Coercion distorts markets, creating shortages and crises that justify further intervention.
Max
max@towardsliberty.com
npub1klkk...x3vt
Praxeologist ~ Cryptoanarchist ~ Cypherpunk
Welfare programs aren’t charity, they’re control. Redistribution creates dependency, binding citizens to the state’s bureaucratic whims.
Surveillance states thrive on fear. By inventing crises, they justify invasive policies that criminalize privacy and dissent.
Cypherpunks are the architects of the future.
Military-industrial complexes profit from perpetual war. Tax dollars fund weapons sales to both sides in conflicts, ensuring endless demand for destruction.
States are as organized crime. Both rely on extortion and violence, differing only in scale and the propaganda cloaking their actions.
We must be willing to take risks and challenge the status quo to build the Second Realm and create a more just and free society.
Develop methods to create evidence for conflict resolution without compromising anonymity.
By creating alternative systems and cultures, we can weaken the state's control and create more space for individual liberty.
The state stifles innovation through regulation. Compliance costs crush small businesses, protecting monopolies that lobby for bureaucratic capture.
Centralized healthcare leads to rationing and delays. The state’s one-size-fits-all approach ignores individual needs, unlike market-driven personalized care.
Develop strategies for coordinated defense that prioritize individual consent and flexibility.
Ideas, and only ideas, can light the darkness.
The state’s “legal” theft normalizes immorality. When politicians evade consequences for corruption, it models unethical behavior for society.
Anarcho-capitalism isn’t chaos, it’s order through voluntary exchange. Private courts and security would compete, unlike the state’s coercive monopoly.
We're not building fast enough.
Go harder.
Environmental degradation worsens under the state. Unchecked bureaucracies subsidize polluters, prioritizing growth over sustainable practices.
No action is virtuous under coercion.
The state’s war on drugs fuels black markets. Prohibition creates violence and corruption, justifying more funding for failed enforcement agencies.
The state’s “national security” rhetoric erodes privacy. Warrantless surveillance and asset forfeiture laws target citizens, not foreign threats.