465 lines
20 KiB
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465 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
LIBERTARIANISM: BOGUS ANARCHY
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Peter Sabatini
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A distinct mainstream movement specific to the
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United States, Libertarianism had its inception during the
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1960s. In 1971 it formed into a political party and went on
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to make a strong showing in several elections.[1]
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Libertarianism is at times referred to as ``anarchism,''
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and certain of its adherents call themselves
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``anarchists,'' e.g., the economist James Buchanan.[2]
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More significant, the work of US individualist anarchists
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(Benjamin Tucker et al.) is cited by some Libertarians.[3]
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Accordingly, it may rightly be asked whether Libertarianism
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is in fact anarchism. Exactly what is the relationship
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between the two? To properly decide the question requires a
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synopsis of anarchist history.
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The chronology of anarchism within the United States
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corresponds to what transpired in Europe and other locations.
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An organized anarchist movement imbued with a
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revolutionary collectivist, then communist, orientation
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came to fruition in the late 1870s. At that time, Chicago
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was a primary center of anarchist activity within the
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USA, due in part to its large immigrant population.4
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(Chicago was also where the Haymarket affair occurred in
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1886. An unknown assailant threw a bomb as police broke
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up a public protest demonstration. Many radicals
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were arrested, and several hanged on the flimsiest of
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evidence.) Despite off and on political repression, the US
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anarchist movement continued in an expansive mode until the
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mid-1890s, when it then began to flounder. By 1900, anarchy
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was visibly in decline.[5]
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But like its counterpart in Europe, anarchism's
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marginalization in the United States was temporarily slowed
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by the arrival of syndicalism. North American syndicalism
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appeared 1904-1905 in the form of a militant unionism known
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as the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). Anarchists
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entered the IWW along with revolutionary socialists. The
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alliance did not last long. [6] Internal squabbles soon split
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the IWW, and for a time there existed anarchist and
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socialist versions. Finally, with involvement of the US in
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WWI, the anarchist IWW, and anarchism in general, dropped
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>from the public domain.[7]
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Anarchy in the USA consisted not only of the
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Bakunin-collectivist/syndicalist and Kropotkin-communist
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strains, but also the Proudhon-mutualist/individualist
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variant associated most closely with Benjamin Tucker.
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Individualist anarchy actually had a longer history of
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duration within the United States than the other two, but
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not only because Proudhon preceded Bakunin and
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Kropotkin. There were other individualist anarchists
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before Tucker who had ties to various radical movements
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which predate Proudhon. Within the United States of early to
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mid-19th century, there appeared an array of communal
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and "utopian" counterculture groups (including the
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so-called free love movement). William Godwin's anarchism
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exerted an ideological influence on some of this, but
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more so the socialism of Robert Owen and Charles
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Fourier. [8] After success of his British venture, Owen himself
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established a cooperative community within the United
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States at New Harmony, Indiana during 1825. One member of
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this commune was Josiah Warren (1798-1874), considered to be
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the first individualist anarchist.[9] After New Harmony
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failed Warren shifted his ideological loyalties from
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socialism to anarchism (which was no great leap, given that
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Owen's socialism had been predicated on Godwin's anarchism).[10]
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Then he founded his own commune ("Modern Times") and propounded an
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individualist doctrine which nicely dovetailed with
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Proudhon's mutualism arriving from abroad.[11] Warren's
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activities attracted a number of converts, some of whom
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helped to further develop American mutualism. The most
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important of these were Ezra Heywood (1829-1893), William
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B. Greene (1819-1878), and Lysander Spooner (1808-1887).
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The advent of the Civil War put an end to much of the
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utopian movement and its communal living experiments.
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Individualist anarchism was itself reduced to an agitprop
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journalistic enterprise of some measurable popularity.[12]
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And in this form it found its most eloquent voice with
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Benjamin Tucker and his magazine Liberty. Tucker had
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been acquainted with Heywood and other individualist
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anarchists, and he subsequently converted to
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mutualism.[13] Thereafter he served as the movement's chief
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polemist and guiding hand.
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The Proudhonist anarchy that Tucker represented was
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largely superseded in Europe by revolutionary collectivism
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and anarcho-communism. The same changeover occurred in
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the US, although mainly among subgroups of working class
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immigrants who were settling in urban areas. For these
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recent immigrants caught up in tenuous circumstances within
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the vortex of emerging corporate capitalism, a
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revolutionary anarchy had greater relevancy than go slow
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mutualism. On the other hand, individualist anarchism also
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persisted within the United States because it had the
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support of a different (more established, middle class, and
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formally educated) audience that represented the earlier
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stream of indigenous North American radicalism reflecting
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this region's unique, and rapidly fading, decentralized
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economic development. Although individualist and communist
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anarchy are fundamentally one and the same doctrine, their
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respective supporters still ended up at loggerheads over
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tactical differences. [14] But in any event, the clash between
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the two variants was ultimately resolved by factors
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beyond their control. Just as anarcho-communism entered a
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political twilight zone in the 1890s, American mutualism did
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likewise. Tucker's bookstore operation burned down in 1908,
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and this not only terminated publication of Liberty, but
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also what remained of the individualist anarchism
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``movement.'' The aggregate of support upon which this thread
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of thought had depended was already in dissipation.[15]
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Individualist anarchy after 1900 receded rapidly to the
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radical outback.
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What then does any of this have to do with
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Libertarianism? In effect, nothing, aside from a few
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unsupported claims. Libertarianism is not
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anarchism, but actually a form of liberalism. It does,
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however, have a point of origin that is traceable to
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the same juncture as anarchism's marginalization.
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So in this limited sense there is a shared commonality. To be
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more precise, the rapid industrialization that
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occurred within the United States after the Civil War
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went hand in glove with a sizable expansion of the
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American state.[16] At the turn of the century, local
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entrepreneurial (proprietorship/partnership)
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business was overshadowed in short order by transnational
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corporate capitalism.[17] The catastrophic transformation of
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US society that followed in the wake of corporate
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capitalism fueled not only left wing radicalism
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(anarchism and socialism), but also some prominent right wing
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opposition from dissident elements anchored within
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liberalism. The various stratum comprising the
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capitalist class responded differentially to these
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transpiring events as a function of their respective
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position of benefit. Small business that remained as such
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came to greatly resent the economic advantage corporate
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capitalism secured to itself, and the sweeping changes the
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latter imposed on the presumed ground rules of bourgeois
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competition.[18]
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Nevertheless, because capitalism is liberalism's raison d'tre,
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small business operators had little choice but to blame the
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state for their financial woes, otherwise they moved
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themselves to another ideological camp
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(anti-capitalism). Hence, the enlarged state was imputed as
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the primary cause for capitalism's ``aberration''
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into its monopoly form, and thus it became the scapegoat
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for small business complaint. Such sentiments are found
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vented within a small body of literature extending from this
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time, e.g., Albert Jay Nock's Our Enemy, The State (1935);
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what may now rightly be called proto-Libertarianism.[19]
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As a self-identified ideological movement, however,
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Libertarianism took more definite shape from the 1940s
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onward through the writings of novelist Ayn Rand. The
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exaltation of liberal individualism and minimal
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state laissez-faire capitalism that permeates Rand's
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fictional work as a chronic theme attracted a cult
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following within the United States. To further accommodate
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supporters, Rand fashioned her own popular philosophy
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(``Objectivism'') and a membership organization. Many
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of those who would later form the nucleus of Libertarianism
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came out of Objectivism, including two of its chief
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theoreticians, John Hospers and Murray Rothbard.[20] Another
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conduit into Libertarianism carried a breakaway faction
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>from William F. Buckley's college youth club, the Edmund
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Burke-style conservative Young Americans For Freedom. [21] More
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academic input arrived from the Austrian school of
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neoclassical economics promulgated by F.A. Hayek and
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Ludwig von Mises (of which the economist Rothbard
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subscribes).[22] All these marginal streams intermingled
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during the mid to late 1960s, and finally settled out as
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Libertarianism in the early 1970s.[23]
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It is no coincidence that Libertarianism solidified and
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conspicuously appeared on the scene just after the United
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States entered an economic downturn (at the same time
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Keynesian economics was discredited and neoclassical
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theory staged a comeback). The world-wide retrenchment of
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capitalism that began in the late 1960s broke the
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ideological strangle hold of a particular variant of
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(Locke-Rousseau) liberalism, thereby allowing the public
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airing of other (Locke-Burke) strains representing
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disaffected elements within the capitalist class,
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including small business interests. Libertarianism was
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one aspect of this New Right offensive. It appeared to be
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something sui generis. Libertarianism provided a
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simplistic status quo explanation to an anxious
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middle class threatened by the unfathomed malaise of
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capitalism and growing societal deterioration, i.e.,
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blame the state. And this prevalent grasping at straws
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attitude accounts for the success of Robert Nozick's
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popularization of Libertarianism, Anarchy,
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State, And Utopia (1974). It rode the crest of this polemic
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rift within liberalism. The book was deemed controversial,
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even extreme, by establishment liberals (and social democrats
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long pacified by the welfare state), who, secure in power
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for decades, were now under sustained attack by their own
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right wing. Yet at bedrock, Nozick's treatise was nothing
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more than old wine in a new bottle, an updating of John
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Locke.[24]
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Libertarianism is not anarchism. Some Libertarians
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readily admit this. For example, Ayn Rand, the radical
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egoist, expressly disavows the communal individuality of
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Stirner in favor of liberalism's stark individualism.[25]
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Plus Robert Nozick makes pointed reference
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to the US individualist anarchists, and summarily
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dismisses them. [26] This explicit rejection of
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anarchism is evidence of the basic liberalist ideology that
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Libertarians hold dear. But more specifically, within the
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movement itself there exist factional interests. [27] There
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are Libertarians who emphasize lifestyle issues and civil
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liberties (an amplification of John Stuart Mill's On
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Liberty). They want the state out of their "private" lives,
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e.g., in drug use and sexual activity. Others are chiefly
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concerned with economics. They champion laissez-faire/``free-market''/
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neoclassical economics, and fault the state for corrupting
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``natural'' capitalism. Although both groups despise
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the state intensely, neither wants to completely do away
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with it. This minimal state position, sufficient by itself
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to debar Libertarianism from classification as anarchism,
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is embraced by Rand, Buchanan, Hospers, and Nozick. [28] More
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revealing, however, is why Libertarians retain the state.
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What they always insist on maintaining are the state's
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coercive apparatuses of law, police, and military.[29] The
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reason flows directly from their view of human nature,
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which is a hallmark of liberalism, not anarchism.
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That is, Libertarianism ascribes social problems
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within society (crime, poverty, etc.) to an inherent
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disposition of humans (re: why Locke argues people leave the
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``state of nature''), hence the constant need for
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``impartial'' force supplied by the state. Human corruption
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and degeneracy stemming from structural externalities as a
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function of power is never admitted because Libertarianism, like
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liberalism, fully supports capitalism. It does not object
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to its power, centralization, economic inequality,
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hierarchy, and authority. The ``liberty'' to exploit labor
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and amass property unencumbered by the state is
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the quintessence of capitalism, and the credo of
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Libertarianism ne liberalism, all of which is the utter
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negation of anarchism.
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Lastly to be addressed is the apparent anomaly of Murray
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Rothbard. Within Libertarianism, Rothbard represents a minority
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perspective that actually argues for the total
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elimination of the state. However Rothbard's claim as an
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anarchist is quickly voided when it is shown that he only
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wants an end to the public state. In its place he allows
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countless private states, with each person supplying their
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own police force, army, and law, or else purchasing these
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services from capitalist venders.[30] Rothbard has no
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problem whatsoever with the amassing of wealth, therefore
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those with more capital will inevitably have greater
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coercive force at their disposal, just as they do now.
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Additionally, in those rare moments when Rothbard (or any
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other Libertarian) does draw upon individualist anarchism,
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he is always highly selective about what he pulls out. Most
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of the doctrine's core principles, being decidedly
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anti-Libertarianism, are conveniently ignored, and so
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what remains is shrill anti-statism conjoined to a
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vacuous freedom in hackneyed defense of capitalism. In sum,
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the ``anarchy'' of Libertarianism reduces to a
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liberal fraud. David Wieck's critique of Rothbard,
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applicable to Libertarianism in general, will close this
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discussion.
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``Out of the history of anarchist thought and action
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Rothbard has pulled forth a single thread, the thread of
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individualism, and defines that individualism in a way
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alien even to the spirit of a Max Stirner or a Benjamin
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Tucker, whose heritage I presume he would claim - to
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say nothing of how alien is his way to the spirit of
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Godwin, Proudhon, Bakunin, Kropotkin, Malatesta, and the
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historically anonymous persons who through their thoughts and
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action have tried to give anarchism a living meaning.
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Out of this thread Rothbard manufactures one more
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bourgeois ideology.''[31]
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END NOTES
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1 David DeLeon, The American As Anarchist:
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Reflections On Indigenous Radicalism
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(Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University,
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1978), p. 147; Jay Kinney,
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``What's Left? Revisiting The Revolution'', in Stewart
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Brand, ed., The Next Whole Earth Catalog (Sausalito, CA:
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Point, 1980), p. 393;
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David Miller, Anarchism (London:
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J.M. Dent & Sons, 1984), p. 4.
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By itself, the fact that Libertarianism formed a
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political party and has attempted to attain power
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through the electoral system seriously undermines its claim
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to be anarchism.
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2 James M. Buchanan, "A Contractarian Perspective On
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Anarchy", in J. Roland Pennock and John W. Chapman, eds.,
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Anarchism: NOMOS XIX (New York: New York University,
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1978), p. 29. Libertarianism is also referred to as
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"anarcho-capitalism" and "philosophical anarchism." The
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word "libertarian" was used by French anarchists in the 1890s
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as a synonym for "anarchist." Consequently, some
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contemporary anarchists refer to themselves and/or anarchy
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as "libertarian." But here there is no implied connection
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to Libertarianism. Michael P. Smith, The Libertarians And
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Education (London: George Allen & Unwin, 1983), pp. 2, 3.
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3 David Friedman, The Machinery Of Freedom: Guide To
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Radical Capitalism, Second Edition (La Salle, IL: Open
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Court, 1989), pp. 37, 113; Murray Rothbard, For A New
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Liberty: The Libertarian Manifesto (Lanham, MD:
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University Press of America, 1978), pp. 51-52.
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4 Bruce Nelson, Beyond The Martyrs: A Social History of
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Chicago's Anarchists, 1870-1900 (New Brunswick, NJ:
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Rutgers University, 1988), pp. 4, 15, 25; Laurence Veysey,
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The Communal Experience: Anarchist and Mystical
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Counter-Cultures in America (New York: Harper & Row,
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1973), p. 35.
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5 Ibid., p. 35.
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6 Sima Lieberman, Labor Movements And Labor Thought:
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Spain, France, Germany, and the United States (New York:
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Praeger Publishers, 1986), p. 247.
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Dorothy Gallagher, All The Right Enemies: The Life
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and Murder of Carlo Tresca (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers
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University, 1988), pp. 60-61.
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7 James Joll, The Anarchists. Second Edition
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(London: Metheun, 1979), pp. 201-203; Miller, pp. 134-135;
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Terry M. Perlin, Anarchist-Communism In
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America, 1890-1914 (Ph.D. dissertation, Brandeis
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University, 1970), p. 294.
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8 John C. Spurlock, Free Love: Marriage and
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Middle-Class Radicalism in America, 1825-1860 (New York:
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New York University, 1988), pp. 28, 62.
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9 James J. Martin, Men Against The State: The
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Expositors of Individualist Anarchism in America 1827-1908
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(New York: Libertarian Book Club, 1957), pp. 14, 17;
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William O. Reichert, Partisans Of Freedom: A Study in
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American Anarchism (Bowling Green, OH: Bowling Green
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University, 1976), p. 66.
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10 G.D.H. Cole, Socialist Thought: The Forerunners
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1789-1859 (London: Macmillan, 1953), pp. 87-88.
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11 Martin, p. 97.
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12 Veysey, pp. 35, 36.
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13 Edward K. Spann, Brotherly Tomorrows: Movements
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for a Cooperative Society in America 1820-1920 (New York:
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Columbia University, 1989), p. 146.
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14 For example, see the vitriolic exchange between
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Kropotkin and Tucker.
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Peter Kropotkin, Modern Science And
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Anarchism, Second Edition (London: Freedom Press, 1923),
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pp. 70-71.
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Benjamin R. Tucker, Instead Of A Book, By A Man
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Too Busy To Write One (New York: Haskell House, 1969),
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pp. 388-389.
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15 Martin, pp. 258-259.
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16 See, Stephen Skowronek, Building A New American State:
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The Expansion of National Administrative Capacities,
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1877-1920 (Cambridge: Cambridge University, 1982).
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17 See, Olivier Zunz, Making America Corporate
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1870-1920 (Chicago: University of Chicago, 1990).
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18 David M. Gordon, Richard Edwards and Michael Reich,
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Segmented Work, Divided Workers: The Historical
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Transformation of Labor in the United States (Cambridge:
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Cambridge University, 1982), pp. 109, 110.
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19 Albert Jay Nock, Our Enemy, The State (Caldwell,
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ID: Caxton Printers, 1935).
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Peter Marshall, Demanding The Impossible: A History of
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Anarchism (London: HarperCollins, 1992), p. 560.
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Veysey, p. 36.
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20 John Hospers, Libertarianism: A Political
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Philosophy for Tomorrow (Los Angeles: Nash Publishing,
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1971), p. 466.
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Ted Goertzel, Turncoats And True Believers:
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The Dynamics of Political Belief and Disillusionment
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(Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books, 1992), pp. 141, 263.
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21 DeLeon, pp. 119-123; Micheal G. Newbrough,
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Individualist Anarchism In American Political Thought
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(Ph.D. dissertation, University of California,
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Santa Barbara, 1975), p. 216.
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22 Murray Rothbard is the "academic vice president" of
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the Ludwig von Mises Institute at Auburn, Alabama, and
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contributing editor to its publication, The Free Market.
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Llewellyn H. Rockwell Jr., ed., The Free Market 11(7-8),
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July-August 1993, 1-8.
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23 Newbrough, p. 217.
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24 John Gray, Liberalism (Minneapolis: University of
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Minnesota, 1986), pp. xi, 41; J.G. Merquior, Liberalism: Old
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and New (Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1991), p. 138.
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25 Ayn Rand and Nathaniel Branden, The Virtue of
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Selfishness: A New Concept of Egoism (New York: Signet
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Books, 1964), p. 135.
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26 Robert Nozick, Anarchy, State, And Utopia (New York:
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Basic Books, 1974), p. 276.
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Also see, Tibor Machan, "Libertarianism: The Principle
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of Liberty", in George W. Carey, ed., Freedom And
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Virtue: The Conservative/Libertarian Debate (Lanham, MD: University
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Press of America and The Intercollegiate Studies
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Institute, 1984), pp. 40-41.
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27 Goertzel, p. 262.
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28 Gray, p. 42; Hospers, p. 417; Nozick, p. 276; Rand and
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Branden, pp. 112, 113.
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29 Hospers, p. 419; Nozick, p. ix; Rand and Branden, p.
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112.
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30 Murray N. Rothbard, "Society Without A State", in
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Pennock and Chapman, eds., p. 192.
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31 David Wieck, "Anarchist Justice", in Pennock and
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Chapman, eds., pp. 227-228.
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[This article appears in issue #41 (Fall/Winter 1994-95) of
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*Anarchy: A Journal of Desire Armed* available for $3.50
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postpaid from B.A.L. Press, P.O. Box 2647, New York, NY 10009.]
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