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To: KDD

Re: your profile, “the common enemy of all well-disposed, industrious and decent men” has got to be Mencken, no? Also, that Albert Knock...just ran across his name for the first time, should I bother, and if so, where should I begin?


16 posted on 07/24/2011 7:15:50 PM PDT by Huck
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To: Huck

Bump


17 posted on 07/24/2011 8:34:54 PM PDT by NorwegianViking
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To: Huck
Chapter 1

Our Enemy, The State
by Albert J. Nock - 1935

[It must be remembered that Mr. Nock was writing this shortly after the Coup d'état of Roosevelt and the New Deal Democrats - What he saw happening HAS HAPPENED! - We are very much closer as we enter the 21st Century to a Dictatorial Socialist State.]

In chapter 5 Nock goes on to write, 'The revolution of 1776-1781 converted thirteen provinces, practically as they stood, into thirteen autonomous political units, completely independent, and they so continued until 1789, formally held together as a sort of league, by the Articles of Confederation. For our purposes, the point to be remarked about this eight-year period, 1781- 1789, is that administration of the political means was not centralized in the federation, but in the several units of which the federation was composed. The federal assembly, or congress, was hardly more than a deliberative body of delegates appointed by the autonomous units. It had no taxing-power, and no coercive power. It could not command funds for any enterprise common to the federation, even for war; all it could do was to apportion the sum needed, in the hope that each unit would meet its quota. There was no coercive federal authority over these matters, or over any matters; the sovereignty of each of the thirteen federated units was complete.'

His conclusion:

'But there is no need to dwell lugubriously upon the probable circumstances of a future so far distant. What we and our more nearly immediate descendants shall see is a steady progress in collectivism running off into a military despotism of a severe type. Closer centralization; a steadily growing bureaucracy; State power and faith in State power increasing, social power and faith in social power diminishing; the State absorbing a continually larger proportion of the national income; production languishing, the State in consequence taking over one "essential industry"after another, managing them with ever-increasing corruption, inefficiency and prodigality, and finally resorting to a system of forced labour. Then at some point in this progress, a collision of State interests, at least as general and as violent as that which occurred in 1914, will result in an industrial and financial dislocation too severe for the asthenic social structure to bear; and from this the State will be left to "the rusty death of machinery,"and the casual anonymous forces of dissolution will be supreme.'

18 posted on 07/24/2011 8:38:42 PM PDT by KDD (When the government boot is on your neck, it matters not whether it is the right boot or the left.)
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To: Huck
Full story at link... http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/929392/posts

Even more so then Albert Nock, Garet Garrett, writing in
1938 lays it out pretty well. R and D are just useless labels that serve only the central government by keeping the populace almost evenly divided...while it has it's own agenda...one which seems to have a lot to do with imperialism and little to do with nationalism.

Not Communist...more fascist, with a corporatist twist to it.

21 posted on 07/24/2011 8:58:45 PM PDT by KDD (When the government boot is on your neck, it matters not whether it is the right boot or the left.)
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