provide privileges, subsidies, and bailouts for firms that are supposedly “struggling”).
     What will be necessary - and appropriate, and moral - for the collection of taxes upon the funds gained from wielding monopoly privileges, will be for a non-monopolistic, or less monopolistic, form of economic governance, to emerge. The monopolistic nature of the state, just like the monopolistic nature of exclusive and exclusionary property rights, can be lessened. This can be done through decentralization, localization, and strict delineation of spheres of policy influence across the various levels of government. One example would be for community associations to levy taxes on profits, rather than for the state or federal government to do it.
     Readers desiring to know more about my ideas about how our government could be made “less statist” (which is to say, less monopolistic), can read my July 2013 article “On Max Weber's Definition of the State”.

     All legal and economic monopolies must be destroyed.
     We will destroy monopolies by making them into oligopolies, and gradually into polyopolies. The final form of our economy should be a polyopoly-polyopsony, a state of many sellers, many buyers.
     Without legal titles, any de facto, monopoly which is perceived of as “natural” (except for land, the monopoly on which is natural, at least in a limited, local sense) will not last as a monopoly for very long, given the total freedom of all others to enter into competition with it, and to challenge its right to exclude. (Note: Land would likely prove to be the easiest monopoly to abolish, because of the vast amount of it which exists; however, many people have yet to be convinced of this fact. Once land proves abundant, then the cost of mixing labor and capital upon the land will plummet.)
     Without the state, people would have the unlimited right to challenge a company's privilege to “exclude” some people; especially if it forcibly includes them at the same time. Firms with significant financial privileges and/or legal immunities often exclude workers and customers from benefiting sufficiently from the company, while at the same time compelling them (as well as taxpayers), to pay the company through taxes (due to the privileges, subsidies, and bailouts for which those taxes pay). Thus, the taxpayers, workers, clients, and consumers have little to no recourse with which to free themselves from this benefit-free obligation, save for hiring a lobbyist to change the law, so as to allow them to fully boycott the company, by removing all of those privileges and favors which help keep the company afloat.
     However, the anarchists, of course, would object to such lobbying, and rightfully so, since lobbying the state to change its laws, requires the legitimized use of violence. Unless, however, if in the process the state ceases becoming a state as we know it - like by shedding all of its monopolistic aspects and abdicating all of its power to rule and enforce with finality - then a change in the law is just what we need. Especially if only those contracts and agreements which are both mutually beneficial and voluntary, come to be accepted.

     Only by establishing “O&U norms” (that is, occupancy-and-use norms) can we avoid depending upon the state, and its legitimized violence, for a resolution to our property disputes.
     It's time to say “R.I.P.” (“rest in peace”) to “R.I.P.” (rent, interest and profit). And, with them, usury, the most complex and pernicious form of economic rent and excess return.



12. Post-Script: Taxation and Monopolies

     While I have explained at length why monopolies deserve to be taxed, and alluded to an answer as to whom ought to tax them, I have yet to explain the issues of whether taxation is a monopoly, and whether taxation has to be done in a monopolistic fashion.
     I believe that taxation is currently a virtual monopoly, at least in the United States. I say this because federal government expenditures constitute about 25% of the G.D.P., while state and local government expenditures constitute 15%, while other expenditures constitute the remaining 60%. Since 1789, the federal government has certainly demonstrated its ability to suck whole sectors of the economy into its legislative purview. And with it, a much higher percentage of the economy is taxed-away by the federal government; both in comparison to state and local governments, and in comparison to the level of taxation which Americans enjoyed 100 years ago.
     Having the state and local governments spend more than the federal government - or, to put it a better way, having the federal government spend less than state and local governments - will help reduce the federal government's monopoly over the legislative and judicial functions related to taxation, and thus enable state and local governments to take-over any federal functions which they can handle.
     [Note: The executive function of taxation, has already been sub-contracted-out to our employers, whom are obliged to collect taxes from our paychecks. What would our country be like if those taxes were retained in a mutually accessible fund, or would only be paid to the government on April 15th if both employers and workers agreed that the government had done a good job the previous year? It simply cannot be, that we "can't afford" to have a basic level of financial transparency in all transactions; it should be financial transparency which dictates what is affordable, rather than the amount of wealth thought possessed.]

     Because the only morally just goal of taxation (in my opinion) is for the purpose of diminishing the influence of monopolies, taxation cannot and should not be performed by a single institution, nor by any agency affiliated with the state (which I contend is an intrinsically monopolistic institution).
    As I explained earlier, if community associations were to levy taxes, instead of the state or federal government, then it would be a less monopolistic way of doing things. Other agencies which could perform the task of taxation in a stateless society, aside from the most local governments possible, which would also lead to the diminution of the monopolistic enforcement and characteristics of taxation, could include:
     1) voluntary associations;
     2) Georgist C.L.T.s (Community Land Trusts);
     3) mutual public banks; and
     4) private (though non-state-affiliated) security agencies (and other types of firms) which charge dues based on one's ability to pay, or based on the value of the property being protected (such as the libertarian activists who protected portions of Detroit, Michigan following the 2007-08 financial crisis).
     But more importantly than one's ability to pay, however, is the issue of to what degree one's wealth was acquired because they helped the state extort people in exchange for land, labor, and capital.

     Taxation does not have to be performed by an agency wielding any monopoly powers, nor even privileges to make any decisions bearing any sort of finality whatsoever. Decentralized governments, and non-state-affiliated nonprofit organizations can levy taxes.
     Community Land Trusts can be set up, which levy "taxes" (although Georgists call them dues and fees) in a decentralized manner, for the benefit of the community. But that community need not exist with territorial limitations, however; if nobody can be stopped from joining, and nobody can be excluded, without unanimous or consensus-based agreement of just cause, then the community is not a state, because it is neither monopolistic, exclusive, nor exclusionary.
     Additionally, it is possible to fund an entire government solely through charitable contributions, without punishing people for refusing to pay (save for social ostracism). We know this from the experiences of the Jewish people who lived in the Holy Land (i.e., Israel-Palestine) in the 1930s and 1940s; they set up charitable funds which were spent on building Israeli government buildings and bringing the land back to life.
     Any tax which a person can be convinced to pay, is voluntary (unless he is tricked or defrauded, or otherwise unjustly deprived of the freedom to choose other viable forms of taxation). Any tax which is agreeable to all people, is voluntary. Taxation systems based on voluntary payment of dues (for as long as one wishes to receive benefits), and fee-for-service models, could and should replace compulsory taxation.
     I mean, we have to do something. People should not get shot to death on their front lawns for refusing to pay their taxes. Harsh punishments for tax evasion are only warranted if the tax is just and unanimous, and people enthusiastically sign up to be shot if they refuse to pay. Only the very insane, and the very suicidal, would do such a thing. Or, perhaps, the very confident.

     Finally, I would be remiss if I neglected to mention the following: While it is very good to tax monopolies, governments would have no need to do so, if they did not create those monopolies in the first place.
     And a government which consciously reduces the monopolistic characteristics of all of its functions - legislative, executive, and judicial functions - is less likely to have enough power to create imbue firms with monopolistic privileges and rights to exclude.



13. Links and Additional Reading

     As promised, I will hereafter include links to additional readings about the topics of why most monopolies are state-created; as well as how to tax profits without the state (as solutions have been offered by left-anarchists and right-anarchists).


Articles about the taxation of monopolies, written by various authors:

http://mnmeconomics.wordpress.com/2011/09/29/taxing-a-monopoly-firm/



Articles by Left-Anarchists / Anti-Propertarians / Anideotists:

- introduction to anarchist economics (no state, no private property):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anarchist_economics

- Jeff Smith, student of Henry George, on replacing taxes with Land Value Dues:
http://www.wealthandwant.com/themes/Land_Dues.html


- website about Georgist student Ralph Borsodi (look for the articles about Community Land Trusts):
http://www.schoolofliving.org/borsodi

- explanation of Community Land Trusts:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_land_trust

- Pierre-Joseph Proudhon's “The Misery of Philosophy”, on monopoly and property:
http://www.marxists.org/reference/subject/economics/proudhon/philosophy/ch06.htm

- Benjamin Tucker's “Four Monopolies” (land, money, patents, and tariffs):
http://attackthesystem.com/2011/06/03/benjamin-tuckers-four-monopolies/

- Roderick T. Long and Charles W. Johnson on “the many monopolies”:
Long: http://fee.org/articles/the-many-monopolies/
Johnson: http://praxeology.net/cjohnson-state-monopolies.pdf

- Gary Chartier on redistribution without the state:
http://bleedingheartlibertarians.com/2011/04/bleeding-heart-libertarians-for-redistribution/

- on Spencer Heath, Heathian anarchism, proprietary communities, and multi-tenant properties:
http://ipfs.io/ipfs/QmXoypizjW3WknFiJnKLwHCnL72vedxjQkDDP1mXWo6uco/wiki/Heathian_anarchism.html
http://www.explorersfoundation.org/glyphery/280.html
http://attackthesystem.com/spencer-maccallum-interviewed-by-wayne-john-sturgeon/
http://fee.org/articles/introduction-to-proprietary-cities/
Articles by Right-Anarchists / Propertarians / Ideotists

- Walter Block's support of Rothbard's criticism of Henry George:
http://www.lewrockwell.com/lrc-blog/henry-george-weak-economics-example-rothbard-rule/

- Hans-Hermann Hoppe on different types of property:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nNTDqAunbCc

- Robert P. Murphy's
Chaos Theory (read the section on security, especially the parts which address the issue of how people could secure property claims in the absence of the state):
http://mises-media.s3.amazonaws.com/Chaos%20Theory_2.pdf

- Robert P. Murphy's “The Economics of the Stateless Society”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yoJF_psh8AI

- Stefan Kinsella's criticism of Occupancy and Use norms:
http://mises.org/wire/critique-mutualist-occupancy

- Linda and Morris Tannehill's “The Market for Liberty”:

http://mises-media.s3.amazonaws.com/The%20Market%20for%20Liberty_2.pdf
See also: articles by Joe Kopsick on related topics:

- Joe Kopsick's “Why Rent is Theft”, criticizing economic rents (rent, profit, and interest):

- Joe Kopsick on Max Weber's definition of the state, and how to make government less monopolistic:
http://aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2013/07/on-max-webers-definition-of-state.html

- Joe Kopsick on Geolibertarianism (a description of how to turn a system based on rent and taxation, into a system based on the collection of dues from vacant land):
http://www.lclp.org/articles/geolibertarianism/

- Joe Kopsick on why Libertarians should be interested in Georgist Land Value Taxation:
http://aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2017/01/what-is-geolibertarianism.html

- Joe Kopsick on how prisons could be privatized without risking corruption by the profit incentive:
http://aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2019/05/how-to-fully-privatize-prisons-without.html
See also: a free-market perspective from in the middle:

- “Property is Only Another Name for Monopoly”, by Eric A. Posner and E. Glen Weyl:
http://chicagounbound.uchicago.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=12668&context=journal_articles





See also: taxation without the state among Jews in Palestine in the 1930s-1940s

http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1983331




See also: descriptions of private dispute resolution in a stateless society:

- traditional definition of a private dispute resolution organization:
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/dispute_resolution_organization

- more detailed definition: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dispute_resolution

- Stefan Molyneux on Dispute Resolution Organizations (D.R.O.s) as an alternative to the state:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1B-5Lbpk_3Y

- David D. Friedman on medieval Iceland's justice system:
http://notendur.hi.is/bthru/friedman.htm (link within leads nowhere)
http://www.daviddfriedman.com/Academic/Course_Pages/Legal_Systems_Very_Different_13/Book_Draft/Systems/SagaPeriodIceland.htm
http://www.daviddfriedman.com/Academic/Iceland/Iceland.html
http://praxeology.net/libertariannation/a/f13l1.html

- Roderick Long on dispute resolution without the state:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Icelandic_Commonwealth#Legacy
http://www.lewrockwell.com/2002/06/roderick-t-long/the-vikings-were-libertarians/

- other authors on dispute resolution without the state:
http://libertarianism.fandom.com/wiki/Dispute_resolution_organization
See also: links regarding the management of firms by labor:

- Richard Wolff on worker self-management and Workers Self-Directed Enterprise (W.S.D.E.s):
http://www.geo.coop/content/richard-d-wolff-worker-co-op-solution
http://www.jacobinmag.com/2016/03/workers-control-coops-wright-wolff-alperovitz/
http://www.rdwolff.com/crispy/legislative_package_introduced_to_encourage_employee_owned_companies

- Richard Wolff on WSDEs:




Based on notes taken in April 2019, and May 19th, 2019

Written on May 21st and 22nd, 2019

Edited and Expanded on May 27th and 31st, 2019
Edited on October 30th, 2019

First image created in May 2019
and re-created on September 8th, 2021
and added on September 8th, 2021

Originally Published on May 22nd, 2019

Author's Post-Script written on May 22nd, 2019

Additional Links Added on May 31st, 2019

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