One Law

Re-thinking governance. We only need one law - the Non-Aggression Principle - the foundation of libertarianism - to maximize justice, peace, and prosperity.

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April 24, 2021 by SC Striebeck

Customer or Slave?

Customer or Slave?

A little over a year after the Covid pandemic began, the “vaccine” had been released and the government was driven to vaccinate everyone, regardless of their beliefs, values, or other medical circumstances – clearly a one-size-fits-all approach.

In preparation for a general medical exam, and not having been vaccinated, I requested a test for Coronavirus antibodies in addition to the normal blood panel test; however, the nurse said I needed my physician’s permission to get the antibody test. Stunned, I asked why. She said that was the hospital’s policy. I complained without success and thought why this policy.

Why can I not have any test for which I am willing to pay and by which no one will be injured or damaged?

And for a test, that our tax dollars likely facilitated the development?

Why does a doctor have such control when I am not asking him to personally act in some way that would violate his professional opinion?

Why does a government charged with protecting my rights allow for this prohibition?

I understand that some believe the test is inaccurate or they may have other motives for dissuading people from using it e.g., to increase rates of vaccination, etc. That is fine until they impose those beliefs on others by force through the government.

This rationale discourages and prohibits people from thinking for themselves. Many people wish to understand and assess their health from a number of perspectives. Nobody has all the answers. Science and people can learn more and grow together where there is a competitive forum for the exchange of ideas.

Plus, why would curiosity be shunned?

Like many industries, the medical profession has become infused with governmental intervention i.e., inefficient bureaucracy and unsubstantiated groupthink where increasingly doctors and nurses have become servants of the government. Many can perform great life-saving feats, but can hardly think for themselves in a broader social and economic context – a prime example of the learned ignoramus syndrome.

To boot, many are cocksure if not blatantly arrogant of their correctness, even when it is clearly illogical and counterproductive in many other ways. This is a symptom of too much governmental largess that breeds unaccountability, inefficiency, waste, and unnecessary expense.

These trends have created a medical system that has reduced personal care, active listening, and common logic. Many medical providers have forgotten their roots – that the patient is the customer, not a minion nor slave.

Although the Hippocratic Oath has evolved since ancient times, Wikipedia claims that many adhere to the following version:

********************

“I swear to fulfill, to the best of my ability and judgment, this covenant:

I will respect the hard-won scientific gains of those physicians in whose steps I walk, and gladly share such knowledge as is mine with those who are to follow.

I will apply, for the benefit of the sick, all measures [that] are required, avoiding those twin traps of overtreatment and therapeutic nihilism.

I will remember that there is art to medicine as well as science, and that warmth, sympathy, and understanding may outweigh the surgeon’s knife or the chemist’s drug.

I will not be ashamed to say “I know not”, nor will I fail to call in my colleagues when the skills of another are needed for a patient’s recovery.

I will respect the privacy of my patients, for their problems are not disclosed to me that the world may know. Most especially must I tread with care in matters of life and death. If it is given me to save a life, all thanks. But it may also be within my power to take a life; this awesome responsibility must be faced with great humbleness and awareness of my own frailty. Above all, I must not play at God.

I will remember that I do not treat a fever chart, a cancerous growth, but a sick human being, whose illness may affect the person’s family and economic stability. My responsibility includes these related problems, if I am to care adequately for the sick.

I will prevent disease whenever I can, for prevention is preferable to cure.

I will remember that I remain a member of society, with special obligations to all my fellow human beings, those sound of mind and body as well as the infirm.

If I do not violate this oath, may I enjoy life and art, respected while I live and am remembered with affection thereafter. May I always act so as to preserve the finest traditions of my calling and may I long experience the joy of healing those who seek my help.”

********************

Does the modern medical system embody those values?

After I submitted to the hospital’s policy and requested my doctor to authorize the test. He required me to schedule an office visit in a couple of weeks to discuss the matter. I immediately fired him.

Requiring a physical appointment to discuss his views for an antibody test?

Later that day, looking for a new doctor, I called another medical specialist whom I had seen for over 30 years. He would not provide me with three references for a new general practitioner. I was told to search the internet. I immediately fired him too.

Does any of this sound like superlative patient care and treatment consistent with the Hippocratic Oath?

Does it sound more like following an agenda with the mentality of CYA?

Why was it necessary to waste so much time to avoid such a simple test and provide other options for medical service?

Would it have been easier, cheaper and more efficient to allow the antibody test to reward one for taking interest and inquiring about his own health?

Would it have been better for the medical profession to abide by the Hippocratic Oath and acknowledge its uncertainty, to remain open to more points of view, and more possibilities?

Versus telling me what I needed, especially in a greater state of uncertainty surrounding the pandemic?

Or even worse, prohibiting me from taking a test?

When these measures of advice escalate to control is it a telltale sign of far deeper trouble?

Food is more important than healthcare, but do we find a stranglehold on services and products provided by grocery stores?

In a free market for healthcare services and products, these systemic ills would be eliminated by others willing to better serve. Adaptation and advancement would occur far more rapidly. Presently, there is no free market in a largely subsidized healthcare system, so there is little incentive, much less ability, for entrepreneurs to expand the quality and efficiency in medical care.

In this environment, is that surprising?

Look closely at any industry where the government intervenes and we will find a mismash of irrational and often contradictory rules that create make-work and mostly serve the existence of bureaucracy and unchecked control; all of which suppresses curiosity, creativity and the ability to execute on ideas …unless one is “connected”, whether it through the right lawyer, accountant, lobbyist, functionary, deep-pocketed donor or politician. The relatively few winners then get a job, tax break, subsidy, grant, favorable regulation, etc. and stagnation ensues.

It cannot be stressed enough that government has zero ability in picking winning services and products. Its only mechanism is force. The selection and evolution of services and products is solely the province of customers in a free market.

At this time, there is no free market anywhere in the world so we all live under the yoke of the political class and its inefficiency, waste, excessive expense and resultant instability to society which degrades each of our lives. This is especially true for the aged, infirm, and uninformed who often lack the resources and tools to buffer the loss.

Whether the government is giving cover to Big Medicine, Big Pharma, Big Ag, Big Energy, etc., massive numbers of people fail to receive the attention, care, compassion, and expertise they desire and need for nearly all services or products relative to an economic environment void of government intervention where entrepreneurialism is maximized.

For now, we are more slaves than customers. We can do better.

Note: The views expressed are solely the opinion of the author.
Source: SC Striebeck for Wisdom of Anarchy
Video/Image Source: Image by Pixabay

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Filed Under: Accountability, Big Medicine, Choice, Covid19, Free market, Free market anarchism, Freedom, Health, HIPPA, Prosperity, Slavery, Socialized Medicine, Sustainability

September 3, 2019 by SC Striebeck

Do Consumers Know What’s Best for Them?

Do Consumers Know What’s Best for Them?

Source: Do Consumers Know What’s Best for Them?

Human nature is largely human nature regardless of culture, upbringing, etc. We all suffer from the many and various flaws of being human.

But over time, on the whole, for justice to prevail, for peace to follow, for prosperity to accumulate, to weave a common strength between us, we all need to be on the same proverbial playing field because we are all human, except for the reptilians and greys …just kidding!

If we want justice, it starts here with this concept – not some program drafted by bureaucrats in a governmentsl agency to somehow balance benefits or redistribute money for equalizing the general well-being of millions of people. Someone once said justice is consistent if nothing else – which by the way, begs the question: what is social justice? I’m still struggling with that one.

But I digress, back to the need for a level playing field. There is more than a grain of truth to that statement. It is the basis for what the true rule of law stands. It is what we are currently missing in most cultures and countries, including the United States. It should be respected, if not revered, not circumvented by excuse and subterfuge.

Rothbard, as only he so often crystalizes, wrote the following quoted from the above piece published by mises.org – very likely the finest organization devoted to educating all about the best and most equitable forms of economic thought and freedom.

“Thus, the privately hired expert flourishes in proportion to his ability, whereas the government expert flourishes in proportion to his success in currying political favor. Moreover, what incentive does the government expert have to care about the interests of his subjects? Surely he is not especially endowed with superior qualities by virtue of his government post. He is no more virtuous than the private expert; indeed, he is inherently less capable and is more inclined to wield coercive force. But while the private expert has every pecuniary incentive to care about his clients or patients, the government expert has no incentive whatever. He obtains his revenue in any event. He is devoid of any incentive to worry about his subject’s true interests.”

He does not say that a given governmental official cannot care, only that there is an inequality of incentive and accountability. That’s an unavoidable fact. And, over time, the lack of incentive and accountability, over time, over individuals, makes itself known.

Ultimately, it is about accountability. Those in the free market are always held to a higher standard of accountability because the “beneficiary” a/k/a customer is free to not avail themselves of such free market products or services. That’s choice which is the same as power.

Obviously, this is not the case with government where the “beneficiary” is the constituent. We are not always free to choose. In fact, we are very often forced. Mob rule controls. We go with the program or we are penalized – regardless of our agreement or acceptance of the program. That is less choice and therefore less power.

Is it any surpise we see the polarity in modern politics?

Some are willing to relinquish their power in favor of more government and some won’t – that’s a problem.

When one gains consent of another, the bar is higher for each and for the good of both. Both consent. Both agree. Both must trust. Both must win. Contrary to what we were taught in public school and often through private universities, force involves no trust. It is simply a smaller group of persons operating through one type of human organizatin known as government to bluntly force its agenda upon the non-consenting constituents.

Contrary to many a modern academic, we don’t need PhDs to fathom what are typically fundamental truths or actions of human nature – what Ludwig von Mises defined as praxeology. It really is that simple. For those of us who are a bit older and presumably wiser, the hard part is unwinding years of indoctrination and separating the good (becuase it wasn’t all bad) from the …really bad, for which there always seems to be some super arbitrary excuse by government or its priveleged interests.

Arbitrariness and justice are mutually exclusive.

What do you see in government that is arbitrary?

Can an unjust organization provide justice?

And, in turn peace?

And, by extension sustainable prosperity?

Is it so hard to understand the disparity in distribution of wealth when government provides cover to Big-Everything?

Can we expect it to change?

And, if not, what can we do?

Ultimately, the consumers will decide because they do know what is best for them.

Note: The views expressed are solely the opinion of the author.
Video/Image source: mises.org
Source:  mises.org

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Filed Under: Accountability, Action, Anarcho-capitalism, Anarchy, Austrian economics, Capitalism, Central Planning, Checks and Balances, Choice, Class Struggle, Decentralization, Diversification, Force, Free market, Free market anarchism, Freedom, Government, Graft, Justice, Murray N. Rothbard, Peace, Politics, Power, Principle, Rothbard, Self-Ownership, Sustainability

December 18, 2017 by SC Striebeck

Why We Should Worry About China …and Every Government

Why We Should Worry About China …and Every Government

Many of our readers might remember the late 80s. There were hundreds of movies, songs and books about the inevitable Japanese economic invasion. The ones of you that did not live that period can see that it did not happen.

Source: Why We Should Worry About China

More accurately, why we should worry about any government.

Not only are growth targets inevitably subject to gross political misrepresentation and are inherently unreliable, they misconstrue true economic value  …which is purchasing power. When everyone’s purchasing power is increasing, then so is our collective wealth. This is the only standard any one needs to know. People will always need stuff, so jobs will ebb and flow with demand.

Then think about why the purchasing power of the USD is worth ~5% of what it was a little over 100 years ago – just prior to the dawn of the Federal Reserve Bank and its never-ending tendency to dilute the value of your earnings.

Its actions result in counterfeiting and all counterfeiting is theft. You may believe that since it is committed by government it is ok; that it is for the greater good; that the majority rules, etc.

But if you recognize that government is nearly always wrong, wasteful and corrupt; that people, even in government are naturally self-interested first relative to the good of society; and, that majoritarian rule is equivalent to sanctioned mob rule, then you can see that a more just society cannot exist until we relieve ourselves of these fictions and commit to the deconstruction of government and the inequitable class structure it creates.

Market-based governance founded on a single rule of law, equally applicable to all, is the most just and sustainable solution to better solving virtually every problem that affects society.

So, if you want a better economy, government will never be the answer. They are mutually exclusive.

Note:  The views expressed are solely the opinion of the author.
Conceptual and title source: Mises Wire Why We Should Worry About China by Daniel Lacalle
Media source: Mises Wire

 

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Filed Under: Accountability, Anarcho-capitalism, Anarcho-libertarianism, Democracy, Entrepreneurialism, Federal Reserve Bank, Federalism, Free market anarchism, Non-Aggression Principle, Sustainability

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