Check out Kevin Carson’s latest C4SS research paper: MOLOCH: Mass-Production Industry As a Statist Construct.
By Roderick
Check out Kevin Carson’s latest C4SS research paper: MOLOCH: Mass-Production Industry As a Statist Construct.
Tagged Conflation Debate, Left-Libertarian, Molinari/C4SS, Online Texts | 1 Response

The Empirical Me
I’m Roderick T. Long, Professor of Philosophy at Auburn University. I’m an Aristotelean/Wittgensteinian in philosophy and a left-libertarian market anarchist in social theory. (More about me here.) This blog, Austro-Athenian Empire, is a continuation of my earlier blog, archived here.
Spencer Lapsus Linguae The Thin Blue Line Boring Administrative Stuff Science Fiction PI Complex IP Financial Saga Science Fact Democracy Anarchy Terror Arma Virumque Left-Libertarian Jove's Witnesses Thank You Please May I Have Another Free the Earth Resistance Is Not Futile Rand Antiracism Ethics Guest Blogs Therapeutic State Feminism Elseblogs Can't Stop the Muzak Paterson No Borders Unethical Philosophy Cato Encyclopedia Praxeology Conflation Debate Antiquity Space Labortarian Juvenilia LGBT Personal Molinari/C4SS Left and Right Industriels Online Texts Humor
Copyright © 2012 Austro-Athenian Empire.
Very interesting read. It would be interesting to see how business would have operated without the interference of the state over the last 150 or so years.
Some thoughts:
Carson seems to say that railroads (big ones running across the nation) wouldn’t have existed without state help. I wonder what he thinks about the Great Northern. It seems to have made it across the continent without the state intervention that competing railroad lines received.
On page 21 in the section “Mass Consumption to Absorb Surplus”, there’s a lot of discussion about marketing creating demand for surplus products. I’m confused as to whether or not he believes brands would exist in the absence of state intervention. I’m guessing he does, but I’m not sure. I think there would be. A brand might signal a certain quality to the buyer.
On the subject of advertising, the way Carson writes about it makes it seem as if marketing is some sort of magical thing that makes people buy stuff. I’m also unclear on if he thinks that mass production would not exist sans state help. Maybe his arguments here are too nuanced for me.