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Philosophy Political Video Link

Rousseau Tries to Dig Himself Out

Rousseau’s Social Contract, part 5

In Book 2, Chapters 4 and 5, we’re covering “The Limits of the Sovereign Power” and “The Right of Life and Death.” Rousseau has finally seemed to realize that the framework he is building is incredibly totalitarian, and has started to backpedal FURIOUSLY.

Full show notes here.

Categories
Philosophy Political Video Link

Tricks in Service of Oligarchy

Rousseau’s Social Contract, part 4

We are starting out with the first three chapters in Book 2 of Rousseau’s Social Contract this time.

Full show notes here.

Categories
Philosophy Political Video Link

Fig Leaves in Service of Tyranny

Rousseau’s Social Contract, part 3

This week, we are finishing up Book 1 of Rousseau’s Social Contract. Three more chapters, and unfortunately Rousseau repeats and confirms the unlimited power of the State in his framework.

Full show notes here.

Categories
Philosophy Political Video Link

Slavery in Service of Rights

Part 2 of Critiquing Rousseau’s Social Contract

In chapters 5 and 6 of Book 1, Rousseau gives us his definition of the Social Contract.

It is a definition so fraught with self-contradictions and deliberately fuzzy thinking that it is frankly insane.

Show notes here.

Categories
Philosophy Political Video Link

Lies in Service of Power

Part 1 of my critique of Rousseau’s Social Contract

Here’s the first part of this next book I decided to go through: Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s famous (or infamous, if you’re like me) Social Contract.

Show notes here.

Categories
Economics Philosophy Political Video Link

A Recipe for Disaster

The Conclusion of the Conquest of The Conquest of Bread

The end of the book came almost as a surprise. Chapter 16 is very short and is mostly focused on a gross misunderstanding of the meaning of “specialization.”

Full show notes here.

Categories
Economics Philosophy Video Link

Railing Against Trade

The Conquest of The Conquest of Bread, Chapters 14 & 15

These two chapters are both very short. First, Kropotkin argues that economic calculation or understanding should start with what people need, and then move on to production. Oddly enough, he has a bit of a point here, but unfortunately, he carries it off into one of his bizarre and flatly wrong tangents again.

He ends up arguing that the division of labor is destructive to prosperity. He wanders off in a couple of weird directions that are clearly counter to reality, but that fact doesn’t stop him.

Full notes here.

This video is available on Odysee, YouTube, and BitChute.

This episode’s intro quote is from a talk by Shawn Ritenour:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7bP4Mw3uk1A

Intro music by MFCC, courtesy Pixabay:
https://pixabay.com/users/mfcc-28627740/

References:
Mises, Human Action:
https://mises.org/library/book/human-action

Rothbard, Man, Economy, and State:
https://mises.org/library/book/man-economy-and-state-power-and-market

My article containing intros to Mises’s Calculation Problem, Hayek’s Knowledge Problem, and the concept of Pareto-Superiorty:
https://mises.org/mises-wire/mmt-feeding-economically-inferior-machine

Mises, Money, Method, and the Market Process:
https://mises.org/online-book/money-method-and-market-process/trade/10-autarky-and-its-consequences

Hoppe, Marxist and Austrian Class Analysis:
https://mises.org/mises-wire/marxist-and-austrian-class-analysis

Categories
Economics Philosophy Political Video Link

Bad Theory and Willful Blindness

The Conquest of The Conquest of Bread, Ch. 13

Chapter 13 is titled “The Collectivist Wages System” and it is a tissue of faulty comparisons, bad conclusions stapled to obsolete theories, and nonsensical figures attached to shifting goalposts.

Categories
Economics Philosophy Political Video Link

Don’t Worry, Kropotkin Says It’s Better this Way

The Conquest of
The Conquest of Bread:
Chapter 12

Chapter 12 is supposed to be Kropotkin’s answers to objections, but (perhaps unsurprisingly) he only goes after a few cursory criticisms and even his answers to those are seriously flawed.

Full show notes here.

Practically every argument Kropotkin makes is even better satisfied by private property, free markets, and voluntary exchange.

There are even some terrifying positions he takes that basically confirm that his “voluntary associations” are simply the coercive state with a prettier name. They have the potential to be even more tyrannical than the most callous private employer.

This video available on Odysee, YouTube, and BitChute.

Intro quote is from “Kropotkin’s Ethics and the Public Good,” by Williamson M. Evers:
https://mises.org/journal-libertarian-studies/kropotkins-ethics-and-publc-good

Article reference:
“Sweatshops: A Way Out of Poverty,” an interview with Benjamin Powell
https://mises.org/mises-daily/sweatshops-way-out-poverty

Intro music edited from a piece by Music for Video, courtesy Pixabay:
https://pixabay.com/users/music_for_video-22579021/

Categories
Culture Creation Philosophy Political Satire

Two Fables

Proudhon’s Bush-Tender

A man was walking through a lonely forest one day, when he saw a tiny sapling. “This sapling,” he said, “will someday become a great bush that will grow many delicious berries. Perhaps I should try to make sure it survives.”