جزییات کتاب
With eleven chapters by top libertarian scholars on all aspects of defense, this book edited by Hans-Hermann Hoppe it represents an ambitious attempt to extend the idea of free enterprise to the provision of security services. It argues that "national defense" as provided by government is a myth not unlike the myth of socialism itself. It is more viably privatized and replaced by the market provision of security.From the introduction:"Even aside from day-to-day security risks, the reality of terrorism and its resulting mayhem has demonstrated the inability of government to provide adequate security against attacks on person and property. The lesson of September 11 is indisputable: government had not only failed to act as a guardian of security and protection but had actually been the primary agent in creating insecurity and exposure to risk, and, moreover, did not achieve secure justice once the crime had been committed."However, this was not the lesson that was drawn from the affair. Instead, the political elite successfully exploited public fears to vastly increase government spending, central credit inflation, bureaucratic management, citizen surveillance, regulation of transportation, and generally wage an all out attack on liberty and property."Meanwhile, US foreign policy pursued in the aftermath became more aggressively interventionist, violent, and threatening (the US refused even to rule out the employment of nuclear weapons against enemy regimes) than it had been before, thereby increasing the number of recruits into the ranks of people who are willing to use extreme violence as a means of retribution."In the same way that government intervention in times of peace can generate perverse consequences in markets that do not tend toward clearing, in times of war, military intervention can thus have the effect of harming the prospects for peace and security and bringing about a permanent state of violence and political control. Truly, the political affairs of our time cry out for a complete rethinking of the issues of defense and security and the respective roles of government, the market, and society in providing them." Introduction by Hans-Hermann Hoppe The Problem of Security; Historicity of the State and "European Realism" by Luigi Marco Bassani and Carlo Lottieri War, Peace, and the State by Murray N. Rothbard Monarchy and War, by Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn Nuclear Weapons: Proliferation or Monopoly? by Bertrand Lemennicier Is Democracy More Peaceful than Other Forms of Government? by Gerard Radnitzky Mercenaries, Guerrillas, Militias, and the Defense of Minimal States and Free Societies by Joseph R. Stromberg Privateering and National Defense: Naval Warfare for Private Profit by Larry J. Sechrest The Will to be Free: The Role of Ideology in National Defense by Jeffrey Rogers Hummel National Defense and the Theory of Externalities, Public Goods, and Clubs by Walter Block Government and the Private Production of Defense by Hans-Hermann Hoppe Secession and the Production of Defense by Jrg Guido Hlsmann Publication Information