On this view, unappropriated natural resources are either unowned or owned in common, believing that private appropriation is only legitimate if everyone can appropriate an equal amount, or if private appropriation is taxed to compensate those who are excluded from natural resources.
I don’t see how they propose the complex organization necessary for ensuring resources are only appropriated appropriately without severely compromising personal rights and liberties.
One way would be to drive notions of proper appropriation (under whatever scheme) into cultural background as folk knowledge, so the “complex organization” is diffused among individuals rather than being externalized as a state apparatus. In other words, someone making an illegitimate property claim under this regime would not be suppressed by force, but instead mocked and not taken seriously, in the manner of someone who today claims to own the air you’re breathing or the idea of birthdays. Only if they resort to force against others would there be a problem.
Yes. Putting signs reading “private property—do not trespass” is pointless if there are no cops to deter people from trespassing anyway. (You can deter people yourself with a gun, but that’d mean you actually are on your land, which libertarian socialists would call “possession”, not “property”.)
The core idea is to avoid enforcing stuff. Self interest individuals who care about their own status won’t violate norms because they don’t want to lose their status.
Burning Man works pretty well without any rules being enforced through violence.
I don’t see how they propose the complex organization necessary for ensuring resources are only appropriated appropriately without severely compromising personal rights and liberties.
One way would be to drive notions of proper appropriation (under whatever scheme) into cultural background as folk knowledge, so the “complex organization” is diffused among individuals rather than being externalized as a state apparatus. In other words, someone making an illegitimate property claim under this regime would not be suppressed by force, but instead mocked and not taken seriously, in the manner of someone who today claims to own the air you’re breathing or the idea of birthdays. Only if they resort to force against others would there be a problem.
Yes. Putting signs reading “private property—do not trespass” is pointless if there are no cops to deter people from trespassing anyway. (You can deter people yourself with a gun, but that’d mean you actually are on your land, which libertarian socialists would call “possession”, not “property”.)
How does that work for things that require violence to enforce?
The core idea is to avoid enforcing stuff. Self interest individuals who care about their own status won’t violate norms because they don’t want to lose their status.
Burning Man works pretty well without any rules being enforced through violence.
In that question, “requires violence to enforce” is being used as a one-place function. Is it really one?
It doesn’t, obviously. The idea is that those are rare.
With the magic of economics.
That only works if your appropriate distribution is the one the market creates, I suspect this isn’t the case for left-libertarians.
Presumably they think it would work.
Then I gues they just have to use redistributive taxation to iron out the consequences of a necesarily inappropriate distribution of resources.