The Individualist Manifesto jury system
Trevor Watkins 30/7/24
The Individualist Manifesto suggests a jury system for resolving disputes and grey areas within a community. This is probably the most contentious of the 4 components in the manifesto, so I am writing this article to help explain and clarify this issue.
Job 5:7 says that “Man is born to trouble as surely as the sparks fly upward”. Things fall apart. Conflicts always arise. In the past conflicts were resolved by the king, or through warfare. Nowadays they are resolved by courts and judges appointed by politicians in government. This critical function has been moved beyond the control of the individuals involved in the dispute. When other avenues such as compensation and apology have failed, I suggest that conflicts between individuals should be judged by other individuals using the tried and trusted jury system.
How will it work?One individual or group declares to another individual or group that a dispute exists.
Being good individualists, the disputants mutually agree to settle the dispute using the jury system proposed in the Individualist Manifesto, to minimise conflict and costs.
Jury duty is voluntary. Commonly members of the jury will be selected by the disputants.
The size and composition of the jury must be consented to by both parties to the dispute. If agreement on a jury cannot be reached in a reasonable time (7 days, for example), both sides select six jurors, and a foreman with a casting vote is chosen by random lottery of the jury members.
Because it is a matter of chance as to which side obtains the casting vote on the jury, it will be important for both sides to select jurors committed to acting on the merits of the case, rather than jurors blindly supporting the side which appointed them.
The members of the jury alone determine the rules for the hearing.
They may be guided by well-established rules of legal procedure and evidence, but they are not bound by it.
They may appoint a judge or judges to guide them.
They may invite or allow lawyers to represent the parties.
They may allow witnesses, cross-examine them, conduct investigations, seek the opinion of experts, or do whatever is required to reach a decision.
Jury decisions are made by a simple majority vote.
They will be funded equally by the parties to the dispute during the hearing, but may finally decide on any allocation of costs they see fit.
Any jury decision may be appealed to another jury until one side or the other has 3 identical decisions in its favour. Thereafter the jury decision becomes binding upon both parties to the dispute, and is added to the set of legal precedents for that community which defines their common law.
I believe that a class of professional, impartial jurors will arise whose primary asset will be their reputation for fair decisions. This class of jurors will provide the pool from which most parties to a dispute will make their jury selection.
Juries will be local and decentralised. Bad decisions will have immediate consequences visible to the community
Because they are local, a jury will reflect the standards and customs of the community in which it is based.
Conflict and costs will be reduced.
Access to justice will not be denied because of wealth or position.
Endless expensive delays will be reduced
By participating directly in the justice system, citizens exercise their freedoms and duties in a tangible manner.
There's the risk of local biases influencing decisions, which could undermine the libertarian ideal of impartial and fair justice. Each side selects its own jurors, which should minimise this.
The potential for injustice always exists even in the best systems, as the New York judiciary currently illustrates.
The Individualst Manifesto and the HarmConsentRule constitute the legal framework within which the jury operates. This may not be acceptable to all.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Individualist Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to individualis...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/ace19f36-3695-4ced-8dae-bb8918f2b6b5n%40googlegroups.com.
From, Martin Vlietstra
First of all, who am I. I worked with Trevor in the 1970's and in 1978 relocated to the United Kingdom. Trevor and I have kept in touch since then.
The United Kingdom has an arbitration system in place. Arbiters are appointed jointly by parties in dispute and are usually experts in the field. For example, if the dispute involves an IT system, the President of the British Computer Society (BCS) is empowered to appoint arbiters who are accredited by the BCS and who will establish the facts - "Did the software supplied comply with what was contracted?" A BCS-appointed arbiter will seldom award damages, though once the facts have been clarified, any damages will quickly be determined by reference to Common Law.
In my view, Stephen rightly identifies that any dispute settlement system should work first and foremost in the free market situation. In any market, there are a number of parties - the buyer and the seller (who do not necessarily know each other) and most importantly of all the regulator (who identifies what can be bought and sold in the market and how the product is packaged and how it is delivered and how it is paid for). Having a regulator in a free market improves transparency - if I am negotiating with you, does my price include government taxes or not? When is payment required? How is the product delivered? For the record, in the 1970's I sold peaches on the Johannesburg fruit and vegetable market (via an agent) and more recently I have worked on IT systems in both the London and Frankfurt financial industries.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAMr06S7xrACqOx4Lg%2Biu-dYuARo-f8OO%3DTRVLsFMOw6Ru9JTGA%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/000001dae2c1%24bd990aa0%2438cb1fe0%24%40btinternet.com.
Regarding the "need" of a regulator in the free market, the moment a market is subjected to any form of state applied regulation it is no longer free.
In a genuine free market, if there is a demand for parties that will ascertain " ... what can be bought and sold in the market and how the product is packaged and how it is delivered and how it is paid for” then service providers in this field will naturally arise to meet the demand without any need for a state imposed regulator.
Whether these parties are called “regulators” or whatever, their name will arise and shape itself in the free market to fit the demand … without any form of government intervention.
Paradoxically many pro “free market” economists stop short of being pro free market and fall back on the government to regulate the market.
Just a little bit here and a little bit there of intervention … but the moment that happens there will be immediately someone who benefits thanks to the intervention and others who do not.
The initial genuine free market system then starts degrading into a regulated market system that will increasingly favour some over many others.
Relating back to the jury discourse, arbitration is such a service that can and does arise naturally, contracting parties can agree on how disputes will be resolved.
However, any mutually trusted party that is willing to perform arbitration would be able to do so in a genuine free market. There may be formal professionals selling their arbitration services or informal mutually trusted ones ... the free market will provide.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/000001dae2c1%24bd990aa0%2438cb1fe0%24%40btinternet.com.
" It is not the water in the fields that brings true development, rather, it is water in the eyes, or compassion for fellow beings, that brings about real development. "
—Anna Hazare
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/DB9P191MB156338E8FE1F179511A534E2F2B12%40DB9P191MB1563.EURP191.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM.
I disagree.
State regulation can often simplify things without compromising the fundamental tenant of a free market – namely that price is determined by supply and demand only. Consider for example a government regulation that all weights and measures used in the market shall comply with certain regulations. If these regulations are sufficiently wide, then they will aid transparency – it the buyer and seller agree a price per unit weight, then provided that the scales meet the government regulations, there is no need for the parties to verify the scales as part of the deal – the government has already done that. If I am buying eggs and the government has decreed what is meant by “large”, “medium” or “small” eggs, again both buyer and seller have an agreed yardstick against which they can base their agreement.
Again, the regulator might specify how bargains are to be paid for. If it is cash, do I hand my cash over to the seller (which means that he has the added problem of carrying a large amount of cash around with him), or does he give me a chit, I settle at the cash desk and he then hands the product over to me.
Finally, the regulator should provide a means of settling disputes. This is one of the reasons why he might specify what units of weight and measure should be used – he can verify the scales which were used were just scales. In passing, may I mention the state of affairs in France in 1789 – each nobleman, each businessman, each trader had the right to nominate the units of measure that he was using – the king’s measures only applied to debts (taxes) owed to the king. There were over half a million different weights and measures. One of the consequences was that when the Revolution broke out on 14 July 1789, one of the areas of concern that was addressed was that of weights and measures – the result was the metric system. If I buy a kilogram of apples today, I will get the same weight as if I bought a kilogram in 1799 (when the first prototype kilogram was put to use).
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAGXOEN0T66H7-ibSCtK9r_30DHjUwXY7E1USA9MLByc6twU_dQ%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/000001dae356%2429a40a80%247cec1f80%24%40btinternet.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/000001dae356%2429a40a80%247cec1f80%24%40btinternet.com.
From, Martin Vlietstra
First of all, who am I. I worked with Trevor in the 1970's and in 1978 relocated to the United Kingdom. Trevor and I have kept in touch since then.
The United Kingdom has an arbitration system in place. Arbiters are appointed jointly by parties in dispute and are usually experts in the field. For example, if the dispute involves an IT system, the President of the British Computer Society (BCS) is empowered to appoint arbiters who are accredited by the BCS and who will establish the facts - "Did the software supplied comply with what was contracted?" A BCS-appointed arbiter will seldom award damages, though once the facts have been clarified, any damages will quickly be determined by reference to Common Law.
In my view, Stephen rightly identifies that any dispute settlement system should work first and foremost in the free market situation. In any market, there are a number of parties - the buyer and the seller (who do not necessarily know each other) and most importantly of all the regulator (who identifies what can be bought and sold in the market and how the product is packaged and how it is delivered and how it is paid for). Having a regulator in a free market improves transparency - if I am negotiating with you, does my price include government taxes or not? When is payment required? How is the product delivered?
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/000001dae2c1%24bd990aa0%2438cb1fe0%24%40btinternet.com.
Trevor seems to be suggesting one way in which the market may provide justice / arbitration... and maybe the market would do it that way, but maybe it would not. Only trying will tell.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAMr06S5Ds0neS-d3Ex5XO-ZNsqLbaY81LDtKbAgqjq6jz%2BuN1w%40mail.gmail.com.
Hi Trevor, Thank you for your greetings.
You might recall that when we were working together in the 1970's, I was doing a part-time BCom at UNISA which I never completed. One of the modules that I did pass was Commercial Law I. In that course I learnt that one of the important aspects of any contract is that there should be a built-in mechanism to resolve disputes. I also learned that certain types of contract were always void (ie the courts would never enforce them - such contracts generally involved committing illegal activities), some contracts were voidable (especially those contracted by a minor which could be unilaterally revoked) while others would be enforced by the law should one of the parties request the courts to do so.
Contract Law also provides default solutions for many situations that might not be built into a contract. As an example, if A accepts an offer from B by post and after he posts the acceptance, but before B receives the acceptance, A drops down dead, can B demand that A's heirs honour the contract or not (and vice-versa)? In many decent contracts, such a situation is dealt with by the simple clause "This contract is to be interpreted under English Law" and legal precedents will be consulted.
Under English Law, many "default" situations can be over-ridden by the contract, but the courts will often take into consideration the negotiating power of the parties concerned when asked to over-ride a clause. English Law will usually uphold any decision reached by a reasonable arbitration system - a classic example being the concept of Sharia mortgages. As you might be aware, Moslems are not permitted to charge interest on loans. If a Sharia-compliant bank makes a loan so that a borrower can buy a house, the bank becomes a joint owner of the house, and the borrower buys rents the part of the house that the bank owns and slowly buys fractions of the house from the bank. If the borrower dies and the house is sold, the bank then takes a portion of the proceeds of the sale equal to the fraction that they still own. Not only would such a process be upheld by the English courts, but the British tax office has modified its tax laws so that transfer tax on such loans is only paid once in line with non-Sharia loans.
I trust that this will help put into perspective what you are saying about jury systems for resolving disputes. In England, the courts would probably uphold a decision made by such a jury provided that it can be shown that if one party was much stronger than the other, that the process was equitable.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAN6K2LkdkbUkP%3DaX8wod9qZ_7P9DN2Ot-y7Reha5TDy7rohG8w%40mail.gmail.com.
Hi Stephen,
I have had two instances where I have had to go to law – both connected with people owning me money and refusing to pay. In the first (in 1994), the client made me a scapegoat for a project that had gone wrong and the agency concerned refused to pay me fees in lieu of notice. They were obviously giving me the run-around for about three months until I instituted a claim through the (English) small claims court. When the summons landed on their desk, they paid me within 24 hours. The second instance (in 2009) a client who was in financial difficulties owed me a sum of money in excess of the small claims court limit. I suspected that the tax office would be declaring him bankrupt (in which case they take precedence over all other claimants), so I engaged a solicitor (lawyer) to ensure that I got my money before the tax office moved in.
I have had a third instance when I had an interaction with the law – I was on the jury for a case of attempted rape. In the event I ended up as foreman.
I have of course engaged a solicitor when buying and selling a house (the norm in the UK), to assist in drawing up my will and when dealing with my late in-laws affairs (I was the executor in both their estates and their solicitor held their wills).
Martin
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/E6948CC4-2DAB-4684-8618-8E863DAA1717%40gmail.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/000001dae419%2462281400%2426783c00%24%40btinternet.com.
I was not aware of anything like that when I was paying off my house.
However, under English Law, a debt is automatically cancelled if the lender does nothing about it for 7 years. A number of years ago, a neighbour wanted to buy a small piece of land from me. I decided that the hassle of registering the land transfer was too much, so I entered into an agreement whereby he rented the land from me for 12 years at a rate of £1 per annum (often known as a "peppercorn rent). In this way, as long as I collected the £1 annually and gave him a receipt, there was never any dispute as to the ownership of the land.
Sent via BT Email App
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to unsub...@googlegroups.com" target="_blank">individualist+unsub...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/ace19f36-3695-4ced-8dae-bb8918f2b6b5n%40googlegroups.com.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Individualist Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to unsub...@googlegroups.com" target="_blank">individualist+unsub...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAMr06S7xrACqOx4Lg%2Biu-dYuARo-f8OO%3DTRVLsFMOw6Ru9JTGA%40mail.gmail.com.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Individualist Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to unsub...@googlegroups.com" target="_blank">individualist+unsub...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/000001dae2c1%24bd990aa0%2438cb1fe0%24%40btinternet.com.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Individualist Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to unsub...@googlegroups.com" target="_blank">individualist+unsub...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAN6K2LkdkbUkP%3DaX8wod9qZ_7P9DN2Ot-y7Reha5TDy7rohG8w%40mail.gmail.com.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Individualist Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to unsub...@googlegroups.com" target="_blank">individualist+unsub...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/000001dae419%2462281400%2426783c00%24%40btinternet.com.
--
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to unsub...@googlegroups.com">individualist+unsub...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAMr06S6uDJVyfOKjqUwm3_i2WZjcKe2gWR6R_CPPugOKVzZ5vw%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/000801dae420%24eccb8c20%24c662a460%24%40btinternet.com.
If the lawyers are doing their job properly, then there should not be any problems. I have never bought or sold property in South Africa, but having spoken to my brother , I know that there is a big difference between property transfers in the UK compared to RSA. In the UK, the idea is that if I am buying a new property and selling an old property, both transactions take place at the same time.
At the moment that the agreement is “completed” (the official jargon in the UK), money that I owe on the loan for my old house will be repaid (using money from the buyer) and any additional or alternative loan that I might need for my new house will be made available to my solicitor. Before this happens, the buyer's solicitor checks the official records and make sure that nobody has a loan secured against the property that his client is buying, or if they do, that the loan will be discharged when the property transfer takes place. He also checks on behalf of his client that the buyer has available funds to pay for the property. I never actually see any of the money that is changing hands until a few days after "the dust has settled", when any outstanding debts are settled up. It is not uncommon for there to be six or even more people linked up in a chain, all discharging their obligations simultaneously and part of the solicitor’s task is to ensure that everybody “exchanges contracts” (ie becomes committed to their part of the exchange) at the same time and that they are able to fulfil their part of the bargain. “Rents of occupation” which I believe are used in South Africa are not used in the UK.
There are so many small points where I could be tripped up such as the seller has a second mortgage that I did not know about or the buyer not having enough money to buy my old property which is why I use a solicitor (who has a professional indemnity insurance).
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAMr06S4e-NdFnSEpRxVE%3DZrpn4DnbTvWnan0i6PQ%2BuqQCeNZ6A%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAMr06S4e-NdFnSEpRxVE%3DZrpn4DnbTvWnan0i6PQ%2BuqQCeNZ6A%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/002601dae43b%24b864fb40%24292ef1c0%24%40btinternet.com.
What else did the lawyer do for you? Did he ensure that all the deeds were in order and that no-one would take the house off you because the previous owner had not paid off his loan? Did you even know whether he had a second loan secured against the house? If a deposit changed hand when the contract was signed who would look after the deposit? If the deal fell through due to a problem on the part of the seller (for example the house burning down), would the buyer get his deposit back? These are all things that the lawyer should look after for you.
A few years ago, my wife and I put our house up for sale but failed to find a buyer. Part of the contract with the agency stated that if we exchanged contract with anybody who the agency had shown around within two years of taking the house off the market, the agency was due a commission. In my view, two years was ridiculous, but I said nothing knowing that the courts would not enforce such a clause. In the event, they did not even send me a list of the viewers they had shown around.
Coming back to Trevor’s suggestion of private contracts, I would not like to draw up a contract which takes into account all of these eventualities. The CNA template (WH Smith template in the UK) still needs to have the various appendices defining exactly which property was changing hands and cataloguing any liens against that property. It might also need special clauses specific to that property.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAMr06S6T9HDFRgNBaQCrchw6ygANaq7kR%3DKMU%3DFknZ0BPEcPrw%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/003201dae450%2468c79d80%243a56d880%24%40btinternet.com.
First of all, Equifax cannot tell me whether or not my buyer has the funds to buy my house. That is because it is a private matter between him and his money lender and the money lender will take into account things like his income to ensure that he can service his debt.
I don't know about South Africa, but in the UK things have changed quite a bit over the last few decades. When I bought my first house in 1978, I had to take out a life insurance policy which was sufficient to cover the outstanding mortgage. The last time that I changed my mortgage (1993), I did not have to supply any "back-up securities" to the bank - my house was their security. The bank might choose not to insure the interest that they have in my property, or rather they self-insure in the way that all Anglo-American company cars are (or at least were) insured by Anglo-American insurance.
I agree with you that you do not have to spell everything out explicitly in a contract as case law covers many situations, though of course it helps if bank account details to which payment must be made are given in an attachment. Also, if there is likely to be a problem due to different nationalities involved (for example the South African arm of a British agency signs up a South African who is living in Johannesburg for a contract in London), it is sensible to specify whether South African or English Law applies to the contract. Again, it would be part of a lawyer’s duty to draw this to the attention of the parties concerned as they might not think about it. What I noticed in the various contracts that I signed with IT contract agencies is that whenever they had a dispute with a contractor, they tend to write a clause in their standard contract to cover themselves and often repeat what case law says anyway (and sometimes get it wrong). A typical clause that I have often seen states "If any clause in this contract is contrary to law, then that clause shall be severed from the contract as though it never existed". The law says this anyway, so why repeat it.
One good reason to employ a lawyer is to ensure that clauses such as "Value Added Tax shall be added to the contract price at the rate of 20%" (the current UK rate) do not go into the contract. A much better clause would be ""Value Added Tax shall be added to the contract price". Such a statement is essential if the other party is not aware that the seller is VAT registered.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAMr06S4GwbcwgCDsfZY15UdbgREn0m9UfxCuPc7AFJJhAjyYvA%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/000001dae4b4%24cc142750%24643c75f0%24%40btinternet.com.
In a genuine free market there would be a spectrum of options ranging from a Stephen Handshake to the most stringent and comprehensive documents.
Consumers could choose, at their own risk or expense, which options they wish to use.
There may be many regrets and nightmares but it should be up to each of us to secure that which we think works best.
Fraud may occur, as the dishonest of the more sophisticated try to prey on the less sophisticated but the market feedback signals will inform the demand and the more honest and sincere services will prevail.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAMr06S70rMDKfwLQMT8tDngRwZDbAhMgB6Adt3msbA8P2bTMWw%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAGXOEN1LqVWThctdchFMppyMgknxYx%3DkBj9zCYVBo8eG_eHwMA%40mail.gmail.com.
In the United Kingdom, the situation nis totally different. If I am moving from one house to another, I will sell my old house and buy my new house at the same time and will rely on my buyer paying me on time in order that I can pay the owner of my new house. It is not unknown for ten or more people to be connected in a chain like this. If one party pulls out, the whole chain collapses. There was one instance a number of years ago when there were 13 houses in the chain and the person at the bottom pulled out. The person who was buying the house at the top of the chain was able to raise enough money to also buy the house at the bottom of the chain and immediately put it back on the market. This is why we can’t have a bunch of amateurs organising things.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAMr06S70rMDKfwLQMT8tDngRwZDbAhMgB6Adt3msbA8P2bTMWw%40mail.gmail.com.
I think that you are confusing contract law with market systems. My understanding of a “free market” is that it is a market where participants have equal negotiating power and that the price of the object being traded is determined only by the laws of supply and demand. The law of contract provides a means of settling disputes between parties to a particular trade should they occur and that such disputes will be enforced by the courts if necessary and is independent of whether the market is a free market, an oligopoly or a monopoly.
Your suggestion that the “more honest and sincere services will prevail” is naive in the extreme in that the “small” participants in the market will get broken by the big players who have financial strength and who will form a monopoly which is the antithesis of a free market (in other words the free market model of participants who have equal negotiating power will be broken)..
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAGXOEN1LqVWThctdchFMppyMgknxYx%3DkBj9zCYVBo8eG_eHwMA%40mail.gmail.com.
Yes, I am one of them – when I retired I was a Member of the British Computer Society, a Chartered Engineer and a European Engineer (in that order). The entry requirements for Eur Ing were seven years training of which three had to be pursuing an appropriate course of study at an appropriate tertiary level institution, two had to be practical experience and the last two could be either or a combination of both. The BCS requirement was less stringent and provided that the course studied had a sufficient content of maths and physics, automatically provided admission as a CEng. I had a number of contracts where I was fixing software that was inappropriately designed or coded by people who just did not really understand what they were doing.
None of the work that I did required the qualifications that I had, though the Eur Ing qualification did allow me to practice as self-employed when I was working in Germany.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAN6K2LmmxWE4w1WBSPmu1fEsNmD_J42rwn_3QobyUHHOezF%3D%2Bg%40mail.gmail.com.
Stephen, you have only given half the story.
The other half is that Microsoft indulged in anti-free market practices - in particular Windows and Internet Explorer are two separate products but Microsoft bundled Internet Explorer in with Windows and refused to allow OEMs to install Windows unless they bundled Internet Explorer in as well. This effectively cut Netscape out of the market because user had to pay to use Netscape and had to go through the process of installing it.
Also, Microsoft did not publish full details of the Windows interface which meant that their Office suite could operate better than other companies' equivalents (such as Lotus 1-2-3) because the Microsoft product used unpublished functionality in Windows.
For what it is worth, good programming practice says that you should never use unpublished features of a system on which you are dependant because there is no guarantee that those features will be supported in years to come. In the context of Microsoft, Microsoft product developers knew which undocumented features they could use, but outside companies could not take the risk.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/9FA529AF-0935-4E14-8163-993907ABC2BF%40gmail.com.
This is why we can’t have a bunch of amateurs organising things.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/002301dae5c3%2444fe2260%24cefa6720%24%40btinternet.com.
I am far happier with a 1 page contract, because then the wisdom of crowds prevail.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAMr06S4GwbcwgCDsfZY15UdbgREn0m9UfxCuPc7AFJJhAjyYvA%40mail.gmail.com.
I am not confusing contract law with market systems at all … 😊
The genuine free market is the manifestation of a genuine libertarian/individualist system ... and only of a genuine libertarian/individualist system.
Such a system, a rose by any other name, be it called libertarian/individualist or x or y or z or whatever will not permit ethically or morally the initiation of physical force against any other, aka violence.
The use of physical force would only be allowed in self defence, in which case it is specifically not violence.
The prevailing term for this principle has in recent times been the Non Aggression Principle or NAP.
The problem with the NAP is that it is "nebulous" in that the axioms as to what constitutes the rights of individuals and hence the difference between violence and self defence are not comprehensively defined.
American libertarians have us mostly chasing our tails as a result of this, they bring about reactions like those of J D Vance, and also your understandable concerns that "the “small” participants in the market will get broken by the big players who have financial strength and who will form a monopoly which is the antithesis of a free market (in other words the free market model of participants who have equal negotiating power will be broken)..".
Currently, it is Ayn Rand's "Nature of Man", the NoM, that prevails in contemporary libertarian content as axiomatic “anchor” and thereby the difference between violence and self defence
Robert Nozick sought to firm up with an alternative philosophical axiomatic anchor for libertarianism, in his famous book, "Anarchy, State and Utopia" but it is disappointing.
The reader volume of his book is far better, but mostly it also leaves the source of ethics and morality unanswered.
(One of the articles co-written by two Objectivist authors is however superb in how to go forward with implementing freer societies, in the real world, and also, surprisingly, absent in their writing the loathing that most Objectivists have for libertarians).
Ayn Rand really takes up the long standing idea of the nature of human beings as the source of a proper ethics and morality, the same idea that Aristotle, born in 384 BCE, promoted.
Whether or not he was the first to do so is immaterial, he certainly is a champion for this and thus a point of reference.
In the East, Lao Tzu, born in 571 BCE has the same idea in his Tao, preceding Aristotle by a couple of centuries.
In the Western world this idea develops to some extent after Aristotle on and off and lingers on through the centuries until Locke, born 1632, among others, really takes it up.
This time as "God given" rights which lead to the American Constitution, effectively proto libertarianism.
Still somewhat immersed in the burning bush which spits out the stone tablets imposed by an Angry God, oft forgiving and merciful albeit She/He/It/Burning Bush as preferred pronouns will urge the throwing of LGBTQ+ etcetera off roofs.
Ayn Rand, born 19O5, almost a couple of centuries plus a half after Locke, gives it a massive push as a reaction to the coercive collectivism pronouncing altruism as the virtue and any instance of egoism as a sin, and with that the violence that raged and built sky high pyramids of human deaths in the 2Oth Century.
The problem with Ayn Rand is that she overshoots and pronounces egoism as the virtue and any instance of altruism as a sin.
And she projects herself, her instance of Man, as the "Nature of Man".
The common denominator of all these notions from Aristotle to Rand is that who we are as a result of natural selection should be the point to start discovering and unpacking of the ethics and morality appropriate for us.
If anything this is far more appropriate and scientific than the violence of angry gods …
The degree to which we as a species are altruistic or egoistic will manifest as a random distribution curve with a mean and a standard deviation.
This will be so even when the data is normalised and the influence of culture (religion, traditions etcetera) is removed.
There will be outliers beyond the 95% of us defined by the standard deviation left and right of the mean.
Rand is probably an egoistic outlier.
Mother Teresa is probably an altruistic outlier.
The rest of the most of us, within the standard deviation containing the 95% of us, are a mix.
I lean towards altruism rather than to egoism, and when I tried to go against my nature (in violation of the Tao, in my attempt to be a faithful disciple of Rand) and sought to be solely egoistic, in my few attempts, it never really worked out well.
So my sentiment is very much for your "small” participants", and I absolutely get where you are coming from.
That said, I recognise the pivotal effect of Rand's NoM.
Rand's NoM is powerful as a counter to coercive collectivism even if it is not sufficiently representative of us as a species.
It needs to be replaced and there is an answer to that but far too long to get into this already long reply.
And having done that, Trevor Watkins Harm Consent Rule, HCR, should replace the NAP, as a clearer and more practical vehicle to distinguish between violence and self defence ... well it already does a better job than the NAP and hopefully it will begin to be far more utilised.
So, far from me being “naive”, as you say, it is because I (like you I think) want your "small” participants" to not be exploited by your "big players ".
The problem with any intervention by the government is that it sets off a flapping of butterfly wings that will in time become a tsunami of obstacles favouring those already in place, your "big players ", and disfavouring those who are trying to get there, your "small” participants" .
Without the unimpeded possibility of disruptive competition, “natural” monopolies will emerge and the Gini Coefficient will rocket sky high.
😊 ...
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/002801dae5c5%243ae49d70%24b0add850%24%40btinternet.com.
Trevor, I am also happier with very short contracts. The essential points of a contract are:
I will deal with each of these in turn.
The law under which the contract is made should be specified unless it is obvious from the context of the contract, in which case it can be omitted.
It is mandatory to include the identity of the parties to the contract. If one is using a boiler plate for the contract, it is quite in order to identify the parties in an annex to the contract, but to refer to them as the “buyer” and the “seller” (or some such language in the main contract. The annex can give the full names, company registration details (if appropriate), individual’s identification details as required by local law, contact details etc. In the UK it is normal to refer to an individual as “Keir Starmer of 10 Downing Stret London SW1A 2AA”, whereas I believe that in South Africa he would be referred to as “Keir Stamer born in Southwick, England on 2 September 1962”.
The obligations of each party should be set out in brief on the main contract and expanded, if necessary, in an annex. Ther annex might well contain a full engineering specification. It is mandatory to include an outline of each parties’ obligation and with the annex, it should be clear exactly what is required of each party. The obligations might also include warranties that describe the quality of workmanship expected and qualification of the personnel involved, though this part is optional.
Penalties for non-compliance. In many cases this section should be blank, though occasions can arise where such a section is very useful – particularly when project overruns are involved. The golden rule for including any clause in this section is to ask the question “If this clause were not there, what would the courts do? “ If the answer to the question is that things would be complicated, then the section should be drafted so as to give the courts guidance. AS an example, when I was working on the Met Police Crime and Information Recording System (CRIS), the specification stated that my client would write and operate the system which would run 24x7. There was a permitted 8-hour window once a calendar month (agreed in advance) for maintenance. Any other down-time during core time would be penalised as a rate specified in Appendix B and outside core time at one third of that rate. (Appendix B was only available to the commercial department), but there was enough information in the rest of the contract that the maintenance team could make informed decisions about dealing with bugs, outages etc. When outages did occur, the supplier paid the penalties without argument and the customer-supplier relationship was maintained.
As you can see, a well-written contract does not need to ramble on for pages and pages, but where the services of a lawyer might well be needed to ensure that none of the clauses inadvertently contradict existing law. In the case of the CRIS system, the specification ran to three ring binders of print-out, but for a system that logged over a million crimes a year from 70 police stations spread over 34 police divisions. The crimes themselves of ranged from petty thefts, domestic disturbances to murder and the system had to cope with the initial reporting of the crime, progress on investigating the crime, arrests right up to the stage where the crime was closed or handed over to the Director of Public Prosecutions.
Finally, may I remind you of a quote by the Fench philosopher/mathematician Blaise Pascal “I apologise for the length of this letter – I am in a hurry and do not have time to write it more concisely”.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAN6K2Lns%3DPhF5gYNpH3MjD7AOjE9Z-PoYdQN%3DbX-BBsGXPFWsg%40mail.gmail.com.
Hi Stephen,
Under English law, a party can, in certain circumstance, petition the courts to set aside clauses in a contract even if the clauses in them selves are not illegal. The principal test is whether or not the parties had equal negotiating powers and whether or not the terms were reasonable in the circumstances. The law book that I read ( and which my son has “borrowed on the permanent loan system” outlines two cases that illustrate opposite sides of the law.
Case 1: A successful pharmacist sold his practice to a large pharmacy chain. One of the clauses prohibited the seller from setting up a pharmacy within a certain period of time anywhere in the United Kingdom. A year later he set up a pharmacy 20 km from where he had previously practised. The large firm tried to close him down because he had breached his contract. The courts ruled that while it was reasonable to prohibit him from setting up a new business with the specified period in an area where he could poach his old clients back, the prohibition “anywhere in England” was excessive and the courts severed that clause from the contract.
Case 2: The inventor of the Maxim machine gun sold his patents to an arms manufacturer for a substantial sum of money. Part of the agreement prohibited the inventor from working in the arms trade for a period of ten years. A few years later, he re-entered the arms trade and was sued by the buyer of his patents. The courts ruled that as he was handsomely paid for his patents, the prohibition clause was reasonable.
I think that these two cases illustrate what happens in a real-world situation.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAGXOEN1_LnvPjag%3DWxie166AOhkqs4N-dFP51k3bsekWChekDg%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAGXOEN1_LnvPjag%3DWxie166AOhkqs4N-dFP51k3bsekWChekDg%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAN6K2L%3DRwFA6niZ5XeG95avK%2BO-yvjRS1EosOxzQf%3D7-0ovGPg%40mail.gmail.com.
The father of Trump’s would-be assassin, Matthew Crooks, is a registered
libertarian.
His mother, registered Democrat.
Thomas Crooks had well over $1m in offshore accounts, perhaps from cryptocurrency trading.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAGXOEN3ccf33ROr_xUDYeGmuitQiatWXKTTmGHoS1HXo8KmrXw%40mail.gmail.com.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Individualist Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to individualis...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/E5523B59-2769-486C-85BA-498E8C73EA81%40gmail.com.

To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/2C387462-F9F6-4027-A9A8-8DD57641883C%40gmail.com.
Hi Stephen,
If you are in England, English Law applies. If you enter into an agreement with somebody else and you agree that your agreement is bound by English Law, large chunks of your contract can be left out because English Law takes care of them.
For example, I want to buy your vintage car and pay you a deposit for it with the object of paying the balance and taking delivery the following day. That night your garage is struck by lightning and catches fire with the result that the car is destroyed. Your contract required that the car be delivered in good working order, so what now? YOU can consult the law books and see what precedents have been set for that or similar circumstances and act accordingly.
You have said that “the law should not override private agreements”. English Law identified three types of contract – contracts that are void, contracts that are voidable and contract that are binding:
In short, as I have said before, the free market assumes equal negotiating power between parties. Where the parties have unequal negotiating power, I have no problem with the law acting in a way so as to reduce the inequality.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/52177AB9-B120-45B5-A212-424D52FF1C87%40gmail.com.
Hi Stephen,
I am a little puzzled by your stats. First of all, may I place on record that I have tutored A-Level students (year 12 & 13) in stats on a one-to-one basis. Also, Trevor and I were often involved with calculating statistical problems when we were at DRL (1970’s).
You mentioned the R^2 factor. Do you have the full name for that factor? I know that the Correlation coefficient is often represented by the symbol R (-0.12 in your case) and I cannot find any reference to an R^2 factor.
You made a number of assertions based on the fact that R was negative. Unless you calculate the confidence limits of R, such assertion are meaningless. In particular, you should test the whether or not you can reject the nul hypothesis of R=0 and since you calculate R as being -0.12, this test is almost an absolute MUST.
I am afraid that your explanation of correlation coefficient is not what I have read in the text books. What I have read is summarised in the Wikipedia article https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearson_correlation_coefficient. What a correlation of -0.12 means is that X and Y have a weak negative correlation (ie the points have a wide scatter, but not quite random), but it says nothing about the value of the slope as you suggested. What you are looking for is the slope of the regression line through the points, not the correlation coefficient.
Martin
From: indivi...@googlegroups.com <indivi...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Stephen vJ
Sent: Sunday, August 4, 2024 7:02 PM
To: indivi...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: IM: The Individualist Manifesto jury system
I can definitely dig it up, but it would be even better if someone could update it with the latest figures, a) so we can have fresh numbers and b) to show that the results hold true over time. I don't have the time right now to reproduce it, but I might later in the month or I could tell you what I did and maybe someone else can do it, if they have an hour or two to spare.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/2C387462-F9F6-4027-A9A8-8DD57641883C%40gmail.com.


I understand fully what you are saying. When my father ran his own business, he took on a partner for a period. My (now ex-) brother-in-law Tony, an attorney, drew up the partnership agreement and once each had signed both copies, Tony put each copy in an envelope and sealed the envelope. He then turned to my father and said “Roy, if you ever break this seal, the partnership is over”.
If two people both wish to walk away from a contract, there will inevitably be some tidying up to do (for example how to split the outstanding rent, water and electricity bill). If these can be agreed, then there will be no problems. If however agreement cannot be reached, this is where the courts come in and where the law is applied. In such cases, assuming that the people concerned are rational, they will get some legal advice on “If, hypothetically speaking, we go to court, what is the court likely to rule?” If they are sensible, they would then follow the likely outcome and save the costs of actually going to court.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/F14D2170-617D-41EA-B23A-A47B52542028%40gmail.com.
I understand fully what you are saying. When my father ran his own business, he took on a partner for a period. My (now ex-) brother-in-law Tony, an attorney, drew up the partnership agreement and once each had signed both copies, Tony put each copy in an envelope and sealed the envelope. He then turned to my father and said “Roy, if you ever break this seal, the partnership is over”.
If two people both wish to walk away from a contract, there will inevitably be some tidying up to do (for example how to split the outstanding rent, water and electricity bill). If these can be agreed, then there will be no problems. If however agreement cannot be reached, this is where the courts come in and where the law is applied. In such cases, assuming that the people concerned are rational, they will get some legal advice on “If, hypothetically speaking, we go to court, what is the court likely to rule?” If they are sensible, they would then follow the likely outcome and save the costs of actually going to court.
Martin
From: indivi...@googlegroups.com <indivi...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Stephen vJ
Sent: Sunday, August 4, 2024 10:56 PM
To: indivi...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: IM: The Individualist Manifesto jury system
I have been in countless situations where people have grown unhappy with the contracts they were bound to, then I ask both sides what their ideal outcome would be, ignoring law, the contract and sunk costs... and then finding that both parties basically want the same thing, which is often simply walking away.
Once both sides realize they want the same thing, the solutions are glaringly obvious - just mutually agree to walk away (or whatever the common desire is). People get so wound up in law and process and formality that they forget that all of this is about relationships between human beings. I never start with the law, but with what the parties want... and rarely does that result in a debate over semantics or protracted fights over historical paperwork.
I am not confusing contract law with market systems at all … \uD83D\uDE0A
\uD83D\uDE0A ...
Let me put courts into perspective. I agree that they are a last resort so what any sensible people do if there is a dispute is to check past records of the courts and see what they would do if, hypothetically, their case went to court. In 99% of cases, things are clearly laid out n the law by means of Acts of Parliament and legal precedents. Once they have checked what the law says it would do, they do that anyway.
For example, a friend of my fathers ran a building firm and would often send one of his employees to buy things on the business account. One day the employee bought a substantial amount of goods and “did a runner”. Who should bear the loss – my father’s friend or the shopkeeper? A check of legal precedents showed that in similar situations the court had ruled that the employer, not the shop-keeper should bear the loss, the reason being that by “habit and repute”, the employee had frequently bought things on his employer’s behalf. My father’s friend reimbursed the shop-keeper without complaint. In cases that are less clear-cut, one ort other of the parties could have consulted their lawyer who would (or rather should) advise them to pay up as that is what the courts would order anyway.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/754089467.52959263.1722866615775.JavaMail.zimbra%40iafrica.com.
My reading of the relevant text books tells me something different. It tells me that if you start off by taking the average per capita income in the countries under observation and then calculated the SQUARE of the difference, you will get an initial variation. If you then pair each income figure with an associated IoF value and fit a linear regression to the data, then 68% of the SQUARE of the variation will disappear, NOT 68% of the variation itself. The remaining 32% will be the value of the SQUARE of the variation.
The Pearson Index of Correlation to which I was referring (called R, not R^2) is slightly different and is used when one does a full Analysis of Variance (ANOVA). Until I saw your posting, I had never come across the R^2 parameter (which does NOT equal R*R).
Martin.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/2ED58B2D-7C54-444A-99A3-9FF716054338%40gmail.com.


To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/C805BA2D-A5A2-4831-9B9E-536D0F590F03%40gmail.com.
Hi Stephen, Gabri and others,
May I suggest an alternative approach:
Assume that you have full data sets for N countries
Since the model assumes that the economic freedom index is the independent variable and the income per capita is the dependant variable, allocate the economic freedom index to the x-axis and the income per capita to the y-axis.
We are trying to generate an equation
y = α + βx
Denote the values used to set up the equations by X and Y (vectors each with N elements and stored as two columns on an EXCEL spreadsheet)
Define
α = INTERCEPT (X, Y) where INTERCEPT is an EXCEL function
β = SLOPE (X,Y) where SLOPE is an EXCEL function.
We now have the values for α and β.
If we compare the calculated values of y(i) with the original values, then
y(i) = α + βx(i) + n(i)
where n(i) is the noise associated with the fit. The noise is made up of errors in measurement noise, modelling noise and random noise.
If we assume that n(i) has a Gaussian distribution we can replace it with kg(i)
where k is a constant (see later)
g(i) is a random value from a normalised gaussian distribution (ie μ = 0 and σ² = 1).
Such a distribution guarantees that 68% of values lie between -1 and 1, that 95% of values lie between -2 and 2 and that 99.7% lie between -3 and 3.
The value k is calculated as follows:
s² = variance of Y values = VAR(Y)
s = standard deviation of Y values = SQRT(s²)
R = Correlation between the X and Y sets of data = CORREL (X,Y)
k = s * SQRT(1-R²).
This approach is taken straight from the text books, from what I learnt in my Stats course at UNISA, from my experience at the Diamond Research Laboratory (Johannesburg) and at the BP Research Laboratory (London) and from what I taught when tutoring A Level maths in recent years.
Wikipedia sources
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normal_distribution
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_regression
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearson_correlation_coefficient
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAGXOEN2u2NP1VEY%3DT%2BDiaY2ehz-bCSmTgUBw4FzAOKQDTuNrEQ%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/000701dae75c%2408ccadd0%241a660970%24%40btinternet.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAN6K2Lm06hzEptRdB3HnQpOnqeeoiCwW1nHcyu5hAxRMUibP0w%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/CAGXOEN2yEn%2B-D1Nd8_xc1pHMBjRHQ82VG8jew1eSpA-dBzdpig%40mail.gmail.com.
If you are interested, visit https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Index_of_Economic_Freedom and https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SI.POV.GINI?most_recent_value_desc=false, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal)_per_capita, and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(PPP)_per_capita where you can get data to test your hypothesis.
If you want to include GINI in your model alongside economic freedom index, you will need to build a model of the type
Z = αx + βy + γ.
This cannot be done directly using EXCEL, but EXCEL can be used to do the number crunching once the maths has been sorted out. If anybody want to go down that route and doesn’t really know where to start from a mathematical point of view, let me know and I will sketch out how to do it.
Regards
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/D3765CFA-B2D7-4328-9FCA-6BCB543A097C%40gmail.com.
If you want to include GINI in your model alongside economic freedom index, you will need to build a model of the type
Z = αx + βy + γ.
Yes ... 👍👌
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/individualist/000001dae907%24d4de1ce0%247e9a56a0%24%40btinternet.com.