Voluntaryism | Polcompball Wiki | Fandom

VoluntaryismVoluntaryism is a variation of Anarcho-Capitalism inhabiting the bottom right of the compass, with no specific cultural implications. It believes in voluntary funding of the state, which end up giving the state no real monopoly over violence, making it basically like any other organisation, and without having the monopoly of violence it can be considered that it seeks for an non-statal society but with a national government.

It puts a direct focus on the philosophy of immorality of starting force in peaceful individuals in an agressive and not-deffensive way.

It is the biggest intelectual influence for Rothbardian Anarchism. It was created in 1897 and is probably one the first full theoretical seen way of achieving a society completely based on liberty and property rights (Probably just preceded by "The production of security" by Gustave de Molinari, in 1849), which fully influenced Anarcho-Capitalism.

Probably the main difference is that Voluntaryism is based in Classical economics while Anarcho-Capitalism is greatly influenced by Austrian economics.

In Benjamin Tucker's words after Auberon Herbet's death: "Auberon Herbert is dead. He was a true anarchist in everything but name. How much better (and how much rarer) to be an anarchist in everything but name than to be an anarchist in name only!"

The term Voluntaryism was created by Auberon Herbert. The term was created first exposed in the book "The principles of Voluntaryism" in 1897.

It believes that the only legitimate government, by the meaning that it has for most Lib-Rights, that isn't the same as the meaning of "State" (State being the monopoly of considered legitimate coaction over the individual), is a government based on voluntary human interactions without any un-voluntary intervention over the individual.

It believes that it is never legitimate to start force against individuals whenever it is not done for defense purposes, and thus see taxes as a form of theft and believe although there can be a government to give these services it must be voluntary to pay those taxes and thus doesn't have a state, which leaves this ideology in the exact (Or almost) the same place than Ancap.

This can be usually used for the same as Anarcho-Capitalism in most cases. Since some Voluntaryists think the term capitalism was first used and created by leftist philosophers in a pejorative way, and prefer to call it Voluntaryism since it represents better the philosophy of a society based on free association without coaction from un-voluntary organisms as a state in this case, and also was created for the precise same meaning that it has right now and with no derogatory connotations.

Drawing Voluntaryism is very simple:

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Voluntaryism | Polcompball Wiki | Fandom

Rocket Propulsion Market 2020: Overview and Share Forecasted to 2027 – Market Research Posts

Rocket Propulsion market is projected to exceed USD 6 billion by 2027. The market growth can be attributed to the rising demand for enhanced defense and commercial space network. Increasing activities of space exploration, earth imagery, and atmosphere observation mission are providing a positive impact on the rocket propulsion market. Increasing technological advancements, such as all re-usable rockets, electric propulsion systems, electromagnetic drive, and introduction of green propellants are improving market competitiveness.

Request for a sample of this research report: https://www.decresearch.com/request-sample/detail/3047

Some major findings of the rocket propulsion market report include:

Major companies in the market are focused on providing new age technologies, which will help in minimizing failures and increase reliability at reduced costs. For instance, SpaceX and Blue Origin have recently demonstrated their capabilities of reusable rockets, significantly reducing the operational cost. The companies are still investing significantly to further reduce manufacturing cost by embracing additive manufacturing processes.

High initial investments and political insurgencies between nations eliminate trade networks, thereby restraining the rocket propulsion market. Rocket propulsion is a complex system and requires significant technological expertise. Many countries rely on other countries for carrying out space exploration projects. For instance, the U.S. was completely dependent on RD-160 engines developed by Energomash for its space exploration project until the political insurgencies with Russia took place in 2014. Currently, the market share of Energomash, a major Russian rocket engine manufacturer, has reduced significantly as it has lost the U.S. from its client base. Such factors are significantly hampering the global rocket propulsion market.

The demand for new technology and upgrades of existing system are contributing to the rocket propulsion market growth. The introduction of electric propulsion system and reusable rocket is supporting the growth of commercial space launch programs by significantly reducing the cost per launch. For instance, Falcon 9, a reusable rocket developed by SpaceX, has manufacturing cost of USD 54 million but during its second course, it occupied USD 200,000 as fuel cost and a few refurbishments.

Table of contents for this research [emailprotected] https://www.decresearch.com/toc/detail/rocket-propulsion-market

Companies are actively focusing on undergoing collaborations and long-term agreements to secure their market share. Commercial space travel is also one of the major markets that is expected to experience exponential growth, improving the rocket propulsion market opportunity. A few companies which include SpaceX and Blue Origin have initiated efforts to explore their opportunities in the commercial space travel segment. Other companies and government organizations are focusing on reliability and cost reduction for space exploration projects through collaborations. For instance, in April 2019, ISRO successfully conducted the PSLV-C54 lift-off from Satish Dhawan Space Centre SHAR, Sriharikota. After 17 minutes and 12 seconds of the lift-off, EMISAT successfully entered the suns synchronous polar orbit and released 28 international customer satellites into their assigned orbit. Such international collaboration reduces the cost of space travel to a larger extent.

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Rocket Propulsion Market 2020: Overview and Share Forecasted to 2027 - Market Research Posts

What you need to know for Thursday, August 6 – Lompoc Record

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. Chris Paul had 21 points, seven rebounds and six assists in the Oklahoma City Thunder's 105-86 victory over the poor-shooting Los Angeles Lakers on Wednesday night.

Danilo Gallinari scored 19 points and Steven Adams had 18 for the Thunder (42-25), who never trailed in their first win over the Lakers in four meetings this season. Oklahoma City pulled even with Houston for the fifth seed in the Western Conference playoff picture with five games left.

The 86 points were the fewest by the Lakers and by a Thunder opponent this season.

We just tried to stick to the game plan, Paul said. We tried to keep those guys off the (free throw) line as much as possible. We tried to build a wall up on LeBron when hes pushing it. Just trying to make it hard for them.

LeBron James had 19 points and 11 rebounds for the Lakers (51-16), who had another possibly concerning offensive performance while dropping to 2-2 in the bubble. Los Angeles, which has already clinched the top seed in the West and the Pacific Division title, never held a lead for the first time all season.

I think we had some great possessions, James said. I think sometimes we have some bad shot selection throughout the course of these games, but I think we got some great looks. Our defense is pretty good. We only allowed the Thunder to shoot 43% from the field. Well get our rhythm and start making some.

The Lakers went a season-worst 5 for 37 on 3-pointers and made only 35% of their shots overall. Los Angeles dropped two games behind Milwaukee for the NBA's best overall record, which won't provide a real home-court advantage in the NBA Finals this year.

Were building habits, and every time were out there we have a chance to build and find rhythms, Lakers coach Frank Vogel said. These games are still really important for us to do that.

Dion Waiters scored 14 points for the Lakers, whose poor perimeter shooting in the bubble still hasn't been fixed as they dropped to 25% on 3-pointers in their last four games. They went 1 for 12 behind the arc in the first quarter against Oklahoma City, and they missed 19 of their first 22 attempts until late in the third quarter.

The Thunder were only 5 for 24 on 3-pointers, but their steady defense and 32-for-36 effort at the free throw line led to a comfortable win.

I felt we had a good team effort in terms of getting back and letting (James) see a crowd, Thunder coach Billy Donovan said. Neither team shot it too well from behind the line today.

Thunder: They played without Mike Muscala (concussion protocol), Terrance Ferguson (bruised right leg) and Dennis Schroder, who is away from the team for the birth of his second child. ... Adams got his leg caught underneath his body when he fell in a heap with Davis during the third quarter. He left the court briefly, but returned to the game.

Lakers: Dwight Howard sat out with a sore right knee. ... Los Angeles got a scare in the third quarter when Paul elbowed Kentavious Caldwell-Pope in the ribs, forcing Caldwell-Pope to leave the game. The Lakers are already without Avery Bradley and Rajon Rondo. Caldwell-Pope returned later.

9 AD

Anthony Davis scored just nine points on 3-for-11 shooting in 29 minutes. That matches his second-lowest point total in a Lakers uniform and his lowest-scoring performance while playing at least 29 minutes since January 2018.

I think were fine, Davis said. I dont think anything is eye-opening, something that we need to be afraid of. The offense is going to come around.

76ers 107, Wizards 98

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. Joel Embiid had 30 points and 11 rebounds, and the Philadelphia 76ers held on to beat the Washington Wizards despite losing two-time All-Star Ben Simmons to a knee injury in the third quarter.

There was no immediate word from the 76ers on the extent of Simmons injury, which occurred as he landed awkwardly after grabbing an offensive rebound. At the next break in the action he walked gingerly to the locker room and did not return.

He was shown leaving the locker room in street clothes late in the fourth quarter.

Tobias Harris added 17 points for the 76ers, who pulled within a game of the Pacers for fifth place in the Eastern Conference standings.

Thomas Bryant had 19 points and 10 rebounds for the fast-fading Wizards, who have gone 0-4 since the restart and would be eliminated from playoff contention if Orlando and Brooklyn win their games later Wednesday.

Nuggets 132, Spurs 126

Michael Porter Jr. had 30 points and 15 rebounds, and Denver rallied in the fourth quarter to beat San Antonio.

Nikola Jokic added 25 points and 11 assists. Jerami Grant finished with 22 points.

Two days after posting a career-high 37 points in Denvers win over Oklahoma City, Porter stayed hot, scoring 10 of the Nuggets first 16 points against San Antonio.

San Antonio, which started the day two games behind Memphis for the final playoff spot in the West, dropped to 2-2 since the restart.

Rudy Gay scored 24 points and Derrick White added 23 points and seven assists for the Spurs (29-38).

Jazz 124, Grizzlies 115

Joe Ingles scored 12 of his 25 points in the fourth quarter, and Utah kept Memphis winless in the NBA bubble.

Mike Conley had 23 points and seven assists against his former team for the Jazz (43-25), who improved to 2-2 in the seeding round and nudged ahead of Houston (42-25) for the fourth spot in the Western Conference standings.

Dillon Brooks scored 23 points, while Grayson Allen had a career-high 20 points and six 3-pointers as the Grizzlies dropped to 0-4 in the seeding round, further endangering their chances of hanging on to the No. 8 seed in the West playoffs.

Jonas Valanciunas had 21 points and 14 rebounds, and Ja Morant added 20 points and nine assists for Memphis (32-37). But the Grizzlies have lost five straight overall since March, and Portland (31-38) leads a pack of four teams now within three games of the eighth seed.

Raptors 109, Magic 99

Fred VanVleet had 21 points and 10 assists, and Toronto held on to beat Orlando.

Pascal Siakam added 15 points and Kyle Lowry finished with eight points, nine rebounds and 10 assists.

Toronto (49-18) has won its last seven dating back to before the hiatus and three straight games since the restart.

The Magic (32-37) missed an opportunity to clinch a playoff spot following Washingtons loss to Philadelphia earlier Wednesday. But they maintained their 7 1/2-game lead over the Wizards for the eighth seed with four seeding games to play.

They also may be without forward Aaron Gordon for an undetermined amount of time after he left the game in the third quarter with a left hamstring injury after taking a hard foul from Lowry.

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What you need to know for Thursday, August 6 - Lompoc Record

Led Zeppelins Jimmy Page revealed the song that changed his life – Far Out Magazine

Its fair to say that with the Yardbirds, in-studio sessions and, of course, Led Zeppelin, Jimmy Page influenced thousands and thousands of musicians. The iconic guitarists image was up on bedroom walls around the globe and his music is still powered through speakers across the entire planet.

Yet, all icons have their heroes, and during a conversation for Bob Boilens book, Your Song Changed My Life, where the veteran journalist speaks to some of musics heroes about their own favourite songs. When he asked Page the answer became rather obvious.

Like most rock and rollers his age, when Jimmy Page was a young boy rock n roll was so far from Britain it wasnt even played on the radio. As an eight-year-old Page moved houses and, upon arriving at his new bedroom, found himself a leftover guitar from the previous residents. Though the young Page had no interest in the instrument he kept it around.

Rock n roll would of course eventually land on British shores and Page himself would do a good job in bringing his own flavour to the new sound. In fact, Page immersed himself in every piece of the delta blues he could find, giving himself a vital education as he did. But as Boilen revealed to Rolling Stone, So many Brits of that age talk about skiffle music [and] Lonnie Donegan was king.

However, there was something different about Pages relation to the Scottish singer who brought rock n roll to Britain. But it wasnt till I began to think of how Donegan changed the blues and skiffled it up that I made the connection to how Jimmy Page took Donegan and electrified it to shocking and long-lasting effects.

Page was never intent on making himself into a British version of an American product though, I wanted to have my own approach to what I did. I didnt want to do a carbon copy of B.B. King, but I really love the blues. The blues had so much effect on me and I just wanted to make my own contribution in my own way.

Lonnie Donnegans cover of the blues standard Rock Island Line, a song about two Chicagoan institutions, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad line and made famous by Lead Belly, found its way on to the radio. Page certainly hear dit many times. But it wasnt until a friend of Pages, Rod Wyatt, played the song live that something in Page was ignited.

Page told Wyatt of the guitar he had at home with Wyatt promising him that he could both tune and help Page to play the instrument. It was a campfire guitar but it did have all the strings on it which is pretty useful because I wouldnt have known where to get guitar strings from, remembers Page. And then [Rod] showed me how to tune it up and then I started strumming away like not quite like not quite like Lonnie Donegan, but I was having a go.

He really understood all that stuff, Lonnie Donegan, Page tells Boilen. But this is the way that he sort of, should we say, jazzed it up or skiffled it up. By the time you get to the end of this hes really spitting it out he keeps singing Rock Island line, Rock Island [and] you really get this whole staccato aspect of it. Its fantastic stuff! So many guitarists from the Sixties will all say Lonnie Donegan was [their] influence.

Listen to Lonnie Donegans Rock Island Line and see if you can be inspired to be the next Jimmy Page.

(Via Rolling Stone)

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Led Zeppelins Jimmy Page revealed the song that changed his life - Far Out Magazine

Black Friday Is Capitalism at Its Most Beautiful | Cole Webb Harter – Foundation for Economic Education

I went to a Daily Mass on Black Friday last year. The priest didnt waste too much time with the homily, but he made a few comments about Thanksgiving and a statement about Black Friday which I found hopefully refreshing.He said, This is a day for the poor. Of course, hes right, but how often do we think of Black Friday in those terms? As Thanksgiving and Black Friday approach once again, let us reflect on this concise but incredibly profound statement.

Black Friday is a day when the fruits of our labor are more abundant and more available for more people. Black Friday is truly one of the most beautiful examples of capitalism we have around these days.Its a day when everyone gets richer. The producers get richer because more people are buying their wonderful products, and the consumers get richer because they both come into possession of something they greatly value and because they save a little of their hard earned money in the process. This is what capitalism is all about: mutual enrichment through mutual gift-giving.

Judging by his accent and the color of his skin, this priest is almost certainly an immigrant from a very poor country.He definitely understands poverty, and the fact that he sees something charitable and Christian in a day so often sneered at by Catholics and upper-middle-class Americans in general for its apparent celebration of consumerism and materialism is extremely enlightening. The truth is Black Friday benefits the poor and the working class most of all. The rich dont need a discount. They buy what they want regardless of the price.

But Black Friday is a day when the fruits of our labor are more abundant and more available for more people. Think about this next time you mock some single mother on food stamps for taking part in a "doorbuster" crowd while trying to get a discount Christmas present for her children.It can be tumultuous, but its also a glorious celebration of the humanitarian implications of the free market.

That is the beauty of voluntaryism and capitalism: it is a descriptive, and not a prescriptive, worldview. Its very easy for people to sit back on Black Friday and exempt themselves from the rat race, to hold themselves above all those plebs scrambling for a television at half-price.The neo-Marxist left, and regrettably some libertarians, like to tsk-tsk at these people for being so foolish as to think useless junk like TVs and childrens toys and gaming consoles are worth such revelries.

This is the great tragedy of the political philosopher, who thinks he knows whats best for everyone. You dont reallyneedthat TV, you dont reallyneedthat new pair of shoes.To these people I say, get off your morally superior high horse. Who are you to say what people need and dont need? That is the beauty of voluntaryism and capitalism: it is a descriptive, and not a prescriptive, worldview. Nobody is required, let alone qualified, to decide whats best for everyone else. In a truly free market, free from government coercion and cronyism, everyone is able to allocate for themselves what resources, goods, and services they deem most valuable and essential.

Mostly we think of Black Friday as a day of crass consumerism, of greed, and irrational attachment to material goods. But just look how good life is. The free market has yielded a surplus unthinkable to even the richest members of society as recent as two hundred years ago. So stop judging and celebrate abundance.

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Black Friday Is Capitalism at Its Most Beautiful | Cole Webb Harter - Foundation for Economic Education

Satyaniti and Swaraj: The True Twin Pillars Of Society – Youth Ki Awaaz

The society which we know as India in modern times was once a society firmly placed on the twin-pillars of self-governance and voluntaryism [1-5]. Voluntaryism is a philosophy that posits that all forms of human association should be voluntary [6 and 7]. A voluntaryist society is one where people live, socialise, transact and trade without any structures of power and hierarchy, without any coercion or regressive power dynamics. The decentralisation of power, which ends with a community or family in modern times, ended only with the individual politically, socially and spiritually in ancient India.

Spontaneous order in the political and economic realms was respected and harmonized. While in the past I have written on Dharmocracy, comprehensive (political, economic and spiritual) democracy; in this piece, I go one step further in decentralisation and renegotiation of the normative to the individual. In ancient India, at least in spirit, it was Swarajya (self-rule of people within picayune kingdoms/republics so much so, that even in 1947, India had 565 princely states) not Samrajya (imperial rule), catallaxy (a synchronisation of individual economics and interests) not a modern economy (transactions with assumed common goals and interest) [8, 9]. This was the perspective that prevailed, and in such a liberal society, people lived with responsibility, peace and rationality: traits of a rarely found, open, free and transparent society [10-12].

The Vedas are the fountainhead, the spring of profound and beautiful philosophical, soteriological and spiritual principles and ideas [13-18].

Composed in Vedic Sanskrit, the Vedas constitute the oldest layer of scriptural literature within the Sanatana Dharma, with Hindus considering the Vedas to be apaurueya, not authored by a man. While monarchies prevailed in the Vedic society [19, 20]; not only was there a movement away from pre-eminence given to political power towards a more spiritual one [21, 22], but also the existence of ancient Indian republics Ganatantra, which contributed towards the decentralisation of power [23]. Whether this directly took the form of anarchism is debatable, but there was a move towards reducing the importance of the construct of a primary, overarching state and constructs of powers [24].

The Dharmic path has always been about a fearless trek into the unknown, about seeking the truth of reality [25-27]. It throws out any and every imposed normative ideal of political philosophies, and in doing so, calls for the sacrifice of attachment of the human mind with dogma and rigid political alignments. While this perspective highlights societys ills and even prescribes possible solutions, it lays a greater emphasis on mutual respect, cooperation and harmony in society rather than rigid loyalties to political constructs of the state or ideologies. This is part of the greater Dharmic realisation of the futility and fleeting nature of all constructs be it political, social or economic, in the pursuit of the Absolute Truth.

Satya, the Absolute Truth, is beyond constructs of politics and society, particularly those of state and (political) ideologies

And in doing so, it had anarchist undertones, when one considers politics: it highlighted the fallibility of human power and reasoning that can be applicable to one and all. The importance of spontaneous self-organisation and unconscious design in political entities, the significance of innovation and influence of factors and forces beyond the control of a central authority.

Satyaniti, this Dharmic anarchism, is the result of the Indic civilisation embracing the dynamism of life, and the spontaneity and capacity to the self-organization of human beings.

The principle of self-governance naturally arises from this realisation. Instead of imposed structures, the emphasis is on peaceful emergent orders without any rigid conservatism regarding hierarchy, power dynamics, and coercion. A truly Dharmic society has at its foundations a pre-eminent place for honest introspection, self-improvement and evolution of thought, and individuality thereby. This is a dynamic way of determining ones purpose of life, of ones role within society, and the key to ones happiness.

There is a distinct difference between western anarchism and Dharmic anarchism. While western anarchism is about negation and oft-violent insurrection against political structures, the Dharmic version preoccupies itself with the realisation of why the obsession with these political elements is naturally at odds with ones existence and well-being. The Rishis (seers) since times immemorial led by example in highlighting how self-governance and self-rule are significant, coupled with anarchist tendencies of not placing much importance with control of the state.

They dwelled in forests outside the control of any government be it of a monarchy or republic of ancient India. They brought forth a spiritual mooring for education and existence, a values-based living and a realisation of Rta (cosmic order) and Dharma (the path that facilitates this order, the universal cosmic principle as well equilibration in nature).

While western anarchism emphasised anti-state policies, Dharmic anarchism emphasised self-consciousness. While western anarchism went against specific rulers, Dharmic anarchism went for decentralised and non-hierarchical polities. The latter prioritises community living, sensitivity to holistic living and ecologically sustainable lifestyles. This was done with a combination of grassroot democracy (that was centralised around the unit of the Gram, village), Dharma, Varnasrama (not Jaativad) and socio-spiritual realisation of Satya, Truth.

Grassroot democracy can be seen even today with the Panchayati model. Over millennia, this turned India into not only a village-based society but also a strongly community-based, resilient society. The movement towards making these fundamental units of politics and society self-governing and self-sufficient has been seen over the ages. This was in a cooperative model, which was sustainable and nature-bound, and most importantly, independent from the state and its associated politics. Orientalists such as Metcalfe, Munroe and Wilks have described the importance of these communities in India. Kings came and went, dynasties came and went, power exchanged powers, wars took place, but what never changed beyond a point was the underlying social fabric of India, which is based on the village- and community-based model.

C. F. W. Hegel highlighted how this system made India impervious to the vagaries of despotism and subjugation by rulers and invaders, even during the colonial era. The achievement of this high level of decentralisation was that there never was a political monolith that a coloniser or invader could demolish for the Indians to fall as a people. It is this rich political heritage that naturally translates to the principle of self-governance, self-rule and Swaraj. And it is this rich political heritage that I would like to stand by.

Satyaniti and Swaraj constitute the historical backbone of the socio-political order of India, through the ages.

References:

[1] Talwar, Balvir. Sustainable growththe Vedic way.International Conference on Quality (ICQ05), Tokyo, September. 2005.

[2] Rammohan, Sethuraman. Improving Governance In The Light Of Ancient Indian Heritage Texts. (2018).

[3] Jha, Pradip Kumar. Decentralization in India: Reflections from Bihar.Journal of Politics and Governance3.4 (2014): 149-155.

[4] Singh, Gurdeep. Swami Dayananda Saraswatis Instruments in the Reformation of Indian Society.

[5] Mohapatra, Amulya Ranjan.Swaraj: A Multi-Dimensional Concept. Readworthy, 2009.

[6] Herbert, Auberon Edward William Molyneux.The principles of voluntaryism and free life. Free Press Association, 1897.

[7] Watner, Carl. Stateless, not lawless: voluntaryism and arbitration.The voluntaryist84 (1997): 1-8.

[8] Tilak, Deepak, and Geetali Tilak. Swarajya and Tilak. (2019).

[9] Nikam, N. A. Indian Thought and the Philosophic Bases of Responsibility of Man.Revue Internationale de Philosophie(1957): 75-87.

[10] Kuppuswamy, Bangalore.Dharma and society: A study in social values. Macmillan, 1977.

[11] Londhe, Manali. Vedic Concept of Rta: The Cosmic Order.Proceedings of the XXIII World Congress of Philosophy. Vol. 16. 2018.

[12] Saravanamuthu, Kala. Gandhian-Vedic.Envisioning a New Accountability (Advances in Public Interest Accounting, Volume 13). Emerald Group Publishing Limited(2007): 177-235.

[13] Halbfass, Wilhelm. The Idea of the Veda and the Identity of Hinduism.Defining Hinduism. Routledge, 2017. 16-29.

[14] Goodall, Dominic, ed.Hindu scriptures. University of California, 1996.

[15] Macnicol, Nicol.Hindu scriptures. Univ of California Press, 1996.Remove featured image

[16] Zaehner, Robert Charles.Hindu scriptures. Motilal Banarsidass Publ., 2001.

[17] Frawley, David.Wisdom of the ancient seers: Mantras of the Rig Veda. Motilal Banarsidass Publ., 1994.

[18] Wilson, H. H. Rig-Veda Sanhita: A Collection of Ancient Hindu Hymns, Vol. (1888).

[19] Bedekar, V. M. VEDIC FOUNDATIONS OF INDIAN CULTURE. (1976): 223-226.

[20] Singh, Sarva Daman. Monarchy in the Vedic Age.Australian Journal of Politics & History35.3 (1989): 338-352.

[21] LINDBLAD, J. THOMAS. The Ultimate Implications of the Ancient Hindu Concept of Sovereignty: The Principle of.Journal of Indian History: Golden Jubilee Volume(1973): 193.

[22] Sinha, Braj M. SVADHARMA AND SVABHVA IN THE BHAGAVADGT.Journal of South Asian Literature23.2 (1988): 144-149.

[23] Pandey, R. B. Vedic origin of Indian republics. Proceedings of Indian History Congress; 15th. session, Gwalior. 1952.

[24] Weir, Kay. A brief history of anarchism.Pacific Ecologist19 (2010): 48-50.

[25] Agarwal, Manjul K.The Vedic Core of Human History: And Truth Will Be the Savior. iUniverse, 2013.

[26] Edgerton, Franklin. The Upanisads: what do they seek, and why?.Journal of the American Oriental Society(1929): 97-121.

[27] Nigal, Sahebrao Genu.Vedic philosophy of values. Northern Book Centre, 2009.

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Satyaniti and Swaraj: The True Twin Pillars Of Society - Youth Ki Awaaz

Satyaniti and Swaraj constitute the historical backbone of the socio-political order of India, through the ages – OpIndia

Society in the lands we know in modern times as India once was a society firmly placed on the twin-pillars of self-governance and voluntaryism [1-5]. Voluntaryism is a philosophy that posits that all forms of human association should be voluntary [6, 7]. A voluntaryst society is one where people live, socialise, transact and trade without any structures of power and hierarchy, without any coercion or regressive power dynamics. The decentralisation of power, which ends with a community or family in modern times, ended only with the individual, politically, socially and spiritually, in ancient India. Spontaneous order in political and economic realms were respected and harmonized. While in the past I have written on Dharmocracy comprehensive (political, economic and spiritual) democracy, in this piece, I go one step further in decentralisation and renegotiation of the normative to the individual. In ancient India, atleast in spirit, it was Swarajya (self-rule of people within picayune kingdoms/republics so much so, that even in 1947, India had 565 princely states) not Samrajya (imperial rule), catallaxy (a synchronisation of individual economics and interests) not a modern economy (transactions with assumed common goals and interest) [8, 9]. This was the perspective that prevailed, and in such a liberal society, people lived with responsibility, peace and rationality, in what was a rarely found open, free and transparent society [10-12].

The Veda are the fountainhead, the spring of profound and beautiful philosophical, soteriological and spiritual principles and ideas [13-18].

Composed in Vedic Sanskrit, the Veda constitute the oldest layer of scriptural literature within Santana Dharma, with Hindus considering the Vedas to be apaurueya, not authored by man. While monarchies prevailed in Vedic society [19, 20], not only was there a movement away from preeminence given to political power towards a more spiritual one [21, 22] but also the existence of ancient Indian republics Ganatantra, which contributed towards decentralisation of power [23]. Whether this directly took the form of anarchism is debatable, but there was a move towards reducing the importance of the construct of a primary, overarching state and constructs of powers [24]. The Dharmic path has always been about a fearless trek into the unknown, about seeking the truth of reality [25-27]. It throws out any and every imposed normative ideal of political philosophies, and in doing so, calls for the sacrifice of attachment of the human mind with dogma and rigid political alignments. While this perspective highlights societys ills and even prescribes possible solutions, it lays a greater emphasis on mutual respect, cooperation and harmony in society rather than rigid loyalties to political constructs of the state or ideologies. This is part of the greater Dharmic realisation of the futility and fleeting nature of all constructs, be it political, social or economic, in the pursuit of the Absolute Truth:

Satya, the Absolute Truth, is beyond constructs of politics and society, particularly those of state and (political) ideologies

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And in doing so, it had anarchist undertones, when one considers politics: it highlighted the fallibility of human power and reasoning that can be applicable to one and all, the importance of spontaneous self-organisation and unconscious design in political entities, significance of innovation and influence of factors and forces beyond the control of a central authority.

Satyaniti, this Dharmic anarchism, is the result of the Indic civilisation embracing the dynamism of life, and the spontaneity and capacity to self-organize of human beings.

The principle of self-governance naturally arises from this realisation. Instead of imposed structures, emphasis is on peaceful emergent orders without any rigid conservatism regarding hierarchy, power dynamics and coercion. A truly Dharmic society has at its foundations a preeminent place for honest introspection, self-improvement and evolution of thought and individuality thereby. This is a dynamic way of determining ones purpose of life, of ones role within society and the key to ones happiness.

There is a distinct difference between western anarchism and Dharmic anarchism. While western anarchism is about negation and oft-violent insurrection against political structures, the Dharmic version preoccupies itself with the realisation of why obsession with these political elements is naturally at odds with ones existence and well-being. The Rishis (seers) since times immemorial led by example, in highlighting how self-governance and self-rule is significant, coupled with anarchist tendencies of not placing much importance with control of the state. They dwelled in forests outside the control of any government, be it of a monarchy or republic of ancient India. They brought forth a spiritual mooring for education and existence, a values-based living and a realisation of Rta (cosmic order) and Dharma (the path that facilitates this order, the universal cosmic principle as well equilibriation in nature).

Read- Satyatva or the Absolute Truth: Resonances across Religions and Rejection of Exclusivism

While western anarchism emphasised anti-state policies, Dharmic anarchism emphasised self-consciousness. While western anarchism went against specific rulers, Dharmic anarchism went for decentralised and non-hierarchical polities. The latter prioritises community living, sensitivity to holistic living and ecologically sustainable lifestyles. This was done with a combination of grassroot democracy (that was centralised around the unit of the Gram village), Dharma, Varnasrama (not Jaativad)and socio-spiritual realisation of Satya Truth.

The grassroot democracy can be seen even today with the Panchayati model. Over millenia, this turned India into not only a village-based society but also a strongly community-based and resilient society. The movement towards making these fundamental units of politics and society self-governing and self-sufficient has been seen over the ages. This was in a cooperative model, which was sustainable and nature-bound, and most importantly, independent from the state and its associated politics. Orientalists such as Metcalfe, Munroe and Wilks have described the importance of these communities in India. Kings came and went, dynasties came and went, power exchanged powers, wars took place. What never changed beyond a point was the underlying social fabric of India, based on the village- and community-based model. C. F. W. Hegel highlighted how this system made India impervious to the vagaries of despotism and subjugation by rulers and invaders, even during the colonial era. The achievement of this high level of decentralisation was that there never was a political monolith that a coloniser or invader could demolish for the Indians to fall as a people. It is this rich political heritage that naturally translates to the principle of self-governance, self-rule and Swaraj, and it is this rich political heritage that I would like to stand by.

Satyaniti and Swaraj constitute the historical backbone of the socio-political order of India, through the ages.

References:

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Satyaniti and Swaraj constitute the historical backbone of the socio-political order of India, through the ages - OpIndia

Satyaniti and Swaraj constitute the historical backbone of India – Global News Hut

Society within the lands we all know in fashionable occasions as India as soon as was a society firmly positioned on the twin-pillars of self-governance and voluntaryism [1-5]. Voluntaryism is a philosophy that posits that every one types of human affiliation needs to be voluntary [6, 7]. A voluntaryst society is one the place individuals stay, socialise, transact and commerce with none constructions of energy and hierarchy, with none coercion or regressive energy dynamics. The decentralisation of energy, which ends with a group or household in fashionable occasions, ended solely with the person, politically, socially and spiritually, in historical India. Spontaneous order in political and financial realms had been revered and harmonized. Whereas previously Ive written on Dharmocracy complete (political, financial and religious) democracy, on this piece, I am going one step additional in decentralisation and renegotiation of the normative to the person. In historical India, atleast in spirit, it was Swarajya (self-rule of individuals inside picayune kingdoms/republics a lot so, that even in 1947, India had 565 princely states) not Samrajya (imperial rule), catallaxy (a synchronisation of particular person economics and pursuits) not a contemporary economic system (transactions with assumed frequent targets and curiosity) [8, 9]. This was the attitude that prevailed, and in such a liberal society, individuals lived with duty, peace and rationality, in what was a not often discovered open, free and clear society [10-12].

The Veda are the fountainhead, the spring of profound and exquisite philosophical, soteriological and religious rules and concepts [13-18].

Composed in Vedic Sanskrit, the Veda represent the oldest layer of scriptural literature inside Santana Dharma, with Hindus contemplating the Vedas to be apaurueya, not authored by man. Whereas monarchies prevailed in Vedic society [19, 20], not solely was there a motion away from preeminence given to political energy in direction of a extra religious one [21, 22] but in addition the existence of historical Indian republics Ganatantra, which contributed in direction of decentralisation of energy [23]. Whether or not this straight took the type of anarchism is debatable, however there was a transfer in direction of lowering the significance of the assemble of a main, overarching state and constructs of powers [24]. The Dharmic path has all the time been a couple of fearless trek into the unknown, about searching for the reality of actuality [25-27]. It throws out any and each imposed normative best of political philosophies, and in doing so, requires the sacrifice of attachment of the human thoughts with dogma and inflexible political alignments. Whereas this angle highlights societys ills and even prescribes doable options, it lays a better emphasis on mutual respect, cooperation and concord in society fairly than inflexible loyalties to political constructs of the state or ideologies. That is a part of the better Dharmic realisation of the futility and fleeting nature of all constructs, be it political, social or financial, within the pursuit of the Absolute Fact:

Satya, the Absolute Fact, is past constructs of politics and society, notably these of state and (political) ideologies

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And in doing so, it had anarchist undertones, when one considers politics: it highlighted the fallibility of human energy and reasoning that may be relevant to every body, the significance of spontaneous self-organisation and unconscious design in political entities, significance of innovation and affect of things and forces past the management of a government.

Satyaniti, this Dharmic anarchism, is the results of the Indic civilisation embracing the dynamism of life, and the spontaneity and capability to self-organize of human beings.

The precept of self-governance naturally arises from this realisation. As an alternative of imposed constructions, emphasis is on peaceable emergent orders with none inflexible conservatism relating to hierarchy, energy dynamics and coercion. A very Dharmic society has at its foundations a preeminent place for trustworthy introspection, self-improvement and evolution of thought and individuality thereby. This can be a dynamic means of figuring out ones function of life, of 1s position inside society and the important thing to at least ones happiness.

Theres a distinct distinction between western anarchism and Dharmic anarchism. Whereas western anarchism is about negation and oft-violent rebellion in opposition to political constructions, the Dharmic model preoccupies itself with the realisation of why obsession with these political components is of course at odds with ones existence and well-being. The Rishis (seers) since occasions immemorial led by instance, in highlighting how self-governance and self-rule is important, coupled with anarchist tendencies of not inserting a lot significance with management of the state. They dwelled in forests outdoors the management of any authorities, be it of a monarchy or republic of historical India. They introduced forth a religious mooring for training and existence, a values-based dwelling and a realisation of Rta (cosmic order) and Dharma (the trail that facilitates this order, the common cosmic precept as nicely equilibriation in nature).

Learn- Satyatva or the Absolute Fact: Resonances throughout Religions and Rejection of Exclusivism

Whereas western anarchism emphasised anti-state insurance policies, Dharmic anarchism emphasised self-consciousness. Whereas western anarchism went in opposition to particular rulers, Dharmic anarchism went for decentralised and non-hierarchical polities. The latter prioritises group dwelling, sensitivity to holistic dwelling and ecologically sustainable life. This was carried out with a mix of grassroot democracy (that was centralised across the unit of the Gram village), Dharma, Varnasrama (not Jaativad)and socio-spiritual realisation of Satya Fact.

The grassroot democracy might be seen even right this moment with the Panchayati mannequin. Over millenia, this turned India into not solely a village-based society but in addition a strongly community-based and resilient society. The motion in direction of making these elementary items of politics and society self-governing and self-sufficient has been seen over the ages. This was in a cooperative mannequin, which was sustainable and nature-bound, and most significantly, impartial from the state and its related politics. Orientalists resembling Metcalfe, Munroe and Wilks have described the significance of those communities in India. Kings got here and went, dynasties got here and went, energy exchanged powers, wars happened. What by no means modified past some extent was the underlying social cloth of India, primarily based on the village- and community-based mannequin. C. F. W. Hegel highlighted how this method made India impervious to the vagaries of despotism and subjugation by rulers and invaders, even in the course of the colonial period. The achievement of this excessive degree of decentralisation was that there by no means was a political monolith {that a} coloniser or invader may demolish for the Indians to fall as a individuals. Its this wealthy political heritage that naturally interprets to the precept of self-governance, self-rule and Swaraj, and its this wealthy political heritage that I wish to stand by.

Satyaniti and Swaraj represent the historic spine of the socio-political order of India, via the ages.

References:

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Satyaniti and Swaraj constitute the historical backbone of India - Global News Hut

Bear Lake Hill Climbs were a success | News-Examiner – The Herald Journal

The Bear Lake Hill Climbs returned after a two-year break. The Hill climbs were located at the Price Ranch in Geneva ID. There was plenty of snow, and at the last minute, the weather turned cold enough that mud was not the problem it had been in the past.

There were over 500 entries with several racers running in more that one class. This years race wasnt the largest race they have had, but it turned out great. The snow was good, they were able to make a course that gave some challenges to the racers, and all turned out well.

The case was an RMSHA race. The Bear Lake Rim Riders hosted the competition. The King of the Hill was Keith Curtis from Dillion, MT. The Semi pro was won by Cole Thomas and Jadian Phaff was the Womens Queen. There were local racers and ones from as far away as British Columbia. The Hill Climbs has been a long-standing tradition in Bear Lake, but due to changing weather conditions, it was canceled for three years. With a little change in schedule and the help of the Bear Lake County Road and Bridge crew, the race was on again. Of course, that could still have not happened if it wasnt for the generous use of Carson Prices land. He has been a great supporter of these hill climbs.

RMSHA would like to thank the community for the beautiful way they turn out and the voluntaryism that makes events like this happen.

A big shout out to the Price Ranch, Bear Lake Road, and Bridge Crew, Bear Lake Rim Riders, Bear Lake Ambulance Service, State of Idaho DOT for the quick clean up of the avalanches and all the volunteers that helped make this a great event. Thank you to all involved for a successful event. The hill help did a great job of helping keep the riders safe.

Our excellent motels, Super 8, Clover Creek, and Rest Assured Inns, have clean, comfortable places for the riders to stay, and all of these things make for a great race day.

The Community can be proud of the job it does for this event.

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Bear Lake Hill Climbs were a success | News-Examiner - The Herald Journal

The Panarchist Solution to a World Divided – CounterPunch

In these days of epic collapse, with the established order rapidly disintegrating before our very eyes, mankind seems to be tearing apart at the seems and resorting to the bipolar extremes of the far-left and the far-right. And why the hell not? Poor people across the globe have grown weary of the false promises and bald-faced lies of the so-called moderates. The one thing the warring camps of extremes seem to agree on is that the mass democracy of neoliberal globalism is an epic wash. A rigged shell game that only pays out to the house, and now the house is on fire.

So we witness the spectacle of populism on both the left and the right. Record numbers of young people embracing the once tainted label of socialism while the kind of xenophobic nativism which was once only uttered in hushed tones at the far corners of church potlucks has now become mainstream fodder openly brandished like Hermann Goerings revolver. These are the times that we live in but weve seen them before. Whenever empires crumble and the fixed markets of state capitalism find themselves in peril. The people who stand to gain the most from the cataclysm find themselves divided on the opposite ends of the barracks. Stalinists and Brown Shirts. Antifa and the Alt-right. Its times like these when the call of Samuel L. Jacksons prophetic DJ in Spike Lees classic dissection of urban upheaval, Do the Right Thing, rings like tinnitus through my eardrums. Can we live together?! Together, can we live?!! Ive spent my life in search of an answer to that existential question. I believe Im getting closer.

Ive always found myself on the far-left end of the barracks, even while the proletariat was still drunk on the delusions of progress that came with the first black president and Apple Store commodity fetishism. I discovered Marx young and Chomsky shortly after. I spent the lion share of my teens flirting with a carousel of Libertarian Socialist ideologies, Chomskys Syndicalism, Red Rosas Council Communism, Subcomandante Marcos Zapatizmo. All set to a hard-driving soundtrack of Billy Bragg, Joe Strummer and Zack de la Rocha.

By my late adolescence, I found myself under the spell of more statist genres of leftism, brought on by the unexpected revival of Bolivarianism in Hugos Venezuela and Evos Bolivia. I eventually came to embrace Third World Communism as a bulwark against Northern attacks on these democratic social experiments. I came to see Fidel Castros harshly undemocratic measures to protect the Cuban Revolution in the wake of Kennedys terrorist campaign against it as the only solution to imperialism. But my appetite for history wouldnt allow me to hold on to that delusion for very long. Upon further studies, I came to the conclusion that the state itself was cancer and it mattered little how benevolent its managers were. It was always a wicked contraption designed to oppress before it self-destructs. I turned back to anarchism but contradictions continued to haunt me.

The biggest problem with nearly every school of leftism is its almost messianic assumption that mankind can be united in internationalist harmony beneath the banner of a single way. As much as I may believe that my own brand of Post-Marxist Syndicalism is the ideal model for a truly democratic society, I had trouble convincing myself that someday mankind would reach a singular collective consciousness and fall in love with the guild. Frankly, as an anti-imperialist, Ive always been uneasy with these sort of notions of internationalism.

Assuming that some 19th-century factory workers in industrial Western Europe had all the answers for my friendly neighborhood primitivists in the Amish community, let alone the tribes of Borneo or the Kalahari, just smacks bitchingly of colonialism. With a world so beautifully complex, how could there ever be just one way? This seemed like the same trap that lead our Founding Fathers to set the stage for the neoliberal hellhole of global capitalism, only ours was an egalitarian Manifest Destiny. I believed very strongly in the ideals of Murray Bookchin and Rudolph Rocker, but these contradictions kept me from seeing even my own anarchism as anything more than a distant pipe dream. That is, until I discovered the philosophy of Panarchy.

One of the biggest misconceptions about anarchism is that it is defined by the absence of government. Such notions are patently absurd. Governments have, do and always will exist. A government is any gathering of individuals brought together to make collective decisions. Technically speaking, three stoned roommates debating over pizza topping is a government. Anarchy is defined by the absence of the state, a permanent government micromanaged by a class of professional politicians, be they corporate board members, congressmen or monarchs. The very existence of this managerial class is what makes a simple government a state. Anarchy, in all its forms, seeks to abolish this hierarchy and replace it with an entirely civilian government. Panarchy is the recognition that in our world, in this diverse cultural landscape known as mankind, there is no singular answer to the scourge of the state. Anarchy can only exist outside of manifestos and punk rock venues when it is free to take on any form, regardless of adjectives, as long as it does so voluntarily and free from force.

Globalism has brought on nothing but colossal super-states. The tyranny of bigness, big government, big business, big race, big religion. This problem cannot be solved by hijacking these systems and rebranding them as internationalism. The only valid solution to this mass tyranny is localism and thats precisely what Panarchy embraces, the idea that government can only succeed on the same grounds as any other relationship, through reversible contracts between consenting parties committed to voluntaryism and non-aggression above all else. These could be mutual aid societies, autonomous communes, democratic syndicates, tribal orders, a quilt-work of endless Utopian experiments competing peacefully for their citizenrys patronage with individuals free to opt-out and collectives free to succeed at anytime. Ideally, these governments would exist like social clubs with benefits, completely untethered by geography. Making it entirely possible for six stateless nations to exist on a single square block.

Whats the catch, you ask? And there is always a catch. The catch is that freedom of society exists under the same parameters as freedom of speech. Panarchy doesnt just protect the societies you like, it protects the societies you hate. Under the grand contract of a confederal constitution, people would be free to build societies based around any ideology as long as they remained peaceful and voluntary. That means societies based on Mutualism, Syndicalism, Capitalism and Communism. But that also more than likely means peaceful nations governed by ideologies like Religious Fundamentalism, Geographic Integralism and even Racial Separatism. Allowing such societies to exist does not mean condoning them anymore than freedom of speech means condoning hate speech. Its a matter of excepting the reality that true liberty means respecting the decisions of others, however misguided, to live voluntarily however they damn well please, provided they do so peacefully, much like my clannish Amish neighbors who peacefully coexist with wicked English trannies like me.

This philosophy runs anathema to the current culture of both the far-left and the far-right, who both seem to define themselves by their guttural opposition to the others very existence. But I see this catch as the solution to a proletariat that will always remain divided across complex cultural lines. When they lack the nifty shield of persecuted victim-hood, the Fascist right tends to lose its appeal to the masses. Every time one of those goosestepping pricks gets hammered by Antifa, there book sales go through the fucking ceiling. I have to believe in the Kropotkinite theory that free mutual aid leads left towards true egalitarian evolution. When free to compete peacefully, the more malignant fear-based cultures will dwindle while the open communal ones will thrive. The beauty is that the far-right is free to believe the very same thing about my Queer Syndicalist Tribe. They get the opportunity to prove me wrong just as I do them, but the both of us will be too small to waste our energy on combat. Micro-nations make any form of sustained warfare an act of mutually assured destruction. Coexistence becomes the only sustainable way to exist.

And this is how I believe we can live together, Communists, Nationalists, melting pots and Isolationists, together we can live. Behind every apocalypse hides an opportunity for Utopia. The Panarchist says why not a thousand? Why not? Tis the season after all.

Continued here:

The Panarchist Solution to a World Divided - CounterPunch

Introduction to Voluntaryism – The Art of Not Being Governed

The following is a post by guest-author Peter Miller.

In this essay I will discuss the philosophy of Voluntaryism. In Section 1, I will explain the basic principles of this philosophy, then in Section 2, I will discuss some of the more controversial logical conclusions of the philosophy. In Section 3, I will provide some responses to common objections that people raise to Voluntaryism, and I will wrap it all up in Section 4 with some general comments on the future of Voluntaryism.

1. What is Voluntaryism?

Conceptually, Voluntaryism is a very simple moral philosophy it is the basic proposition that all human interaction should be directly consensual. Voluntaryism rejects the initiation of force in all its various forms including physical violence, threats of violence, theft, bullying, slavery, rape, murder, etc. However, unlike Pacifism, Voluntaryism does not bar the victim of coercion from responding in a strictly self-defensive manner. And voluntaryism completely rejects any attempts to construe offense as defense, such as the phrase the best defense is a good offence. Finally (and this barely needs mentioning, but for the sake of providing a complete definition I will include it) voluntaryism does not discriminate on race, gender, age, sexual orientation or physical or mental ability.

Hopefully, up to this point readers will not think that anything remarkable has been said. The above definitions really should sound less like a novel philosophy and more like how I already live and experience my life. Indeed 90% of human interactions are already conducted in the voluntary manner described above. In the next section I will discuss the remaining 10% of interactions which contradict the voluntary philosophy. (note that 90% and 10% are just numbers I made up to signify most and a small amount respectively).

2. Some Controversial Conclusions of Voluntaryism

Based on the above definitions, most people would agree that voluntaryism is a moral philosophy worth upholding. However, in my experience almost all these people will alter their stance and completely reject Voluntaryism when they discover what the logical conclusions of Voluntaryism entail. Here I will list and briefly discuss some of the logical conclusions which people typically find controversial:

Voluntaryism rejects trade restrictions (such as prohibition of substances or weapons)

The uncoerced passage of goods between seller and buyer is one of the most important consequences of the Voluntaryist philosophy. For the exchange to be voluntary, both parties must be free to set their own terms for the exchange. The seller must be free to charge any price and the buyer must be free to request any price. Both parties must be free to reject the other partys price and indeed the whole trade if desired. Obviously theft is the polar opposite of this voluntary arrangement and therefore is completely rejected under Voluntaryism.

If the seller fears that the buyer may use the exchanged goods for a purpose which he (the seller) does not personally agree with then, according to the Voluntaryist philosophy, the seller is completely justified in refusing to trade. For example, the seller might fear that the buyer would use the weapons he sells to attack innocent people, in which case he would be free to boycott the deal. Likewise, someone may buy a house then discover that there are marijuana plants growing in the garden. If this person does not approve of the use of marijuana then, according to the voluntaryist philosophy, there is no requirement to sell the plants even if doing so would be profitable.

Voluntaryism supports the acquisition of any weapon for defensive purposes, and denies the legitimacy of a third party to interfere in a trade of such goods. Ownership and use of drugs (e.g. alcohol, caffeine, tobacco, heroin) are unrelated to coercion and is therefore fully permissible under the Voluntaryist philosophy. Therefore Voluntaryism does not permit a third party to interfere against the wishes of the buyer and seller in drug trades.

Voluntaryism rejects taxation (regardless of the purpose of this tax)

Taxes are a form of involuntary exchange, and are synonymous with theft. Without the initiation of force, taxes would cease to exist. Taxes are not subject to voluntary negotiation between buyer and seller, but rather they consist of a third party forcefully intervening in a transaction to extract an arbitrary amount.

As this is one of the hardest concepts for newcomers to Voluntaryism to understand, I will devote a large portion of the Section 3 to responding to common objections to the claim that taxation is theft.

Voluntaryism rejects both non-defensive wars and mandatory conscription for any war

As was briefly mentioned in the first (definitions) section, Voluntaryism can be distinguished from pacifism in that Voluntaryism permits self-defense while Pacifism does not. Therefore the Voluntaryist response to a threat of invasion is to fend off the attackers, using deadly force only as a last resort; whereas the pacifist response would be to stand by and observe (or be killed) as the attackers invade.

However, initiating an attack, regardless of the intended purpose of that attack, runs directly against the Voluntaryist philosophy. For example, if there is a strong suspicion that a neighboring regime is amassing for an attack, the Voluntaryist response would not be to preemptively attack the regime, but rather to ensure that all grievances are dealt with and restitution made for any wrongs. If the regime is unreasonable and still wishes to invade, then the Voluntaryist course of action might be to strengthen the defenses. It would probably also be wise to inform the regime that these defenses are not for the purpose of launching an attack, so as to minimize the chances of an arms race.

One other important issue relating to voluntary self-defense on a large scale is the procurement of mercenaries. According to Voluntaryism, mandatory conscription must be rejected as this involves forcing someone to do something (fight) against their own will. Rather, Voluntaryism requires that mercenaries freely choose to conduct any defensive activities. And of course those who wish for the mercenaries to defend them are free to provide incentives (e.g. money, land, etc.) in exchange.

In Section 3 I will respond to the objection that these mercenaries would turn on those whom they have agreed to defend.

Voluntaryism = Anarchy

As you will probably have noticed from the above conclusions, the main opponent of Voluntaryism is government. This may come as a shock to those who considered the definition of Voluntaryism given in the first section to be a good definition of morality. If voluntaryism is synonymous with morality then the opposite of Voluntaryism must also be the opposite of morality, which makes government inherently immoral.

This is not to say that all the things that government does are necessarily immoral, but rather that the manner in which these things are done is immoral. For example, providing welfare for the disabled would seem to be a very moral activity and this is indeed something which governments do. However, the manner by which the welfare money is obtained to give to the disabled is of vital importance. Governments obtain their money either through taxation or legal tender laws and the printing of money (inflation), both of which require the initiation of force, so the only moral action to take with this money is to return it to its victims. In Section 3 I will refute the objection that the poor and disabled would go without welfare in a voluntary society.

It also bears mentioning here that anarchy can mean different things to different people. Some people associate anarchy with chaos indeed this is a typical usage of the word, while others associate anarchy with a lack of private property (communism). However, when I say anarchy in this essay I simply mean no government. This does not mean no rules, but rather no involuntary rulers. Voluntaryism of course permits people to voluntarily subjugate themselves to rulers (for example, a personal trainer is a form of ruler, and so can be an employer), however it is the rulers who have not been appointed in a directly consensual manner who are illegitimate under Voluntaryism.

By this stage you may be feeling fairly shocked. My guess is that you had never considered things such as drug prohibition, taxation, or mandatory conscription to be immoral and, unless you are in a tiny minority, I am fairly certain that you have never considered anarchy to be moral. The sad fact is that the most powerful people in the world in which we live write laws which directly contravene the Voluntaryist philosophy. However, Voluntaryism is somewhat vindicated by the fact that the average person interacting with their friends, or buying things at the shops or just going about their everyday lives is already acting according to the Voluntaryist philosophy.

3. Responses to Common Objections to Voluntaryism

I will start this section with a brief discussion on a couple of the positive aspects of human nature namely human compassion for others who are less fortunate than ourselves, and the human tendency to work to improve our own lives both via individual creativity and via cooperation with others. I will be referring back to these points as I respond to some common objections to Voluntaryism later on in this section.

Just as almost all humans have two legs and two arms, so almost all humans feel compassion for each other. Researchers at Princeton university have found that the human brain seems wired up to respond to others suffering [1]. They found that helping others triggers activity in the caudate nucleus and anterior cingulate, portions of the brain that turn on when people receive rewards or experience pleasure. This is a rather remarkable finding helping others brings the same pleasure we get from the gratification of personal desire. While it may be rare for someone to devote their entire life solely to helping others, it is not rare for a large number of people to devote a much smaller amount of effort to helping their fellow man. 1000 people donating their time and effort for merely an hour each week have a far greater effect than a single mother Teresa diligently devoting every hour of her life to the same cause.

Another positive aspect of human nature is the human tendency to work to improve ones own life. In its most basic (microeconomic) form this trait is essential for human survival. Examples include working to feed oneself, clothe oneself, and shelter oneself from harsh environments. The more complex (macroeconomic) form of this trait is responsible for all the economic progress we enjoy in our modern high-tech world. Examples include the development of the a combine harvester which enables a single farmer to do the same amount of work previously requiring thousands of people, the development of medical equipment and techniques which have helped extend the human lifespan from less than 30 years to over 75 years, and supersonic air travel which can transport people from one side of the globe to the other in under a day (to name a small fraction of human accomplishments!). All of these accomplishments are due to individual and collaborative human creativity. It also bears mentioning that coercion has never been necessary for the development of inventions. People do not need a gun to their head to develop innovative things they will do so both because they find it fulfilling and because the rewards are great.

With these human traits in mind I will now answer some of the most common objections to the Voluntaryist philosophy:

Without taxation the poor and disabled would starve to death

The first thing to note here is that the objection does not dispute the fact that taxation is theft. Rather, it focuses on the consequences of eliminating tax. In other words, this objection presupposes that the initiation of force (theft in this case) is justifiable so long as the ends are sufficiently worthy. This notion is actually part of another common philosophy known as consequentialism. Voluntaryism on the other hand comes under the deontological ethics category of philosophy. Entire books have been devoted to debating the relative merits of these two philosophies, so obviously I will not go to such a deep level here. However I will counter this particular claim by simply altering the ends in question.

Consider the following scenario there is a need to provide clean water, clothing, medical equipment, etc. to the worlds poorest people many of whom are currently living hand-to-mouth in Africa. I will proceed under the assumption that the person raising the objection agrees that providing these ends is a very worthy goal. Therefore I might propose to the objector the following means to achieve this goal: tomorrow I will begin stealing cars, starting with yours, and I will then be selling them to donate the proceeds to the starving African people. My guess is that the objector would be outraged at this idea. So I might continue, but dont you care about those who are starving in Africa?. And I would expect that the objector to respond, of course I do, but this worthy cause does not warrant your stealing my property. Id be prepared to donate voluntarily to an African charity, but you cant just take my things to finance your operation!

Hopefully this scenario demonstrates that stealing someones property is immoral, even for the noble motive of helping the poor and disabled. As I discussed at the start of this section, people are naturally compassionate, and when faced with others who are down on their luck they are naturally willing to lend a hand or give money or goods to help out.

Finally, I must add that 100% of people who raise objections to Voluntaryism will give this as one of their main objections, which I take as further proof that people are very interested in the well-being of the poor and disabled. my expectation would be that if government compulsion were removed from the equation then there would still be a widespread desire to ensure that the poor and disabled are well taken care of. Furthermore, in the absence of tax and inflation, vast additional resources would become available for this purpose.

Without taxation there would be no roads, public hospitals, police, etc.

This is another very common objection to Voluntaryism, and as with the previous objection, it does not dispute the fact that taxation is theft, but rather focuses on the consequences of eliminating tax. The underlying theme of this question is that without taxation the average person would not be able to afford basic necessities which are currently paid for with taxation. Some people will also point to the USA when stating this objection and say that when healthcare is not run by government then it costs people a lot more.

The stated objection is actually derived from another political philosophy which is very popular in western democracies today state socialism [2]. This becomes clearer when the objection is rephrased in a broader manner: it is acceptable to act in an immoral manner because doing so will result in cheaper goods or services.

There are two responses to this objection and I will give both. The first is that voluntaryism is a moral philosophy and so it is not directly concerned with economic efficiency. An example from history will serve well here. During the late 1700s in the USA, all cotton was grown and harvested by African-American slaves. The main fear of the day was that if slavery were abolished then cotton farmers profits would be lower as they would have to pay workers to do the work voluntarily. The voluntaryist response to this dilemma (which hopefully the objector will agree with) is that no amount of profit justifies enslaving someone. Likewise with roads, public hospitals and police no amount of cost reductions for some can justify stealing from others. If roads, hospitals and services which protect people can be provided via voluntary exchange (and I will explain in the next paragraph that they can), then this is completely in line with voluntaryism. But voluntaryism opposes these things both being funded by stolen money and being forcibly monopolized.

the previous paragraph may leave some readers feeling apprehensive that a voluntaryist society would be a very expensive one to live in. This leads to the second response to the objection government involvement is inherently expensive, and in fact societies in which all human interactions are directly consensual (i.e. a society of voluntary exchange) are the most economically efficient societies currently known to mankind. I wont delve too deeply into the topic of economics as it is large enough to fill many libraries, but suffice to say that:

This final point is the case for almost the entire American healthcare system, which people mistakenly cite as a model of voluntary exchange. An alternative healthcare system built on Voluntaryist principles would be the mutual-aid model which existed prior to the takeover of the healthcare market by government at the start of the twentieth century [6].

So to summarize, far from there being no roads, hospitals, and protective services in the absence of taxation, these services would actually be provided in an ethical manner and at much lower prices.

Without government warlords would take over

This objection comes up quite often. The first thing to note is the use of the word warlord to imply a coercive entity who is both legally and morally exempt. However, as discussed in Section 2, government is already the one coercive institution in almost all countries to be both legally and morally unaccountable. Governments write their own laws which govern their code of conduct, so if they wish to do something previously classified as illegal they can simply enact it into law. So the question really should be rephrased to, without a single morally exempt entity, other morally exempt entities might spring up. When put like this, the objection sounds rather strange. If the aim is to eliminate morally exempt entities then surely the first step should be to eliminate the existing one.

I suspect that when people raise this objection what they really mean is, what if, in a society run on voluntary principles, warlords were to enslave the entire population in a military style dictatorship?. The simple answer to this is that people in a voluntary society should always be prepared for such attempts and should set up mechanisms whereby this is not possible. I obviously cant predict the mechanisms that people may choose but here are some ideas:

Of course there are an infinite number of possible ways which the problem of security could be solved. In the absence of government, it would be in every persons immediate interest to seek out flaws in the security provision system and fix them. As mentioned at the start of Section 3 people are very creative when faced with challenges, and when large groups of people put their mind to a task they can be completely unstoppable. Viewed in this light, the protection offered by government defense forces no longer seems like the firewall it is commonly thought to be.

Without government the rich would take over and essentially run the country

As with the objection to voluntaryism on the grounds of warlords taking over, this objection already contains a loaded assumption. In this case the assumption is that so far the rich have not taken over and are not running the country. The reality though is that it is hard to find a country where this objection is not already the case. The average net worth of politicians is well in the millions and often in the billions of dollars in western democracies [8]. And likewise the consultants and business connections who influence these politicians are exceedingly wealthy (and in many cases are ex-politicians themselves) [9].

Voluntaryism has no objections to wealth, so long as it is earned through voluntary exchange. In fact wealth earned in this manner is a reward for providing a large number of people with the goods or services they desired. However wealth earned through legal privilege or by secretly granting political favors to business friends in exchange for a kickback is about as far from voluntary exchange as it gets.

The elimination of government, far from being beneficial to the rich, would actually close off a large source of their funding. Without the legal ability to tax or regulate money away from people, or even to print it for themselves [10] the rich would need to produce something of value to sell to willing customers.

Democratic government is already voluntary. We all agreed to be governed when we voted

While it may be true that casting ones own vote signifies ones willingness to be governed, it is certainly not true that this action signifies anybody elses willingness to be governed. If voting is synonymous with consent then those who do not vote have not given their consent, and this consent certainly cannot be given on that persons behalf. This fact is not altered by the ratio of voters to non-voters. Needless to say, voluntaryists refuse to vote.

If you dont like it here you can always leave

As with many of the previous objections, this objection contains a hidden agenda. This is best seen by rephrasing the objection: the system may well be immoral, but people like it this way. If you were to leave and stop bringing this issue up then we could all go back to pretending that things are fine.

As already discussed in Section 1, 90% of our lives in todays western democracies are already conducted according to the Voluntaryist philosophy. The remaining 10% involves peoples interactions with government. Personally I find government to be an annoyance, however not to such a point that it is unbearable. If the governments intrusion increased to a point where it did become unbearable I imagine I would seek out a new country which was more in line with voluntaryism (if one existed, if not then staying would still be the best option). However, until that happens I would prefer to attempt to open peoples minds to voluntaryism in the hope of bringing about a paradigm shift.

4. Conclusion

Now you have a fair understanding of Voluntaryism. No doubt you can think of a large number of further objections to this philosophy, maybe I will write more essays rebutting other objections. But in the meantime, rather than thinking, Voluntaryism is indeed a moral and admirable idea, but it would never work in practice, ask yourself why it would never work, and go one step further and think could it be made to work if enough people wanted it to?. Also consider whether Voluntaryism runs in line with or against human nature, and consider whether the deviations from Voluntaryism in our current world (mainly government and criminals) run in line with or against human nature. Every general objection that can be raised to Voluntaryism has been a problem at one stage of history or another, and has been solved in a voluntary manner previously. I think we have every reason to aim for such high standards again.

Finally, a quick discussion on the goals of Voluntaryism. Clearly the aim of this essay has been to try and convince the reader to join the Voluntaryist cause. But what is the Voluntaryist cause? Well really it is quite simple firstly to educate as many people as possible regarding the nature of morality. This is something that is not taught in schools, so, much as people in the 1300s took it for granted that the sun revolved around the earth, people today take it for granted that governments are capable of acting in a moral manner. If this educational enlightenment can be achieved then my guess is that the desire to eliminate forceful programs and (where applicable) replace these with voluntary alternatives will follow naturally from there.

If you agree with the Voluntaryist definition of morality I have given in the first section and if you can see how the consequences given in the second section are derived from the original definitions, and if you agree with the rebuttals in the third section then I have probably taught you all you need to know to begin your own journey of discovery. Here are some more resources for further investigation:

https://www.youtube.com/user/LarkenRose Larken Rose has some very good videos challenging common perceptions of government. In particular check out If You Were King and The Jones Plantation.

https://www.youtube.com/user/stefbot Stephan Molyneuxhosts a radio show discussing every aspect of the life of a Voluntaryist. For starters check out The Story of Your Enslavement and The Bomb in the Brain. A side note here Stefan may not be the most consistent advocate of the Non-Aggression Principle, so remember to always critically analyze everything he says. I personally have found that I disagree with him on a number of things. Nevertheless, 90% of the time he is spot on and very instructive..

https://www.youtube.com/user/StormCloudsGathering Storm Clouds Gathering is a news channel which gives updates on current events in a voluntaryist perspective. The Psychology of Authority is an excellent one.

https://www.youtube.com/user/AnCapChase Chase Rachels gives some really good lectures on practical Voluntaryist alternatives to currently state monopolized industries, such as the roads, welfare, etc.

Mises.org if you prefer reading to watching videos, the Ludwig von Mises institute publishes many articles which discuss the economics of voluntary vs. involuntary exchange. They have a daily mailing list which is always well researched and very topical.

NotBeingGoverned.com finally another one for those who prefer reading. This blog has many excellent articles on voluntaryism and economics. Check out the Anarchy Never Been Tried? articles for historical examples with aspects of voluntary societies.

[1]The Compassionate Instinct

[2] Benjamin Tucker State Socialism and Anarchism

[3]Monopoly

[4] Can Government Make Essential Choices?

[5]Inefficient Government Rules and Regulations

[6]How Government Solved the Healthcare Crisis

[7]The Stateless Society An Examination of Alternatives

[8]Top 50 Richest Politicians

[9]Revolving Door (Politics)

[10]What is Quantitative Easing?

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Introduction to Voluntaryism - The Art of Not Being Governed

Hatzalah – Wikipedia

This article is about the Emergency Medical Services organization. For the holocaust rescue organization, see Vaad Hatzalah.

Hatzalah ("rescue" or "relief" in Hebrew: ) is a volunteer emergency medical service (EMS) organization serving mostly Jewish communities around the world. Most local branches operate independently of each other, but use the common name. The Hebrew spelling of the name is always the same, but there are many variations in transliteration, such as Hatzolah, Hatzoloh and Hatzola.[1] It is also often called Chevra Hatzalah, which loosely translates as "Company of Rescuers" or "Group of Rescuers."

The original Hatzalah EMS was founded in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York, USA by Rabbi Hershel Weber in the late 1960s,[2] to improve rapid emergency medical response in the community, and to mitigate cultural concerns of a Yiddish-speaking, religious Hasidic community. The idea spread to other Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods in the New York City area, and eventually to other regions, countries, and continents. Hatzalah is believed to be the largest volunteer ambulance service in the world.[3][4] Chevra Hatzalah in New York has more than a thousand volunteer EMTs and paramedics who answer more than 70,000 calls each year with private vehicles and a fleet of more than 90 ambulances.[5]

Hatzalah organizations now function in Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Israel, Mexico, Panama,[6] Russia,[7] South Africa, Switzerland, United Kingdom,[8] Ukraine, and in 10 states in the US: California, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and Michigan. Hatzalah branches are currently being organized in other states as well.

In Israel, there are two Hatzalah organizations operating on the national level, Ichud Hatzalah (Hebrew: ), Hebrew for, "United Hatzalah", and Tzevet Hatzalah (Hebrew: ). While United Hatzalah is unarguably the larger of the two organizations, their volunteers are limited to direct response on scene care, versus Tzevet Hatzalah volunteers which are additionally licensed and authorized to provide emergency transport utilizing Magen David Adom ambulances.

Hatzalah uses a fly-car system, where members are assigned ad-hoc to respond to the emergency. The dispatcher requests any units for a particular emergency location. Members who think they will have best response times respond via handheld radios, and the dispatcher confirms the appropriate members. Two members will typically respond directly to the call in their private vehicles. A third member retrieves an ambulance from a base location.[9]

Each directly dispatched Hatzolah volunteer has a full medical technician "jump kit," in their car, with oxygen, trauma, and appropriate pharmaceutical supplies. Paramedic (EMT-P) members carry more extensive equipment and supplies, including EKG, IV, injection, intubation, and more pharmaceuticals. Each volunteer is called a unit (as in, a crew of one), and is assigned a unit number that starts with a neighborhood code, followed by a serial number for that neighborhood (e.g., "Q-303" means "Queens unit number 303"[10]). Ambulances also have unit numbers in the same format, with the first few numbers for each neighborhood reserved for the ambulance numbers.[9] Some neighborhoods have begun to assign 3-digit unit numbers to their ambulances, using numbers out of the range assigned to human member units (e.g. 900-numbers).

In some areas there may be periods where coverage is not strong enough, for example on a summer weekend. When this happens, coordinators may assign an on-call rotation. The rotation may still respond from their houses, or they may stay at the garage through their shift. In such periods, Hatzalah functions closer to a typical EMS crew setup, though the dispatchers may still seek non-on-call members to respond, and there will still often be a non-ambulance responder as first dispatched, even if that responder starts from the base.[10]

In Israel, United Hatzalah relies upon mobile phone technologies which include an SOS app and a special emergency phone number, 1221, with messages to news organizations distributed by WhatsApp.[11]

Hatzalah's model provides for speedy first responder response times. Each Hatzalah neighborhood's response time varies. For example, in Borough Park, Brooklyn daytime response in life threatening emergency are between 12 minutes and nighttime response times are 56 minutes.[12] In the Beverly-La Brea neighborhood of Los Angeles response times average at sixty to ninety seconds.[13]

Hatzalah is not a single organization. Each chapter operates autonomously, or in some cases, with varying levels of affiliation with neighboring Hatzalah chapters.[1][14]

In New York City's Hatzalah, there is a very simple operational hierarchy. Usually, there are two or three members who are "coordinators,"[15] managing all operations aspects of the chapter.

As Orthodox Jews, many volunteers see each other daily during prayers, and especially on Shabbat. This allows them to remain organized despite the lack of an extensive formal hierarchy.

The coordinators are responsible for recruitment, interaction with municipal agency operations (police, fire, and EMS), first-line discipline, and day-to-day operations. The coordinators often are responsible, directly or via delegation, for arranging maintenance crews, who are often called service members or service units, and for purchasing supplies, ambulances, and other equipment. There is also an administrative function, often separate from the coordinator function. The chief administrator is often called a director or executive director, and this is sometimes a paid position. All other positions in Hatzalah, including coordinators, are held by unpaid volunteers.

Most of the New York State branches have some centralized administration and dispatch functions, known as "Central Hatzalah," or simply, "Central." The neighborhood organizations under Central are nevertheless independent. Most Hatzalah organizations pattern themselves after the Williamsburg and Central models (see operational descriptions below).

Formally, the New York City-area "Central Hatzalah" is called Chevra Hatzalah of New York. It combines dispatch and some other functions for over a dozen neighborhood organizations, including[14] Williamsburg,[2] Flatbush, Borough Park, Canarsie, Lower East Side, Upper West Side, Midtown, Washington Heights, Queens, Rockaways & Nassau County, Seagate, Catskills, Staten Island, Riverdale, and others. As each of these areas is otherwise independent, each has its own fundraising, management, garages, ambulances, and assigned members. Rockland County, NY branches have a centralized dispatch system as well, but their central organization is separate from the other New York State centralized functions, and they have a looser relationship with their New York State brethren, though there is a great deal of cooperation among them. Together, the combined New York State branches have grown to become the largest all-volunteer ambulance system in the United States.[12]

Within Israel the largest local organization is Magen David Adom.[citation needed]

Outside of New York and Israel, there are many smaller Hatzalah organizations. Each of these operates as a self-contained unit, with no centralized organization or coordination. However, where there are other Hatzalahs nearby, there is often a great deal of cooperation.

In the United Kingdom, Hatzalah cannot use blue lights and sirens on their private vehicles [16]

Hatzalah organizations are often involved in other community activities, on top of their primary mission of emergency medical work. Many neighborhood chapters sponsor and participate in community events, both within the local Jewish community, and in the broader community.

Flatbush Hatzalah frequently plays softball against teams from local police precincts, firehouses, and hospitals.[17]

Hatzalah of Passaic/Clifton works with the local Bikur Cholim[18] to put on a yearly Health & Safety Fair at no charge to the community, with participation from both Jewish and non-Jewish presenters, said to get a turnout possibly exceeding 25% of the local community.[19]

Many Hatzalahs worldwide[20][21][22] run public relations campaigns related to safe drinking on Purim and fire safety on Chanukah and during Passover preparations. Chevra Hatzolah in New York works closely with the FDNY on this matter.

A number of items that are either unique to Hatzalah, or that are relatively unusual for an EMS include:

Most EMS rely on crews with scheduled shifts operating from a known location. Due to its members and the communities they serve usually living in proximity, Hatzolah relies little on scheduled crews and stations and rather has all service members on call 24/7 and members responding from wherever they are.[23]

Language, religion, and culture barriers create challenges for an emergency medical service.[citation needed] Hatzalah is built to consider these challenges, especially with regard to halacha (Jewish law) and communities that only speak Yiddish or Hebrew.

A Jew reluctant to violate Sabbath rules when receiving medical attention may be more at ease and easily convinced of the medical urgency when the EMT or paramedic is a fellow Orthodox Jew.[citation needed] A female worried about physical modesty and contact is helped by knowing that a Jewish provider is aware of the details of her concerns, and will act to reduce the problem as much as possible.[citation needed]

Hatzalah was the subject of controversy as articles in the New York Post[24] and JEMS Magazine[25] criticize the organization for its discriminatory practice of not allowing women to join. The group of Orthodox women founded an organization called Ezras Nashim, an all-female Orthodox Jewish volunteer EMT ambulance service.[26] They cited the need for modesty and sensitivity to the needs of fellow Orthodox women, with the goal of preserving womens modesty in emergency medical situations, especially childbirth: "This is a woman's job. Historically, women have always delivered babies in traditional Jewish values, pointing to the Hebrew Bible Book of Exodus where the first midwives were women Shiphrah and Puah.[27] In our community, women also have a very strong motivation to seek female doctors," said their lawyer, Rachel Freier, a Brooklyn Civil Court Judge and Orthodox Jewish mother of six.[28]

New York State Assembly member Dov Hikind announced on his radio show his support for Ezras Nashim[29] and he was criticized by Hatzalah.[30] The group received approval from their community's leading rabbis, including prominent Rabbi Yechezkel Roth of Karlsburg.[31] Until now, Hatzolah has operated under this controversial policy, despite receiving public funding, such as the nearly half a million dollars in funding to overhaul the communication system at Hatzolahs new command center in the Flatbush section of Brooklyn.[32]

In areas where the EMS charges a fee, lower income clientele lacking health insurance may have a reluctance to call for an ambulance unless the evidence of urgency is overwhelming. A volunteer service, with less overhead costs, tends to reduce that reluctance. Hatzolah will often handle "check-out" cases, without charge. In this way, the true emergencies among those check-outs may be recognized and treated quickly, where the caller might have otherwise not sought treatment.[33]

In contrast with most other EMS agencies, many Hatzalah volunteers will remain at the hospital with the patient long after bringing them to the emergency department. This is especially true during serious cases in order to help the patient and/or their families navigate the sometimes confusing series of events that occur during an emergency. Members will stay to explain, advocate and sometimes help make arrangements to bring in other specialists or arrange transfer to higher care facilities.

At times there have been difficulties in dealing with outside organizations, including other first-responders.[34][35]

In general, branches have excellent relations with state and local police and EMS.[36]

An example of those operating in uneven[37] or otherwise especially challenging situations[38] is Catskills Hatzolah, handling the swelling summer crowd.[39][40]

Israel's United Hatzalah has shared its expertise with a group of Arab volunteers from East Jerusalem to form an emergency first response unit called Nuran. The group since has been dismantled and the volunteers were incorporated in United Hatzalah.

United Hatzalah's relationship with Magen David Adom, however, is strained, and MDA has banned its members and volunteers from also volunteering in other rescue organizations, including Hatzalah.[41]

The Chevra NYC Central affiliates boast an excellent relationship with New York City and New York State agencies.[9]

On February 20, 2013, the Federal Communications Commission granted Chevrah Hatzalah's request for a waiver to obtain calling party numbers (CPN) even when callers have caller ID blocking.[42] Calls to 911 are exempt from CPN blocking but calls to Chevrah Hatzalah do not go through 911. Other Hatzalah dispatch numbers, including other New York State Hatzalah groups, do not have this waiver, but some are working on it.

Hatzalah members were among the first responders to the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001.[43][44][bettersourceneeded] Alongside other rescue workers, Hatzalah volunteers rescued, treated, and transported victims.[44] In the process they earned great respect from their peers in the emergency service community.[45]

Hatzalah was not dispatched by the city's 911 system, and a printout of the 911 job from FDNY EMS does not list them as responding units.[46] However, audio recordings exist of Hatzalah's own dispatch, including members calling for help during the collapse of the first tower.[47] There are also well-known photos of destroyed Hatzalah ambulances[48][49] and the destroyed cars of Hatzalah members, in the aftermath of the attack.[50]The Hatzalah units were also referred to in a memoir of 9/11 by responding NYC fireman Dennis Smith in his book Report From Ground Zero. On page 231 of the first edition he wrote: "I met two guys from Engine 39. They brought me to EMS, the Hezbollah [sic] ambulance." This was corrected in later editions.

Chapters of the organization exist in Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, England, Israel, Mexico, Russia, South Africa, Switzerland, and in the United States. The chapters in each neighborhood or city operate independently though in many cases affiliations and levels of cooperation do exist between neighboring chapters.[1][51]

See the original post here:

Hatzalah - Wikipedia

The Voluntaryist

If one takes care of the means, the end will take care of itself. -GandhiStatement of Purpose: Voluntaryists are advocates of non-political, non-violent strategies to achieve a free society.We reject electoral politics, in theory and in practice, as incompatible with libertarian principles. Governments must cloak their actions in an aura of moral legitimacy in order to sustain their power, and political methods invariably strengthen that legitimacy.

Voluntaryists seek instead to delegitimize the State through education, and we advocate withdrawal of the cooperation and tacit consent on which State power ultimately depends.

Quote of the DayHappiness and DesiresIf you have enough money to satisfy your desires ... you are rich. But there are two ways to be rich: You can earn, inherit, borrow, beg, or steal enough money to meet expensive desires; or, you can cultivate a simple lifestyle of few desires; that way you always have more than enough money. ... The secret of happiness ... is not found in seeking more, but in developing the capacity to enjoy less.- Dan Millman, WAY OF THE PEACEFUL WARRIOR (1984), pp 167-168.

We have to prove them wrong! Our stories and histories must be told and preserved.

To this purpose, we have created a section on our voluntaryist.com website titled How I Became A Voluntaryist. Already a number of autobiographies have been posted, but we would like more.

Please submit your articles in any format you wish (preferably in an email or as an email attachment). Essays will be screened for editorial purposes, and the most interesting of them will be published, as well, in our newsletter.

Commit your history to paper and the web. Please send your story now to editor (at this site) or snail to Box 275, Gramling, SC 29348.

Original post:

The Voluntaryist

Free State Project – Wikipedia

Free State Project

Logo of the Free State Project

Executive Director

The Free State Project (FSP) is a political migration founded in 2001 to recruit at least 20,000 libertarians to move to a single low-population state (New Hampshire, selected in 2003) in order to make the state a stronghold for libertarian ideas.[2] The project seeks to overcome the historical ineffectiveness of limited government activism which they believe was caused by the small number and diffuse population of libertarian activists across the 50 United States and around the world.

Participants sign a statement of intent declaring that they intend to move to New Hampshire within five years of the drive reaching 20,000 participants. This statement of intent is intended to function as a form of assurance contract. As of February3, 2016[update], 20,000 people have signed this statement of intent[3]completing the original goaland 1,909 people are listed as "early movers" to New Hampshire on the FSP website, saying they had made their move prior to the 20,000-participant trigger.[4] Approximately a dozen Free Staters were elected to the New Hampshire House of Representatives in the 2012 election[5] and about 18 in the 2014 election.

The FSP is a social movement generally based upon decentralized decision making. The group hosts various events, but most of FSP's activities depend upon volunteers, and no formal plan dictates to participants or movers what their actions should be in New Hampshire.

The FSP mission statement, adopted in 2005, states:

"Life, liberty, and property" are rights that were enumerated in the October 1774 Declaration and Resolves of the First Continental Congress[7] and in Article 12 of the New Hampshire Constitution.[8]

To become a participant of the Free State Project, a person is asked to agree to the Statement of Intent (SOI):

The FSP is open to people with a minimum age of 18 and United States citizenship is not required; people who promote violence, racial hatred, or bigotry are not welcome in the FSP.[9]

The Free State Project was founded in 2001 by Jason Sorens, then a Ph.D. student at Yale University.[10] Sorens published an article in The Libertarian Enterprise highlighting the failure of libertarians to elect any candidate to federal office and outlining his ideas for a secessionist movement, calling people to respond to him with interest.[11] Sorens soon published a follow-up article [12] backing away from secession, "and it never played a role in the FSPs philosophy from then on.[13]" Sorens has stated that the movement continues an American tradition of political migration, which includes groups such as Mormon settlers in Utah, Amish religious communities[14] and the "Jamestown Seventy",[15] an earlier effort to influence the politics of a particular state through deliberate migration.[16]

The organization began without a specific state in mind. A systematic review started by narrowing potential states to those with a population of less than 1.5 million and those where the combined spending in 2000 by the Democratic and Republican parties was less than $5.2 million, the total national spending by the Libertarian Party in that year. Hawaii and Rhode Island were eliminated from this list because of their propensity for centralized government.[17]

In September 2003, the state vote was held and participants voted using the Condorcet method to choose the state.[18] New Hampshire was the winner, with Wyoming coming in second by a 57% to 43% margin.[18] Alaska, Delaware, Idaho, Maine, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota and Vermont were also on the list.[14]

New Hampshire was chosen because the perceived individualist culture of the state was thought to resonate well with libertarian ideals.[19] However, the Free State Project has drawn criticism from some New Hampshire residents concerned about population pressure and opposition to increased taxation. On the other hand, some Republicans have responded more favorably to the project because they also favor a small government.[20]

In December 2012, state representative Cynthia Chase (D-Keene) said "Free Staters are the single biggest threat the state is facing today. There is, legally, nothing we can do to prevent them from moving here to take over the state, which is their openly stated goal. In this country you can move anywhere you choose and they have that same right. What we can do is to make the environment here so unwelcoming that some will choose not to come, and some may actually leave. One way is to pass measures that will restrict the freedoms that they think they will find here".[21]

In 2012, the Concord Police Department applied for $258,000 in federal government funding to buy a Lenco BearCat armored vehicle for protection against terrorist attacks, riots, or shooting incidents. The application said: "Groups such as the Sovereign Citizens, Free Staters and Occupy New Hampshire are active and present daily challenges". The grant from the United States Department of Homeland Security was successful and the Concord City Council unanimously approved of the grant after having revised the application to remove references to those political movements.[22]

In September 2014, Republican Party Senate nominee Scott Brown, a former United States Senator from Massachusetts, said his election campaign needed "Freestaters" to support him in his one-minute closing statement at the Granite State Debate.[23]

On February 3, 2016, the Free State Project announced via social media that 20,000 people had signed the Statement of Intent.[24] In a press conference later that day, then FSP president Carla Gericke officially announced that the move had been triggered and that signers were expected to follow up on their pledge.[25] The project organization will change focus from recruiting signers to encouraging them to move to New Hampshire, stating "we want 20,000 movers".

The Free State Project aligns itself with no political party, takes no official political positions, supports no candidates in elections and neither supports nor opposes any particular legislation.[26]

The Free State Project receives its funding from individual donors interested in moving as part of the FSP or attending one of the annual events.[27][28] Donations are tax deductible as the FSP is a tax-exempt nonprofit educational organization, falling under category 501(c)(3). This affects all donations since July 20, 2009.[29]

Several early movers have been elected to the New Hampshire legislature. In 2006, one of its participants, Joel Winters, was elected to the state legislature, running as a Democrat.[19] He was re-elected in 2008, but defeated in 2010.[30] In 2010, 12 Republican Free Staters were elected to the New Hampshire House of Representatives.[31]

On December 5, 2012, Free Stater and self-described anarchist Tim O'Flaherty was elected to the state House of Representatives under the Democratic Party ticket, representing Manchester Ward 5.[32] He was defeated for re-election in 2014.

In 2012, elected participants wrote and passed House Bill 418 which requires state agencies to consider open source software and data formats when making acquisitions.[33] However, it died in the Senate.[34]

The Free State Project is the official organizer of two annual events in New Hampshire:

In 2006, Democrat Joel Winters became the first known free stater to become elected to the 400-member New Hampshire House of Representatives.[19] Every two years, the entire House is up for election. In 2010, 12 Free Staters were elected.[31] In 2012, 11 more were elected.[32] In 2014, at least 18 were elected.[40][41] In 2016, at least 15 were elected (out of 32).[42][43]

On February 17, 2006, economist Walter Block publicly expressed his support for the FSP and is quoted as saying:

Jeffrey Tucker reflected about his experiences at the New Hampshire Liberty Forum in Nashua, saying in part: "If you are willing to look past mainstream media coverage of American politics, you can actually find exciting and interesting activities taking place that rise above lobbying, voting, graft and corruption".[46]

The project has been endorsed by Ron Paul[47] and Gary Johnson.[48]

In 2010, Lew Rockwell from the Mises Institute endorsed the project and referred to the city of Keene, New Hampshire as "The northern capital of libertarianism".[49]

In 2011, Peter Schiff said he had considered moving at one point.[50]

Critics argue that the Free State Project is "radical",[51] a "fantasy",[52] or that they "go too far" in seeking to restrict government.[53]

The Free State Project was the centerpiece of the 2011 documentary film Libertopia[54] as well as the 2014 crowdfunded documentary 101 Reasons: Liberty Lives in New Hampshire.[55]

Coordinates: 425923N 712748W / 42.9897N 71.4634W / 42.9897; -71.4634

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Free State Project - Wikipedia

Quick and Clean: 40 Non-Processed Snacks That Meet Your …

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In a society that is geared towards instant gratification, the problem with non-processed food is that it isnt quick. One of the major reasons that people give for eating processed foods over whole foods is that I needed something quick. Dont let your need for speed sidetrack your healthy eating habits.

If you are a prepper, its especially important in a disaster situation to have food that you can turn to for quick nutrition. In a grid-down situation, foods that dont require cooking can be especially vital. Some people make the mistake of relying on long-term storage foods that require lengthy cooking times, forgetting that cooking fuel might need to be rationed in order to last throughout the event. Alternatively, relying on highly processed foods will not provide you with the extra energy you need for the demands that may be placed on you physically in such a situation.

One strategy that you can employ for some instant food gratification is to make a habit of a weekly food-prep session. Spend some time each weekend washing, cutting, and cooking food for the week ahead. This will give you cut-up veggies, prepared protein sources and washed fruit that you can eat right from the refrigerator. This session can also include some home-baked goodies for lunch boxes and some complete meals that just need to be reheated at serving time.

Next, be sure to have some foods on hand that can be prepared quickly. Some of the suggestions below are just snacks but when combined with another selection can take the place of a meal:

Note: Once upon a time, tuna was on my healthy snacks list. Post-Fukushima, we dont eat it anymore. Pacific tuna caught off the coast of California is tainted with radiation from the disaster. So-called experts say that the small amount of radiation is safe,but this is a theory that Im not willing to test on my own family

Your healthy snacks are only as good as their ingredients. Food that you produce yourself is always the best option, because then you can be absolutely assured of both the seeds and the farming process. Supplement with items from local farms (find a location near you)or the organic section of your grocery store. When you eat in-season, it is far easier to choose the most nutritious foods and save money. Carefully wash your produce to get rid of any airborne residue that might remain on the food.

Build your pantry stockpile with long-term storage foods. Select healthy basics such as nuts, honey, whole grains, and dried fruits.

When you always have quick options available it is far easier to make choices that fuel your body. What quick and healthy snacks do you feed your family?

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Quick and Clean: 40 Non-Processed Snacks That Meet Your ...

Amazon.com: Customer reviews: The God of Atheists

Stefan Molyneuxs strengths as a broadcast philosopher are his challenges as a novelist. His Freedomain Radio podcast is an invigorating mix of life-changing sermon, gut-wrenching discussion and side-splitting comedy. But how does his gifts for long lectures and moral certitude in the volume business of podcasts play within medium known for careful selection of ideas, moral ambiguity and understatement?

Show, dont tell, is an often repeated simplification of an important literary principle. When we read a novel we want to discover the nature of characters through their words and actions, rather than the thoughts of the narrator. The God of Atheists does not give us enough of an opportunity.

Theirs was a brisk courtship of efficient sex and scant small talk.

Throughout the first three chapters we are told what we need to know about the main characters. We are asked to accept the authors judgment. While we find his opinions of characters sound, we feel somewhat cheated. We are lectured more than entertained.

Background information (or exposition) is an ordeal for all storytellers. Most choose either to give it quickly and briefly in the beginning, or provide it throughout in small doses. The God of Atheists gives us too much, too soon.

In his broadcasts, Molyneux is famous for wild streams of consciousness. The turns of phrases are sometimes inspired and elevated and other times hackneyed and vulgar. Lines like She would not have been surprised if his bowel movements produced the smell of fresh cut grass, might add flavor and personality to a podcast, but seem out of place in a work of literature.

Still, The God of Atheists is a much welcome read for anyone who wants to see important philosophical principles take life. It is the closest thing to another Ayn Rand novel I have found. It is the novel Rand would have written if she gave up on the idea of minimal government, embraced psychotherapy and drastically cut her time commitment. (Atlas Shrugged took twelve years to write. Molyneux completed The God of Atheists in just one.)

The influence of Ayn Rand and objectivism is unmistakable. But like Nathaniel Brandon before him, Molyneux has subtracted and added to her philosophy in some very important ways. Most importantly, by giving special consideration to the question of children. He retains Rands dualism, however, and this is where most of the criticism of him, as with her, takes aim.

While black and white thinking can give strength and clarity to non-fiction philosophy, it can diminish a fictional work. Like Jack London, an advocate of socialism who created a work so true to life, in The Call of the Wild, that it seems to promote social Darwinism, the best novelists accommodate a variety of views and interpretations. And when a story leads us to one unmistakable conclusion, the master storyteller will serve up a reversal to remind us that we should never be too certain.

The God of Atheists does a good job of demonstrating what I see as a much needed, anti-egalitarian brand of voluntaryism, but does not trust its readers enough. It is an important work from perhaps the most influential philosopher since Ayn Rand.

Aided by todays Internet technology, Moyneux may well eclipse Rand. But 100 million plus podcast downloads and 300 thousand plus Youtube subscribers may not be enough. For me at least, it will take another, more exceptional work of fiction.

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Amazon.com: Customer reviews: The God of Atheists

Voluntarism | Define Voluntarism at Dictionary.com

[vol-uhn-tuh-riz-uhm]

EXAMPLES|WORD ORIGIN

Philosophy. any theory that regards will as the fundamental agency or principle, in metaphysics, epistemology, or psychology.

Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, Random House, Inc. 2019

Other provisions governing the establishment of agroindustrial complexes, however, conflicted with the principle of voluntarism.

Carried into practice, Voluntarism would be as like Anarchism as two peas.

One particular school of voluntarism (Wundt) reduces the motive-force of energy to will.

The two great characteristics of the British raceinitiative and enduranceare due to this burning flame of voluntarism.

To the idol of voluntarism a veritable holocaust of victims has been offered up.

voluntarism

philosophy the theory that the will rather than the intellect is the ultimate principle of reality

a doctrine or system based on voluntary participation in a course of action

the belief that the state, government, and the law should not interfere with the procedures of collective bargaining and of trade union organization

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Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

1838, in philosophy, from voluntary + -ism. As the theory or principal of using voluntary action rather than coercion (in politics, etc.), from 1924, American English (Voluntaryism in this sense is recorded from 1883).

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Online Etymology Dictionary, 2010 Douglas Harper

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Voluntarism | Define Voluntarism at Dictionary.com

Do it yourself – Wikipedia

"Do it yourself" ("DIY") is the method of building, modifying, or repairing things without the direct aid of experts or professionals. Academic research describes DIY as behaviors where "individuals engage raw and semi-raw materials and parts to produce, transform, or reconstruct material possessions, including those drawn from the natural environment (e.g., landscaping)".[1] DIY behavior can be triggered by various motivations previously categorized as marketplace motivations (economic benefits, lack of product availability, lack of product quality, need for customization), and identity enhancement (craftsmanship, empowerment, community seeking, uniqueness).[2]

The term "do-it-yourself" has been associated with consumers since at least 1912 primarily in the domain of home improvement and maintenance activities.[3] The phrase "do it yourself" had come into common usage (in standard English) by the 1950s,[4] in reference to the emergence of a trend of people undertaking home improvement and various other small craft and construction projects as both a creative-recreational and cost-saving activity.

Subsequently, the term DIY has taken on a broader meaning that covers a wide range of skill sets. DIY is associated with the international alternative rock, punk rock, and indie rock music scenes; indymedia networks, pirate radio stations, and the zine community. In this context, DIY is related to the Arts and Crafts movement, in that it offers an alternative to modern consumer culture's emphasis on relying on others to satisfy needs. It has also become prevalent in the personal finance. When investing in the stock one can utilize a professional advisor or partake in do-it-yourself investing.

Italian archaeologists unearthed the ruins of a 6th-century BC Greek structure in southern Italy that came with detailed assembly instructions and is being called an "ancient IKEA building". The structure was a temple-like building discovered at Torre Satriano, near the southern city of Potenza, in Basilicata, a region where local people mingled with Greeks who settled along the southern coast known as Magna Graecia and in Sicily from the 8th century BC onwards. Professor Christopher Smith, director of the British School at Rome, said that the discovery was "the clearest example yet found of mason's marks of the time. It looks as if someone was instructing others how to mass-produce components and put them together in this way". Much like the instruction booklets, various sections of the luxury building were inscribed with coded symbols showing how the pieces slotted together. The characteristics of these inscriptions indicate they date back to around the 6th century BC, which tallies with the architectural evidence suggested by the decoration. The building was built by Greek artisans coming from the Spartan colony of Taranto in Apulia.[5][6][7]

In North America, there was a DIY magazine publishing niche in the first half of the twentieth century. Magazines such as Popular Mechanics (founded in 1902) and Mechanix Illustrated (founded in 1928) offered a way for readers to keep current on useful practical skills, techniques, tools, and materials. As many readers lived in rural or semi-rural regions, initially much of the material related to their needs on the farm or in a small town.

The DIY movement is a re-introduction (often to urban and suburban dwellers) of the old pattern of personal involvement and use of skills in the upkeep of a house or apartment, making clothes; maintenance of cars, computers, websites; or any material aspect of living. The philosopher Alan Watts (from the "Houseboat Summit" panel discussion in a 1967 edition of the San Francisco Oracle) reflected a growing sentiment:

Our educational system, in its entirety, does nothing to give us any kind of material competence. In other words, we don't learn how to cook, how to make clothes, how to build houses, how to make love, or to do any of the absolutely fundamental things of life. The whole education that we get for our children in school is entirely in terms of abstractions. It trains you to be an insurance salesman or a bureaucrat, or some kind of cerebral character.[8]

In the 1970s, DIY spread through the North American population of college- and recent-college-graduate age groups. In part, this movement involved the renovation of affordable, rundown older homes. But it also related to various projects expressing the social and environmental vision of the 1960s and early 1970s. The young visionary Stewart Brand, working with friends and family, and initially using the most basic of typesetting and page-layout tools, published the first edition of The Whole Earth Catalog (subtitled Access to Tools) in late 1968.

The first Catalog, and its successors, used a broad definition of the term "tools". There were informational tools, such as books (often technical in nature), professional journals, courses, classes, and the like. There were specialized, designed items, such as carpenters' and masons' tools, garden tools, welding equipment, chainsaws, fiberglass materials and so on; even early personal computers. The designer J. Baldwin acted as editor to include such items, writing many of the reviews. The Catalog's publication both emerged from and spurred the great wave of experimentalism, convention-breaking, and do-it-yourself attitude of the late 1960s. Often copied, the Catalog appealed to a wide cross-section of people in North America and had a broad influence.

DIY home improvement books burgeoned in the 1970s, first created as collections of magazine articles. An early, extensive line of DIY how-to books was created by Sunset Books, based upon previously published articles from their magazine, Sunset, based in California. Time-Life, Better Homes and Gardens, Balcony Garden Web and other publishers soon followed suit.

In the mid-1990s, DIY home-improvement content began to find its way onto the World Wide Web. HouseNet was the earliest bulletin-board style site where users could share information. HomeTips.com, established in early 1995, was among the first Web-based sites to deliver free extensive DIY home-improvement content created by expert authors.[citation needed] Since the late 1990s, DIY has exploded on the Web through thousands of sites.

In the 1970s, when home video (VCRs) came along, DIY instructors quickly grasped its potential for demonstrating processes by audio-visual means. In 1979, the PBS television series This Old House, starring Bob Vila, premiered and this spurred a DIY television revolution. The show was immensely popular, educating people on how to improve their living conditions (and the value of their house) without the expense of paying someone else to do (as much of) the work. In 1994, the HGTV Network cable television channel was launched in the United States and Canada, followed in 1999 by the DIY Network cable television channel. Both were launched to appeal to the growing percentage of North Americans interested in DIY topics, from home improvement to knitting. Such channels have multiple shows showing how to stretch one's budget to achieve professional-looking results (Design Cents, Design on a Dime, etc.) while doing the work yourself. Toolbelt Diva specifically caters to female DIYers.

Beyond magazines and television, the scope of home improvement DIY continues to grow online where most mainstream media outlets now have extensive DIY-focused informational websites such as This Old House, Martha Stewart, Hometalk, and the DIY Network. These are often extensions of their magazine or television brand. The growth of independent online DIY resources is also spiking.[9] The number of homeowners who blog about their experiences continues to grow, along with DIY websites from smaller organizations.

DIY amongst the fashion community is popular, with ideas being shared on social media such as YouTube about clothing, jewellery, makeup and hair styles. Techniques include distressing jeans, bleaching jeans, redesigning an old shirt, and studding denim. This trend is becoming popular.

The terms "DIY" and "do-it-yourself" are also used to describe:

DIY as a subculture could be said to have begun with the punk movement of the 1970s.[13] Instead of traditional means of bands reaching their audiences through large music labels, bands began recording, manufacturing albums and merchandise, booking their own tours, and creating opportunities for smaller bands to get wider recognition and gain cult status through repetitive low-cost DIY touring. The burgeoning zine movement took up coverage of and promotion of the underground punk scenes, and significantly altered the way fans interacted with musicians. Zines quickly branched off from being hand-made music magazines to become more personal; they quickly became one of the youth culture's gateways to DIY culture. This led to tutorial zines showing others how to make their own shirts, posters, zines, books, food, etc.

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Do it yourself - Wikipedia

What is a Voluntaryist? – Zero Aggression Project

A voluntaryist libertarian believes that all adult relationships should be voluntary.

A voluntary society is what results when you apply the Zero Aggression Principle (the ZAP) consistently. This means that institutions of governance must be

The result is something we call consumer-controlled governance. In other words, citizens should have the power to withhold funding from government functions they disapprove of, or to choose another service provider.

Some libertarians disagree. They make exceptions to the Zero Aggression Principle. They argue that some legitimate government functions, such as police, courts, national defense, and pollution control, require taxation, though they still hope to limit those functions and taxes.

Voluntaryists believe this approach is both immoral and impractical. Its immoral because it initiates force. Its impractical because it

This is why tax-funded government tends to be wasteful and inefficient. Its also why tax-funded government constantly grows. There is no way to prevent this once you permit the power to initiate force. Thus

Voluntaryists make NO exceptions to the ZAP. Force must never be initiated. Force must only be used defensively.

The voluntaryist thinks empathetically when evaluating all political proposals. We put ourselves in the shoes of those affected not only those who would benefit from some coercive political proposal, but also those who would be harmed by it. We ask if we would want to be treated that way, and then act accordingly.

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What is a Voluntaryist? - Zero Aggression Project

Voluntaryism In Action: Fairy Tale Park In Oregon Gets A …

For years, Galen McBee Airport Park has been deteriorating in McMinnville, Oregon. That was until a group of local volunteers decided to restore the whimsical forested trails, and takecare of one of the most unique public spaces in the Willamette Valley.

According to Oregon Live, Dean Klaus, a Sunrise Rotary Club member, read an articledetailing the lack of funding the park had suffered leading to maintenanceissues. McMinnville parks and recreation director Jay Pearson had said that the city hit an economic slump in 2008 and ever since its been hard to keep up with the maintenance of its sprawling park system.I read it [the article] and I thought, Man, what a sad story to put on a travel page,he told the News-Register. And then I thought any time theres a problem, its an opportunity.

So instead of begging the government to take action or raise taxes, Klaus gathered volunteers to help maintain the park. Klaus talked to fellow rotary club members, who agreed to adopt the park, and then spent the better part of a year cleaning it up. Volunteers gathered to re-surface trails, clean out culverts, replace signs, and patch up and re-paint the iconic mushroom house. They also got in touch with Galen McBee himself, McMinnvilles first parks director and airport manager, who served from 1968 to 1997, reported Oregon Live.

I thought the park was named after a dead guy, Sunrise Rotary president Denise Murphy said, gathered with Klaus and McBee at the park last week. Im not dead yet! McBee, who is now 79 said laughing. While walking along the newly-refurbished trails, McBee walked the group through the history of the park.

It all started in World War II, [McBee] said, when the U.S. government offered to build a municipal airport in McMinnville. The resulting airfield butted up against a separate plot of land, which once had been logged and, for a time at least, had been used to store dynamite. Over the years, a roughly 21-acre plot of woods grew up there, and in the 1970s, inspectors with the Federal Aviation Administration told airport officials to remove a patch of the trees that were growing too tall, too close to the runway.But that land was still private property, and the owner wasnt interested in selling just a slice of it, McBee said. Instead, the man sold the city the entire plot of land, and after crews cut down the offending trees, city officials decided to turn the rest of it into a public park. Oregon Live

City officials opened the park in 1977 and surprised McBee by naming it after him. I felt honored, McBee said. But in the years that followed, McMinnvilles population climbed, and the citys parks department added 13 additional public parks without hiring more employees to manage them, McBee said. That lead to a deterioration of the nine fountains and the mushroom house.

As the city of McMinnville continues to grow, the 41-year-old park by the airport feels like its right out of ourdistant past. But the group of local volunteers who dedicated their time and energy to resurrecting Galen McBee Airport Park see a value in keeping it around. We have the obligation to fulfill history, Murphy said. There are a lot of people who benefit from a little bit of work that we do.

Voluntaryism in action just shows how much people can achieve when they come together for a common goal. Thanks to the efforts of volunteers, the Galen McBee Airport Park will soon be restored to its original glory without force, violence, or coercion or theft money (taxation).

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Voluntaryism In Action: Fairy Tale Park In Oregon Gets A ...