We are developing the social individualist meta-context for the future. From the very serious to the extremely frivolous... lets see what is on the mind of the Samizdata people.

Samizdata, derived from Samizdat /n. - a system of clandestine publication of banned literature in the USSR [Russ.,= self-publishing house]

Private British rocket “Starchaser” makes successful test flight

Congratulations to Steve Bennett on the unmanned test flight over Britain of his 38 foot (11 metre) Starchaser rocket. The launch took place at Morecambe Bay in Cumbria.

Bennett described the launch as being “85% successful” due to the fact that two of the three parachutes became entangled, causing the expended reusable rocket main body to return to the mud flats of Morecambe Bay rather faster than hoped for. The unmanned passenger capsule detached and landed perfectly however. Despite having many detractors, Bennett intends to be the first passenger once the rocket is ready for its maiden manned flight.

This is yet another indication that privately built and funded manned spaceflight is drawing ever closer. I wish Bennett and all the other pioneers of non-governmental spaceflight the very best of luck… for they are the very best of us. Per Ardua ad Astra

Frédéric Bastiat, the intellectual P. J. O’Rourke of his day?

There is a splendid little article about Frédéric Bastiat (1801-1850) by Gary M. Galles which give a good overview of what the man was all about.

I have always though modern anti-statists would do well to emulate Bastiat, because as well as being extremely coherent, he was a very witty satirist (for example his Petition of the Candlemakers for state protection against the unfair competition of the sun). Nobel Laureate F.A. Hayek called him a “publicist of genius.”

Walk for Capitalism: IMPORTANT REMINDER

Walk for Capitalism: IMPORTANT REMINDER

A reminder to all fellow ‘capitalist running dogs’ that the Walk for Capitalism will be happening in over 100 cities worldwide on Sunday 2nd December 2001.

Annoy a luddite and be there! You know it makes sense.

There will be a Walk for Capitalism in the following countries:

Albania
Argentina
Australia
Bangladesh
Belgium
Brazil
Canada
China
Costa Rica
Czech Republic
Denmark
France
Germany
Greece
Hungary
India
Italy
Korea
Lithuania
Netherlands
New Zealand
Nigeria
Norway
Poland
Romania
Russia
Slovakia
Spain
Sweden
UK
USA
Venezuela
Yugoslavia

Here is a selection of cities in which a Walk for Capitalism has been organised in Australia, UK and USA but for details of the walk in your town and a full international listing , visit the Walk for Capitalism website

Australia
Adelaide
Brisbane
Canberra
Melbourne
Perth
Sydney

UK
Bath
London
Manchester
Southampton

USA
Amherst
Annapolis
Atlanta
Austin
Binghamton
Boston
Burlington
Carson City
Chicago
Cocoa
Columbia
Dayton
Denver
Detroit
El Paso
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Montgomery
New York
Olympia
Orlando
Portland-Or
Sacramento
Saint Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Saratoga Springs
Seattle
Silicon Valley
Spokane
Syracuse
Tucson
Washington
Westminster-Md

(http://www.walkforcapitalism.org)

P. J. O’Rourke back on top form

With thanks to Transterrestrial Musings for pointing out this top notch P. J. O’Rourke article in The Atlantic in which he ‘puts the boot in’ to all the usual suspects with his trademark clarity and viciousness. Excellent.

Oracle Oracle CEO Larry Ellison reminds us that Capitalism is not a synonym for Liberty

All libertarians need to remember that capitalism eventually leads to liberty but Capitalism is not a synonym for Libertarianism. Once a society introduces a degree of capitalism, it starts to produce more wealth and more knowledge than it previously did. As this society trades amongst itself, competition occurs and comparative advantages start to emerge between businesses. This produces an imperative for the owners of these businesses to change the way they function in order to minimise competitive disadvantages and exploit comparative advantages…and to do that they must be free to make decisions.

It is this that is the truly subversive thing about capitalism: in order to make it work, people with the knowledge of running the business (the ‘owners’) must be allowed to actually use that knowledge to directly implement changes in a dynamic manner and people must be allowed the choice to purchase what they produce. This of course means that the owners of the business/knowledge and the people who decide to acquire what they produce, are the ones who cause things to happen, rather than the force based state… but states like more wealth they can tax and so allow the wealth creators to create yet more wealth by their own efforts. The paradox is then that for the state to accumulate more resources and grow in size, it must allow power to pass from its hands. The economy gets larger and wealthier, the state gets larger and less relevant. If the state tries to rein in the capitalists, once the economy has become globalized, their ability to do so decays rapidly as capital itself is no longer captive.

Hence even a totalitarian state like China can introduce a tiny sliver of capitalism and, in the short term, the Communist power structure is seen to benefit from increased wealth and knowledge. Yet this early capitalism is a distorted creature, as much of the entrepreneurial talent being freed is still being largely diverted from wealth creation by the time required to navigate the endless maze of regulations and state imposed obstacles.

Similarly, many of the ‘new capitalists’ will be creating wealth not by filling dynamically derived market needs but by finessing obscure and often contradictory state regulations.

However the new capitalists will inevitably start exerting pressure for a relaxation of a regulation here, a redrafting of a law there, and thus the virus of liberty is spread. Capitalism is nothing less than the impersonal and unintentional carrier wave of liberty.

But it does show that capitalism can coexist with profoundly unfree states for a considerable amount of time… and in the meantime, capitalists in that state will try to profit from the state’s apparatus of repression as well as free themselves from its effects.

So every time you see the leering face of Larry Ellison on television pushing for the national ID cards that will make him millions of dollars, remember that just because a person is a capitalist, that does not automatically make him a friend to the broader liberty of society. Next time you see Larry Ellison or an Oracle product, just change the channel: he has plenty of competitors.

The funny side of nuclear terrorism

Wired magazine reports that the nuclear bomb documents found by Times journalists in an abandoned Al Qaeda house in Kabul might be spoof plans published by some gonzo pranksters several years ago.

This is indeed hilarious and it should now be clear to all that Al Qaeda are downloading everything on the Internet with the word ‘thermonuclear’ in it because they too are just misunderstood pranksters. We must stop bombing Afghanistan forthwith as it must now be clear that flying airliners into the WTC was just a good natured jape that got a little out of hand.

Similarly, the only reason they have been sending anthrax through the post is a simple linguistic misunderstanding: they were told to send Andrex (a brand of toilet tissue) but as English is not their first language, they got a little confused…hey, anyone can make a mistake!

Any day now, intelligence sources report we will soon hear that Osama will be calling on Bert from Sesame Street to replace slain Al Qaeda number two, Muhammed Atef, as Chief Deputy Prankster.

Interesting updates on the LIBERALIA website

Christian Michel’s high quality libertarian site LIBERALIA has some new papers well worth reading:

Oneworldism: The Leviathan strikes back by Alberto Mingardi

Immigration: controversies, libertarian principles & modern abolition by Ken Schoolland

Down with the EU by Martin Stefunko

What should we do with the rich? The welfare state and the question of poverty by Christian Michel

The LIBERALIA website is one of those ‘must visit’ places on the Internet for libertarians. If you ever get the opportunity to hear Christian in person, he is an engaging speaker and a most congenial gentleman. Highly recommended.

All the papers on the LIBERALIA site are available in English and French.

The last time Britain tried to impose its will on Afghanistan…

When you’re wounded and left on Afghanistan’s plains,
And the women come out to cut up what remains,
Jest roll to your rifle and blow out your brains
An’ go to your Gawd like a soldier.

– Rudyard Kipling (extract from ‘The Young British Soldier’)

For more Kipling verse, see everypoet.com.

The Americans have the right idea: get involved with the enemies of our enemies, and make it clear to them all we want to do is kill said mutual enemies, not mess in their internal affairs. Offer them money by all means but to even contemplate ‘peacekeeping’ or ‘stabilisation forces’ is utter madness.

The West, no, who are we kidding…the USA and to a lesser extent the UK, can play a constructive role by tying ongoing aid to more moderate behaviour by the future rulers in Kabul. But for goodness sake, realise that the victorious army we have backed hates Taliban/Al Qaeda because they allowed large numbers of armed foreigners into the country (Arabs, Pakistanis, Chechens etc.). It is absurd to suggest large numbers of British troops are going to be any more acceptable.

It is obvious that the anti-Taliban/anti-Al Qaeda forces are more than happy to work with small scale deployment of special forces, but to suggest 6,000 regular British soldiers will be seen the same way is a grave misjudgement. A brigade sized British force would be there for only one reason: to act as a counter balance to the various local armies. From the perspective of the ‘Northern Alliance’, what possible good could that serve other than to dilute their hard won gains?

Let’s keep our eyes on the ball people. We are in this ghastly hell hole called Afghanistan for one purpose and one purpose only: to destroy Al Qaeda and just incidentally to destroy the Taliban because they stand in the way of that objective. Sure, lets help them form a stable society that suits not just their interests but also our own by removing a breeding ground for terrorist vipers… but leave the armed aspect of politics and the ‘peacekeeping’ to the locals. We can give wise counsel but to suggest we could forcibly keep this armed-to-the-teeth society from fighting amongst themselves if they are determined to do so is ridiculous.

No wonder the Taleban ran

Julian Manyon sees the devastation wrought by the B-52s, but says that the fall of Kabul is not the end of the struggle. He gives an excellent eyewitness report in The Spectator from the front line in Afghanistan.

I look forward to hearing from all those out there in ‘establishment pundit land’ who sneered at the effect of the US bombing.

Regarding the Great Somali Turkey Shoot…

What Dale writes is quite correct but it is just another manifestation of American ‘liberal’ media racism. When eighteen US Army Rangers dies that is horrifying because eighteen American lives are valuable. As Somali lives are irrelevent, who gives a damn if one thousand Somali irregulars got smoked? The important fact was that here was a chance to dwell on the negative aspects, namely American deaths. Regardless of the fact the US soldiers gave a fine account of themselves before being overwhelmed, why not just use this as an excuse to point out the US military are the bad guys yet again?

Whilst I do think the whole mission to Somalia was a noble but naive mistake from the outset, is it too much to expect the US media to realise it was actually a far from ignoble episode in US military history? I guess so.

Another example of US ‘liberal’ media racism was the reporting of the 1998 US Embassy bombings in Africa. It as widely reported that twelve Americans died and almost as an afterthought, oh yes, about 300 or so Africans were killed plus nearly 4000 wounded. This need to be repeated again and again to people across the world who claim Al Qaeda only want to kill Americans.

Similarly as commented on by Opinionated Bastard (now is that a great name for a blog or what?), once it became clear most of the people on Flight 587 which crashed in Rockaway were not from the USA, media interest tailed off rapidly (no pun intended):

This is infuriating because the passengers on Flight 587 were almost entirely from the Dominican Republic. We get ’round the clock coverage of whatever civilian casualties may or may not have actually happened in Afghanistan, but when poor folks in our own hemisphere are suffering, it’s shuffled off to the back page.

I guess those people just did not count for much.

The depth of the disaster for the Islamists starts to become clear

Events in Afghanistan bring to mind a large container truck suddenly tipping over and spilling its load across a busy highway in front of traffic moving in both directions. As we see the situation shift not by the day but by the hour, it is important that people look not just at Mazar-i-Sharif, Kunduz, Kabul and Khandahar, but also at nuclear Pakistan: what happens in Islamabad, Karachi, Rawalpindi and Quetta will certainly end up being far more important in the long run.

For weeks since the US bombing started, the Islamic political parties in Pakistan have been whipping up sentiment with a world view that pits Islam against the godless foreigner. Large numbers of young Pakistanis heard the call for jihad against the United States and were urged to stand shoulder to shoulder with the Taliban and Al Qaeda in the defence of Islam. Thousands streamed across the Khyber Pass into Afghanistan seething with religious zeal to take up arms against the hated infidel.

The secular General Musharraf looked on uneasy as the streets swelled with crowds incited by his political enemies and has also been forced to keep looking over his shoulder at his own intelligence service, the ISI, who have always been the Taliban’s primary patron.

And then, the container truck unexpectedly tips over, scattering its cargo of… jack-in-the-boxes.

Weakened by the USAF/USN airstrikes far more than the ignorant and willfully pessimistic western pundits would have had us believe, the Taliban suddenly starts to collapse. Like dominos, town after town falls to the various anti-Taliban forces.

In Mazar-i-Sharif, we have learned that the Afghan Taliban forces took all the available motor vehicles and retreated as Abdul Rashid Dostam’s forces enveloped the city, leaving about 600 newly arrived pro-Taliban Pakistanis to face Dostam’s soldiers alone. The school in which they made their last stand is now a twisted ruin and at least 400 Pakistanis were wiped out in the bitter fighting.

In Kunduz, accounts suggest most of the Afghan Taliban forces have either defected or bailed out of the town prior to it being completely surrounded. What is left are largely Chechens, Chinese Muslims and Pakistani fighters. They are clearly doomed.

And so, it is interesting to note that the streets of Pakistan are surprisingly subdued. Far from ‘Islam’ rising up against the United States and its anti-Taliban friends in Afghanistan, city after city is filled with cheering throngs and America is saluted by the very people who lived through the bombing for contributing to the Taliban’s misfortunes. Hundreds and possibly thousands of young Pakistanis are already dead, killed not as Islamic holy warriors but as hated foreigners by Afghans who have had it up to ‘here’ with the interference of its neighbours.

So as the Islamic politicians of Pakistan survey how in the matter of eight days the entire situation in Afghanistan has turned upside down, the families and friends of the dead Pakistani boys who listened and then marched to their deaths across the Khyber pass are going to start asking ‘why?’ When people start to figure out the answer, I don’t think the forces of Islamo-fascism are going to like what happens next. It must be slowly dawning on the more secular forces in Pakistan that their Islamist political enemies are starting to look very exposed indeed.

For the west, nuclear armed Pakistan is far more important in the long run than that ‘Mad Max’ nation called Afghanistan.

Yes, the leitmotif for Afghanistan and Pakistan really is a jack-in-the-box. You heard it here first.

Three cheers for Capital One

On the sometimes inspired, sometimes misguided but always interesting anti-state.com site, there is an very interesting article about a major credit card company electing to use private binding arbitration rather than the coercive and clumsy state legal system to resolve disputes.

An interest development and, I suspect, an sign of things to come.