30 Jun 2011
Economists familiar with the Rothbardian tradition have taken the analysis even further, persuasively arguing that Somalia is much better without a state than it was with one. The standard statist put-down — “If you Rothbardians like anarchy so much, why don’t you move to Somalia?” — misses the point. The Rothbardian doesn’t claim that the absence of a state is a sufficient condition for bliss. Rather, the Rothbardian says that however prosperous and law-abiding a society is, adding an institution of organized violence and theft will only make things worse.
If you mean less government than the prior communist dictatorship, then sure. I’d imagine that if you asked your average liberal whether they thought communist dictatorships tended to have too much centralization, they would agree that they do.
I have been to Somalia (as well as many other Muslim nations) and I can tell you that Islamic law with regard to civil and criminal cases is almost nonexistent.
Here is an article about a woman being stoned to death for adultery in Somalia. According to the article, the stoning was ordered by a judge.
I don’t think that’s the Xeer in action.
Also, stoning women for adultery (even rape), as well as for marrying without being a virgin is described in Deuteronomy, and thus is part of Judaic and Christian law, as well. Remember, Christians, Jews, and Muslims are all “people of the book” and thus their religious laws are very similar.
There are many localities in the US that have “blue laws”. That does not make America a nation based upon Christian law.
Boy, that sure sounds like a pandemic of Sharia law to me….
There may be areas in the country where that is true, but I don’t think that’s true overall. Somaliland, for example, appears to have a fully functioning government, and as noted below the government in the Islamist controlled areas doesn’t seem to restrict itself to applying the common law.
Certainly, Somali’s aren’t Rothbardians who understand how a stateless society would work, rather they are people who already had a chaotic reality whose government crumbled in civil war. If all of the sudden the US government collapsed there would be factions vying for control, many through violent means, and some would gain footholds in particular regions.
I don’t delude myself into thinking that humanity is now ready for an entirely stateless society, but I do believe that the ultimate goal of humanity is to eventually be able to be free of any monopoly of force. I think that reducing the powers of government have already proven empirically that less government does indeed produce greater prosperity, and that it is only one of the first steps in the right direction.