Showing posts with label Seasteading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Seasteading. Show all posts

Thursday, August 16, 2012

AMTV News: Russian Incursions Into Strategic US Territory & Reddit Island's Bold Plan

Topher Morrison



Welcome to AMTV News, I’m your host Topher Morrison.  Today is Wednesday August 15th, 2012.

First up…
Russian Military Tests US Defenses, Again

A Russian nuclear-powered attack sub, likely Akula class, operated undetected for weeks in the Gulf of Mexico.  This secret incursion took place at the same time Russian strategic bombers conducted a massive exercise in the arctic, which made incursions into restricted US airspace near Alaska and California in June and July.  It was a move made by the Russians not seen since before the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.  So – in light of recent events – here’s a flashback… Just who fired, what appeared to many, including experts a missile of the coast of California in November of 2010?

European Citizenship: Death of Nations?

It’s described as something similar to what we have in the United States, a love of country, but an affinity for our state.   In Europe freedom of travel has been energized with integration, electoral reforms allow foreigners to vote were they live and work.  And a European identity is being forged, which binds under its own national anthem the peoples of Europe.  What also bind Germans, for example to Greeks, are dictates from Brussles and of course soaring debt.

Reddit Island: Birth of Nations?

It’s been dubbed ‘Nerd Island’ as Gawker editor Adrian Chen goes about slaying the ‘completely batshit insane’ plans of Libertarian tech mogul Peter Thiel and members of the social news site Reddit, known for its anti-SOPA activism.  While the rest of the planet attempts to govern under one roof, Thiel as far as Chen is concerned, has ‘wasted’ part of his billion dollar fortune in the attempt to create floating city states aimed at, according to the Seasteading Institute: ‘peacefully testing new ideas for government.” Chen is more than skeptical and sees it as a veiled attempt at ‘keeping the party alive after [rich people] finish utterly pillaging all land-based civilization.’  The Reddit sub community Reddit Island similarly aims at creating, according to Chen albeit in a less caustic vein, ‘a self-sustaining libertarian technopia where download speeds are high and taxes are low.’  It’s no doubt zany, but the idea isn’t as new as it seems.  A group of highly educated professionals seeking a new life far from anachronistic models and willing to risk their fortune and reputations to accomplish it is hardly novel.

Ladies and Gentlemen: Start your Engines…
‘Black Box’ Standards for Your Car

For Americans the automobile is sacred.  It is the epitome of freedom and often seen as an extension of one’s personality.  Come September our cars may soon be viewed as an extension of the federal government.  The National Highway Traffic Saftey Administration has green-lighted new standards for event data recorders, similar to those found in airplanes.  EDRs are currently voluntary, however, recent legislation and intimate knowledge of the bureaucracy suggest the NHTSA is merely setting the stage to federally mandate a black box in every car in America.

Artificial Retina to Restore Normal Vision

Researchers have cracked the code to mouse and monkey retinas allowing them with a novel prosthetic device to bring sight to the blind – animals that is. Currently blind humans are offered some comfort with barely navigable implants, but this breakthrough promises to restore ‘normal vision.’  The proposed visor takes in light and an advanced chip translates the information into a code the brain uses to formulate an image.  This new revolution provides hope to some 25 million people worldwide.  

George Soros & Co. Flock to Gold

In September of 2010 billionaire fancier and social engineer George Soros said Gold is “the ultimate asset bubble” and “is certainly not safe” – this was after all when QE2 was but in its infancy. Gold, then at $1225 per ounce, has since seen a nominal high of $1920.30 in September 2011 and after a months long correction looks to be moving north once again.  Eating his words Soros has more than doubled his stake in the SPDR gold trust ETF according his latest SEC filing.  And Famed John Paulson’s hedge fund, managing over $21 billion, has more than 44% of its assets allocated to gold. Big money is on this precious metal especially in lieu of officially beginning QE3.

College is Dead: Peter Thiel’s Plan

The show is called “20 Under 20” and aired for the first time on Monday…

Capturing every corner of alternative media watch AMTV News Monday – Friday.  Find our in depth commentary and analysis of stories like these at GreeneWave.com, part of the AMTV Network.

Thursday, June 7, 2012

E.U.’s Baltic Tiger, Small is Beautiful

Topher Morrison
PurpleSerf.com
After a quick survey of the world’s economies it is easy to become pessimistic.  The BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) are all slowing in growth, they account for much of the world’s raw production and nearly 1/3 of its economy.  The first world or OECD hasn’t changed much since the 2008 crisis slugging along at a 2-3% growth depending where you look, anywhere from 8-15% unemployment and together their debt is even more abhorrent, a cumulative 106% of GDP.

The Baltic Tiger Amidst the Bleating Sheep

Macroeconomics aside, there are a few diamonds in the rough, which is to say, low debt, high growth and low or lowering unemployment diamonds.  Estonia, for example, sixteen months after joining the languishing EU bloc enjoys a budget surplus, national debt is at 6% and its economy grew at a neck breaking 7.6% last year, five times the euro-zone average.

We have discussed this Baltic Tiger and its disheartening and tumultuous history before, apparently it was those hard years, which forged a resilient nation.  So resilient in fact that it bounced back from a nearly 18% contraction, an economic hay maker straight to the chin, as a result of 2008 world financial crisis.  How did they do it? “I can answer in one word: austerity. Austerity, austerity, austerity,” says Peeter Koppel, investment strategist at the SEB Bank.
PurpleSerf.com also examined the structural cause last year:
“Estonia features a constitutionally mandated balanced budget, the highest levels of internet freedom, one of the world’s first flat tax systems (the government has just approved to cut income tax from 21% to 20% by 2015), an open banking system allowing for generous foreign investment, and unlike the United States (sitting on unparalleled and untouched oil reserves) Estonia is self sustaining supplying 90% of their energy from local oil shale…
Bam!  Tell me where you can find that anywhere in the EU.

As far as their ethos is concerned, however, it may be that nearly 700 years from agrarian serfs to Soviet comrades has thickened their skin.  While the rest of the EU: France, Greece, Ireland, etc. bemoan trimming government largesse and entitlements, in many cases literally setting their cities aflame in protest, Estonians have stoically borne the harshest of austerity measures.  When it was time to tighten their belt in 2008 many in Estonian society may have already had bored the extra holes.  From Global Post:
“For older Estonians, memories of the grim days of Soviet occupation make it easier to accept sacrifices today. Among the young, there is a widespread awareness that in a nation of just 1.3 million people, the freedom and opportunities their generation enjoy depends on unity in times of crisis.
‘Western Europe has not really experienced a decrease in living standards since the Second World War,’ says Koppel. ‘Historically, austerity is inevitable, but it’s not part of the culture of Western Europe right now. This is what really differentiates us, that we were able to understand that.'"
Small is Beautiful: More Governments, Less Governance

Perhaps, it isn’t just historical frugality, which produces this type of serenity in the face of the vicissitudes of life.  Perhaps it’s the “1.3 million,” the size of the polity, we should be taking a look at.

As we mentioned before there are diamonds in the rough and as such they are small amidst the economic weeds of this world.  Nonetheless the are brilliant and just as valuable to our overall health, hence “Govern Locally, Not Globally.” These are just some of the world’s smaller more successful states.  You can tell partly because they’re rarely in the news.

Country Size (sq mi) / Population Emp. / Debt (GDP) / Growth
Hong Kong 426 / 7 mil 3.4% / NA / 7.2%
Andorra 180 / 84,000 2.9% / NA / -1.9%
Estonia 17,413 / 1.3 mil 11.3% / 6% / 7.8%
Azerbaijan 33,436 / 9.1 mil 1% / 4.7% / 0.2%
Lithuania 25,174 / 3.1 mil 15.6% / 37.7% / 5.8%
Latvia 24,938 / 2.2 mil 13% / 44.8% / 4%
Singapore 274 / 5.1 (3.2 citizens) mil 2% / 118% / 4.9%
Iceland 39,770 / 320,060 6% / 130% / 2.4%
Costa Rica 19,653 / 4.3 mil 6.5% / 44.5% / 4%
Switzerland 15,940 / 7.9 mil 3.1% / 52.4% / 2.1%
Qatar 4,416 / 1.8 mil 0.4% / 8.9% / 18.7%
Seychelles 174 / 84,000 2% / 46.2% / 5%
United Arab Emirates 32,278 / 8.2 mil 2.4% / 43.9% / 3.3%
San Marino 24 / 31,887 5.5% / NA / 1%



















It is clear when you contrast these numbers with the major economies above, albeit some outliers exist, small and beautiful is also more manageable and agile.  While not even small countries are perfect the trajectory is what is most important.  In every one of the aforementioned countries there are bright spots to point to, if not, the countries are lean and prosperous.

Aside from the numbers let us ask ourselves “What Small Countries Can Teach the World.”  The study by Jeffery A. Frankel of Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government and its conclusions is heretical to macrostate hegemony, a world that consists merely of 189 some odd countries.  The small advanced countries of this planet have so much to teach us if we would just listen: New Zealand’s Inflation Targeting, Estonia’s flat tax, Switzerland’s debt brake, Ireland’s FDI policy, Canada’s banking structure, Sweden’s Nordic model, and the Netherlands’ labor market reforms offer so much to our large and lumbering economies.

So many conservatives and libertarians browbeat economic competition when they would just as easily win over their communist, socialist, green, etc. enemies by merely championing “Let a 1000 Nations Bloom!”  After all it’s the “Most Progressive Movement on the Planet,” but unlike big government solutions and the few experiments they leave us to compare their policies against, this new ethos values competitive governance.  Stop fighting our government and have them fight over us for once.  If we can’t create new governments on land there are even ideas of making them available at sea.

Fresh air anyone?

Once upon a time in America we had 47 of what Justice Brandeis once called the “laboratories of democracy”, each one imbued with all the powers necessary for effective governance.  The people of America had 47 different options of where to live and under what system to thrive.  Since we dismantled the Senate, instituted a private financial dictatorship and forced all wage earners to pay the government before they paid themselves in 1913 those hedges against government intervention and corporate escapade were lost in the fog of reform and "progress."

As the New York Times points out of Leopold Kohr’s book, the Breakdown of Nations, it might be prudent to return to our Kohr Principles:
“In 1943 Kohr secured a professorship at Rutgers, where he taught for 12 years, during which time he finished his central work, “The Breakdown of Nations.” Published first in Britain, in 1957, the book develops his theory of the optimal size of polities: “There seems to be only one cause behind all forms of social misery: bigness.” Size was the root of all evil: “Whenever something is wrong, it is too big.”
Unsurprisingly, Kohr’s guiding principle was anarchism, “the noblest of philosophies.” But its inherent nobility, he recognized, also made it utopian: a truly anarchist society could do away with governments and states only if all individuals were ethical enough to respect one another’s boundaries. Kohr cleverly turned this utopianism upside down, from weakness to strength: any party, any leader, any ideology promising utopia is automatically wrong, or lying. Acceptance of utopia’s unattainability, in other words, is the best insurance against totalitarianism.
But if the ideal state cannot be attained, at least it can be approached, Kohr thought, by reducing the scale of government. Which sounds a lot like the famous quote from Thoreau’s “Civil Disobedience”: “That government is best which governs least.” But in Kohr’s vision, smaller government should mean, first and foremost, a smaller area to govern. In such smallness, greatness resides. Counterintuitive as that may sound, didn’t Greece and Italy have their Golden Ages when they were divided into countless city-states? Not a coincidence, according to Kohr: smaller states produce more culture, wealth and happiness.”
Instead of 17 hulking EU states, which are quickly coalescing into one Euro Super State (a possible 4th Reich, according to George Soros) or heading for a cataclysmic breakup, imagine a setting similar to what the U.S. enjoyed for the first part of its life.

Unfortunately history nor ethnic considerations
come into play on this map, but you get the idea.
In the near future there may be nothing left
of Europe’s borders.
Needless to say this inaugural part of American history, prior to 1913 and the firs World War, made possible the realization of what has been referred to as the “5000 year leap.”

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Govern Locally, Not Globally

Govern Locally, Not Globally
Is this not pro Earth?
Introducing: Lexicon of a Libertarian

If you want to replace an established system, be it religious, cultural, scientific or political an equally comprehensive system must be introduced to take its place.  Specifically, the new system must solve the failures and embrace the success and often the routines of the former.

Take Christianity for example.  Within 300 years it grew from an obscure Jewish cult to a multinational religion, larger than Judaism had ever been or wished to be.  Christmas and Easter take place on the Winter Solstice and Spring Equinox, not of mere coincidence, but of prudence.  By superimposing Christianity over the dominant pagan religion of Rome and by respecting the same holy days it was ensured a smooth transition.

This series begins without a predetermined end, as a musing on how the Lexicon of a Libertarian might provide our current national and geopolitical model with a similar thorough transition to an emphasis on individual liberty.

When God was Killed Technocrats Just Took His Place

The video below is of Michael Shermer, founder and publisher of Skeptic Magazine.  Beginning at 13:30 (I would highly suggest watching the entire video) he provides a deft analysis of modern religion after anamism, polytheism and monotheism proved insufficient to answer and solve mankind’s problems or its propensity to create new ones.

 

Shermer begins with a self-reliant hominid on the plains of Africa.  According to Shermer the hominid and successive generations of humans struggling to survive and therefore operating from a position of advanced insecurity saw patterns everywhere.

The attempt to explain and predict these patterns and the world around them gave way to the idea that there was something larger than oneself.  After the epiphany, mankind established dogma and superstition to cope with what we could not immediately understand.   This is the broad stroke that seems to paint much of our existence.

According to Shermer’s dialectic, after monotheism (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) proved an illusion big government became the new world order.  The idea that “government can rescue us” is pervasive and is based on the dogmatic belief that mankind, through scientific experts, can somehow provide all the answers.

This from Friedrich Nietzche’s The Gay Science (1882):

“God is dead. God remains dead. And we have killed him. How shall we comfort ourselves, the murderers of all murderers? What was holiest and mightiest of all that the world has yet owned has bled to death under our knives: who will wipe this blood off us? What water is there for us to clean ourselves? What festivals of atonement, what sacred games shall we have to invent? Is not the greatness of this deed too great for us? Must we ourselves not become gods simply to appear worthy of it?”

Understand that there is no fundamental change in the human condition when God is killed and the mantel of science is assumed.  If the science of psychology has taught us anything it is that we are still as insecure as our hominid forebears.  Because we are insecure we look to each other, but most importantly to our state and our leaders for answers.

Since the turn of the 20th century we thought by rejecting the false gods of the supernatural realm for the real gods of secular and by embracing the redemptive qualities of democracy that people, through science and its technology, would bring us closer to utopia – a new stage in human existence, what Nietzche called the Übermensch or Superman.

The problem is that science, like democracy is essentially a utilitarian device.  While science may lead us to knowledge and democracy may safeguard internal peace and individual freedom, humans are behind both and therefore both are by no means infallible.   What happens when science or its Supermen are wrong?  I’ll put it this way; propaganda was not perfected by monarchs.

This intoxicating prospect of Übermensch wrought disastrous consequences in the 20th century.  We found democracy and authoritarianism were not mutually exclusive as the state became superior and jealous of the individuals whom had built it.  Over and over again in Nazi Germany, Stalin’s Soviet Union, Mao’s China, Imperial Japan, Communist Cambodia, Islamic Indonesia, etc. there was avalanche after avalanche of tyranny.

Government in its last analysis is force, even when ostensibly governed by science or Nietzhe’s Overmen.  The methodology of science in its purest form may in time unlock a universe of puzzles, but its Supermen cannot as Nietzche and others wished, establish a new and comprehensive hierarchy of values for mankind.  Ironically, Nietzche and his progeny never understood that man as a being of nature operates under similar laws, which cannot simply be repealed and replaced by decree.  Equally ironic was that the Crown and the Church before them had already tried and failed.

F.A. Hayek from Road to Serfdom on Hitler’s attempt:

“Where the precise effects of government policy on particular people are known, where the government aims directly at such particular effects, it cannot help knowing these efforts, and therefore it cannot be impartial.  It must, of necessity, take sides, impose valuations upon people and instead of assisting them in the advancement of their own ends, choose the ends for them.  As soon as the particular effects are foreseen at the time a law is made, it ceases to be a mere instrument to be used by the people and becomes instead an instrument used by the lawgiver upon the people and for his ends.  

The state ceases to be a piece of utilitarian machinery intended to help individuals in their fullest development of their individual personality and becomes a “moral” institution – where “moral” is not used in contrast to immoral, but describes an institution which imposes on its members its views on all moral questions, whether these views be moral or highly immoral. In this sense the Nazi or any other collectivist state is “moral,” while the [classical] liberal state is not.”

“Govern Locally, Not Globally” – An Emphasis on You

While Shermer claims “the idea that government can rescue us is no longer the wave of the future” current trends do not favor this sentiment.  Big government has never been bigger and its technocrats have already overrun the planet, look no further than the European Union, the U.S., China, the African Union and ultimately the United Nations.  Only a few free and prosperous citadels remain.  The rest are struggling to tread water amidst a sea of debt and conflict while the U.N. and powerful internationalists try to consolidate and retool our entire global economy.

There are approximately 196 “independent” countries throughout the world (I use independent carefully because it most definitely is up to debate) all of which like businesses compete for the nearly 7 billion residents of this planet.  Seems like a pretty small number of competitors right?  That is why many including myself have advocated “Let a 1000 nations bloom!”  If we can’t decentralize power within our own countries lets just create new ones.

Nietzche was right about one thing, his emphasis on secular man.  We are the only ones, not angels or aliens, who can and should be held responsible for our fate.  “Either we died because of our religion or our religion dies because of us” Nietzche proclaimed.

We are understandably insecure beings and the natural inclination, the path of least resistance, has always been to rely on superstition, God, the state, empire, supermen and even skepticism itself for consolation.  But if we must kill anything it is the predilection of consistent deference to central government, organized religion, ephemeral movements or ethereal beings.  There have only been a few instances in human history when we have chosen the difficult path, to respect each other’s unalienable rights and liberties.  In this world of bigger is better it may be best to remind ourselves small is beautiful.

LEFT: Anglo Saxon Freemen RIGHT: Ancient Israelites guided by God's pillar of fire
The ancient Israelis and Anglo-Saxons respected the fundamental unit of society – the individual.  Both cultures retained a constitution of sorts whether oral or ensconced in the Arc of the Covenant and both favored a decentralized familial organization of governance.  In fact Thomas Jefferson, John Adams and Benjamin Franklin originally proposed the seal for the United States to honor these two rare civilizations:

The culture of a society is dictated by the individuals that make it up.  In a free society we are individually empowered to seek our own value system and through free association may enter or exit relationships with those who share a similar disposition or freely confront and debate those who do not.  When this model is reversed and ever-larger groups try to impose by force arbitrary relationships and values upon us calamity has been sure to follow.

Although the world has become smaller due to science’s technology it does not follow that there should be a larger worldwide government.  Contrary to what is claimed a one world government regardless of design will assuredly result in despotism.  The infrastructure needed to maintain a world government will beckon for a leader strong enough to wield the vast array of public policy tools and charismatic enough to ameliorate its disparate parts.  Such a leader is no doubt to arrive, but as history has shown us he will most likely not offer us more power over our own lives.  We know this because, in the words James Michner:

“A man can read 10,000 pages of history and find only the corruption of power and the defeat of hope.”

It was said that all politics is local, but our politics today are plagued by foreign policy, national politics and very little about events in our hometown or district.  Actions like the Repeal of 1913 or Seasteading will return power to the local level where it serves more intimately and efficiently and where it will ultimately empower free humanity to resist this new world order.  Historically while countries may fall to tyrants and cataclysm exodus was still possible, in a one world government there is nowhere to run.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

1000 Nations: The Most Progressive Movement on the Planet

Topher Morrison
PurpleSerf.com

Pictures of Dubai before and after becoming a special economic
zone (SEZ) and undergoing substantial legal reform. See
also pictures of Schenzhen, China - amazing!
Image Source: AThousandNations.com
Small governments are the most effective political bodies in the world.  You often hear or see the phrase "Think Globally, Act Locally" most often in reference to climate change, however, if we applied this concept to governance, the world would be a much better place.  


          People often talk about competition making businesses better, but how can competition make governments more accountable, more useful and more responsive to the needs of their people?  The answer: create more of them!  Governments by definition cannot survive without their citizens, therefore, it would seem to benefit us if we force them to compete over our tax dollars.


          While there is of course a finite amount of land and little likelihood that the 188+ nations already established will part with theirs, there are efforts to create special economics zones if not radical open ocean platforms. These are the ideas espoused by organizations like FreeCities.org and Seasteading.org.


          Imagine a world in which governments had to compete for citizens from 1000 nations?  While central banks, politicians and technocrats more and more attempt to consolidate the world under one government, the ultimate goal of megalomaniacs over the millennia, the rights, liberties and needs of the many will factor less and less into the decision making of the few.


          Ever since the Declaration of Independence and the establishment of the US Constitution what were essentially several large spheres of influence operated by German, English, Russian, Spanish, French, etc. empires gave rise to a wave of independent nation states embracing democracy under popular sovreignity.  


          Since that time these formerly independent nation states have been slowly consolidated once again under the European Union, the Meditterenean Union, the African Union and ultimately the United Nations under the auspices of peace and prosperity.  If our current economic crisis and perpetual warfare has shown, this system which has operated over the past 50 years has not resulted in what was promised.


          These systems have been called "The Most Progressive Movement on the Planet" while libertarians refer to it as the most important step toward securing prosperity, personal liberty and peace.