Murray Rothbard's Anatomy of the State
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
Murray Rothbard
was known as the state's greatest living enemy, and this is his
most succinct and powerful statement on the topic, an exhibit A
in how he came to wear that designation proudly. He explains what
a state is and what it is not, according to his own ideological
vision. He shows how it is one institution that purports to hold
the right to violate all that we otherwise hold as honest and moral,
and how it operates under a false cover now and always. He shows
how the state wrecks freedom, destroys civilization, and threatens
all lives and property and social well-being.
The essay is
seminal in another respect. Here Rothbard had bound together the
cause of private-property capitalism with anarchist politics
and he was truly the first thinker in the history of the world to
fully forge the perspective that later came to be known as anarcho-capitalism.
He took all that he had learned from the Misesian tradition and
the liberal tradition and the anarchist tradition to put together
what is really a new and highly systematic way of thinking about
the entire subject of political economy and social thought.
Understanding
his point of view has an interesting effect on any reader. It has
the effect of putting things together in a way that changes the
way we see the world.
And he explains
all of this in a very short space, and in this very beautiful book.
This is the first time that this essay has been published separately,
and it is done in order that the book can be ordered in large quantities
and distributed to all interested people.
60 page, paperback,
2009, ISBN: 978-1-933550-48-0
This article
first appeared on Mises.org.
May
27, 2009
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
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