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02/11/2005 Entry: "Qua lege vivis?"
Qua lege vivis?
Swedish economist Richard C.B. Johnsson, after lengthy research, wrote an essay that was published on LewRockwell.com on February 8, 2005. This in my view was probably the best libertarian site to publish this text on. It's the quality of the site of course that gave it the suitable frame (though there are other top quality libertarian sites around, of course), but above all the very large number of its visitors and also the quality of these was a must for the great importance of this essay and the tremendous cause it defends. I am told that the very first day of publication it was the second most read piece at LRC. A day later, on February 9, 2005, the author wrote me to suggest that I should repost it on my site and that he would be proud to be mentioned on my site. I was extremely happy about this. As, considering the theme of the essay, it really fits my "The Exterritorial Imperative" group of sites (or the partner site Panarchy.org of Gian Piero de Bellis) much better than any other ones, and in particular, among my sites, this one: Panarchism.info.
Qua lege vivis? According to which law are you living? Let's hope that one day we will get back to this ancient How do you do? :-)
Richard C.B. Johnsson's great essay is the best I read so far, even in a way the first, which really has all the qualities to make people understand that cause of exterritoriality and panarchism and hopefully convince them, a thing that so far has mostly been very difficult. It will, pardon the comparison, like a tsunami refresh all shades and sizes of the vast libertarian movement. Panarchism can become the common denominator. To at long last free us from the "cuius regio, eius res publica", like we are, in most parts, since a while freed from the former "cuius regio, eius religio".
Enjoy Richard C.B. Johnsson's eye-opening essay with the title