Civil wars happen all the time.
Not in America, but the Revolutionary War (an act of rebellion) paved the way for freedom. It's the "sheep" mentality that allows this abuse to happen.
Civil wars happen all the time.
When it comes to free-market police/defense, theory is all we have. We don't know what shape things might take, because we haven't seen it.You're dodging the question by answering it with more theory.
How are six different, competing forces going to handle that?
If you're going to attack the free market solution to a problem, you need to be able to defend the monopoly position, not the other way around.
I already did so in my OP. Considering the events, news and rhetoric at the time, I had no problem seeing APCs and armed soldiers stationed at the mall when doing some grocery shopping.
All of the things you mentioned in your OP could be accomplished in a much more efficient way by private security.
Not in America, but the Revolutionary War (an act of rebellion) paved the way for freedom. It's the "sheep" mentality that allows this abuse to happen.
A private police force isn't going to solve anything, it'll just become another branch of a corporate giant and drain your money that way.
BBC News - G4S repays UK government £108.9m after tagging scandal
Blackwater Baghdad shootings - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
G4S Olympic Security Disaster: How It Happened - Business Insider
Incompetence and corruption are everywhere, until you design the system to stamp it out. A good start would be merging a lot of these three letter agencies that seem to constantly overlap each other during investigations. I can't see how creating more disparate and distant police forces would make things any easier.
heh, we'll just have to agree to disagree then. Nonetheless, logistics, communication, intelligence, and supply chains are four things I can think of off the top of my head. I don't know, I'm never in charge of large crowd control operations in metropolitan areas, but I'm quite confident there's a whole lot more to it than I realize.
To think some private companies with board of directors and shareholders could have calmed the Thai populous as quickly and efficiently as the military did is what's ludicrous.
You're missing a big point.
Who paid those "private" companies? It wasn't private or voluntary money. And they were hired by the Government, going back to the whole "monopoly" thing we covered earlier.
What do you propose instead?
Come on, you guys can't do that. You're dodging the question by answering it with more theory. I actually agree with you guys in principle, but well... it's just a theory. When you apply it to a real-world scenario, it fails miserably.
Government or not, there will always be mass protests. For example, say you have an industrial area, and the factory owners go into cohorts with each other to help dictate worker pay, conditions, and benefits in order to maximize profits. After several years of this, workers feel disenfranchised, so they organize, and take to the streets to demand better treatment from the factory owners. Government or no government, this type of thing will still happen, correct?
So now you have say 20,000 people marching down the street for a week or two, a small minority of which are pissed off, heavily armed, and happy to cause some problems. How would six competing private protection agencies handle that? I'm sure you can see the holes in it.
Or what happens when an even larger protest happens? Every two or three years they seem to have a good 50 - 100k protesters in downtown Bangkok, and they hang out there for months at a time. These people come from all over, even hundreds of miles away. They have weapon caches, TV & radio stations, and everything else all throughout the country. They'll erect huge encampments right in the middle of Bangkok, and barricade themselves in with cement blocks, dump trucks, tires, etc., and the police know full well if / when they move in those tires will be in flames within minutes, etc. How are six different, competing forces going to handle that? You can't, it's logistically impossible.
Jake with all due love and respect the above scenario had an almost undetectable undercurrent of creepy to it that made me gnash my teeth a little. Like part Stepford Wives, part Running Man, part Minority Report.
But thank you for those posts, I needed a good think to thunk about. Raising a glass to you my man =]
At Ice and Scott:
I knew both of you could state things much better that I could.![]()
I wholeheartedly disagree with the above at least in regards to anything I might add to this discussion, and only posted a response in the hopes that you might follow up with one of your own, so that I might be exposed to some ideas beyond the scope of my own imaginings...
I wholeheartedly disagree with the above at least in regards to anything I might add to this discussion, and only posted a response in the hopes that you might follow up with one of your own, so that I might be exposed to some ideas beyond the scope of my own imaginings...