Friday, 25 October 2002
Bushfires today.
You can smell it as soon as you walk out the front door—it smells like
your neighbors are burning leaves, except that it's everywhere. Asthmatics are
advised to stay indoors.
Australia had bushfires last summer too, but not this early. The drought's
getting worse.
- Posted by Scott Forbes at 7:28 pm. comments.
Friday, 25 October 2002
Winston Churchill once said
that "democracy is the worst form of Government,
except all those others that have been tried from time to time."
With all the recent talk of "regime change" in Iraq, and since I did my patriotic
duty this afternoon, I thought I'd post a rejoinder to Eric
Raymond's Why I
Am An Anarchist essay, and explain why I'm for democracy.
(Eric has since written that 9/11 is causing him to re-examine his
beliefs, because an anarchy may not be able to defend itself against
Al Qaeda-like threats. What better time, then, to make democracy's
case?)
Why not anarchy?
Anarchy is really the absence of government, rather than a form of
government: It proposes that, instead of a central body, individual
citizens perform the duties of governments. The "state" has no armies,
but rather a group of people who come together in time of need, and then
return to peaceful pursuits afterwards. The heavily armed population is
self-policing, and they promote justice and tranquility through the
simple technique of minding their own business.
Vernor Vinge's short story "The Ungoverned" is about a society where
anarchist farmers with nuclear weapons fight off an invasion from a
neighboring military state, and is probably a good depiction of the
anarchist ideal.
As a political system, anarchy minimizes the risk that a heavy-handed
government will interfere in the lives of citizens and businesses,
because there isn't any government per se. Anarchy relies on market
forces to provide necessities like product safety and environmental
conservation—the FAA, FCC, FDA, and other government agencies are
privatized and subsidized by industry—and you're free to take whatever
drugs you like, educate your children in whatever manner you prefer, and
generally live your life as you please.
The problem with the anarchist utopia is that it doesn't exist outside
of science fiction. History's empirical evidence suggests that
anarchist societies can't exist, or at least that anarchies are
about as stable as
francium isotopes and are doomed to rapidly decay into tribalism,
feudalism, or city-states. Anarchy requires a balance of power among
citizens that is difficult to establish or maintain, and it demands
behaviors from its citizens that run counter to the patterns we know.
Anarchy effectively requires that all citizens be equal in their
ability to call upon force at need, which in turn requires economic
parity—if you have to choose between putting food on the table and
paying for privately-run police and fire services this month, you're not
going to last in this system. Likewise, if your rich neighbor decides
to become a tyrant, you can either pool resources to match him or become
his 19th province; you don't have any other recourse. Anarchy is a poor
distributor of scarce resources (e.g., water and fishing rights), and
its lack of a binding legal system means that dispute resolution is
likely to be inefficient as well.
Even if you do manage to set up a working anarchy, though, it will very
likely degrade into tribalism within one generation. The chilling
implications of the
Milgram experiments suggest that humans are predisposed to obey
authority figures, and will follow orders from an authority figure even
when those orders violate their own morals and the person will
suffer no extraordinary consequences from refusing the order.
An anarchist might argue that Milgram's findings are the end results of
a lifetime of indoctrination in an authoritarian society, and that
people who lived under anarchy wouldn't follow this pattern of
behavior—in hacker parlance, that it's a bug in the software, not
the hardware. But what if it isn't? What if we apes are hardwired for
hierarchies, and the anarchist utopia is no less alien to human nature
than the Communist utopia?
It would certainly explain a lot of things. If one person in every
hundred has an inbred authoritarian streak, and the other 99 are
pre-wired to follow orders, then the ideal anarchist society will
quickly degenerate into Afghanistan. With apologies to Voltaire,
history suggests that if an authority figure does not exist, human
nature will find it necessary to create one.
More on this topic next week.
- Posted by Scott Forbes at 4:45 am. comments.