Episodes
Tuesday Oct 17, 2017
ana013: Private Ownership of Public Space | Part 1: Tim’s Porcfest Speech
Tuesday Oct 17, 2017
Tuesday Oct 17, 2017
Tim presented a speech at the 14th Annual Porcupine Freedom Festival (Porcfest), titled “Private Ownership of Public Space in Post-State Cities.” He addressed three key questions:
1. What is “public space” and why should libertarians care about it?
2. How can public use be preserved under private ownership?
3. How can state owned spaces be divested into private ownership?
This episode features a brief discussion about Porcfest, and the full recording of Tim’s speech.
View full show notes at anarchitecturepodcast.com/ana013.
Intro
“You had me at ‘Privatization'”
Discussion
What is the Free State Project?
A pledge by 20,000 libertarian activists to move to New Hampshire within five years.
Adra Architecture – The Official Sponsor of Anarchitecture Podcast (a shameless plug for Tim’s new architecture practice)
Terms and Conditions apply
Tim’s profit-seeking motive for sponsoring PorcFest
The Porcupine as a symbol of Liberty
What the Free State Project and Kim Jong Il have in common
FIGHT CLUB – Tim vs. Jeffrey Tucker
The Porcfest crowd
Not “With Her”
Bohemians in tie-dye
Ex-military guys with assault rifles
Bohemians in tie-dye with assault rifles
Bitcoin computer geeks
Families
Business people
Academics
The big umbrella of libertarianism
Porcfest Events
Debates on zoning, immigration
Patrick Byrne – CEO of Overstock.com
Dale Brown, from Detroit Threat Management Center
Burning Porcupine
Pig roast
Vendor booths for businesses, food, and merchandise
The “Adra Lounge” – Tim’s own piece of public space
Thanking our entire audience for going to Porcfest
OMG WE ARE CELEBRETARIANS NOW!!!
Brett Veinotte from School Sucks Project
Steve Patterson – Tim throws down the gauntlet, which was quantum entangled so that it was really Joe throwing it down.
“Speaking of shooting off your mouth… my speech.”
Speech Notes
Overview
What is public space?
Ownership of land
Divestiture of government property
Ownership of public space
Post-state cities
What is Public Space?
…and why should libertarians care about it?
Space that is accessible to non-owners without invitation, with reasonable restrictions
Access to Public Space
…a sliding scale
Public Space
No permission for entry, no permission for occupancy
(Public park)
Permissible Public Space
Minor permissions for entry and / or occupancy, i.e. Pay a fee
(Movie theater)
Permissible Private Space
Major restrictions on entry and/or occupancy
(Corporate building lobby)
Private Space
Invitation only
(Private Home)
Categories of Public Space
Open Space
Urban open space (plazas and parks)
Natural areas (hiking trails, nature preserves, beaches, preserved farmland)
Enclosed parks (theme parks, amusement parks, botanical gardens)
Buildings
Social / Cultural facilities (museums, theaters, community centers, libraries, tourist attractions, sports arenas)
Mercantile facilities (Farmers markets, malls, shops, restaurants)
Transportation facilities (airports, train stations, bus stations)
Pathways
Roads and rights-of-way
Waterways (Rivers, lakes, oceans)
Parking (Lots, garages, on-street spaces)
Restrictions on Public Space
…do not necessarily disqualify a space as “public”
Administrative Restrictions:
Fees for use (park fees, road tolls)
Hours of use
Occupancy capacity (egress, parking)
Types of occupancy (camping, mercantile, assembly)
Behavioral Restrictions:
Disruptive / aggressive behavior / drinking
Reckless driving
Criminality
Health and safety risks
Why is public space important?
Essential to human functioning
Freedom of movement
Marketplaces – Access to goods, services, and jobs
Recreation, nature, history, and arts
Social interaction, public discourse, protest, celebration
Public Space Summary
Space that is accessible to non-owners without invitation, with reasonable restrictions
Many types of public space – Open Space, Buildings, Pathways
Government owned and privately owned
Degrees of access with permissions
Many private facilities have public space components (i.e. Lobbies)
Expectation of entry (if not occupancy) on most properties
Restrictions on entry and occupancy
Public space is essential to public life
Ownership of Land
Essential elements of ownership
Reasonable freedom from adverse use inhibiting desired use
Duration of desired use with minimal risk of seizure (i.e. lease term)
Freedom to transfer ownership rights at will, in whole (sale) or in part (lease)
Necessity of Land Ownership
Private property ownership of land is essential to settlement and production.
Any society that is not nomadic needs to allocate private property to farm the land and build homes, roads, and infrastructure, with minimal risk of seizure, eviction, and adverse use by others.
Means of Enforcing Land Ownership
Architectural Means
Fences, Gates, Walls, Doors, Intrusion Alarms
Legal Means
Titles, Deeds, Trusts, Surveys, Liens, Homestead, Common Law / Custom
Forceful Means
Armed Security, Forceful Eviction, Booby Traps
Is forceful eviction consistent with the non-aggression principle?
…and the sign says anybody caught trespassing will be shot on sight
So I jumped the fence and yelled to the house, Hey, what gives you the right?
To put up a fence to keep me out, and keep mother nature in
If God were here he’d tell it to your face, Man, you’re some kind of sinner
Signs, by Five Man Electrical Band
Is trespass without threat an act of aggression that justifies defensive force?
No
Has a trespasser consented to force being used against him?
Maybe
Does a right to forceful eviction depend on local laws and customs?
Yes
Is forceful eviction consistent with the non-aggression principle?
The right to use force to exclude or evict people from a certain area of land is not an a priori “natural” right
However, forceful eviction is necessary (with proportionality and due process) to avoid adverse use of many types of property, which is essential to settlement and production
A right to forceful eviction is a valid legal construct in societies with broad consensus for property rights.
Establishing a Right To Forceful Eviction
Homesteading
“Mix labor with the land”
A nice idea, but impractical
Takes time to “mix” labor with a large area of land
Excludes potential for natural preservation
Can justify an initial claim after the fact
First Claim
“I claim this chest in the name of Spain”
Necessary, but insufficient
Dennis Hope has claimed the Moon and sold off claims to others.
Some combination of claim, survey, and declaration of intent for use may be sufficient to validate a claim (i.e. mining claims).
But none of this matters…
Seizure
“All your base are belong to us”
No existing land title has been established primarily by homesteading
No future land titles (on Earth) will be created by homesteading
All existing land titles have been created by governments who have claimed unused land or seized occupied land.
Are all existing land titles invalid?
NO
Land claims are relative.
Whoever has the earliest provable claim to land has the best claim (Stephan Kinsella)
Privately-owned land has been “removed” from the governments who seized it.
Is “Public Property” invalid?
There is no public property.
“Public Property” is private property that happens to be owned by a government.
The Owner (government) sets rules for access, fees, and allowable uses, no different than private property owners.
Some government-owned property is public space, and some is not.
Like private property, government-owned land titles may be valid if there are no better competing claims
The problem is the ongoing ownership by a government taxing and initiating force.
The government needs to go away, not the land titles.
Divestiture of Government Property
Why Divest Government Property?
Property ownership forms part of the basis for the state’s power and perceived legitimacy.
Government-owned roads, parks, beaches, etc. are amenities that entice people to support government and taxation. Bread and circuses.
Less justification for eminent domain. Government doesn’t need to take land to build roads if it doesn’t build roads.
Governments collect taxes to build infrastructure, spend taxes blowing up infrastructure in other countries.
Private landownership is the basis for a voluntary society governed by rules of private landowners.
Levels of authority: Landowners’ rules, deed restrictions, social standards, universal morals (NAP)
Municipal police exist largely in part to patrol municipal property. Private security becomes much more viable and logical without government property.
Property divestiture to public forms of ownership (i.e. voucher privatization) could be a windfall endowment to the poor.
How should government property be divested?
Abandonment (to be re-homesteaded)
Only valid for unused land
Restitution to taxpayers (Hoppe)
What’s so special about taxpayers?
What about government’s other victims?
Arbitrary allocation
Politically impossible – giving more property to the rich
Seizure by revolutionaries
In the absence of a valid competing land claim, forceful taking would create an invalid title. Subject to invalidation in future.
Revolutionary overthrow of government would just create another governmental owner. Transfer from government to government, not divestiture.
Spin off government departments as private organizations
Highway Department becomes Highway Association / Highway Corporation
Risk of monopoly
Risk of bankruptcy
Who owns the spin-off?
“Opt-in” Trusts
Anyone, anywhere can opt-in to create a share
Preferred shares for people who invest money in improvements
Profits or other benefits for preferred shares
Normal shares can vote but can’t receive profits (Safeguard against losing public use to wealthy cabal)
Preserving Access Rights to Public Space
The purchaser draws boundaries, fences himself in, and says, ‘This is mine; each one by himself, each one for himself.’ Here, then, is a piece of land upon which, henceforth, no one has right to step, save the proprietor and his friends; which can benefit nobody, save the proprietor and his servants.
“Let these multiply, and soon the people … will have nowhere to rest, no place of shelter, no ground to till. They will die of hunger at the proprietor’s door, on the edge of that property which was their birth-right; and the proprietor, watching them die, will exclaim, ‘So perish idlers and vagrants.’” – Pierre-Joseph Proudhon
Existing public use of government-owned roads, parks, plazas, etc. has been “homesteaded”
Divestiture of public space to private entities should not allow them to restrict access
Reasonable access restrictions, consistent with existing restrictions
Traffic laws
Fees for use
Hours of operation
Behavioral / safety restrictions
Means of Enforcing Public Access
Public Ownership
Opt-in Trust – Public can join as owners and vote shares to maintain public access
Public access could be removed with broad consensus
Trust Ownership
Declaration of Trust could define purpose of land ownership trust as preserving public space.
Limit powers of trust to remove land from public access
Deed Covenants
Before divesting, governments could establish deed covenants and easements that define public access rights, responsibilities, and restrictions
Summary of Private Ownership of Public Space
Existing land titles not in dispute should be respected
Government property should be divested to private ownership
Public forms of private ownership (i.e. Opt-in Trusts) may be most viable
Public access to existing government property should be preserved by legal right
Post-State Cities
Public space freed from the tragedy of the commons
Private ownership can bring market efficiency, value discovery, and accountability to public space
Enhancement of green spaces and urban plazas
Reduction of road congestion and traffic accidents
Provision of appropriate parking
Efficacy of mass transit
Mitigation of unsustainable sprawl
With or without a state, the thoughtful divestiture of state property to private owners could enrich our cities and towns with a flourishing of public space.
Links/Resources
Free State Project | Liberty in Our Lifetime
Porcfest – The Porcupine Freedom Festival
Adra Architecture – Tim’s new Architecture Firm
Dale Brown (Detroit Threat Management Center) on The Tom Woods Show
Steve Patterson on Quantum Mechanics (Soon to be corrected)
Signs – Five Man Electrical Band
I Claim This Chest in the Name of Spain!
Dennis Hope – Selling the Moon
Stephan Kinsella – Land Claims are Relative
Hoppe – Divest to the Taxpayers – Near the end of the article. See also the Kinsella link above for a reference to Hoppe’s position.
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