In 1995 through 1996, I proposed that a new method to eliminate unwanted
government be used, that would eliminate all militaries, wars and nuclear
weapons, forever. I provocatively called it "Assassination Politics".
https://cryptome.org/ap.htmOver a series of ten (10) parts, written between
February 1995 and about May 1996, I proposed that a system would be set up to
allow the public to donate money, anonymously, to be paid, also anonymously, to
the person who correctly "predicted" the data of death of a hated politician or
government figure.
In doing so, I solved David Friedman's
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_D._Friedman) "Hard Problem" that he wrote
of in his 1973 book, "The Machinery of Freedom".
http://daviddfriedman.com/The_Machinery_of_Freedom_.pdf
In doing that, I made it possible for "anarchy" to actually be stable and
orderly, and not chaotic. In Friedman's analysis of the problem, a region run
by libertarian or anachistic principles could be attacked by other regions
running more traditional government systems, like taxes and militaries. That
region that couldn't tax its citizens would seem to be easily defeatable. My
solution not only protects that anarchic region by allowing its people to
attack and defeat the leadership of those other regions, but also allows the
people of those other regions to attack and defeat their own "leadership" which
they don't want.
This would also destroy all militaries, including all nuclear weapons in their
possession: Anybody who possessed a nuclear weapon becomes a threat to anyone
potentially in a targeting area, which means that a large percentage of the
population is threatened. The people of such areas can donate money to
purchase the death of anyone possessing those weapons, unless those possessors
agree to publicly dismantle and destroy all of their weapons.
As such, I assert that my Assassination Politics idea, when implemented, will
permanently stabilize a virtually government-free world.
Jim Bell
On Saturday, November 23, 2019, 02:22:52 AM PST, grarpamp
<[email protected]> wrote:
Fri, Nov 22, 2019
Reply-To: [email protected]
As part of an AHRC research network, I conduct a survey about
Internet/media utopias.
In the time of the Cambridge Analytica scandal and fake news, we
experience a crisis of Internet platforms. Many people think we need
Internet and media utopias today. But how could they look like?
Those interested in liberation and technology might have good ideas...
I therefore want to invite you to participate:
https://psmutopias.limequery.net/879161
Answering will take about five minutes. A number of participants with
very visionary ideas will be invited to a workshop in 2020 in London,
where participants will work on co-writing/co-authoring an
Internet/Media Utopias Manifesto.
Kind regards, Christian Fuchs
--
Prof. Christian Fuchs
University of Westminster,
Director of the Communication and Media Research Institute
http://www.camri.ac.uk
@fuchschristian
[email protected]