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The following essay arose out of a discussion on the fabulous GoldMoney "dgc chat" list in September 2005. Subscribers have access to a more thorough essay on this topic.
Please allow me to offer some thoughts on this topic, which I've spent rather a lot of time studying since first encountering the term "slave rebellions" in a book by Michael Flynn. Yes, there are generational minor peaks in the slave rebellion cycle, and there are inter-generational major peaks. We happen to be approaching a major peak, which may become a very major peak.
You write, "the slave rebellion" as if to anticipate only one. That idea is mistaken, I believe. Rather, we have already
seen some clear signs of rebellion in Louisiana, where people
roaming the streets of New Orleans rebelled against authority,
taking potshots at helicopters. The rebels gained control
of the Convention Center and parts of the SuperDome. To an
extent, the police force of New Orleans rebelled, with some
200 officers leaving the force to care for their homes and
families during the devastation. Obviously, pigs in New York
City are more inured to the suffering and hardship of Wall
Street investment bankers in the World Trade Center, and were
not threatened in their homes with flooding and misery.
The Free State Project and the Free State Wyoming project are signs of rebellion. They are indications of people forming
into defensive sub-cultures able to come to each other's aid in the event of further gun seizures and more brutal repression. To some extent, these are formations of Warsaw Ghetto style enclaves which are more than likely going to be the targets for some really vicious behavior on the part of government.
It seems to me that the FSP and FSW represent people who are clear that they cannot tolerate the existing trends toward authoritarian brutality, and don't see much prospect for resisting alone. So, they are forming ranks, moving to be near each other. Doing so makes the work of the authoritarians easier, to an extent, and more likely.
There are two events which might be characterized by an
historian as "the slave rebellion." One was the Spartacus
revolt of the gladiators. Much has been written about this
event in novels and in glamorous histories, but the key thing
to remember is: Spartacus lost. ("I am Spartacus!") The gladiators were defeated, they surrendered, and the Romans tortured tens of thousands
of them to death by crucifying men, women, and children
from Naples to Rome along every roadway, so that the stench of
their rotting bodies was terrible. When your friends celebrate
Roman culture, as ABC and HBO have done recently, remind them
of this Roman habit of torturing to death enthusiasts for
individual liberty.
The other single slave rebellion of consequence happened about 200 years ago in Haiti. The plantation slaves in
Haiti overthrew the French and became an independent country.
Since that time, the French government, the British
government, the USA government, the banking cartel, and
the United Nations have spent nearly every year taking
actions to create hardship for the people of Haiti, to
make them suffer for their successful revolution. Haiti
has been ostracized, embargoed, demonized, vilified,
blockaded, boycotted, invaded, and occupied. Their economy
has been IMF'd time and again.
So, the case for rebellion isn't really a good one. If
you are expecting people to rise up in the next decade or
so and overthrow brutal, repressive, authoritarian, evil
governments, you should please understand that I am not
expecting anything of the sort. I'm expecting the slave
rebellions in this major peak to be brutally repressed in
the name of fighting terrorism, in the name of fighting
the war on drugs, in the name of fighting the war on
money laundering, and in the name of "civilization" in the
decadent, ostentatious, Roman "pan et circenses" meaning
of the term. "Civilization" in that people live in cities,
worship icons of animal gods by cheering for squads of
steroidally abused athletes, and clamor for the sacrifice
of more wealth producers on the altar of the least capable.
Or, more candidly, a civilization that is tantamount to
cannibalism, accompanied by the beating drums and the
maddened crowds of blood thirsty primitives dedicated to
laziness and incontinence.
Take a cold hard look at the people who rebelled in New
Orleans earlier this month. Take a look at one of the
minor peaks, the 1992 Los Angeles riots, or the last major
peak, the 1964-1969 race riots, including the infamous
Watts riot. Try to imagine these people forming a culture
of freedom, private property, individual liberty, free
enterprise, and free markets. What you saw were people
looting, killing, raping, mugging, vandalizing, and
burning. These people wouldn't likely mind becoming the
next Papa Doc Duvalier rulers of some fiefdom wherever
they could gain and keep power, propped up by distant
puppeteers in the banking cartel. But, these are not
the sort of people one should look to for equating
taxation with theft. Rather, they are more likely to seek
the color of law and take up station with the bureau-rats
and politicos who see "nothing wrong" with theft in the
name of the state.
Please do not misunderstand me. I've been to the 9th
Ward in New Orleans. I've walked those mean streets. I've
been to the South Bronx. I've driven through South Central
LA. I know how people in Harlem and Watts were living
when they began rioting, I understand their sense that they
have been subjugated and made to suffer injustice and
outrages, and I sympathize. I am not surprised that people
rebel. But, I don't expect them to become philosopher
kings overnight, either.
One of the observed difficulties of rebellion is that it
frequently fails due to lack of outside support. If you
look at Haiti, it is a very special case of successful
revolution in the midst of nearly total isolation.
The American Revolution was supported by the French navy,
French military advisors, German military advisors like
von Steuben, and other outside support. I suspect that
many a Dutch merchant captain was delighted to smuggle
arms, ammunition, powder, and tools to the revolutionaries
in revenge for a hundred years of British haughtiness
and oppression. (Navigation Acts be cursed!)
One of the reasons that many science fiction writers of a
quasi-military turn of mind (Heinlein, Niven, Pournelle
come immediately to mind) have postulated a brutally
repressive world government is this difficulty of having
a successful revolution with nothing outside. The hydraulic
empire of Egypt became extremely corrupt and decadent, but
lasted thousands of years before anything came along to
topple it. The Greeks came along and liked it so much, they
married into it. Only the Romans were shortsighted enough
to smash it and burn its libraries and temples.
One of the opportunities we now have is to create entire sets of economies outside the mainstream. The financial
crypto systems of Digi Cash, Digi Gold, J. Orlin Grabbe's
Digital Monetary Trust - all these were premature and
often poorly concealed variants of systems that are now
in operation or development. Economic systems of trade
and commerce that are properly secured should afford the
opportunity to create and accumulate wealth outside the
reach of the unproductive bureau-rats and politicos who
seek to feast on herds of humans like vampires. (Seen as
allegory, Bram Stoker's Dracula is more about the
thieving ways of decadent European aristocracy than it is
about a mythological creature.)
Such systems would be part of the fabric of a new system
of the world. You and I have the opportunity now to lay
a few cornerstones. We can find places that are flat
and level, tie down into the bedrock of sound ethics, and
build. But, don't imagine that you can build a stairway
to the heavens in a few days or years. There is no royal
road to geometry. Buildings set up in a few hours are
knocked down by windstorms all the time. The sort of storm
forces we have to contend against are able to wreak havoc
with "buildings" decades in the making.
The successful revolution to overthrow millennia of deceit,
taxation, and slavery is coming. But, it is not based on
the success, nor is it thwarted by the failure of some
slave rebellions. Done right, it may be possible to build
up a better system of the world which actively prevents
theft and looting without the great effusion of blood that
normally attends world changing events.
Like the success of the Allies in World War Two, indeed, like
FDR's deceit which attended the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor,
it all depends on good crypto. Eisenhower tried to make this
point in his farewell address. The best minds had been
recruited to make available the best crypto for the UK-USA
alliance, the ECHELON databases, the machinery of global
espionage and control. The military industrial complex built
up a system of control, and we are today subjugated by that
very system. But, they made two very important mistakes.
First, they established an incredibly robust system for
inter-networking computers, which is now a global system of
communication and commerce. Second, they failed, utterly,
to keep a lid on public key cryptography, which is the basis
for essential information security.
If we are successful in developing, implementing, and setting
in motion a new system of the world based on individual
liberty, private property secured with strong crypto, and
free enterprise, if we are not betrayed in the early going,
it should be possible to so organize the world that it becomes
impossible for anyone to rule it with force, and to so secure
property that it becomes impossible for anyone to steal very
much of it.
The nature of knowledge is such that it matters a great deal
who wields it, so that much of it is only valuable in the mind
of someone capable of using it. More tangible forms of wealth
need to be secured in more tangible ways.
I feel confident that these things are coming, that these
possibilities are going to be realized. I do what I can to
write about these ideas in my newsletter.
We stand at a threshold, with many doors along a vast hallway.
In the Twentieth Century, we've seen where many of those doors
lead: to torture, oppression, brutality, war, suffering,
famine, plague, genocide, and conflict. But, we've also seen
that some of the choices arrayed before us lead on to better
things, to prosperity, to access to the universe, to the
great cornucopia set before us.
Don't wish for a slave rebellion to rise up and solve all your
difficulties. It won't. Grasp your difficulties with both
hands and wrestle them to the ground. Overcome them, and
gain entry into the vast cavernous space where the treasure
of prosperity is all about. That is your challenge, that is
your opportunity, that is your destiny.
Copyright © 2005 Free West Trust
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