I know you’re well versed in ancap literature so I don’t need to rehash the nuance of private systems but know I’m not opposed to rules or order, my issue is with their imposition under statism with a monopoly on violence.
In any case, we’re so far at the other end of the spectrum to make this nothing more than theoretical today. In my lifetime I hope to see incremental pulls towards individual liberty. Maybe in 100 years there will be 1,000 Lichtensteins in Europe and 10,000 around the world - again it’s the directionality that interests me rather than the utopia Mike always insists is the goal of anarchism.
And I take your point about Iraq however a power vacuum is not a state of affairs to use as a measuring stick - particularly one entirely caused by the fiat world order.
3D printed guns are going to be easy to source in future and an armed society is a polite society - good luck to the roaming bands of rapists when every granny is packing and there’s no monopolists on violence to come put her away for responding to NAP violators.
These things are going to change the status quo of nation states, particularly with Bitcoin and your last para. There is no reason we cannot see this fragmentation underneath current systems; we see it with carveouts for the Amish in Pennsylvania or even the Aborigines here in Australia even under these big government systems - throw in sovereign money, arms proliferation, uncontrolled digital communications and now you’ve got a stew going.
But even that’s a medium term horizon and it’s going to take disorder for such things to emerge. Right now my focus is riding out the volatility of the unipolar collapse into the new multipolar status quo.
My priorities will likely shift over that time as well, I’m not too egotistic to admit that, but minarchism is a step towards anarchism and if eventually the overton window is between those two viewpoints then Bitcoin will have won.


