Love, Trade, and Force: The Machinery of Freedom at 50
David Friedman's anarchism doesn't have the answer for everything. That's the point.

"The direct use of physical force is so poor a solution to the problem of limited resources that it is commonly employed only by small children and great nations."
This spicy little sentence is typical of the zingers littered throughout David Friedman's The Machinery of Freedom. The anarcho-capitalist classic turns 50 this year, and it's worth revisiting for both its spirit and substance.
The book has a chaotic energy. Just a few pages after the epigraph—which pairs a moderately profane joke by Lenny Bruce with a verse from "libertarian troubadour" and future U.S. congressman Dana Rohrabacher—we're deep into a discussion of the Federal Communications Commission's role in spectrum allocation before bouncing back out for chatty speculation about how to "sell the schools," a riff on "socialism, limited government, anarchy, and bikinis," and a treatment of the vital question, "is william f. buckley a contagious disease?" (Stylish '70s lowercase in the original, of course.)
But there is a method to the madness. In his "postscript for perfectionists," Friedman hammers home what is not included in the book: "I have said almost nothing about rights, ethics, good and bad, right and wrong." This strategic agnosticism is what captured my attention as a 19-year-old college student, already weary of banging my head against the wall of deontological disagreement.
It's very hard to convince someone to change their mind about what is right and wrong, but as Friedman observes, "it is much easier to persuade people with practical arguments than with ethical ones." Perhaps not coincidentally, that postscript was written right around the time that James R. Schlesinger was coining the phrase, "You are entitled to your own views, but you are not entitled to your own facts." If, as Friedman hypothesized, "most political disagreement is rooted in questions of what is, not what should be," many people have been going about the project of consensus building and political change all wrong. "I have asked, not what people should want," he says, "but how we can accomplish those things which most of us do want."
This approach suggests a methodology: Scrutinizing existing, highly effective voluntary institutions and systems for alternative ways to perform functions that even a minarchist libertarian might reserve for the state, and then extrapolating from there toward shared goals of peace, prosperity, and justice.
Asking how the world works nearly always yields more interesting and productive discussions than asking how the world should be. Often accused of utopianism, anarcho-capitalists are the opposite. ("I have wondered whether I might have originated 'Utopia is not an option,' but probably not," Friedman mused while casually popping into the comments section of a 2015 Slate Star Codex post about his greatest work.) Friedman's comfort with uncertainty is inspirational, heroic even. He isn't quite sure how things would play out if roles currently performed by the state were instead accomplished via market mechanisms, but he's happy to make a guess. After all, if he knew for sure, he'd be the CEO of the Court Services Co. or Professors Incorporated instead of being a guy who writes books.
***
"There are essentially only three ways that I can get another person to help me achieve my ends," Friedman writes: "love, trade, and force."
In a world where individuals are free to pursue their own interests and desires, people are more likely to engage in mutually beneficial relationships driven by genuine connection rather than social expectations or legal obligations. Love—or "more generally, the sharing of a common end"—is a powerful coordinating tool in society, and one too often underestimated or undermined by other political theories.
Still, love only gets you so far. Force, the preferred tool of toddlers and tyrants, too often leads to unintended consequences while failing to actually achieve its stated ends. That leaves trade as the primary mode for getting things done. Part of the charm of The Machinery of Freedom is that it proceeds on the assumption that voluntary exchange is largely up to the task of organizing society. Friedman underscores that trade is not just limited to material goods but can also encompass intangible assets such as knowledge and ideas.
The most striking thing about The Machinery of Freedom is its cheerful, eclectic optimism. It weaves back and forth between history, politics, and speculative fiction in ways that are enlivening and energizing. Friedman was not the first to make market anarchist arguments, but in the decades that followed the book's publication, they grew in appeal as an alternative to the angry polarization gripping those who preferred to fight over state power. He is generous with his ideas. If you don't like his plan for voucherizing university classes, he's happy to offer you another option for education reform. If you are skeptical about market provision of national defense, he's happy to suggest a theory of change inspired by the French monarchy's habit of selling tax exemptions. If you're worried about who will pay to build the roads, he's happy to tell you a weirdly prescient story about "electronic recording devices, computer-controlled entrances, and three-to-eleven working days" while conceding that those innovations "sound like science fiction."
The appeal of Friedman's anarchism is not that he has the answer, but that he has dozens of them and he's not at all bothered by the idea that none may be the perfect one. "It is fashionable," writes Friedman, "to measure the importance of ideas by the number and violence of their adherents. That is a fashion I shall not follow. If, when you finish this book, you have come to share many of my views, you will know the most important thing about the number of libertarians—that it is larger by one than when you started reading."
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There are no book “bans".
https://www.nationalreview.com/2023/09/there-is-no-book-ban-demic/?utm_source=recirc-desktop&utm_medium=homepage&utm_campaign=river&utm_content=featured-content-trending&utm_term=second
“PEN America, a nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting free expression, recently released an annual report documenting “3,362 book bans affecting 1,557 unique titles” in public schools across the United States during the 2022–2023 academic year. The report says that 88 percent of book bans occurred in Republican states, and “over 40 percent of all book bans occurred in school districts in Florida.”
“PEN America clarifies the following in its methodology:
For example, if a book that was previously available to all now requires parental permission, or is restricted to a higher grade level than educators initially determined, that is a ban. In some cases, books are removed from shelves for “review,” but not returned for a weeks or months. If students cannot access the book, that is a ban.”
“The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines the verb “ban” as “to prohibit especially by legal means” or “to prohibit the use, performance, or distribution of” something. Therefore, reading material cannot be appropriately labeled “banned” just because it is not readily available to every single student. Restricted material is not prohibited material. Similarly, barriers to access — like parental permission slips — do not mean material is prohibited. (Is alcohol “banned” because you must be 21 and show ID to buy it? Obviously not.)”
“The relevant question is not precisely how many books are banned. Instead, the question is what materials should be available to students. We can — and should — have respectful debates about what content is appropriate for what ages. But PEN America isn’t interested in those debates. The organization tailors its methodology to produce misleading statistics in the service of disparaging Republicans, while misrepresenting the books in question to frame their objectionable content as unremarkably generic.”
You are technically correct to be a butt-hurt whinger about the use of the word "ban", but the greater offence is the restriction in the first place. (Not to mention that a stringent enough restriction is FAPP a ban.)
A dishonest framing is a dishonest framing. The question is “what sort of materials are appropriate for what age group”. One cannot have a productive debate about that question if one side engages in hyperbolic abuse of terminology like PEN does.
Nothing described here amounts to a ban, in actual or practical definition.
One can debate whether or not public school libraries should stock Hustler magazine on its shelves.
That a public school library refuses to stock Hustler does not mean that the state banned Hustler.
There is no violation of any libertarian, liberal, democratic, or conservative principle that I know of when parents and taxpayers, not librarians, decide what books are available in school libraries.
Saying, I don't want "Dora Explores Her Hole" in an elementary school library is not calling for a "ban".
There is no violation of any libertarian, liberal, democratic, or conservative principle that I know of when parents and taxpayers, not librarians, decide what books are available in school libraries.
Except that if a single parent complain and that is enough to get a book withdrawn, that is indeed a violation.
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Are there any books that are inappropriate for an elementary school library?
I know David Friedman in real life. We live only a few miles from each other, and I bump into him at quite a few libertarian events.
What I love about his take, and that of his book Machinery of Freedom, is that he does NOT tell you how an anarchist society will work. This is in stark contrast to so much of AnCap literature that seem to know exactly how stuff will work. All residential roads will be toll roads, everyone will subscribe to private justice services, etc., etc. Utter nonsense. Friedman instead shows how stuff actually did work in the past, or does work now. There are no grand moral polemics, or micro-detailed systems of modern society will operate, no blueprints of exactly how we get there. Instead he shows how stuff actually works in real life.
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Yes, and Friedman uses equivocation and propaganda to try to convince you that crony capitalism works!
And your comment is an appeal to ridicule!
Do you have any evidence of your claims, or are we just supposed to accept them on blind faith?
Friedman instead shows how stuff actually did work in the past, or does work now.
I have not read the book (and it's not on Kindle), but I like what I'm hearing. This in particular is what distinguishes him from ideologues of all stripes - including those libertarians who adopt an axiomatic approach to everything - hence independent of, and ignoring, evidence.
If you have a good axiom, it works. If you have a bad axiom, it doesn't.
That there exists bad axioms doesn't prove that arguing from axioms is wrong, anymore than bad evidential arguments prove that evidential arguments are wrong.
Slightly missing the point. There are people who argue from axioms exclusively - Objectivists in my experience do nothing but. That approach alone is bad, even if some of the axioms are good.
Why would arguing strictly from axioms be bad? If they are correct, and the argument is valid, then the conclusion should be correct.
Would arguing strictly from evidence be bad?
Not only is the third edition available on Kindle, it's also available in the third edition as an audiobook, and for free as a PDF on his website. So no excuses for not reading it based on availability.
Thanks! Amazon only showed me HB and PB. I will go back and look or get the pdf.
It's an excellent book.
The Machinery of Freedom: Read by the Author
My favorite chapter was "Love is not enough".
"...no blueprints of exactly how we get there."
Is that the same as "The means determines the end" - Gandhi?
I believe so. If we use reason, rights, and respect for others instead of force, threats, fraud, then our goals, however varied, will be achieved, by an infinite variety of ways.
If we don't; if we worship "The Most Dangerous Superstition" by Larken Rose, then our means will either change, or we will live/die in turmoil.
"Libertarian arguments fail, so we are just going to make utilitarian/progressive ones."
Yes, "voluntary exchange" between the CCP and US billionaires. The "machinery of freedom" certainly works for them. Not so much for their slaves.
“Libertarian arguments fail, so we are just going to make utilitarian/progressive ones.”
Try, "evidence-free theoretical arguments fail, so we are going to go with what has actually worked in practice".
A pragmatic libertarian, noting that a particular idea - whether progressive or conservative - though it appears non-libertarian in principle, has desirable outcomes in practice, will not eschew such an idea. Fundamentalist libertarians will.
No, people are just stubborn and don't want to admit that theft, assault, and murder are wrong even when the State does it, so he's using Utilitarian arguments instead.
I'm sorry, are you saying that Americans are slaves to US billionaires?
Do pray tell how it's wrong when the CCP steals, assaults, and murders, but it's OK when the Feds in DC do it!
You clearly have not read the book and do not know the first thing about his arguments. Don't you feel any guilt for being so thoroughly intellectually dishonest?
(that was a supposed to be reply to noyb2, not ace_m82)
Don't feel bad. I've mistaken these two before. They both share the common denominator of living in their own respective Stepford bubbles.
Any domain entirely controlled by market forces benefits individuals who have the most money. If you don't have enough money to buy lots of stuff, you have much less influence. Wealthy people can buy themselves out of 'tragedy of the commons' situations because they gate themselves from those situations using their money. By the time enough middle and lower-class people pool their resources for a lawsuit, or arrange a boycott, the damage is already done.
"Tell me you haven't read the book without telling me you haven't read the book."
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