Lew Rockwell Podcast

Since July 2008, Lew Rockwell of LewRockwell.com and Mises.org has been producing and providing podcasts (audio segments) through LRC.  I’ve listened to every one of them, some many times, and find them all to be fantastic.

Lew posted the Top 10 Podcast link today.

  1. $2000 Gold and the Break up of the US: Gerald Celente
  2. The Biggest Bubble in the History of the World: Ron Paul
  3. America’s Slow-Motion Fascist Coup: Naomi Wolf
  4. The Greatest Depression in History: Gerald Celente
  5. Thanks for the Inflationary Depression: Peter Schiff
  6. How the Government Wrecked the Economy: Peter Schiff
  7. The Panic of ’08: Lew Rockwell interviews Ron Paul
  8. The Crash of ’08: Lew Rockwell interviews Jim Rogers
  9. Stop the Bailout!: Lew Rockwell on the Michael Reagan Show
  10. There Is Hope: Ron Paul

My favorite of this lot, is the amazing Naomi Wolf interview.  Perhaps I have listened to too much Ron Paul, Peter Schiff and Gerald Celente (who are all excellent btw), but the Noami Wolf interview was a great gateway to the left, and a really special moment where it turned into a conversation between two intelligent people sharing information and ideas.

Sadly, the left-libertarian doorstops (they have to be good for something) haven’t seemed to have done much to help promote it.

Some of my other favorites include (in no particular order)

28. What is Neoconservatism?

65. A Libertarian in the USSR

32. Intellectual “Property”

13. The Old Right

15. Democracy: The God That Failed

68. Are You an Anarchist?

8. The Scam Called the State

I hope more libertarians blog about and share these around.  They appeal to all sorts of different groups, from anarchists to Reagan republicans, antiwar protestors to wall street observers.

Related Blogs

 

Favorite Isaac Asimov Quotes

Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent.

Individual science fiction stories may seem as trivial as ever to the blinder critics and philosophers of today – but the core of science fiction, its essence has become crucial to our salvation if we are to be saved at all.

Humanity has the stars in its future, and that future is too important to be lost under the burden of juvenile folly and ignorant superstition.

 

Killing for Love

Jose Gonzalez – Killing For Love

What’s the point
if you hate, die and kill for love.
What’s the point with a love that
makes you hate and kill for.

You’ve got a heart on fire,
it’s bursting with desires.

You’ve got a heart filled with passion.
Will you let it burn for hate or compassion.

What’s the point
if you hate, die and kill for love.
Whats the point with a love that
makes you hate and kill for.

What’s the point
if you hate, die and kill for love.
Whats the point with a love that
makes you hate and kill for.

You’re killing for love.
You’re killing for love.

You’ve got a heart on fire,
it’s bursting with desires.

You’ve got a heart filled with passion.
Will you let it burn for hate or compassion.

What’s the point
if you hate, die and kill for love.
Whats the point with a love that
makes you hate and kill for.

Killing for love.
Killing for love

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The troubles of an anarchist blogger

No, I’m not talking about me.

My friend FSK has been receiving negative feedback about his idea to monetize his blog. From cowardly anonymous respondents no less, it has brought FSK’s ideas about capitalism and capital accumulation out into the open.

It isn’t immoral for me to promote agorism and show a profit at the same time. In the present, the only way for me to do this is via State-sanctioned businesses.

Well, that is the problem with left anarchism.  You’re not supposed to profit, and you’re not supposed to deal with big companies.  That would be hypocritical or so the reasoning goes.

FSK makes the point, that all labour in the current statist economy aids or condones the state, but that doesn’t mean that generating a profit via the state, to use to promote the end of the state is necessarily bad.

He then addresses a situation with our mutual friend Mike Gogulski, but I think FSK misses the point.

I noticed this post by Mike Gogulski, where he refused a job for the State. The fallacy in his reasoning is that *ANY* on-the-books work supports the State via taxes.

Actually, there is a fallacy in FSK’s reasoning and I will provide it following this rest of the paragraph extrapolating on Mike Gogulski’s supposed logical error.

Suppose I have two choices. I can do $10k of work directly for the State, or $10k of work in a wage slave job. Suppose my income taxation rate is 50%. In the $10k wage slave job, I contribute $5k directly to the State. Similarly, if I accept the $10k job working directly for the State, I pay $5k directly back to the State in taxes. (In some countries, income on State jobs is tax-exempt. I’m ignoring that possibility here.) If I don’t accept the $10k State job, someone else will take it, still getting paid $10k but perhaps doing marginally worse work. However, by refusing the direct State job, I am forced to accept a marginally lower salary. Overall, the net damage to the State by my refusal to work directly for the State is negligible.

I recently listened to a presentation at Oxford featuring Hans Hoppe and he makes the excellent point that if you are paid by the state, your income is 100% confiscated wealth, aka taxes, aka theft.  Which brings us to Mike’s refusal to work for the state.  One could make the distinction (and should in my opinion) that generating your own market income, and giving half to the government, is not the same as taking a state income, and returning half to the government.

Public servants don’t pay taxes.  If a public servant or government contractor is paid with tax money, then whatever they remit back in income taxes is merely a rebate to the state.  Sure the net amount might be the same as generated in the private sphere, but movement of taxes, is merely a shifting from one pocket to another.

In a sense, it’s a form of emotional, philosophical and moral money laundering.  Nudge nudge, wink wink I’ll put $10k in your left pocket, and you will return me $5k from your right pocket, and thus it looks like we have a legitimate business relationship.

Because we can’t forget, that the state gains acceptance by our voluntary participation.  We voluntarily take state jobs, accept state money.  This is stolen money, and while we can make the argument that some may have been stolen from us, we can never be sure, because the state itself launders ownership by socializing wealth into a pool, and then it launders morality out of the equation by selective redistribution.

Thus, I think Mike is right not to work for the state, because as much as possible, in an irrational situation, he is trying to be morally and ethically consistent.  I can sympathize with this, because I have not renewed my state health care in 4 years, and I am currently eligible for unemployment insurance and have not filed, nor do I intend to.  While some people say I am foolish to “turn down free money”, the reality of the situation is that by taking back what reasonably might be called my own contributions, I am validating the process of confiscation and redistribution, which to me, is the great evil of the state.

Fiscally, I may be worse off.  May be.  The question becomes, what sort of skewed incentives come from state redistribution? Am I better off moving on?  I believe so.

Now I’ve noticed FSK has sympathies for Anti-Capitalism and Kevin Carson’s take on Mutualism.  I think this is where a lot of the confusion stems from, because Mutualism, and the Anti-Capitalist movement, relies on false class distinctions (as indicated by Hoppe) and thus, draws conclusions to suit those class beliefs, which are ultimately irrational economically.

I got a bit off track here, so I will bullet point the rest.

  • Left Anarchism is not compatible with rational economics.  Anti-capitalists are cranks.
  • FSK should, and must earn money from his blog because it consumes his time, labour of love or not.
  • Google Adsense helps pay for Blogger, which is a Google property.  FSK is already through the looking glass.
  • I don’t believe it is a good idea to conduct a public opinion poll on how to run your business or website.  Particularly on the internet, you will get so many invalid responses that will poison the data.
  • Is participating in the state immoral?  I say yes, so long as one has other options, the state cannot be regarded by a consistent, rational and ethical anarchist as being equal to the market, strictly on nominal measurements of profit.
  • The Hoppe lecture on class theory will be covered more by me in the future.
  • Mike Gogulski is a great guy and I intend to interview him here at NoTreason in the near future.