Anarchy in Central Park
New York politicians got out of the way for once, and something beautiful happened.

Politicians have big plans for us.
President Joe Biden repeatedly says, "I have a plan for that."
"I alone can fix it," shouted President Donald Trump.
But most of life, and the best of life, happens when politicians butt out and let us make our own choices.
Chinese philosopher Zhuang Zhou called that "spontaneous order." Thousands of years later, economist F. A. Hayek added that order comes "not from design, but spontaneously."
Did you eat a banana this morning? No central planner calculates how many bananas should be grown, who will pick them, when they'll be harvested, how they'll be shipped, or how many to ship. We get bananas and most everything in life through billions of individuals, planning, cooperating, and reacting on their own.
"Think about spontaneous order on a road," says The Atlas Network's Tom Palmer.
Right. Millions of people, some of them morons, propel 4,000-pound vehicles at 60 miles per hour, right next to each other. We rarely smash into each other.
There are rules, like "pass on the left," but for the most part, people navigate highways on their own.
Likewise, no one invented language, but the world has thousands. "Experts" tried to invent better ones, like Volapuk and Esperanto, which supposedly would let us communicate better.
"No one speaks these languages," says Palmer, because language evolves spontaneously. "That is always superior to top-down systems that rely on the information in one brain."
Amazingly, my town, New York City, has twice now allowed spontaneous order that makes my life much better.
City government once managed Central Park. When it did, trash was everywhere, and most of the grass was dead.
The city then agreed to let a private nonprofit, the Central Park Conservancy, manage most of the park. Without a government plan, people came together, giving money and time to turn the park around. (Disclosure: I was one of them, and now I'm a conservancy director.)
Now Central Park is beautiful. Forty million people spend time there every year. Despite the crowds, the park works well without strict government rules.
Musicians play music, asking for donations. There are many of them, but on their own, they figure out how to stay far enough away from each other.
Skate dancers spontaneously chose a spot where they meet to skate. Hundreds gather and dance to music. No one tells them where or how fast to skate. No one says, "Go left, go right."
"You just skate with the flow of the music," one skater says in my new video.
I play volleyball in Central Park. There's no volleyball boss. People just show up and play.
Pickup basketball is famous for that. Players know the rules, otherwise there wouldn't be a game, but who gets to play, and the playing, is spontaneous.
Central Park is filled with walkers, runners, skateboarders, bikers, pedicabs, and horse-drawn carriages. But there are no traffic cops. People maneuver around each other on their own.
There are some rules. You can't drive a car in the park. You can't play soccer on grass right after it rains. But rules are minimal.
Police usually ignore lawbreaking. Unlicensed vendors sell water and fruit. Some people drink alcohol. But as long as they don't bother anyone, police and park workers leave them alone.
Government that governs less, governs best.
Politicians usually want to control more things. My town has been the worst example of that. Progressive politicians add so many rules they make it nearly impossible to do anything new.
Own a restaurant and want to put some tables outdoors? Restaurant owner Jeremy Wladis says he needed permission from 11 agencies. "You had to get a lawyer, get an architect. It literally takes a year!"
But during COVID, something amazing happened. Politicians actually loosened the outdoor table rule. Restaurants quickly opened outdoor seating in sheds on the street.
It's great. The streets around my apartment feel safer now because at night, they are alive with people.
"We need flexibility to allow people to experiment," says Palmer.
Freedom to experiment brings the best in life.
More politicians should learn from Central Park and, amazingly, from politicians in New York City who actually let go a little.
COPYRIGHT 2023 BY JFS PRODUCTIONS INC.
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"Millions of people, some of them morons, propel 4,000-pound vehicles at 60 miles per hour, right next to each other."
I question this assertion.
And this one: "We rarely smash into each other."
Not rarely enough.
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My car weighs closer to 3000 pounds. I also try and go at least 70-75 miles per hour whenever possible.
I think I only smash into someone about every 500k miles.
I've only ever hit a deer... who is no longer part of the spontaneous order.
I question that too. More than "some" are morons.
Speaking as a truck driver, it's vastly more than "some".
I also give Stossel props for acknowledging the existence of the “super dumb” category.
Still, while you and I are “good drivers”, and everyone else is idiots, it is remarkably safe to drive somewhere. I achieve this safety by being observant and never treating driving like it’s an automatic function achieved without any effort on my part. This includes accepting that some other people are lulled by the degree of safety on the roads to pay no attention.
I’ve had five accidents: 2 wrecks and 3 fender-benders. This is in over a million miles. If you are so innumerate you can’t see how this qualifies as “safe”, maybe you should expand your definition of “idiot”.
Try driving in England...
True. Democrats do drive too.
So all drivers are morons? More than some must be all, no?
Um no.
None, a few, some, a lot, all.
Yeah, Tom Palmer very much comes across as the guy in the far left lane doing 60 mph thinking to himself "All this spontaneous order is great!"
We typically call such behavior, Nestoring.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Nestor
Nestor also achieved fame in the Washington, D.C. area in 1984 after The Washington Post published his letter describing his favored driving method: On highways Nestor would settle his vehicle in the far left lane and set the cruise control at the speed limit, at the time 55 mph. He would not move to the right for drivers behind him. "Why," he asked, "should I inconvenience myself for someone who wants to speed?" Nestor also believed he was performing a public service by forcing people to obey the nationwide 55 mile-per-hour speed limit. Nestor's letter enraged many motorists and led Paul J. Leonard to coin the term 'Nestoring' to describe the practice in another letter to the editor.
John Nestor was a real piece of work. In decades at the FDA, he never recommended a drug for approval. He was responsible for cardiac and renal drugs. You know, nothing important.
Update to Chesterton: When people stop believing in God they don't believe in nothing, they believe '*I* am the spontaneous order!'
Intentional/earnest or not, see TheReEncogitationer below.
When you consider that there are at least 289.5 million autos in the U.S., plus millions of Over The Road transfer trucks, RVs, motorcycles, all going billions of miles of differing iteneraries at differing speeds at all hours 24/7/365 in all kinds of road and weather conditions, the number of accidents really are miniscule.
The Number of Cars in the US in 2022/2023: Market Share, Distribution, and Trends
https://financesonline.com/number-of-cars-in-the-us/
It just doesn't seem that way when an accident happens to you. 🙂
Most questionable is : “Police usually ignore lawbreaking …as long as they don’t bother anyone, police and park workers leave them alone."
See how long you last if you light a cigarette.
somemost of them moronsBut the ability to micromanage the shit out of every last detail of other people's lives is the exact reason people go into government work. Who the fuck goes to work for the government so they can leave people alone? If they wanted to leave people alone they'd get real jobs.
There are numerous government jobs and very few involve regulations. Do you think nurses, therapists, lab technicians at government hospitals are there to regulate? What about the street maintenance, plowing, and garbage pick-up? Most of the regulation government performs is a result of being petitioned. John Stossel reveals he is a director of the Central Park Conservancy. I wonder how many requests he gets to address this or that in the park.
Yeah; "Armed-Theft" isn't bossy... /s Just steal what one wants and runaway. You can't be bossy when your just the new 'owner' of someone else's stolen stuff.
Ah, but those Government jobs have to comply with regulations and create all the compliance costs and externalities, so those jobs are part of the problems of regulation.
And just where do I find the place to petition for regulations?
Can you also petition for deregulation? I’d like to get rid of Certificates Of Need so my hospital could get BlueTooth diagnostic electrodes so I can navigate my room without getting tangled.
"And just where do I find the place to petition for regulations? (or deregulate for that matter)"
Contact your elected representative, be that alderperson, county supervisor, state legislator, representative or senator. Most levels of government have some form for comments. That may include public hearings or periods for accepting written comments. Numbers count and it helps to be in an advocacy group when petitioning or commenting.
That's not anarchy, it's liberty!
Thank you John Stossel for this uplifting article, and for your contributions in helping Central Park to flourish
Ironically the USA was founded on the principle that politicians would ensure Liberty and Justice for all.
There are limits to how well people can self-regulate. John Stossel has good example of how people have done this, but that is not always the case. People should recognize that they need to use slower speeds in residential neighborhoods. Kid, older people, pets can cross a street at any time. When I was a kid, it was not unusual to play catch or bat a tennis ball in the streets. Car traveled at reasonable speeds and we stepped out of the way to let them pass. Today as I look at residential streets, I see that excess speed is a problem. People start with self-regulation, posting the yard signs asking people to go slow in the neighborhood. When that fails, they go to the city and the next step is the speed bumps. The almost ubiquitous presence of speed bumps tells me that self-regulation has limits.
I also wonder what John Stossel thinks when he on the highway and the in-out car passes him. The driver weaving in and out of lanes to get there faster. Does he admire the self-regulation or is he hoping there is a police car up the road to get the jerk as he passes.
Good post! I like the question at the end!
I keep getting re-assured that women's reproduction systems can't be self-regulated. As I've said all along. Pro-Life belongs to left-leaning retards like you two.
Pro-Life belongs to mostly RIGHT-leaning authoritarians! Look at red v/s blue state abortion laws, and that much will become quite clear. And I am about as pro-women-own-their-own-wombs as you can get! But that's as a libertarian, not as a leftist. Don't be forcibly "compassionate" with our collectively-owned money (possessions in general), OR with our collectively-owned wombs (bodies in general)!
1) Pro-Life was founded by the Catholic Church (vastly Democrats).
2) Republicans (SCOTUS) wrote Roe v. Wade.
3) A majority of Republican voters supports Roe v. Wade.
4) It's Democrats who think [WE] mob RULES democracy has no limits.
... because of course ...
There are limits to how well people can self-regulate. John Stossel has good example of how people have done this, but that is not always the case...... /s
If there are limits to self-regulation, then doesn't that mean there are limitations to how much one can regulate others?
And don't speed bumps create vehicle damage and even injuries to drivers, not to mention serve as an attractive nuisance for skate boarding and bicycling kids?
I think the point is that the government should seek to govern less than more. It doesn't say it shouldn't do anything at all. There is always pressure to do more. The trick is to push back and find the right balance.
Agreed.
Or maybe it's not a trick at all; Just a job to ensure Liberty and Justice for all.
... instead of criminalistic mind-games of pretending "armed-theft" of those icky taxpayers to pay for ?free? education, healthcare, subsidies, infrastructure, etc, etc, etc is some sort of reasonable ?justice?
The function of government is to defend liberty. Liberty is freedom from the initiatory use of force. That is the extent government should be involved in our lives.
When I was a kid, it was not unusual to play catch or bat a tennis ball in the streets. Car traveled at reasonable speeds and we stepped out of the way to let them pass. Today as I look at residential streets, I see that excess speed is a problem.
You are not thinking critically. The topic is self-regulation. It was the kids that got people to slow down and the kids are not in the street anymore. Twice this year I have had to slam on my breaks while making a left turn because on the route I drive, I so rarely see pedestrians that I fail to scan for them waiting a crosswalk.
The strict regulation of vehicle insurance and changes in liability have also contributed. If drivers are not afraid of the consequences of hitting a pedestrian, they will not pay attention.
When I was a kid, it was not unusual to play catch or bat a tennis ball in the streets. Car traveled at reasonable speeds and we stepped out of the way to let them pass. Today as I look at residential streets, I see that excess speed is a problem.
Rose-colored glasses are a wonderful thing, allowing us to see the past in a great light when the reality was much different.
I see that excess speed is a problem.
Thru traffic is the real problem in residential neighborhoods. That and intimidation by drivers who all understand how easy it is to drive peds/etc out of their way entirely. Suburbs designed thru traffic out of residential neighborhoods via the hierarchical street system and curvilinear streets and cul-de-sacs.
The grid system was always designed to facilitate traffic but once vehicular max speed did go above fatal speed, then what never did happen was to separate that traffic - entirely - from local traffic.
Signs and paint are completely useless. They are not necessary for the driver who lives one block away. They are not paid attention to by every driver who is viewing the neighborhood as a thru-traffic rat run by googlemaps. Speed bumps hassle local traffic as much as thru traffic.
The only thing that can work in urban grids is to build a physical street hierarchy over the grid system. Streets remain grid but the vast majority of residential streets are simply shut off to thru traffic via bollards or such. Those areas funnel out to connectors and arterials and then highways where there is increasingly nothing else allowed except thru traffic.
Physically separating the traffic is the only thing that can possibly work.
Yes. As we know some people are very good at "self-regulating", and some are horrid.
I ALWAYS wish there was a cop around EVERY time I see an asshole driver on the road gladly being an asshole. I hate them! ????
Local story.
All stories about spontaneous order are local stories of necessity.
All stories about spontaneous order by humans are relatively local to our solar system, if not planet Earth, of necessity.
That too...but it all starts with the thoughts and deeds of just one.
For sound economic perspective go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
This can’t be working, right?
Content on Hayek's "fatal conceit of planning" or fuck no!
It’s all fun and games until someone is misgendered or deadnamed.
I keep trying to figure out how restaurants being forced to close their dining rooms and made to serve people on hastily constructed sheds on the street is a good thing.
Particularly given the fact that they were not 'allowed', they were 'tolerated'--and failure to kiss the right Democrats ass got your shanty restaurant closed down and you fined.
The 'spontaneous order' John is lauding here is the worst kind--it is people having to pick up the slack for the elites while the elites take credit for it.
I would note that self-regulation requires people to be sensible in their actions. In addition to doing what you are expected, are you willing to tolerate those not doing as expected. I have visited Central Park on a number of occasions. One thing I always notice is that at Strawberry Fields, the Lennon memorial, the sign asks for no music to be played. I have on most occasions see some musician guitar out playing Beatle songs for tips. The worst part being the musician doesn't even know the difference between Lennon and McCartney songs. But in the interest of self-regulation most people let it be.
"Let it be?" Either I see what you did there or this is spontaneous humor.
🙂
Imagine that.
Of all the gin joints and Public parks in all the towns in all the world, Stossel finds the one public (25%)-private(75%) venture that has been successful, mostly because the vast majority of the donations come from people who live within 10 minutes of the Park with many of them serving on the board of trustees etc. Having a viable Central Park preserves their property values and the character of their NIMBY crime free neighborhood - government zoned to keep out cars and the homeless and patrolled by publicly funded NYC Police Parks Division and Fire Departments. It's a venture that's been almost impossible to duplicate elsewhere.
One imperfection about the Central Park example that I will concede is the larger problem of New York City: No private firearms carry. Without that, one mass incident of crime could send it all spiraling down.
However, just a skip away in New Hampshire, the PorcFest has most everyone engaged in open and concealed carry and it's gone on for years with no muss, no fuss.
...but today's politicians think they're gods.
Did you eat a banana this morning? No central planner calculates how many bananas should be grown, who will pick them, when they'll be harvested, how they'll be shipped, or how many to ship. We get bananas and most everything in life through billions of individuals, planning, cooperating, and reacting on their own.
And contrary to Evangelist Ray Comfort, the banana itself is not the product of a "Central Planner" either, yet another argument for "Spontaneous Order" of relatively simpler things like human political economies.
🙂
John, politicians will continue to have the upper hand in pretending to micromanage everything from soup to nuts because they have nothing else to do. They will continue to do it badly because spontaneous order almost always works better than micromanagement. Citizens who object to interference by meddling politicians will always have to waste their own personal time and resources to counter government while the officials will have all the time and tax money they need to fight in court no matter how many times they lose or how long it takes.
Jeezus H Christ. American traffic does not work by 'spontaneous order'. That is how traffic 'works' in Saudi Arabia.
I've always wondered what does the "H" stand for in the Jesus H Christ declaration? Howard? Harry? Humphrey? Homeless? Help me out here.
Apparently - this monogram
My personal favorite is that the "H" stands for "Haploid".
Is there a cop at every intersection yet traffick flows smoothly not because of laws but because people don't want to wreck their very expensive property. Selfishness is what keeps the roads moving.
You're right about everything but the dining sheds. They are an eyesore, crowd the sidewalks and have become prime real estate for NYC's rat population. The sooner NYC gets rid of them the better.
John, you obviously live in a tony part of town. Come to Brooklyn and see how the homeless defecate on the sidewalk, junkies congregate below scaffolding to get their fix, inconsiderates blast their music to deafening levels, cab drivers toss plates of food into the street, delivery bikes run pedal bikes off the road, etc. The reality, most NY'ers are dirty and selfish pigs who could use a bit of governance.
Friends of mine have bought a restaurant/coffee shop whose owner retired, and sold the building and property but not the business. Fine, they want to do THEIR thing, not what Sonja did. Of COURSE the ol Coutny Health Department comes nipping round to bother. The place had not been closed long enough to trigger a full new inspection. GThe county dweeb takes one look at the new proposed menu, compares to the records he has from Sonja, and says he needs complete recipes, method, ingrediet lists, etc of every new item, and wants a different proceedure for every item the former owner served that the new folks want to drop from the menu.. HOURS and hours of make-work, and they have all thee TI's, new equipment to install, training, etc to take care of, not playong stupid games with the countydweeb. His solution? Next visit he informed the county dweeb they will simply use the former owners' complete menu, exactly as she had it. No inspection on the food items they will be serving. Hmph. (of course, if they don't "happen" to have certain key ingredients for her older dishes, they just won't be availble that day. Dweeb can go pound sand. He will be far more useful doing that when what HE has up his sleeve to harrass and burden them.
Sheesh......
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