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  • An Apolitical Approach To Libertarianism

    In the discussion and debate that goes on among libertarians, it is disputed as to wether or not libertarians should vote and participate in party politics. Some see voting as the only practical option, some think that there should be a multi-pronged approach that includes voting, some are die-hard supporters...
    Posted to Brainpolice by Brainpolice on Sat, Apr 5 2008
    Filed under: Anarchism, Coercive Monopoly, Competition, Collusion, Monopoly, Checks and Balances, The Calculation Problem, Democracy, Representation, Voting, Means and Ends, Agorism, Propaganda, Consent, Libertarianism
  • How The State Thrives, How The State Falls

    Foreward note: inspired in part by "The Politics of Obedience: The Discourse on Voluntary Servitude" by Eteinne De La Boetie . How the State Thrives How does the state maintain itself? It is true that to some extent all states initially derive from conquest through devices such as war and land...
    Posted to Brainpolice by Brainpolice on Sat, Dec 15 2007
    Filed under: Competition, Collusion, Education, Agorism, Social Evolution, Big Media, Interventionism, Revolution, Patronage, Entropy, Civil Disobedience, Propaganda, Intellectualism
  • Checks and Balances: Two Kinds

    Checks and balances should be a fairly familiar concept to Americans. The standard definition of checks and balances is that the state must be broken up into multiple segments that function as checks against eachother's power and perform different functions, while these segments still remain within...
    Posted to Brainpolice by Brainpolice on Wed, Nov 28 2007
    Filed under: Competition, Collusion, Decentralization, Centralization, Monopoly, Checks and Balances
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