Are we at the point of name calling again ?
I may have not come up with the best analogy to state my point ok. And I am probably least of a statist.
Whats my problem is that there is a slippery slope between a "voluntary" agreement under which somebody might have a slight disadvantage and straight out coercion.
Oh, come on, at least make me work a
little to get the right one...
Your logical fallacy is...People agree to do something voluntarily because it's in their best interest, or at least, what they see as their best interest at the time.
But if they "see something as their best interest", couldn't this be a form of "soft" coercion? Lets say I know are consequences to not play ball by implied punishment or social ostracization? Then something is not truly voluntary because there is a false choice in a sense. Your word voluntary feels very loaded in the manner you use it.
Can you think of
one logical hypothetical situation where this is the case? I'm having difficulty doing so. Note: it's not coercion to make you do something you already freely agreed to do, only to make you do something you would not otherwise.
In your AnCap world, if we make an agreement and you loan me money. I renege on our agreement and you know I have the money that is owed and I ignore your peaceful non-violent attempts to retrieve it, what are your options at that point? Also, what are my consequences overall. I would like to understand that from your own words more.
Well, there are two paths. One, the "soft" way to do it, is to inform everyone available that you have reneged on our agreement, and further, that you have refused all attempts to redress that wrong. This is the same method usually used to enforce the implied contract between you and a restauranteur. If he gives you poor service, or poor food, you tell your friends, and he loses business.
Of course, with you, this may have even greater consequences... I know I wouldn't sign a contract with someone who hasn't put in a general submission to arbitrate with one or another agency without making sure that contract has an arbitration clause. Likewise your defense agency, and any other people who contract with you. By breaching not only the contract for the loan, but the arbitration clause (I assume you've done so, since you stated you ignored my non-violent attempts for redress), you've shown yourself to be untrustworthy.
Once you've shown yourself to be untrustworthy, none of those other entities will deal with you anymore. Economists call this the discipline of constant dealings. Practically, what this means is that you will lose those contracts, and likely be unable to get new ones. For some of those contracts, you'll probably do fine without (Cable TV, Internet, etc). Others, however, are slightly more vitally necessary. Such as your defense contract. Oh, you'll still get the "free ride" of "national" defense, from the aggregate actions of all the agencies, just like everyone else does, but other than that, you're on your own. House got robbed? Tough luck. Car stolen? Boy, that sucks. I guess you'll be biking to work. Being mugged? Hope you know Tae Kwon Do. And so on.
Of course, that's the "soft" method. The other way, which probably won't be used unless it's a
very large amount, in which case it would likely be specified in the original contract, since the soft way is much less expensive, is to simply extract the money by force. You're liable to resist, of course, which is where the expense comes in. Overcoming that resistance is likely to incur some losses. Death benefits to the agents of my defense company would cut large chunks out of that money. But, half of something is better than all of nothing, so I'll take what I can get.
Enforceability is a major issue I see as a problem outside my worry that your stated policy of N.A.P. (non-violence) is just that, a policy that at anytime you could break and then we would have not unbiased 3rd party to uphold my rights if I was the weaker person in this situation.
So, let's say you attempt to bring a case against the US federal government, or much more likely, the federal, county, city or state government brings a case against
you. Would you say you are the weaker party in that situation? Would you further say that the judge is an "unbiased third party?" Whose interest does he have at heart?
A private [court] would have its bias because of the monetary relationship, it corrupts them slightly if not all the way from my point of view.
On the contrary, the monetary relationship is what keeps it unbiased. Judge.me, for instance, at the time of filing, requires half the fee from each party. During arbitration, the arbiter is then able to shift part or all of the fee as part of the judgment. Typically, this means that the loser pays the entire cost of the proceedings as part of the judgment against them. He truly is an unbiased third party, since he gets paid whichever way the case goes, and his employer doesn't get mad if he continually judges one way or another.