Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Cutting Edge Business Opportunity Now

Crowdfunding and crowdsourcing is recovering lost patterns and practices and we all need to hail the escape from fascism these efforts engender.  The less state the better.  Yay anarchy!  But as this story shows, we need just a little more anarchy...

A woman rented her 600-square-foot condo to someone in May on a 44-day contract through lodging rental website Airbnb. But when the Airbnb contract ran out the man staying there with his brother refused to leave, according to homeowner Cory Tschogl. Under California tenant law, the man has rights as a tenant after he stays in a home for 30 days. Airbnb told Tschogl that they would help her with legal support....
Maksym Pashanin is also the name of a self-described game developer who launched a $10,000 Kickstarter in 2013 to fund a pixel-graphic adventure game called Confederate ExpressThat Kickstarter was successfully funded on Nov. 20, 2013, for $39,739 with an estimated delivery date of June 2014.

So we have criminals in our midst.  Scamsters who are taking advantage of the new systems and ripping people off.  The most likely scenario is they are both associated with the Man, and are brigning chaos where there was order, in order to bring the State into what was once free markets.

So. Call the police?  NO!!!

Remember, in anarchy, YOU are the cop.  So we need one more crowdsourced effort: law enforcement.  Now neither Kickstarter nor AirBnB are government gigs, but they both have "governance."  Rules that keep things fair.  These fellows ripped off people for $40,000 and have taken over a woman's condo.

And they are thumbing their nose at their victims (giving legislators the pretext to write fascist laws).

So how does justice work in anarchy?  These fellows need internet connections, electricity, gas, food, etc.  The sanctions are "shunning" to the degree that the community is offended.

A database of offenders is created, and business subscribe.  Credit card, debit card, facial recognition is loaded up and as either of these fellows approaches a vendor, an alarm goes up and "we reserve the right to refuse service."

Slowly, life becomes such a hassle that they are ground down to repentance.

There is no way we could ever trust the government with such powers, so it must be a private effort at governance maintenance.

A billion dollar business with about $250 start-up costs....  and no doubt an excellent kickstarter campaign.







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4 comments:

Anonymous said...

And how do u intend to get around the legal implications of registering peoplw online and accusing them of crime. Good idea perhapa but Im just curious.

John Wiley Spiers said...

O dear! "get around" "legal implications" "accusing of crime" ... the premise is too narrow. This is the thinking coming from a statist view in which there is a polity, selected winners and losers.. instead of a comity, mutual cooperation. Nothign I've suggested is not already well settled...eg, Uber has people who register themselves to be in teh community of trust, and should they behave in a way that disturbs the peace, they are shunned, like a blaspheming Amish. they find themselves stranded.

Now as opposed to appealing to state sanctions in which it is not possible to gain adequate redress if any when harmed by the polity, in a comity the community wants your business and will be very attentive to any explanations.

There is no accusing of crime, there is just free association...

My point was here we have another example where the idea of a polity in which winners and losers are selected is no longer necessary... if we wish to leave behind such barbaric practices as democracy, we have working models of governance that are superior to any government.

Anonymous said...

My point is that the powers-that-be have no obligation to allow self-governance, which is why this is not a billion dollar business idea. The Civil Rights Act is too strong. Even if a person commits a crime when he funds a kickstarter and the courts deem that kickstarter.com has the right to deny this person service. It does not make it right to not allow him to rent a condo.

John Wiley Spiers said...

Again, what curious outlook! The powers that be have no say so over the 99.9999% of the world that exercises self-governance in the necessary absence of order given the activities of the powers that be. Obligation ain't in it, they could care less. Since when has the civil rights act affected any good, except to buy a few while the many are incarcerated?

If an association decides they do not want to associate with a malefactor, certainly courts might rule otherwise, but it is precisely because courts have ruled otherwise that they no longer hold respect. Presidents can't keep the borders secure and effect CDC security on virulent strains, the legislatures cannot address budget problems, so all that is left is "the strong man."

Our system is dead and gone, and what is left is a remnant of what is good. As the last politician shares what is last "not nailed down" with a banker, then it will be over and done with. the billion dollar business is what comes out of the ashes. Freedom of association is a great idea. One reason the USA failed is the state created Jim Crow laws, a terrible in justice, which was only reversed when business was encouraged by private protest to overthrow the state.

USA failed when it enshrined slavery in the constitution after the Civil War and then allowed states to practice it.

if anything, this has lasted way too long. I look forward to a renaissance in freedom, such as is emerging with Uber and their "sanctions through shunning." Much more effective and inexpensive than a criminal justice system which only puts murder/rapists on ice for a while before returning then to the streets.

Anarchy provides so much more order than government.