Defending the Undefendable II: Freedom in All Realms.
Thornton, Mark
Defending the Undefendable II: Freedom in All Realms
Walter E. Block
Eastbourne, U.K.: Terra Libertas Ltd., 2013, 264 pp.
Walter Block is at his finest when he subjects the most loathsome
jobs and nastiest behaviors to logical libertarian scrutiny.
Block's Defending the Undefendable has needled and irritated an
entire generation of readers and compelled many to re-examine long-held
beliefs in favor of the logic of libertarianism. Now comes volume 2,
Defending the Undefendable II: Freedom in All Realms (with a foreword by
Ron Paul) that promises more such irritation for future generations.
The introduction is a short course in libertarianism. Block
explains that libertarianism is a political philosophy that shows when
the use of coercion is justified or not justified. The book examines 30
cases that are often seen as illegal, immoral, or unethical. Block
analyzes each case by subjecting it to a libertarian standard, and
ultimately exonerates each from punishment by government.
Please note: the author is only defending these cases by the
political standard of libertarianism and whether they should face
coercive threat from the state. It does not mean by any stretch of the
imagination that this implies approval and commendation. It simply means
they should not go to jail for their behavior.
The examination of these hard cases is what helps us sharpen our
understanding of libertarianism and our ability to debate and defend the
free society. I agree with the author that studying hard cases
strengthens libertarianism and improves the likelihood of achieving a
free society. Much of my own research has been on such hard cases, such
as drug dealers and smugglers. People, particularly college students,
find such cases interesting and often convincing.
Speaking of hard cases, one of my colleagues recently visited South
Africa. He saw that private security was everywhere. He was told that he
and his belongings were safe with private security, but not safe where
government police was in charge. My colleague noted that a nation that
understands that the market provides a better service for security, the
hardest of all cases, is going to be more easily convinced that the
market can provide a better garbage collection service.
The book is divided into seven sections. The first, on trade,
contains five short chapters: "The Multinational Enterpriser,"
"The Smuggler," "British Petroleum," "Nuclear
Energy," and "The Corporate Raider."
British Petroleum is a good hard case because everyone knows about
the accident in the Gulf of Mexico, the 200 million gallons of oil that
were spilled, and that BP has been vilified by the media pundits and
politicians. Block begins by calling the people at BP heroes in part
because they do the dangerous work so we can comfortably drive across
town at 10 cents a mile.
Block asks if BP knew the dangers of deep water drilling. Of course
they did, but government regulations prevent shallow water drilling near
the shoreline and provide incentives to drill in deep water far out at
sea. Meanwhile government regulators were not doing their job, goofing
off, taking bribes, and they failed to upgrade safety standards to
account for the new deep water drilling.
As BP was vilified for negligence and as the oil continued to seep
into the the gulf, the U.S. government turned down offers of assistance
from foreign companies that specialized in such spills and who had more
experience than U.S. firms. Ships from foreign countries also offered
their assistance, but like after Hurricane Katrina, the volunteers were
turned away. Block argues persuasively why such disasters are very
unlikely to happen in a libertarian society and that this tragedy was
the result of government intervention.
The second section on labor looks at the cases of "The Hatchet
Man," "The Home Worker," "The Picket-Line
Crosser," "The Daycare Provider," and "The
Automator." In the case of automation, it does destroy some jobs,
and creates new jobs, and this should be celebrated by society, not
denigrated or sabotaged. Technological advance is the main source of
rising prosperity and job creation. Machines can increase our
productivity and free up labor to produce other goods that are in short
supply. The chapter does a wonderful job of showing how this process
takes place and how we all benefit from automation and robots.
The third section tackles medical issues and includes chapters on
"The Smoker," "The Human-Organ Merchant," and
"The Breast Milk Substitute Purveyor." In terms of
technological progress, human organ transplantation is one of the great
medical advances of our time. However, it is also one that is often
misunderstood and mismanaged. To make matters worse, the U.S. has a
policy that puts the government in charge of obtaining human organs from
the recently deceased (i.e., cadaveric human organs). It is also in
charge of determining who receives the organs. This authority has been
turned over to the administrators of hospitals who conduct human organ
transplants and is overseen by a network of these administrators. It is
now against the law to interject market forces into or outside this
network and the result is a very large shortage of human organs.
This shortage means that a large number of people suffer from the
lack of an organ transplant and that ultimately thousands die as a
result. Block concludes that we should embrace the human-organ merchant
and allow market forces to operate. He and others think that insurance
companies and hospitals could develop a market whereby large numbers of
people are given small incentives to opt into an organ donor contract,
thus creating a much larger supply of cadaveric organs. This would also
destroy any black market in human organs. He rightly opposes the idea of
an "opt out" government mandate that everyone donate their
organs.
The remainder of the book consists of four additional sections with
chapters on "Sex," "Discriminators,"
"Business," and "The Politically Incorrect." What
Bastiat did for the traditional institutions of society, Walter Block
has done for the undefendables of the modern world. Readers will develop
a clearer understanding of libertarianism, as well as its limits.
Mark Thornton, Ph.D., (mthornton@mises.org) is Senior Fellow at the
Ludwig von Mises Institute and serves as book review editor of the QJAE.