11 responses to “Cato Institute Publishes Leftist Screed!, Pars Secunda”

  1. Black Bloke

    Safari MacIntosh

    Awesome.

  2. Soviet Onion

    Firefox 3.0.4 Windows XP

    And you even managed to slip in a name drop and link for the Alliance of the Libertarian Left. You rock, Roderick!

  3. Micha Ghertner

    Chrome 0.3.154.9 Windows Vista

    Roderick, could you please expand a bit on what you mean with this:

    There is little reason to suppose that payment for the labor of intellectual innovators could not be guaranteed in the same way, via an organized system of voluntary boycotts rather than by governmental force.

    How could an organized system of voluntary boycotts guarantee payment for the labor of intellectual innovators? What is the mechanism here?

  4. Bob Kaercher

    MSIE 6.0 Windows XP

    That’s at least sorta kinda like the copy-left agreement under the Creative Commons license, right? Only Creative Commons doesn’t have any voluntary court, but an author/artist who finds his work being pirated could at least spread the word that so-and-so violated the voluntary agreement implicit in acquiring the work in the first place. This would allow the general public to act as a sort of court and render a decision and action (i.e., a boycott) in regards to the pirater.

  5. Bob Kaercher

    MSIE 6.0 Windows XP

    Clarification: By “pirater”, I mean the person who’s marketing and selling your work without your permission and not giving you a cut of the profits.

  6. Michael Wiebe

    Firefox 3.0.4 Windows XP

    You’re big time now Roderick – your article is featured on Crossfit!

  7. Allen Dalton

    MSIE 7.0 Windows XP

    I’m simply dumbstruck by the responses your article has generated at the Reason blog. For those of us who grew up on Rothbard and revisionist business history, you certainly haven’t said anything outrageous. No wonder libertarianism is held in such low regard if our “friends” are of the type attacking you there. We are deeper in the wilderness than I ever expected. Maybe its time for all of us to simply throw in the towel and become Proudhonians – we can still talk about the virtues of contracts and voluntary association without all the baggage of the vulgar.