What Do the Montgomery Bus Boycotts and Trash Collection in San Francisco Have in Common?

(Austrian) Economics, Anti-Statism, Business, Police Statism, Racism
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“Dr. King did not make the boycott, the boycott made Dr. King.”

~ Veterans of the Civil Rights Movement

The lessons of the past keep being repeated, over and over and over, and…

Blogger Mike “Mish” Shedlock posted a fascinating story on his website regarding a situation in San Francisco.  In “Trash Collecting Entrepreneur Squashed In San Francisco” he cites one of his respondents, known simply as Michael, who relates a story about trash collection.  One of the customers of the local trash collection service—a contractor referred to as Joe—got fed up with paying $37 per trash can, per week, for garbage removal.  He and his neighbor began to take their own trash for disposal at a local dump, using “Joe’s” truck.  Shortly, other neighbors joined their informal garbage disposal network, opting to pay the contractor $10 a week for more service than they were getting from the city union.  Soon, after their little business had begun to unexpectedly take off, their competitors decided to call in the big guns.

When the local garbage company and its union found out about “Joe” they complained to the city. Within a year a law was passed stating that garbage service was now mandatory for all residents at the price the city’s monopoly charged, which was shortly raised.  And “Joe”?  For a while he still took our recyclables until he was fined $4000, even though he had our permission.

None of this is really that surprising.  The State often passes laws to prevent competition.  For example, Lysander Spooner’s attempts to compete with the post office led to the passing of laws specifically designed to prevent competition in delivery of first class mail.  Recalling my Southern pig farming roots, I’d offer this metaphor.  When a hog is sucking the teat, he tends to fight to keep his place in line.  He cares not about his siblings and their hunger.  Nor does he care that he is full.  He cares about one thing:  maintaining vapor lock on that teat.  With apologies to any unionist garbage men in our studio audience, the garbage collection unions employed by the city of San Francisco are comparable to government teat suckers, so their reaction to some random guy actually providing service and “stealing” their business is no surprise.  What I find ironic is this.  Not only does this situation in San Francisco compare to Spooner’s mail delivery business, it also reflects the scenario during the Montgomery Bus Boycotts.

Consider:  When the Montgomery Bus Boycotts began, black people immediately tried to find alternative means of transportation.  This was a classic market response.  Some of the local taxis, specifically the ones driven by other black people, began to offer reduced-price rides. They charged a fare equal to the cost of a bus ride.  How did the City of Montgomery respond?  The city began to fine taxis for charging reduced fares.  They made it against the law to charge whatever you wanted for the service you sold to customers who voluntarily sought you out.  (Sound familiar?)  Not to be outdone (and using techniques from similar boycotts in other places), the black citizens organized extensive carpool options.  These were people attempting to use their own resources—pieces of private property known as automobiles—to provide a voluntary service for people who needed rides.  How did the City of Montgomery respond?  The city forced insurance carriers to drop coverage for any such car.  Note that this was a struggle between citizens of Montgomery who happened to be black and the City of Montgomery—an arm of the government.

Any competent student of U.S. history knows how all this played out.  The boycott lasted for a very long time, much longer than comparable ones in other cities.  The federal government eventually rode to the rescue, passing legislation that required the bus company to treat all passengers equally.  What is generally not known is this.  The bus company, losing money hand over fist early in the boycott, was actually considering a way to acquiesce to the citizens’ demands early in the boycott, since a large percentage of the bus company’s ridership was black people.  (They say the way to a man’s heart is through his stomach.  I say the way to a racist’s heart is through his wallet.)  Furthermore, the business community of Montgomery, also feeling the burn of less black spending, formed a group called the Men of Montgomery with the express purpose of finding a way to end the boycott.  One could argue that it was only because the city blocked alternative travel options and outside financiers “spotted” the bus company money that the whole thing wasn’t over in a few weeks.

One arm of the State ostensibly stopping another arm of the State from infringing on black folks is an example of the irony of coercion.  One would be wise to learn from the words of Laurence J. Peter, “A man convinced against his will is of the same opinion still.”  The initial statist actions—of the City of Montgomery—had the effect of forcing those who did not want to pay for poor service to walk, and for much longer than the market would have otherwise allowed.  The secondary statist actions—the laws passed to supposedly protect black bus riders in Montgomery—gave those against whom the law was enforced an excuse to remain upset for years to come.  Would the owners and operators of the bus company have eventually given in, faced with bankruptcy?  We’ll never know, but I bet it’s a lot harder to be mad at a paying customer who is not the beneficiary of statist action.  (As an aside, Rosa Parks was not the first black person to refuse to move from her seat, but that’s probably another essay.)  Certainly one has to admire the tenacity of those who risked so much for a privilege for which they should not have even had to ask.  The courage of those on the front lines in Montgomery cannot be overstated!  Still, it would have been nice to see if Montgomery would have become the epicenter of a black-owned bus and taxi company movement.

Either way, we’ll never know.  The rest is history, and it keeps repeating itself.

(Cross-posted at LRC.)

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Statist The-daism

Anti-Statism, Political Correctness, Statism
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Political correctness is not the only source of damage to language. Indeed, outright implicit statism has been around much longer than PC. Take, for example, a common question asked when people move: “How are the schools in your area?” By this they of course mean government schools. Then there is the space program (NASA primarily), the post office, the police, the roads. These endless the-daisms are the not unexpected result of the monopolization of goods and services by the state.

The vast majority of people take these the-daisms for granted. One would suspect, however, that unless you lived in a heavily statist society, the majority of the population would reject the idea of having a single provider of homes, food, media or news. “How is the housing in your district?” or maybe “How is the grocery store?” In some states that’s already the case for liquor stores.

Even in industries where there is some competition, such as media distribution companies, we see the-daisms: the phone company or the cable company. Due to government intervention, these providers often obtain the monopolistic, legislative right to operate in a certain area, shutting out potential competitors.

It would sound ridiculous to ask about “the pencil system” or “the restaurant system.” Yet it is somehow perfectly fine to have, or to want to have, a uniform, government health system — the health care system. How unfortunate.

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Night Always Follows Day

(Austrian) Economics, Statism
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Logical Fallacy or Inevitability?

There’s an inevitability to the march of totalitarian economic control which Austrian School Economists have warned about repeatedly. There’s a tipping point which exists when a state interferes in an economy beyond which a state will invariably enact the same destructive policies which have collapsed the economies of other states which engaged in similar folly. This folly consists of practices such as debasing the currency, running up massive deficits and debt, and excessively regulating economic activity. (Note, of course, that for us anarchists all state regulation of economic activity is excessive; but, for my purposes here, we can limit the purview to the stifling, bureaucratic interferences like housing acts, forced lending to “sub-prime” borrowers, GSEs, mandates by the FDA and FTC and other three-letter economy-killers, etc.) What happens is simply this:

  1. Some economic “injustice” or “inequity” or “imbalance” (it almost always starts with those keywords, so be on the lookout) exists and is too upsetting to be tolerated.
  2. The state is used to enforce justice/equity/balance.
  3. These attempts to overthrow the laws of economics succeed only in creating new problems (“unintended consequences”) which then require further state action to attempt to alleviate.
  4. A slippery slope comes into play at this point, with each new state interference into the market creating new problems until everything the Austrian School economists warned of comes to pass.

So it should come as no surprise to anyone who’s been paying attention that the state is now making it very difficult (and painful) for people to escape the country with their assets (link goes to Zero Hedge) :

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