Authors > Joseph R. Peden
Joseph R. Peden Quotes
Historically, States do not dismantle willingly or easily. While they can disintegrate with startling speed, as in Russia in 1917 or France in 1968, almost always new States arise to take their place. The reason for this, I believe, is that men cannot bring themselves to believe in the practical feasibility of a society in which perfect liberty, security of life and property, and law and justice can be attained without the coercive violence of the State. Men have for so long been enslaved by the State that they cannot rid themselves of a Statist mentality. The myth of the State as a necessary part of social reality constitutes the greatest single obstacle to the achievement of a libertarian voluntarist society.
Source: Stateless Societies: Ancient Ireland (1971) [link] #31
As exploited peoples all over the world are beginning to realize, their true enemy is always within their midst -- the coercive violence of the State -- and it must be fought constantly in the very heart of its dominions. Every libertarian must fight the State from where he is: in his home, his place of business, in the schools, community and the world at large. His task is to resist the State and to dismantle it by whatever means are at hand.
Source: Stateless Societies: Ancient Ireland (1971) [link] #248
Libertarians have often dreamed of escaping the tyranny of the State; some have sought to do so by seeking refuge in distant and uninhabited lands where they could live in solitary hermitage or in small communities held together by the principle of voluntary association and mutual aid. But historians know that such experiments seldom survive in peace for long; sooner or later the State finds and confronts them with its instinctive will to violence, its mania for coercion rather than persuasion, for compulsion rather than voluntarism. Such has been the fate of the Mormons and Mennonites, the Jehovah’s Witnesses and the Amish people, among others.
Source: Stateless Societies: Ancient Ireland (1971) [link] #688
About Joseph R. Peden
(From Mises Institute)
Joseph Peden taught history at Baruch College of the City University of New York. He was a close friend and colleague of Murray Rothbard's.

