The problem is, once we concede that Reverse Authoritarianism doesn’t let us do much, WHO exactly is going to figure out which authoritarian-like actions are “legitimate” and “needed”? It can’t be all planned out in advance by community consensus, either.
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To avoid yet more abuse of power, you can’t merely tell people to make the object-level “correct” decision; you need a system that would constantly correct for self-serving rationalizations, corruption and power-blindness among the decision makers. If abuse and tyranny emerge as “spontaneous orders”, then their prevention must be a perpetual and multi-faceted process, not a one-time Gordian knot to cut.
The rational response would be to acknowledge that this is a Hard Problem, and that there are not yet good answers. This is exciting, because it identifies places where significant progress can be made.
The rational response would be to acknowledge that this is a Hard Problem, and that there are not yet good answers. This is exciting, because it identifies places where significant progress can be made.