Alex, if I'm stuck in XX century thinking, then you are stuck in XXV century and already in that Titan base of yours. Libertarianism may be a kick ass ideology, just not with this world.
Why did you pick the 25th century - where did the number come from? (Unless that's a reference to Firefly, of course, but that takes place in the year 2517 and thus the 26th century.) There is such a thing as growth momentum, but the passage of time does not influence society in of itself, and not at a constant rate - it is possible for a more economically productive society to achieve in a few decades all of the scientific and technological advancements that would take centuries in another society, while a third society might collapse into a dystopian dark age (for which government failure is the only cause that I can imagine). I think a more reasonable time-frame for a massive shift to libertarianism would be the late 21st / early 22nd century, but the seeds for that transition have to be planted today.
The Titan base was obviously a joke (which was accentuated by a very fitting animated smiley of a smiley-head guy trying to fly by waving two tree branches as wings, as if to ridicule obvious inability to achieve one's high aspirations, but then the freesmileys.org server hosting that image went down - a blow from which my comedic legacy may never recover). Before we have spacesteading we need to have seasteading or private land secession, and before we have that we need to shame the governments into not sending in the navy / tanks to blockade, arrest, or "waco" us. Some libertarians will "plant the seeds" by working within the political system (ex. Ron Paul, NHLA, etc), some through mild civil disobedience, some through serious tax resistance, some through endless Internet trolling, some by simply homeschooling their children to live them a very good education with emphasis on capitalism and libertarian philosophy, and so on. Rome wasn't built in a day...
In a surge of sincerity Milton Friedman said once ( and forgive me for not providing a link to that ) that Capitalism is livable exactly as it's not a meritocracy, because if it was, it would be psychologically unbereable to those on the lower level - they would only have theirselves to blame. If the whole world went libertarian tomorrow ( Libertarianism - real Capitalism ) then we would be on our way to social Ragnarok and not the planet becoming New Hampshire.
Milton Friedman quotations are starting to remind me of the book Misquoting Jesus - and both sides are quite guilty of this. To be fair, here's my favorite example of a libertarian paraphrasing Milton Friedman: "without the current inefficiencies brought about by government controls, per capita income could reach $300,000 per year, without altering anything else in the economy". I haven't been able to confirm the source on that either (my alias on the linked thread was "Phant" for a while), but it would be economically plausible if the point of divergence between is pushed back by a few decades.
So I would like to see the actual quote to explain it better, but Milton Friedman wasn't exactly a principled libertarian, at least not in his public life (his son David and his grandson Patri are both very accomplished Anarcho-Capitalist thinkers). Milton was a good economist who understood the power of the free market, but he nonetheless was tied to government force and often used his knowledge to aid evil. I wouldn't put him in the same league of greatness as the best of the "Austrian School" economists that preceded him. (Note that the Wikipedia article I'm linking to is incredibly biased, but I still prefer to link to sources that cannot be accused of being biased in my favor, and there's still plenty you can learn from that article to understand where I stand - the criticisms presented there are addressed elsewhere.)
Ironically the best debunking of "meritocracy" comes from another minarchist whose economic ideas were very similar to Milton Friedman, Ayn Rand. She wrote: "by means of nothing more than its last five letters, that word obliterates the difference between mind and force - it equates the men of ability with political rulers, and the power of their creative achievements with political power".
On this issue an Anarcho-Capitalist may be reminded of why he kept that inconvenient A-word in the title of his personal philosophy, as opposed to simply calling it "pure free market capitalism" - AnCaps believe that all "rational economic actors" are equal in their negative Rights, and no one man should have political power over another. Of course some men are born taller than others, and some come to accumulate more capital, but that doesn't mean Richard Branson or Glenn Jacobs should have any political power over a homeless midget!
Now I do believe that there is a strong correlation between merit and wealth, but wealth isn't everything. Money can be applied to do good things, but that isn't the same thing as buying one's reputation - some things simply cannot be bought.
The inclusive, democratic state is the one thing keeping us couple of feet above the everflowing river of shit.
Democracy is just a system of marketing tyranny to a modern audience. Power exists for its own sake. What keeps any society a "couple of feet above the ever-flowing river of shit" is the fact that the overwhelming majority of individuals don't want to be in that river, and don't want to be perceived as pushing others into it. In a sufficiently advanced civilization this naturally leads to the Non-Aggression Principle emerging on issues of defending what's rightfully yours (i.e. life, liberty, property), and aiding others in their pursuit of justice lest those criminals aggress against you next. The same reputation-based system of incentives also leads to politeness, charity, natalism, and other aspects of "universally preferable behavior". The vast majority of the elements that push a modern society toward that river exist by the "divine right" of government force!
[...] reductio ad sovietum [...] Somalia [...]
See above.
(I will debunk more of Chris W's barely coherent and repetitive rants later, for the moment I just cannot spare any more time.)
Edited by Alex Libman, 21 May 2010 - 06:25 AM.