Laissez Faire Law20 essays drawn from numerous online archives that illuminate two decades' progress of DeVoon's thought on the philosophy of laissez faire law, a system that he believes has no direct antecedents, except Thomas Paine and Ayn Rand O'Connor, with a grateful hat tip to Jefferson, Lincoln, Madison, Hancock, Otis, and Franklin. |
Contents
Human Rights | 1 |
The Case for Anarchy | 17 |
Defacto Anarchy | 35 |
Scoundrels and Pirates | 53 |
Property | 83 |
The End of Fukuyama | 105 |
The Scourge of Religion | 119 |
Flag Faith and Family Values | 139 |
Law Framer of Last Resort | 153 |
The Rule of Law | 177 |
Socialism is mala in se | 199 |
The Right To Do Wrong | 217 |
Common terms and phrases
action Alan Greenspan American anarchist anarcho-capitalist anarchy ancap Annie Lennox ansoc Atlas Shrugged Ayn Rand Berkshire Hathaway Bill Bill Clinton citizens civil claim Clinton common law consent cops corporate crime criminal cyberspace due process duty economic enforcement equal equity evil exist fascism Federal force Francis Fukuyama freedom Freeman's Constitution freemen Fukuyama fundamental happiness Heinlein Hitler human rights individual innocent liberty Internet issue judiciary jurisdiction jury kill laissez faire law lawyers legislation liberal democracy live logic majority matter means million moral murder Murray Rothbard national defense natural person neighbors never Nosara parties Pirates political practice presumption of innocence principle process of law public justice punishment reason regulation rule of law scoundrels sense slaves social society someone sovereign Supreme Court theory thing Third Wave trade trial tyranny U.S. Constitution Vietnam women wrong



