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Photo: Independent Lodge of Theosophists
In the Introduction to his 2015 book “The Big Drop”, James Rickards makes a short “fictional dystopia” in the spirit of ‘
Brave New World’ or ‘
1984’.
Published five years before the world health crisis which started in 2020, the visionary narrative is set in 2024 and, according to Rickards, was intended to “encourage readers to be alert to dangerous trends in society, some of which are already in place”.
Conversations with Zane Mooneyhan About Austro-libertarianism and Much More
Sent: Friday, February 19, 2021 3:08 PM
Subject: A second Question
One more thing, sorry I bring all my questions to you, you always answer fastest and with the most sources haha. So I was thinking about federally enclosed land and whatnot, and how there is millions of square miles of “federally owned” land, or otherwise controlled by the US govt, where they are preventing people from going in and homesteading their own land. Is there a case to be made that the govt control of this land is significantly inflating land/property prices? And if so would you say the libertarian solution would be to 1. Sell off the land or 2. “free up” the land, allowing people to go in and homestead the property. The second option seems like the correct libertarian solution to me, and I think this whole thing gets overlooked when talking about poverty and capital accumulation under capitalism. I don’t see why there i