Why Most Libertarians Are Missing the Point

I just finished reading a fascinating paper about “seasteading“. This is the concept of creating towers of small communities designed live on the sea, a little like oil platforms. The ideas is that once these small communities evolve, if the members of the communities disagree with governmental policies, they can just take their seastead elsewhere, literally overnight. The switching costs for moving societies will be virtually eliminated.

This has come together from a bunch of libertarians, and is funded by Peter Thiel ($500k), who cofounded Paypal, is an early investor in Facebook and is now one of the top fund managers in the US. He’s also someone I have a tremendous amount of respect for.

Those who know me well know that I’m a huge fan of Ayn Rand and believe that Objectivism is a very important philosophy, especially for entrepreneurs. I was impressed to learn that Peter Thiel is also a big fan of Objectivism, and this may be why he is funding Seasteading.

Many libertarians I’ve met believe libertarian principles of society will truly work if they were given the chance. But since that chance never arrives, they never truly know if their system works.

Well, I’ve lived in an almost-libertarian state since 2001 – in the Caribbean, called the Dominican Republic. Here we have a weak police force, rule of law which isn’t very strong, and almost anything goes.

As a result, there are two principles which govern day to day life here:
1. how well connected you are (where your family comes from, who your friends are)
2. how much money you have

Thats it. So if you have a problem with your neighbour playing his music too loud, you can count on the two principles above if you want to sleep in peace. If you get into a car accident and kill someone, those two principles will determine your survival if the family of the deceased comes after you.

It *does* work.. to a degree.. but its scary sometimes and it means you need to stay on your toes. It also means that if you aren’t well connected and you don’t have money, then you are screwed if a bad situation that comes your way. Many would-be expats leave countries like the Dominican Republic after just a few months with lots of horror stories. Not understanding these two simple rules is the reason why.

I am sure Peter Thiel and the founders of seasteading have great intentions with the society they want to build. It will be great for them, since they will have both money, and connections (after they have the fame of building this libertarian society). But for regular people who are living in it as regular citizens and have neither, life on a seastead won’t be much fun.

Libertarians have some really interesting ideals and we should listen to them. But a fully libertarian society like seasteading will not be one that respects the rights of all its citizens, and will not reach the visions of the founders. After 6 years in the Dominican Republic, a place I do enjoy living in, I now know this first hand.

Who Are the Facebook Early Adopters?

Ever wondered who the really early adopters are? Here’s an anecdotal, probably inaccurate, but interesting methodology.

I was testing today to see if I could export my friends data from facebook. I found a facebook app called FriendsCSV which exports your friend data into a CSV file. (I was hoping to get my friends email addresses so I could update my local addressbook, but unfortunately wasn’t successful.)

However, the list was ordered by userID, which shows us when each person first signed up for facebook. I have an interesting list of technology early adopters in my facebook friends list, so now you can see who among the people I know were the first people to join up for facebook.

Are they the early adopters for everything? Probably not. But this could be an indicator.

uid name
18699 Jeremy Lizt
207923 David E. Weekly
1804892 Dan Caron
2355827 Adrian Bye
2412239 Roy De Souza
2712652 Ryan Allis
5405110 Dave McClure
5518735 Philip Kaplan
10504714 Rachel Rofe
15919445 Josh Verrill
30501653 Shea Mercado
293500033 Rob Jewell
502547440 Steve Case
502551963 Jason Fried
503833014 Michael Dell
503917182 Jeff Walker
504429203 Shawn Collins
504503972 Brad Feld
504671433 Missy Ward
505770460 Ian Schafer
506522975 Drew Curtis
506612494 Mark McWeeny
509883712 Rich Schefren
511065669 Martin Toha
511450156 Tony Gomez
517362434 P.V. Kannan
518405285 Robert Woolford
522502851 Kenneth Chan
524608482 Adrian Broughton
531251626 Joseph Sugarman
534496019 Ian Clarke
537819151 Brad Geddes
539955444 Michael J Filsaime
540913772 Elizabeth Lloyd
548039325 Peter Bordes
555548055 Jim Lillig
555701882 Nordine Zouareg
556706692 Rick Mirsky
556773177 John Lemp
557337551 Paul McDonnell
568107541 Danielle Hickey
576990711 Jay Weintraub
579502151 Brad Powers
581352212 Scott Rewick
584390757 John Linden
596878413 Shawn Casey
597753367 Mark Romanelli
611936413 Drew Kossoff
613808617 Hamlet Batista
618922830 Tellman Knudson
619970378 Kevin Needham
621051098 Paul Galloway
626891799 Christa Foley
626905960 Anne P. Mitchell
627163850 Jordan Finger
630446728 Thomas J Mather
632101727 Chris Graham
634114999 Bogdan Ravaru
635189079 Marlon Sanders
635865713 Matt Hill
636220459 Tony Hsieh
637196863 Scott Mitchell
638082643 Aaron Gravitz
639647779 Matthew Bye
641347608 Armand Morin
641370732 Matt Moog
643779771 Stephen Pierce
644015054 Bill Tai
645509376 Frank Addante
647317290 Scott Richter
652000627 Matthew Wise
655020670 C. David Gammel
662256670 Alfred Lin
668996161 Michael Bastin
672260158 Gary Swart
682753031 Jim Banks
685935774 Joel Sanders
718967101 Brady Whittingham
727295442 Ernie Ghiglione
727468816 Mike Hill
736139388 Jason Cohen
746128676 Keith Baxter
749890391 Michel Fortin
750272398 John Marshall
756444818 Brian Burson
757820219 Keith Richman
760688974 Scott Cohen
774825083 Lucas Morea
801352121 Jesse Willms
831575436 Khalid Shaikh
846825550 Justin Champion
1005010460 Advaliant MediaTrust
1014101939 Eben Pagan
1070147743 Tim Erway
1200702082 Mike Litman
1490700453 Jenny Fine