Words: 726
By Perry Willis
1. What is crime?
Crime is the initiation of force or fraud against others. Said differently, crime is an act of aggression.
2. What is government?
Government has the legitimate function described in the Declaration of Independence -- to use force defensively to fight criminals, foreign or domestic.
In other words, a legitimate government does not use violence aggressively. It does not initiate force. It does not use force in a criminal manner. It only uses violence defensively.
3. What is The State?
The State is an institution that commits crimes (initiates force) under the guise of providing governance. But you can't be both a crime creator and a crime fighter. So The State is actually the opposite of government. It contradicts the very purpose of government.
That means, to be pro-government you must be anti-state.
True, legitimate governments currently exist nowhere on Earth. Libertarians want to change that, especially voluntaryist libertarians (see below).
4. What is a statist?
A statist is a person who advocates statism (see the next question).
There are three general types of statists: left-statists, right-statists, and libertarian statists.
Left-statists are the so-called liberals, progressives, and socialists.
Right-statists are so-called conservatives.
Libertarian statists want to limit The State to the core defensive functions of police, courts, and national defense, while retaining taxation and The State's monopoly status.
5. What is statism?
Statism is the belief that it's okay for The State to commit crimes (initiate force) so long as the statist favors the purpose of the crime.
In other words, to the statist, his or her good intentions justify the use of criminal means.
6. What do libertarians want?
Libertarians want legitimate government. That means institutions of governance that only use force defensively.
Libertarian statists believe this may be impossible to achieve. They think it can be most closely approximated by limiting The State to the core defensive functions of police, courts, and national defense. And the only laws would be those that aim to prosecute people who aggress against others.
But libertarian statists believe these functions should still be funded by taxation and should enjoy monopoly status. Taxation and police-enforced monopoly status are both acts of aggression. By contrast...
Voluntaryist libertarians want to replace The State entirely. They want institutions of governance, such as police, courts, and military defense, to be voluntarily funded on a competitive basis. This means...
No violence-based funding (taxation)
No violence-based monopolies.
For example…
You could pay the city police to patrol your neighborhood, or you could a hire a firm to do it.
You could agree to private arbitration to adjudicate crimes and disputes.
You could offer as little or as much money as you want to fund military defense - or you could favor decentralized defensive alternatives, or perhaps non-violent resistance or even pacifism.
The same voluntary approach could apply to the regulatory and charitable functions The State currently imposes on people. For instance...
You could decide to only use medicines that undergo FDA testing, or you could prefer products certified by Underwriters Laboratory, NSF, or some other testing company.
You could give your money to HUD, or Habitat for Humanity, or some other cause entirely.
7. Why would the voluntaryist approach work better?
Violence-based funding insulates statist institutions from the need to perform well. They get paid whether they do a good job or not. Even worse, they actually get increased budgets when they fail.
Voluntary funding and competition would compel governmental institutions to do a good job. This approach would give us consumer-controlled government instead of political government.
8. What's the difference between political government and consumer-controlled government?
You have far more power as a consumer than as a voter. You can fire any company at any time, but with political government you must gain the permission of a majority of your neighbors to cause any change.
Consumer-controlled government will give more people more of what they want more often. It will commit crimes against no one. Consumer-controlled government is superior, both morally and practically.
9. What if voluntary funding doesn't provide enough money?
The question is backward. The amount of government needed should be determined by what people are willing to fund, NOT by what politicians want to impose.
10. What is the path to such a society?
Resolve to initiate force against no one, personally or politically. Pursue your goals and promote your preferences using only non-violent persuasion and voluntary cooperation.
Perry Willis was the Executive Director of the national Libertarian Party and has managed or worked on six Libertarian Party presidential campaigns. He is the co-founder of Downsize DC and the Zero Aggression Project. He also co-created the One Subject at a Time Act, the Read the Bills Act, and the Write the Laws Act, all of which have been introduced in Congress.