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by Frederick Mann
10/12/97
Introduction
This is the third in a series of articles on the Economic Means to Freedom. The second
article included a brief discussion of the "No-Opposition Strategy." You can access the first two articles at this website.
This article will elaborate on the No-Opposition Strategy
and introduce the "It's Not All-or-Nothing" principle.
Disclaimer
This article constitutes the dissemination of information in accordance with the right to
free speech. Nothing in this article is to be interpreted as legal, accounting, tax,
currency, banking, or investment advice. Anyone seeking such advice should consult a
properly qualified and accredited professional. All readers of this article are
emphatically advised to obey all laws on Earth and in the Universe to the letter.
The No-Opposition Strategy
"If you can avoid it, never play on the other guy's field, by the other guy's rules,
or with the other guy's ball. He didn't design his system to give you
the advantage. Remember that organisms defending their own territory are twice as
effective as an intruding attacker." -- L. Neil Smith
A basic theme of the Economic Means to Freedom is
"building freedom" rather than "fighting for freedom" or
"fighting against tyranny." I believe that if a critical mass of people were to
focus on building freedom, corrupt political systems will eventually lose their power and
influence.
I don't know how many people would constitute such a
critical mass, nor how influential their economic power would have to be, in order for
their combined economic activities to have a decisive impact on the expansion of freedom,
on one hand, and the decline of the power and influence of coercive political systems, on
the other hand.
The fifth main principle of the Economic Means to Freedom
is the No-Opposition Strategy. When we oppose something, or try to reform it, we usually
encounter opposition. Our effort elicits an almost automatic counter-effort. In practicing
the Economic Means to Freedom, we don't attempt to change, oppose, reform, or overthrow
any political or economic systems. We simply create our own voluntary alternatives in the
free-enterprise sector.
In the second article of this series, I used the examples
of Ghandi, the fall of the Berlin wall, and the collapse of the soviet empire to
illustrate that the terrocrats (terrorist bureaucrats or coercive political agents) were
not invincible -- "The power of terrocrats is tenuous -- largely based on illusion,
flimsy, fragile, and of little substance."
At 01:29 AM 10/11/97 -0700, Tim Starr
<timstarr@netcom.com> wrote:
>
>[snip]
>
>Peaceful resistance can work, but ONLY
>against those who aren't willing to
>mass-murder the resisters. Gandhi &
>MLK were fortunate enough to be up
>against opponents who were unwilling to
>do so. Anyone who thinks the US
>government would be equally unwilling is
>invited to consider what happened to
>the Bonus Army in 1932, back when the
>U.S. government was considerably less
>willing to use force against its citizenry
>than it is six & a half decades later.
>
>Exaggerating the effectiveness of
>peaceful resistance is tantamount to
>sending the gullible to their deaths.
>
My examples may have created the impression that I advocate
peaceful resistance. Let me emphasize that peaceful resistance may be appropriate for
certain people in certain situations, but it does not fit at all into the context of the
No-Opposition Strategy.
Peaceful resistance is a form of opposition, which tends to
elicit counter-effort. It involves forms of "fighting for freedom" or
"fighting against tyranny."
There are various styles of practicing the Economic Means
to Freedom. The most powerful is invisibility. You operate in such a manner that
you and your economic activities are effectively invisible to terrocrats. There is no
protesting terrocrat actions; no resistance to terrocrat actions; no fighting terrocrats
in court.
Protesting, resisting, and fighting may have a place in the
Economic Means to Freedom, but have no place in the No-Opposition Strategy. There are
times to take a stand, and times to take evasive action. There are also times to just pay
the terrocrats what they demand, because that's the least evil.
In practicing the Economic Means to Freedom for a quarter
of a century, I've paid terrocrats around $500 in "fines," maybe $5,000 -
$10,000 for "car registration" and "driver's licenses," and around
$10,000 - $15,000 in various "sales taxes."
No terrocrat has ever used a gun against me, or threatened
to do so. No terrocrat has ever pointed a gun at me. Their threats have always come in the
form of words. As indicated in the first article of this series, the practitioner
of the Economic Means to Freedom may face, in general, fewer risks from terrocrats than
people "in the system."
I've received a few threatening letters from terrocrats. In
some cases I paid the "fine" demanded; in other cases I sent them a reply that
resulted in them deciding that it would be more profitable for them to pursue other,
easier victims or "marks."
By making the above payments, I supported the terrocrats.
You could argue that, to the extent I paid terrocrats, I practiced the Economic Means to
Slavery. This suggests the sixth principle of the Economic Means to Freedom.
It's Not All-or-Nothing
The sixth principle of the Economic Means to Freedom is that you don't have to suddenly
switch from one extreme to the other. You can shift into the free-enterprise sector in
stages. You can compartmentalize your life and affairs so your assets, earnings, and
economic activities are partially in the private (or even public!) sector and partially in
the free-enterprise sector.
[The first article in this series
explains the distinction between the three different economic sectors.]
Freedom Technology consists of the practical knowledge,
methods, and skills to live free; the street-smart know-how to outwit and run rings around
terrocrats; the means to protect your earnings and assets from terrocrats and other
thieves and robbers. Freedom Technology enables you to legally, elegantly, and safely
shift some or all of your economic activities into the free-enterprise sector.
Some of the practitioners of the Economic Means to Freedom,
who facilitate this shift, may become the millionaires and billionaires of the next
century. Emerging free-enterprise institutions, such as those mentioned in the first
article of this series, are likely to play an expanding role in the economic shift into
the free-enterprise sector.
An important characteristic of the shift into the
free-enterprise sector is that as it grows, it becomes easier for new people to join the
shift. The emerging financial free-enterprise institutions (see first article in series)
already make it much easier now, than it was 10 years ago, to shift into the
free-enterprise sector. And as the shift grows, so do the number of free-enterprise
businesses. This increases the opportunities for freedom lovers to work in or with
businesses that don't kowtow to terrocrats.
What to Do Next
1. Find out more about Freedom Technology at the Free
World Order website.
2. If you don't have the first two articles in this series, you can access them here.
3. Subscribe to the Free World Order and Advanced Freedom
Solutions lists, and explore with others the best ways to implement the Economic Means to
Freedom. To subscribe to the FWO list, click here. To subscribe
to the AFS list, click here.
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