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To answer this question, we must first understand what is meant
by "government".
Government is the use of force. To govern means to control. The
use of force is implicit in the definition of control. Otherwise, it
would be "influence" rather than control. Even the good things that
governments do involve the use of force somewhere, somehow.
Sometimes government uses force directly to control behavior. Other
times, government uses money taken by force to fund activities which
would otherwise not involve the use of force.
Understanding that government is the use of force, the question
then becomes:
What is the proper use of force in a free society?
To answer this question, we look at three types of force:
- Initial Force. In any group of people, from 2 to 20 billion,
there is no use of force until someone uses it first. Initial
force is aggression or coercion.
- Defensive Force. Defensive force is the use of force to defend
your safety, rights, or property. You have the right to defend
yourself, and the right to authorize others, such as those in
government, to use defensive force in your behalf. Defensive force
is survival.
- Retaliatory Force. Retaliatory force is punishment of someone
who has initiated force. If someone assaults you, you have the
right to authorize government to punish those responsible in your
behalf. Retaliatory force is justice.
Some people have suggested a fourth category of preemptive force
but most examples of preemptive force, upon analysis, can be placed
in one of the other three categories.
Libertarians, by definition, oppose the initiation of force. Some
Libertarians are also pacifists and decline the use of any force.
Libertarianism is broad enough to encompass pacifists. All oppose
the initiation of force.
Some Libertarians are militants and have no qualms about
defensive and/or retaliatory force. Libertarianism is broad enough
to encompass militants. The common factor is the opposition to the
initiation of force. Opposition to the initiation of force (the
Non-Coercion Principle) is the essence of libertarian philosophy.
Freedom is the absence of the initiation of force.
A robber cannot be "free" to steal your property, nor can a bully
be "free" to strike you. The robber and bully have initiated force.
The condition of freedom doesn't exist unless there is an absence of
the initiation of force.
Consequently, a "right" cannot be something which must be had at
the expense of others. You have the right to earn a living, but not
to compel others to provide your living.
Libertarians apply the Non-Coercion Principle to ALL human
behavior. It doesn't matter if the initiators of force are in or out
of government. Government doesn't confer some mystical right on some
to violate the rights of others. If it is wrong for a person to
commit rape as an individual, it must be equally wrong for a person
to commit rape as an agent of government. If somebody takes your
property without your permission, it is theft (an initiation of
force). It's theft regardless of whether the loot is used to buy
drugs or to feed the poor. It is theft regardless of whether there
is one thief or 200 million thieves. It is theft regardless of
whether the gang calls itself "The Bloods" the "Cryps" or "The
Internal Revenue Service".
Where government exists in a free society, its role should be
limited to defending and/or retaliating against those who initiate
force. Government in a free society should not be the initiator of
force. Some laws, such as those prohibiting murder, rape, robbery
and fraud, are laws against the initiation of force. Enforcement of
such laws is the application of defensive and/or retaliatory force,
and is appropriate for government in a free society.
Other laws constitute an initiation of force. Government should
not initiate force to seize the property of individuals. Government
should not initiate force to compel service to the state. Government
should not initiate force to impose lifestyles or moral codes.
Government should not initiate force even when "it's for your own
good".
In a free society, you have property rights. You can use honestly
acquired property in any way that does not constitute initiation of
force or fraud, trespass on the property of others, or violate
agreements you have voluntarily entered into. You decide which
charities to support, and don't have to sacrifice your property
against your will for purposes that others decide on rather than
you.
In a free society, you have personal rights. You can live however
you want to, so long as you don't initiate force or fraud against
others or their property. You decide what risks to take, what to
believe in, and how to entertain yourself.
Property rights and personal rights are really the same. Personal
rights are based on property rights because you own your own life,
your body, and your mind.
Ownership and use of honestly acquired property is not, in and of
itself, an initiation of force and therefore does not violate the
rights of others. If someone owns an AK-47 and uses it to murder
school children, it is the murder that is the initiation of force,
not the ownership of the AK-47. Murder should be prohibited and
punished regardless of the weapons used.
If someone owns and uses drugs, and steals to buy more drugs, it
is the theft that is the initiation of force. Theft should be
prohibited regardless of what the loot is spent on. The use of drugs
is not the initiation of force.
If you own or rent a sexually explicit video and commit a sexual
assault after viewing it, it is the sexual assault that is the
initiation of force, not the viewing of the video. Rape should be
prohibited whether "obscenity" is involved or not. Most people who
view sexually explicit films do not commit sexual assaults.
In the old days, people sometimes had to answer to the church for
their crimes. Some thought they could lessen the gravity of their
offenses by claiming possession. "Your Holiness, the devil made me
do it." What we often hear today is "Your Honor, the drugs made me
do it" or "Your Honor, the pornography made me do it" or "Your
Honor, my unhappy childhood made me do it."
With freedom comes responsibility. If you initiate force, you
should be held fully accountable. No cop-outs, no devils, no
shifting the blame to others or to inanimate objects. If you do not
initiate force or fraud (a subtle form of force), you should be left
alone and force should not be initiated against you by government or
anybody else.
It's that simple. |