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by Frederick
Mann The following are 17 important questions you
may want to consider:
I encourage you to e-mail your answers to me at f-prime@buildfreedom.com. Or you can click here to answer the questions online.
1. Are there certain "powerful things," such that
if about 1,000 freedom activists knew, understood, and did them, they would terminate (or
render insignificant) most coercive political systems within a few decades? If so, what
might these "powerful things" be?
2. What do freedom activists have to be persuaded to accept
in order to maximize the probability that they will quickly bring about a quantum leap in
the expansion of freedom and/or liberty?
3. What things do tyrants want their victims to do that
will increase the power of tyrants while decreasing the freedom/liberty of victims?
4. What actions might victims take to increase their
freedom/liberty -- and cease to be victims -- while reducing the power of tyrants?
5. What are the tyrants' "weak spots"; where are
they most vulnerable?
6. What can freedom activists do to take advantage of the
tyrants' "weak spots?"
7. What are the most common "weak spots" of
freedom activists?
8. What do freedom activists have to do to strengthen these
"weak spots?"
9. Which thinking skills could freedom activists acquire
and/or improve that would make them more effective at expanding freedom/liberty?
10. What are the "strong points" of freedom
activists; in what respects do they have most power?
11. How can these strong points be utilized to defeat the
tyrants?
12. Consider the possibility that there are certain
"powerful things" that many people who don't care about freedom or liberty might
do that are obviously in their self-interest, and that, if done, would bring about a
quantum leap in the expansion of freedom and/or liberty; if so, what has to be sold to
them in order to persuade them to do these "powerful things?"
13. What combination of "killer applications" has
the potential to sink the tyrants?
(By "killer application" I mean an application
that achieves wide acceptance and use -- a household product or service. Examples:
telephone, wrist watch, automobile, radio, cinema, TV, personal computer, word-processing
programs, spread-sheet programs, Internet, e-mail, world wide web, etc.)
14. What "killer applications" do tyrants use to
progressively render their victims more and more helpless and dependent? -- compulsory
"state education," licensing (in many forms), Federal Reserve System, income
tax, "social security," "welfare" and subsidies (in many forms),
business regulation, utility monopolies, "land management," "pollution
control," control of the media, "war on drugs," victim disarmament
(commonly called "gun control"), "war on dead-beat dads," "save
the children," etc?
15. Can practical ways be developed for individuals to exit
("unsubscribe from") some of these "killer applications" in ways such
that the reward/risk ratio is heavily in their favor?
16. What is the single biggest obstacle to freedom that
practically every individual can effectively do something about by himself or herself?
17. What other questions should we ask?
Click here
to answer these questions online.
Addendum
Toward the end of 1996, I wrote a subset of the above questions. I posted the original 12
questions to a few lists and got some interesting responses and debating from such notable
people as Brad Barnhill, "Biophilos," Charles Curley, Jim Davidson, Tom Fosson,
"Hobbit," Victor Milan, Tim Starr, and Rick White. Gail Lightfoot sent in a
letter written by the late Karl Hess that "talks to the questions."
I predict that if we can persuade a few hundred
freedom activists from across the wide spectrum of the freedom movement to answer such
questions as mine above and Victor Milan's below, we will be able to develop a range of
powerful strategies and tactics (including practical projects), such that if we can
persuade of the order of 0.1% (or one in a thousand) of freedom activists to actively
apply (or participate in), we will be able to greatly reduce the coercive power and
influence of tyrants to the point that they will become largely irrelevant -- within a
decade.
The compilation of the initial responses to the original 12
questions is provided in Quintessential Questions to Change the
World - Part II. There I point out some potential killer applications for freedom
activists to consider. Once you see my compilation of the most useful answers to the
expanded 16 questions (to be done once I have enough feedback), I think you may agree that
my prediction above has merit.
Victor Milan's Questions
This is a "summary" of some questions posed by Victor Milan in a series of five
articles published in 'The Libertarian
Enterprise' between August and October, 1996:
Questioning
Authority - Victor Milan
1) Do you really want to be free?
2) Do you understand that a free society is vanishingly
unlikely to be achieved without enormous hardship, turmoil, and danger, to you?
3) What services do you believe government provides?
4) What can you do to provide yourself those services
without government?
5) What can you do to provide others with services
the government claims to provide, and realize a profit doing so?
6) How do we get the message out that even people who
fundamentally disagree with us will win if a free society is achieved?
Questioning
Authority Too - Victor Milan
1) What about gas and electricity? 2) What about water? 3)
How do we prevent "privatization" from being a shuck, i.e., transference of
ownership from the overt government to what amounts to 'de facto' smaller governments? 4)
What do we do to prevent our governors, county councils, or mayors from setting themselves
up as dukes, counts, and barons and yelling, "Serf's up!"? Ours in NM would try,
no question. Do you trust yours not to?
Questioning
Authority Trey: But Is It Safe? - Victor Milan
Robert Edwards: 1) What has been stopping all the brilliant
entrepreneurs of the world from doing this [competing with government] so far?
Bill Cox: 2) How do we introduce competition into
situations where an actual physical monopoly exists?
Victor Milan: 3) Can we render the State irrelevant without
breaking laws? 4) Is it safe? 5) How do we avoid the lashings of government's spiked tail?
6) Who feels bound to honor promises made to slaves?
Questioning
Authority Four - Victor Milan
1) Does everybody have to become a libertarian for us to
gain freedom?
Jackie Ralston (ralston@saber.udayton.edu): 2) "How
viable an alternative to currency is the barter system?
Michael G. Boone (boone@tima.com): "A way out of the
mess called the world situation can be found at http://www.kiva.net/~padanarm.
Try it. You just might like it. It's called going to work and actually building a better
world and letting the shit flush itself automatically."
Craig Goodrich: "Milan-type
secessionist-anarchist" -- "secession, one person at a time."
Victor Milan: 3) If you don't free yourself, how are you
going to gain freedom? 4) Do you actually expect the government to give you freedom?
Questioning
Authority #5 - Victor Milan
1) When will the shit hit the fan? 2) Are we cowards for
not being ready to fight right now? "Somebody has to take the first
step..." 3)What if Libertarians took it upon themselves to "go where no other
person has gone before?" Christine Krof Shock <bobshock@ix.netcom.com> suggests
free-enterprise, libertarian-driven space colonization may be the only feasible route to
freedom. 4) What would you do if it all fell to pieces tomorrow? 5) Whatcha gonna do when
they come for you?
Click
here to go to Part II
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