Coito ergo sum wrote:Seth wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:And, you said, "Libertarianism does not mean that a community can set rules for everyone who might enter that community,"
I don't see why they wouldn't be able to, under your theory.
What if the 9,000 put up signs at all entry points to their town and on the signs it says, "By entering this community and proceeding past this visible and readable signage, you agree to abide by the following rules: [insert list of rules]" - and they should be able to set up a toll, right? A toll booth on the road that says, "The 9,000 paid for these roads, and if you want to drive on them, you have to pay these tolls..."
Can't they do that?
Yes, they can. If they paid for the amenities, they may restrict use of the amenities to those who have paid to use them, or assess a fee for use by others on a per-use basis.
And, if they can do that, then can't they say on the sign: "By entering the community of the 9,000, you consent to be bound by the Rules Applicable to Visitors, which are on file at the town center and which can be viewed on our internet web site." Also, "If you choose to reside in the community of the 9,000, your act of taking up residence constitutes acceptance of the Rules Applicable to Residents, and the Taxes, Fees and Tariffs applicable to Residents."
Among those rules, can't there be a "no vagabond" rule and a "no selling postcards on streetcorner" rule that visitors and residents agree, by entering into the Community, to abide by?
Yes and no. The basis of any rule or regulation that is to be enforced against anyone who has not voluntarily consented to such a regulation must be founded in the prevention of an initiation of force or fraud by the person regulated. "Status" regulations (being a "vagabond" or "black" ) or any other characteristic that has nothing to do with the actual initiation of force or fraud by that person are not permitted under the Libertarian system because such regulations are themselves inherently an initiation of force against the individual who has done nothing to initiate force or fraud against the community.
Well, then they can't make whatever rules they want among themselves, even if they do consent. So, you're talking in circles.
You've said they could make whatever rules they want, if they all consent. But, now you say they can't make a "no vagabond" rule even if they consent.
Right. Because they cannot decide for the vagabond where he chooses to go. If the vagabond signs the contract that applies to the community, then it can be enforced against him, but the 9000 can neither force him to sign the contract nor act to exclude him from the community because he refuses to sign the contract.
Contracts are not one-sided agreements. The 9000 cannot say "if you enter here you agree to the contract" they have to get actual agreement to the terms of the contract for it to be valid.
But they can make any rules they like
among themselves which means among those who have voluntarily consented to have those rules applied to and enforced against themselves.
Seth wrote:
So, yes, a set of rules for the payment of fees, taxes and tariffs applicable to residents are permissible because those who are residents have paid their share and new residents can be required to pay their share as a contractual condition of living in the community. But no, a rule saying "no vagabonds" would not pass muster, although a "no selling postcards on streetcorners" might, if the community assesses a fee and places restrictions on the use of public sidewalks for all residents.
Ah, the "if Seth likes it" rule of government...
Moreover, again, if they all consent, on what basis do you say they are not allowed to consent to it? And, if they consent, it can't be the initiation of force or fraud. They consent. Remember - I stated very clearly that the 9,000 clearly posted to visitors that they must agree to the no vagabond rule, and if they don't consent, they can stay out of the town. Why can't they do that?
Because contracts are a meeting of the minds and require express voluntary agreement to the terms. By "no vagabond rule" I assumed you meant a rule imposed on persons who come to the community who do not consent to a "no vagabond" rule. If one comes to the community, signs the contract which says "you can't be a vagabond in this community," then it's enforceable as a voluntary contract. But if a person who is a "vagabond" wanders into town and takes up residence, absent force or fraud on his part, the community cannot enforce that rule against him without his express voluntary consent.
Seth wrote:
And, since they've agreed by their act of proceeding on in the face of the signage, then aren't they bound by the laws, and then subject to arrest and penalty as described in the rules of the Community of 9,000?
Not unless they become residents and/or make use of amenities provided by the community without paying the required fee for such use. Merely existing is not an initiation of force or fraud, generally speaking. But of course such a sign does constitute a contract, and so persons can become obliged to that contract if they choose to enter the community voluntarily, even as a visitor.
You make no sense.
If they enter as visitors, they can be asked to agree, at a tollbooth, to all the rules of the community. If they don't agree, they can turn around. If they do agree, they proceed on. Nobody is initiating force or fraud against anybody. They are just being asked to abide by the rules.
They can enter whether or not they agree to the rules. Absent an initiation of force or fraud on their part, their freedom of movement cannot be infringed upon because they have not agreed to that restriction. If they make use of public amenities that charge a fee for use and don't pay that fee, then they commit fraud. But absent force or fraud on their part, the community has no authority over them at all.
Can a community assess an entry fee for the use of streets, sidewalks, parks and suchlike? Yes, it can, and anyone entering that community is obliged to pay that fee because to not do so is to initiate fraud. Their alternative is to not enter the community. But as to other rules of, say, decorum or behavior, no rule that the entrant has not expressly agreed to can be enforced against them absent force or fraud on their part. A rule that women must wear black bags only applies to those who have consented to that rule. Anyone else can ignore that rule.
But what moderates such behavior on the part of a community is the moral suasion of other communities and persons. A community that attempts to impose harsh rules or exorbitant fees on visitors will find itself isolated and shut out of trade and interaction with other communities. A KKK community with racist rules will find itself unable to buy or sell to anyone outside that community that does not support the racist intentions of the community.
Since trade and interaction are essential to any community, the force of moral opprobrium will moderate the behavior of every community except those of the most radical and isolationist bent, and those will be shunned by the wider community, which will make life hard for the residents.
The same sort of thing occurs now in communities that have high taxes and harsh, intrusive regulations. People who don't like the tax structure or regulations simply move away and refuse to visit or spend money in that community.
I, for example, boycott California. I will not go there or spend my money there because I disapprove of their political and social ideologies. Likewise I will never visit New York City, because they infringe on my 2nd Amendment rights.
In a Libertarian society, the inertia of wider public opinion and the legal right of every individual to discriminate against any other individual or group without any legal constraint against such discrimination acts to impose moral suasion that modifies and moderates radical anti-social behavior.
Seth wrote:
If the community does not want visitors to make use of amenities, it has the right to make and enforce such a rule, and the right of the community to determine the conditions under which their amenities may be used by non-residents outweighs the desire of an outsider to make use of those amenities by entering the community.
And, one of the conditions is the no vagabond rule. They only want people with money in their pocket in their town. They all agree, they have a right to set the conditions, and one of the conditions for entry past the toll is agreement to the no vagabond rule. Why not?
Because while they can ask for agreement, their only recourse if the agreement is not agreed to is to discriminate and refuse to trade with or interact with someone in their community who hasn't signed the contract, absent an initiation of force or fraud by the visitor.
They cannot involuntarily enforce a condition on entry, they can only react if force or fraud is initiated by the visitor, unless the visitor voluntarily agrees to abide by the condition of entry. Until then, they can only "shun" the visitor.
Seth wrote:
If the visitor doesn't like the requirements, then the visitor is free not to enter the community.
Exactly what I said. But, you said that the community is barred by some Seth-principle that certain rules are not allowed. Taxes and tarriffs and fees - you said "yes," they could. "No vagabond" rule - you said "no" can't do that.
Right. That's because a tax, tariff or fee is payment for the use of property, goods or services provided by the community that others have paid to establish. You can't ride the bus without paying the fare. But you can walk the street, unless it's a private street, in which case you have to pay for that privilege.
But being a "vagabond" is a status, not an act, and in a Libertarian society, the only thing others can do regarding the status of a person they dislike is to refuse to trade or interact with that person. So, if the streets and sidewalks and parks are open to everyone and there is no specific fee for such use that's applicable to all, wandering the streets as a vagabond cannot be prevented because that would be initiating force. But no store owner is obliged to sell to a vagabond, or buy cards from him, or allow him to use private property, or even acknowledge his existence.
Seth wrote:
If he does, he may find himself obligated to the community in accordance with the contract. Of course, the contract must be voluntarily entered into, which means that the community either has to publish the contract in full at every entry point, so a person can read and agree to the contract as a "meeting of the minds," or it must allow leeway for a person to proceed to the place where the contract can be read and agreed to, and it must allow a person who rejects the contract to leave without penalty.
Contracts are routinely agreed to via references to "Standard Terms and Conditions" as amended from time to time in the sole discretion of one party. And, one doesn't have to see the Standard Terms ahead of time. Parties can have a meeting of the minds over the term that the visiting party will abide by the Communities terms, whatever they are, sight unseen.
Not in a Libertarian society. Contracts are not "implied" they must be expressly agreed to. Can a person agree to abide by an unseen contract? Yes, I suppose so, despite that being a stupid idea. But the community may not infer consent, it must have actual, verifiable consent to the terms of the contract, or it's not a contract. Moreover, a visitor can say "I agree to pay a fee for the use of streets and sidewalks, but I refuse to abide by the restriction stating that all women must wear big black bags that conceal everything." The only recourse of the community in that case is to shun the individual, but it cannot prevent him from paying the fee and using the streets and sidewalks and it cannot initiate force to drive him out of the community because an "all women must wear black bags" rule does not address either force or fraud, and therefore cannot be enforced against anyone against their will.
Seth wrote:
To do otherwise, to set someone up to be involuntarily bound to a contract that they have not had the opportunity to read in full and agree to, is itself an initiation of fraud by the community that would absolve the visitor of any liability under the contract.
They have had the opportunity to reject the terms because they haven't had a chance to read them. Moreover, I did say the Community posted them at the town center and on the community's website.
But, let's say they have all the rules available for review at the entry toll. They let you pull over to the side, and read the rules if you want. Why can't the no vagabond rule be a rule that the Community of 9,000 consents to, and that all visitors must consent to as a condition of entry?
Because there cannot be "conditions of entry" that can be enforced to prevent someone from entering or going where they will for reasons other than force or fraud. A condition of entry saying "you can't enter without paying a fee for the use of the streets and sidewalks" is a valid fraud-related condition, and is therefore acceptable. A condition of entry saying "no vagabonds" is neither fraud nor force related and cannot be enforced involuntarily against anyone, although it can be enforced against anyone who voluntarily agrees that the condition applies to them.
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"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
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