The anarchist alternatives seem inefficient only in comparison to a system that has streamlined decision making by confining the vast majority of choices and decisions to a tiny elite. We might think of the status quo as efficient only because it enjoys massive subsidies—subsidies of violence.
We have so little say because our elites have interposed themselves into the organic processes by which we’d otherwise make decisions together. And that interposition is enormously, incredibly expensive.
The armies. The police. The surveillance. The cadastral surveys and property records, the courts and legislatures, the tax assessors and tax collectors, bureaucrats and the technocrats, schools to teach obedience.
More than a million Americans are employed as police officers or support staff. The US spends well over $100 billion each year on coercive policing and then another $40-50 billion on jails and prisons.
All of this is immensely costly, both in terms of the resources involved and the harms imposed on us, and incredibly brittle. Centralized, top-down decision making only feels more efficient because it is bought at the price of gold and blood.
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