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        <title><![CDATA[The Benefits of a Free Society during Pandemics]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">The Benefits of a Free Society during Pandemics</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this time of crisis, many 
exclaim how impressed they are by the “swift and decisive” actions by 
the Chinese regime. Instead of recognizing the abhorrent disrespect for 
human life, the Chinese response is put forth as an exemplar for 
combatting a pandemic.</p><p>These hailers conveniently forget the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_2019%E2%80%9320_coronavirus_pandemic_in_November_2019_%E2%80%93_January_2020" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"> many weeks of silencing and censorship</a>&nbsp;that
 preceded the brutal shutting down of the city of Wuhan and the whole 
Hubei province. They also turn a blind eye to the nature of hierarchy 
and <a href="https://mises.org/library/bureaucracy">bureaucracy</a>, pretending what is needed to choose proper action is simply power and that <a href="https://mises.org/power-market/no-authoritarian-governments-do-not-outperform-open-societies-crisis"> access to accurate, reliable information</a>&nbsp;is of little concern.</p><p>The calls for a <a href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/strongman" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"> strongman</a>&nbsp;solution
 are misguided at best, but have been used to paint the picture of 
freedom as being impotent. As per the strongman delusion, libertarianism
 would seem to lack exactly what is needed for “swiftly and decisively” 
dealing with a pandemic—centralized power.</p><h4><strong>A Free Society Is Not a Free-for-All</strong></h4><p>There is no question that locking (and even welding) people into 
their homes should limit the spread of a contagious virus compared to 
having people moving freely about and spreading the disease. Similarly, <a href="https://nypost.com/2020/03/11/trump-suspends-travel-from-europe-over-coronavirus-fears/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"> stopping air travel</a>&nbsp;should limit the spread as compared to carrying on flying as if nothing happened.</p><p>But those are, in fact, two extremes neither of which applies in a 
libertarian society. The former extreme is based on centralized 
authoritarian power over people’s lives and property, which is rather 
obviously incompatible with freedom. This is, of course, the strongman 
critique of freedom: its lack of such power.</p><p>But the same is true also for the latter extreme, which presumes that
 any society has significant public property and limitations to the 
rights of owners of private property. Neither could be the case in a 
libertarian society. Under private property, you do not automatically 
have the right to enter someone’s store or walk on their sidewalk just 
like you don’t have a right to enter their home as you see fit. While 
you are typically <em>welcome</em> to enter a store – the store owner wants you to consider purchasing their goods for sale—your entry is on their terms.</p><p>As they are in control, they are also responsible for what they allow
 to happen. This is why even today private stores and malls, just like 
private communities, typically have their own security (despite the 
state police monopoly). They are liable if they welcome anyone without 
restrictions, and thereby subject others to potential harm. This 
includes welcoming without restrictions carriers of a deadly virus.</p><p>We saw this oft-overlooked fact in action, to a limited extent, as <a href="https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2020-03-03/airlines-suspend-flights-due-to-coronavirus-outbreak" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"> airlines suspended flights</a>&nbsp;to
 affected areas before being grounded by government decree. Why? Because
 they do not want to risk the health of their employees and 
customers—for which they would be held liable. In a libertarian society,
 there is no right to use another’s property but also no limitation to 
the owner’s responsibility for what happens with their (explicit or 
implicit) approval.</p><p>This is, of course, not a perfect solution that completely does away 
with all problems, including detaining a virus before it starts to 
spread. But there are no perfect solutions. The point is that a 
libertarian society is not like the status quo plus or minus some 
regulation or state agency. The libertarian ‘normal’ is very different 
from what we have gotten used to under the state.</p><p>The fact is neither of the extremes assumed by strongman proponents 
applies in a free society. Yes, it would lack authoritarian power, but 
it is also not a free-for-all where everyone’s wish somehow trumps 
property rights.</p><h4><strong>The Problem with One-Size-Fits-All</strong></h4><p>But surely the lack of authoritarian power must mean freedom is 
impotent in dealing with large threats? No, this is another strongman 
illusion that does not actually follow. It simply isn’t the case that 
centralization is a solution. To instate a central power means adopting a
 one-size-fits-all approach, but there are more problems of 
centralization: it makes us more vulnerable and our responses less 
appropriate.</p><p>Most would agree that a one-size-fits-all approach would in fact be a
 good fit for very few, just like a one-size sweater would be a poor fit
 on practically everyone wearing it. Conditions are different in 
different places, which means each place would have a different best 
response.</p><p>We actually saw this in the coronavirus outbreak, where governors 
adopted different policies for their respective states. It makes sense 
for them to do this, because the states are very different and were also
 differently affected by the virus. While far from perfect, this shows 
that even career politicians recognize that a centralized solution isn’t
 appropriate. If they truly believed in one-size-fits-all they would 
have adopted <em>the same </em>policy. But they didn’t, because the situations were different.</p><p>Information about what works and what doesn’t, and important 
differences between locales and populations, is lost as information is 
aggregated and statistics are produced to guide centralized decisions. 
This is Hayek’s <a href="https://mises.org/library/use-knowledge-society"> famous argument </a> about the dispersed, tacit knowledge that guides our actions but cannot guide the central planner.</p><h4>Decentralization and Flexibility Make Systems More Resilient</h4><p>But a centralized solution also makes us more vulnerable. An example 
might illustrate this. Consider the difference between a structured, 
centralized national defense and an armed populace. Switzerland is the 
popular example of the latter, but this is not a unique idea. For 
examples, Sweden’s defense comprises both a traditionally structured 
military and the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Home_Guard_(Sweden)" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Home Guard</a>.
 While you can rather easily cripple the military by taking out a couple
 of their bases, the decentralized and dispersed forces of the Home 
Guard are almost impossible to wipe out.</p><p>What does this have to do with a virus pandemic? It illustrates the 
false promises of centralization, which is a costly and inadequate 
solution that in fact makes a society more vulnerable. The same argument
 applies whether it is the national defense, centralized education, or 
the monopoly of the CDC. A centralized command structure offers only a 
false sense of security.</p><p>Libertarian society is exactly the decentralized structure that our 
present society is lacking. Rather than a pyramid with information 
selected and repackaged on its way up and orders issued from the top, it
 would be a collaborative network of individuals and neighborhoods. A 
neighborhood affected by an outbreak could quickly and easily choose to 
contain the virus, perhaps in collaboration with adjacent neighborhoods.
 Others could choose to temporarily quarantine themselves to not get 
infected.</p><p>There would also be little reason for them to not share information. 
While the Chinese apparently believed they didn’t have to do anything, 
other than <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Li_Wenliang" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"> silencing whistleblowers</a>,
 a government is typically not held responsible for its failures. It’s 
the other way around: a government agency that fails in its task is not 
punished, but instead offered larger budgets and more discretion.</p><p>In rather stark contrast, a libertarian neighborhood that chooses to 
suppress vital information about an outbreak could (and would) be held 
liable for the harm caused to others. They face the same mechanism as 
the private store owner, who would be liable if s/he welcomes those 
knowingly carrying a virus to enter the premises and infect other 
customers. It is thus in their interest not to hide the fact, as is the 
government modus operandi, but to share the information and get in front
 of the problem.</p><p>None of what is appropriate action during an outbreak or pandemic 
requires central command. The downsides of centralization in fact make 
matters worse and is what made us vulnerable to begin with. The many 
calls for increased centralization, and their outright dismissal of 
libertarianism and freedom as &#8220;impotent,&#8221; are fundamentally confused. 
Rather than being reasonable and rational, these outcries are emotional 
and contrary to fact. They are but symptoms of the strongman ideology.</p>]]></content:encoded>
                <dc:creator><![CDATA[GAGmen]]></dc:creator>
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