StatistFallacies / Libertopia

Fallacy:

"So you're going to go on record stating that in Voluntaryist Utopia, everything that is currently provided to the citizenry by the state would continue to be available to everyone in at least an equally hassle-free manner?"

The term "Libertopia" is similarly used to imply that libertarians expect that everything will be perfect (for some value of "perfect" defined by the complainant) in a free society.

Response:

‎"OMG, you want to abolish rape? You stupid utopian! OK, then tell me how guys are gonna get laid, huh? How's that gonna happen? Unless you can guarantee that every single guy everywhere is getting laid constantly in your system of 'non-rape', then you are a utopian and your system can't work!" (JG)

Longer version:

Frequently voluntaryists are attacked with the baseless assertion that voluntaryism (anarcho-capitalism) is a "utopian" philosophy. By that what is generally meant is that it assumes and relies on all men being good, or at least (in context) respecting the non-aggression principle. Despite the reams of literature about crime and punishment in a free society, this fallacy is perpetuated. From Books/ForANewLiberty (Rothbard):

On the contrary, it is those that think, despite history, the nature of man, and all logic, that a government will remain limited, that are utopians:

So let us hear no more of this folderol of a voluntaryist belief in “perfect people” or utopianism, which we see is rather a bit of the pot calling the kettle black coming from any statist.

Interestingly, the original, i.e. Thomas More's Utopia was much more like socialism or communism and was almost entirely unfree. Of course, that does not mean the term could not be more widely applied if it fit; the problem is that it clearly does not.

Stefan Molyneux writes in Books/PracticalAnarchy:

He continues discussing societal makeup and the implications of various combinations of good and evil and how none of them justifies a state:

Source: davidrobins.net

Related: ../LimitedGovernment

last edited 2012-04-18 21:57:42 by DavidRobins