Roderick Long Quote

Statists tend to treat governmental edicts as though they were incantations, passing directly from decree to result, without the inconvenience of means; since in the real world the chief means employed by government is violence, threatened and actual, cloaking state decrees and their violent implementation in the garb of incantation disguises both the immorality and the inefficiency of statism by ignoring the messy path from decree to result.


"Equality: the Unknown Ideal" (2001)


Statists tend to treat governmental edicts as though they were incantations, passing directly from decree to result, without the inconvenience of...

Statists tend to treat governmental edicts as though they were incantations, passing directly from decree to result, without the inconvenience of...

Statists tend to treat governmental edicts as though they were incantations, passing directly from decree to result, without the inconvenience of...

Statists tend to treat governmental edicts as though they were incantations, passing directly from decree to result, without the inconvenience of...