"Concentrated power has always been the enemy of liberty."
~~Ronald Reagan
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Don't you wish you had power? You could
get people to do pretty much what you
wanted. The rich seem to have quite
a lot of power. Presidents, popes,
CEOs, and head coaches all seem to
have a lot of power. Some power is
open and considered to be legitimate
while other power is hidden and may
be considered illegal and/or immoral.
Power and even authority can be used
for good or for evil. Its exercise
can make life better or worse for many
people.
We probably all know quite a bit
about power in the POM world we live
in. Our physical object money (POM)
is amoral so people can use it to
do bad things which will gain them
more money. Organized
crime, white
collar crime, political
corruption,
and just plain fraud are ways people
have used to gain money and the power
it makes available.
But what would power be like in
a non-POM economy? How would people
gain power, exercise power, and what
would they do with the power they
gain? Remember that in a non-POM
economy, no person can give their
money to anyone else. When
one earns money it comes into existence
in
their account and when one spends
money, that particular money ceases
to exist. Also there is a special
set of people who have volunteered
to give up all their own money and
all the things which money can buy
(only luxuries, in a non-POM economy)
in order to be able to create money
in the accounts of others. These
people are called Payers.
Payers
So let's start with the Payers.
After all, in our POM economy those
who can give others money are very
powerful indeed. Surely the Payers
would also be powerful. And indeed,
they are powerful. But as we pointed
out above, not all power is the same
and not all power us exercised in
the same way.
Payers can reward but they cannot
punish. The power of a POM is a power
that can reward OR punish, but a
non-POM can only reward. If one loses
one's POM income one may starve or
be homeless.
If one loses one's usual non-POM
income one may not be able
to go on that fancy vacation for
another month. Also, Payers are in
a free
market. Just like other buyers
in free markets, they collectively
have power but individually cannot
exercise power over any particular
seller since the sellers can always
sell to another buyer. Therefore,
though a payer can influence what
gets accomplished, the payer has
no power to require, force, coerce,
or make any particular individual
do anything, The closest a payer
can come to controlling a given individual
in any sense is to entice, lure,
or tempt someone into doing something.
If that individual does something
that he knows the payer wants done
then the individual can expect to
have a little more money before too
long.
Thus, the power of Payers is great
in terms of getting things done but
is almost useless in getting any
given person to do any particular
thing.
Payers only pay after the fact.
That is, only after the Payers know
the consequences of some action do
they pay for that action and they
only pay for the net benefit of that
action. This is not by regulation
or some rule that needs to be enforced,
it is a consequence of the situation
in which Payers have placed themselves.
They are completely vulnerable to
the common people among whom they
must live since they cannot have
money or the luxury accommodations
money can buy. The Payers have no
way to avoid ordinary people. Thus,
if the ordinary people are suffering
they will know just whom to blame,
the Payers. And the Payers must take
the blame because they cannot escape.
Therefore, the Payers are going to
pay only for those actions which
result in the ordinary people being
at least content if not happy. This
being the case, there is no need
and no point in paying until they
know the consequences.
Given all this, Payers will pay
morally since that is the only way
to be treated well by those among
whom they live. Therefore, the Payers
will use their power only for good
actions. The more power the Payers
have the better the consequences
for the lives of others. Thus, no
one tries to resist the Payers having
power. They support and encourage
the Payers to exercise their power.
So the power of a payer is safe
both for those among whom the payer
exercises that power and it is also
safe in the sense that no one else
is trying to take that power away
from the Payers.
But there are other forms of power
than that which stems from being
able to see that other people get
money. Let's examine how a non-POM
economy affects the acquisition and
exercise of those other forms of
power.
Charisma
Some people have charisma. Others
are attracted to their personality
and they willingly do what such people
ask of them. One can easily imagine
such a person causing terrible things
to happen. Examples from POM history
include preachers who led their followers
to their deaths, political leaders
who have led their nations into terrible,
destructive wars, and popular celebrities
whose example has led the foolish
to harm themselves.
We really don't understand yet exactly
what charisma is and how it comes
to be. But we do know that such people
are often motivated by a desire for
money. Many of the destructive things
such people have done have been an
attempt to get money. With a non-POM
they would have no such motivation.
When it comes to political leaders,
non-POM societies need not fear their
despotism since their followers will
not be willing to lose very much
money and others would be paid to
prevent and resist harmful actions
by those followers who are willing
to sacrifice their income. Finally,
the media in a non-POM economy will
not show self-destructive behavior
in a flattering light. They will
not make celebrities of those who
would lead others astray. Thus, one
is relatively safe from the consequences
of the exercise of charismatic power.
Property
According to Marx, the Capitalists
were able to exploit the masses because
the Capitalists owned the means of
production. So what about the people
in a non-POM economy who own the
means of production? Do they have
power? The simple answer is yes they
do have power. They have lots of
power.
In a non-POM economy, those who
own property have considerable "property
rights." They are completely
free to do what they want with the
property they own. Not only that,
all property that is owned at all
is owned by individuals. There is
no public property. There is no group
owned property. There is no "community
property." For all practical
purposes there are no laws or ordinances
or other restrictions on what a property
owner can do with their property.
In a POM economy this would result
in considerable abuse and suffering
as you can read about in history.
Marx was responding to real suffering
by millions of people in his day
and property rights then were not
as permissive as they will be in
a non-POM economy. But the context
for these complete property rights
is not the same context that a POM
society presents.
In a non-POM economy, there is no
way to gain money by harming others.
The only route to wealth is to produce
a lot more benefits than harm for
others. Thus, all of the things
one is motivated to do by this sort
of monetary system are all moral,
ethical, beneficial actions. This
concentration of power or "rights" is
safe for the common person.
Next, because one does have these
rights over one's property, one is
held completely responsible for one's
actions and inactions with respect
to one's property. If one allows
one's land to become a breeding ground
for pests and disease (mosquitoes
for example) then one will lose money
one might otherwise have earned.
If one allows erosion runoff to pollute
a stream one may lose income. (Note
that once money is in one's account
only the owner can remove that money
by spending it. No judge or payer
can ever remove money from one's
account. It is only the net benefit
in the present that is affecting
what one earns for this time period.)
So let's say that Bob owns several
trucks. These trucks can be used
to distribute goods to people who
need them. If they just sit in the
parking lot they earn Bob nothing.
So Bob wants them to be used. To
earn money he will *give* a truck
to Sam with the understanding and
agreement that Sam will return the
truck to Bob after making some deliveries.
Now Sam owns the truck. He drives
it making deliveries and returns
the truck to Bob and *gives*
it back to him. Bob gets paid some
for his actions in helping
Sam make those deliveries which generated
net benefit. Bob will get income
from that truck so long as he himself,
Sam or some other person or persons
to
whom he or Sam gives the truck are
generating net benefit by using it.
Note that unless one is personally
using capital goods (like tools or
materials) one gains income by *giving*
them to others to use. One gets income
from that giving only if those who
do use them produce net benefit.
It is similar to a bank loaning money
to someone and getting interest only
if the person uses that money to
make a profit so that the loan and
interest can be repaid. In both cases
the person giving will be rewarded
only if the person they give to uses
the resource well.
Therefore, the owner of capital
(in the Marx sense) cannot use it
to exploit others. In fact, one makes
money on capital by giving it away.
Thus, the literal ownership of capital
tends to permeate the economy. Each
person who is given capital has a
vested interest in using it well
and preserving its value. To do otherwise
will result in others being reluctant
to give one more capital and reduces
one's income. Drivers take good care
of their trucks. Land owners take
care that their land is not damaged
and does not damage others. Owning
property is a responsibility. Those
who assume that responsibility own
that property.
Organizational power, the office
holder.
In POM economies those who have
high offices in large bureaucracies
have power. This power exists because
they can control the pay of others.
This is both the power to reward
and to punish. They also control
the allocation of money with and
outside the organization via their
departmental budgets. In a non-POM
organization, the pay is always controlled
by Payers who are not a part of the
organization. The organization must
request the gifts of resources from
others and must request the cooperation
even of those who work within the
organization. Those who have high
office have power only to the degree
that those with whom they work choose
to grant that power. They attained
high office by helping others earn
money. The more successful they have
been in the past at helping produce
net benefit, the more likely they
are to be trusted to do so again.
Naturally, their past successes and
failures in producing benefits are
public information. It must be public
or the Payers would not know about
it either. These office holders suggest
what should be done by those beneath
them in the organization and they
provide coordination but they cannot
command, coerce, or require anything
of those who work with them. They
are like a football quarterback who
calls the signals but the others
run the play called not because if
they do not do so they will be punished:
but because they believe that doing
so will give the team the best chance
of success.
In other words, high office gives
power only when it is granted and
only when the office holder is helping
to provide benefits to others.
So, in summary, all the various
forms and sources of power available
to people in a non-POM society come
from actions that benefit others.
In no case will actions which cause
harm to others gain someone power.
Therefore, power can be safely concentrated
when useful in the hands of a few
but ceases to exist if the powerful
attempt to abuse that power. Power
benefits all in a non-POM society.
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