“Hegemonic intervention,” wrote Murray Rothbard, “substitutes chaos for … order,” that order being the “mechanism of harmony, adjustment, and precision” that he located in the consensual conduct of self-managing individuals. The chaos that is symptomatic of the “hegemonic principle” is evidence of not just the impracticality of controlling people and free society, but indeed of its impossibility; the state — the people and institutions that, through acting aggressively, comprise it — simply can’t know all of the things it would have to know to successfully “manage” the interactions within society.
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James Tuttle,
Regular Columnist, THL
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