F.4 What is the right-libertarian position on private property?

Right libertarians are not interested in eliminating capitalist private property and thus the authority, oppression and exploitation which goes with it. It is true that they call for an end to the state, but this is not because they are concerned about workers being exploited or oppressed but because they don't want the state to impede capitalists' "freedom" to exploit and oppress workers even more than is the case now!

They make an idol of private property and claim to defend absolute, "unrestricted" property rights (i.e. that property owners can do anything they like with their property, as long as it does not damage the property of others. In particular, taxation and theft are among the greatest evils possible as they involve coercion against "justly held" property). They agree with John Adams that "[t]he moment that idea is admitted into society that property is not as sacred as the Laws of God, and that there is not a force of law and public justice to protect it, anarchy and tyranny commence. Property must be sacred or liberty cannot exist."

But in their celebration of property as the source of liberty they ignore the fact that private property is a source of "tyranny" in itself (see sections B.1 and B.4, for example -- and please note that anarchists only object to private property, not individual possession, see section B.3.1). However, as much anarchists may disagree about other matters, they are united in condemning private property. Thus Proudhon argued that property was "theft" and "despotism" while Stirner indicated the religious and statist nature of private property and its impact on individual liberty when he wrote :

"Property in the civic sense means sacred property, such that I must respect your property... Be it ever so little, if one only has somewhat of his own - to wit, a respected property: The more such owners... the more 'free people and good patriots' has the State.

"Political liberalism, like everything religious, counts on respect, humaneness, the virtues of love. . . . For in practice people respect nothing, and everyday the small possessions are bought up again by greater proprietors, and the 'free people' change into day labourers." [The Ego and Its Own, p. 248]

Thus "anarcho"-capitalists reject totally one of the common (and so defining) features of all anarchist traditions -- the opposition to capitalist property. From Individualist Anarchists like Tucker to Communist-Anarchists like Bookchin, anarchists have been opposed to what Godwin termed "accumulated property." This was because it was in "direct contradiction" to property in the form of "the produce of his [the worker's] own industry" and so it allows "one man. . . [to] dispos[e] of the produce of another man's industry." [The Anarchist Reader, pp. 129-131] Thus, for anarchists, capitalist property is a source exploitation and domination, not freedom (it undermines the freedom associated with possession by created relations of domination between owner and employee).

Hardly surprising then the fact that, according to Murray Bookchin, Murray Rothbard "attacked me [Bookchin] as an anarchist with vigour because, as he put it, I am opposed to private property." [The Raven, no. 29, p. 343]

We will discuss Rothbard's "homesteading" justification of property in the next section. However, we will note here one aspect of right-libertarian defence of "unrestricted" property rights, namely that it easily generates evil side effects such as hierarchy and starvation. As famine expert Amartya Sen notes:

"Take a theory of entitlements based on a set of rights of 'ownership, transfer and rectification.' In this system a set of holdings of different people are judged to be just (or unjust) by looking at past history, and not by checking the consequences of that set of holdings. But what if the consequences are recognisably terrible? . . .[R]efer[ing] to some empirical findings in a work on famines . . . evidence [is presented] to indicate that in many large famines in the recent past, in which millions of people have died, there was no over-all decline in food availability at all, and the famines occurred precisely because of shifts in entitlement resulting from exercises of rights that are perfectly legitimate. . . . [Can] famines . . . occur with a system of rights of the kind morally defended in various ethical theories, including Nozick's. I believe the answer is straightforwardly yes, since for many people the only resource that they legitimately possess, viz. their labour-power, may well turn out to be unsaleable in the market, giving the person no command over food . . . [i]f results such as starvations and famines were to occur, would the distribution of holdings still be morally acceptable despite their disastrous consequences? There is something deeply implausible in the affirmative answer." [Resources, Values and Development, pp. 311-2]

Thus "unrestricted" property rights can have seriously bad consequences and so the existence of "justly held" property need not imply a just or free society -- far from it. The inequalities property can generate can have a serious on individual freedom (see section F.3.1). Indeed, Murray Rothbard argued that the state was evil not because it restricted individual freedom but because the resources it claimed to own were not "justly" acquired. Thus right-libertarian theory judges property not on its impact on current freedom but by looking at past history. This has the interesting side effect of allowing its supporters to look at capitalist and statist hierarchies, acknowledge their similar negative effects on the liberty of those subjected to them but argue that one is legitimate and the other is not simply because of their history! As if this changed the domination and unfreedom that both inflict on people living today (see section F.2.3 for further discussion and sections F.2.8 and F.4.2 for other examples of "justly acquired" property producing terrible consequences).

The defence of capitalist property does have one interesting side effect, namely the need arises to defend inequality and the authoritarian relationships inequality creates. In order to protect the private property needed by capitalists in order to continue exploiting the working class, "anarcho"-capitalists propose private security forces rather than state security forces (police and military) -- a proposal that is equivalent to bringing back the state under another name.

Due to (capitalist) private property, wage labour would still exist under "anarcho"-capitalism (it is capitalism after all). This means that "defensive" force, a state, is required to "defend" exploitation, oppression, hierarchy and authority from those who suffer them. Inequality makes a mockery of free agreement and "consent" (see section F.3.1). As Peter Kropotkin pointed out long ago:

"When a workman sells his labour to an employer . . . it is a mockery to call that a free contract. Modern economists may call it free, but the father of political economy -- Adam Smith -- was never guilty of such a misrepresentation. As long as three-quarters of humanity are compelled to enter into agreements of that description, force is, of course, necessary, both to enforce the supposed agreements and to maintain such a state of things. Force -- and a good deal of force -- is necessary to prevent the labourers from taking possession of what they consider unjustly appropriated by the few. . . . The Spencerian party [proto-right-libertarians] perfectly well understand that; and while they advocate no force for changing the existing conditions, they advocate still more force than is now used for maintaining them. As to Anarchy, it is obviously as incompatible with plutocracy as with any other kind of -cracy." [Anarchism and Anarchist Communism, pp. 52-53]

Because of this need to defend privilege and power, "anarcho"-capitalism is best called "private-state" capitalism. This will be discussed in more detail in section F.6.

By advocating private property, right libertarians contradict many of their other claims. For example, they say that they support the right of individuals to travel where they like. They make this claim because they assume that only the state limits free travel. But this is a false assumption. Owners must agree to let you on their land or property ("people only have the right to move to those properties and lands where the owners desire to rent or sell to them." [Murray Rothbard, The Ethics of Liberty, p. 119]. There is no "freedom of travel" onto private property (including private roads). Therefore immigration may be just as hard under "anarcho"-capitalism as it is under statism (after all, the state, like the property owner, only lets people in whom it wants to let in). People will still have to get another property owner to agree to let them in before they can travel -- exactly as now (and, of course, they also have to get the owners of the road to let them in as well). Private property, as can be seen from this simple example, is the state writ small.

One last point, this ignoring of ("politically incorrect") economic and other views of dead political thinkers and activists while claiming them as "libertarians" seems to be commonplace in right-Libertarian circles. For example, Aristotle (beloved by Ayn Rand) "thought that only living things could bear fruit. Money, not a living thing, was by its nature barren, and any attempt to make it bear fruit (tokos, in Greek, the same word used for interest) was a crime against nature." [Marcello de Cecco, quoted by Doug Henwood, Wall Street, p. 41] Such opposition to interest hardly fits well into capitalism, and so either goes unmentioned or gets classed as an "error" (although we could ask why Aristotle is in error while Rand is not). Similarly, individualist anarchist opposition to capitalist property and rent, interest and profits is ignored or dismissed as "bad economics" without realising that these ideas played a key role in their politics and in ensuring that an anarchy would not see freedom corrupted by inequality. To ignore such an important concept in a person's ideas is to distort the remainder into something it is not.

F.4.1 What is wrong with a "homesteading" theory of property?

So how do "anarcho"-capitalists justify property? Looking at Murray Rothbard, we find that he proposes a "homesteading theory of property". In this theory it is argued that property comes from occupancy and mixing labour with natural resources (which are assumed to be unowned). Thus the world is transformed into private property, for "title to an unowned resource (such as land) comes properly only from the expenditure of labour to transform that resource into use." [The Ethics of Liberty, p. 63]

Rothbard paints a conceptual history of individuals and families forging a home in the wilderness by the sweat of their labour (its tempting to rename his theory the "immaculate conception of property" as his conceptual theory is somewhat at odds with actual historical fact).

Sadly for Murray Rothbard, his "homesteading" theory was refuted by Proudhon in What is Property? in 1840 (along with many other justifications of property). Proudhon rightly argues that "if the liberty of man is sacred, it is equally sacred in all individuals; that, if it needs property for its objective action, that is, for its life, the appropriation of material is equally necessary for all . . . Does it not follow that if one individual cannot prevent another . . . from appropriating an amount of material equal to his own, no more can he prevent individuals to come." And if all the available resources are appropriated, and the owner "draws boundaries, fences himself in . . . Here, then, is a piece of land upon which, henceforth, no one has a right to step, save the proprietor and his friends . . . Let [this]. . . multiply, and soon the people . . . will have nowhere to rest, no place to shelter, no ground to till. They will die at the proprietor's door, on the edge of that property which was their birthright." [What is Property?, pp. 84-85, p. 118]

As Rothbard himself noted in respect to the aftermath of slavery (see section F.2.2), not having access to the means of life places one the position of unjust dependency on those who do. Rothbard's theory fails because for "[w]e who belong to the proletaire class, property excommunicates us!" [P-J Proudhon, Op. Cit., p. 105] and so the vast majority of the population experience property as theft and despotism rather than as a source of liberty and empowerment (which possession gives). Thus, Rothbard's account fails to take into account the Lockean Proviso (see section B.3.4) and so, for all its intuitive appeal, ends up justifying capitalist and landlord domination (see next section on why the Lockean Proviso is important).

It also seems strange that while (correctly) attacking social contract theories of the state as invalid (because "no past generation can bind later generations" [Op. Cit., p. 145]) he fails to see he is doing exactly that with his support of private property (similarly, Ayn Rand argued that "[a]ny alleged 'right' of one man, which necessitates the violation of the right of another, is not and cannot be a right" [Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal, p. 325] but obviously appropriating land does violate the rights of others to walk, use or appropriate that land). Due to his support for appropriation and inheritance, he is clearly ensuring that future generations are not born as free as the first settlers were (after all, they cannot appropriate any land, it is all taken!). If future generations cannot be bound by past ones, this applies equally to resources and property rights. Something anarchists have long realised -- there is no defensible reason why those who first acquired property should control its use by future generations.

However, if we take Rothbard's theory at face value we find numerous problems with it. If title to unowned resources comes via the "expenditure of labour" on it, how can rivers, lakes and the oceans be appropriated? The banks of the rivers can be transformed, but can the river itself? How can you mix your labour with water? "Anarcho"-capitalists usually blame pollution on the fact that rivers, oceans, and so forth are unowned, but how can an individual "transform" water by their labour? Also, does fencing in land mean you have "mixed labour" with it? If so then transnational corporations can pay workers to fence in vast tracks of virgin land (such as rainforest) and so come to "own" it. Rothbard argues that this is not the case (he expresses opposition to "arbitrary claims"). He notes that it is not the case that "the first discoverer . . . could properly lay claim to [a piece of land] . . . [by] laying out a boundary for the area." He thinks that "their claim would still be no more than the boundary itself, and not to any of the land within, for only the boundary will have been transformed and used by men" [Op. Cit., p. 50f]

However, if the boundary is private property and the owner refuses others permission to cross it, then the enclosed land is inaccessible to others! If an "enterprising" right-libertarian builds a fence around the only oasis in a desert and refuses permission to cross it to travellers unless they pay his price (which is everything they own) then the person has appropriated the oasis without "transforming" it by his labour. The travellers have the choice of paying the price or dying (and the oasis owner is well within his rights letting them die). Given Rothbard's comments, it is probable that he will claim that such a boundary is null and void as it allows "arbitrary" claims -- although this position is not at all clear. After all, the fence builder has transformed the boundary and "unrestricted" property rights is what right-libertarianism is all about.

And, of course, Rothbard ignores the fact of economic power -- a transnational corporation can "transform" far more virgin resources in a day than a family could in a year. Transnational's "mixing their labour" with the land does not spring into mind reading Rothbard's account of property growth, but in the real world that is what will happen.

If we take the question of wilderness (a topic close to many eco-anarchists' and deep ecologists' hearts) we run into similar problems. Rothbard states clearly that "libertarian theory must invalidate [any] claim to ownership" of land that has "never been transformed from its natural state" (he presents an example of an owner who has left a piece of his "legally owned" land untouched). If another person appears who does transform the land, it becomes "justly owned by another" and the original owner cannot stop her (and should the original owner "use violence to prevent another settler from entering this never-used land and transforming it into use" they also become a "criminal aggressor"). Rothbard also stresses that he is not saying that land must continually be in use to be valid property [Op. Cit., pp. 63-64] (after all, that would justify landless workers seizing the land from landowners during a depression and working it themselves).

Now, where does that leave wilderness? In response to ecologists who oppose the destruction of the rainforest, "anarcho"-capitalists suggest that they put their money where their mouth is and buy rainforest land. In this way, it is claimed, rainforest will be protected (see section B.5 for why such arguments are nonsense). As ecologists desire the rainforest because it is wilderness they are unlikely to "transform" it by human labour (its precisely that they want to stop). From Rothbard's arguments it is fair to ask whether logging companies have a right to "transform" the virgin wilderness owned by ecologists, after all it meets Rothbard's criteria (it is still wilderness). Perhaps it will be claimed that fencing off land "transforms" it (hardly what you imagine "mixing labour" with to mean, but nevermind) -- but that allows large companies and rich individuals to hire workers to fence in vast tracks of land (and recreate the land monopoly by a "libertarian" route). But as we noted above, fencing off land does not seem to imply that it becomes property in Rothbard's theory. And, of course, fencing in areas of rainforest disrupts the local eco-system -- animals cannot freely travel, for example -- which, again, is what ecologists desire to stop. Would Rothbard accept a piece of paper as "transforming" land? We doubt it (after all, in his example the wilderness owner did legally own it) -- and so most ecologists will have a hard time in "anarcho"-capitalism (wilderness is just not an option).

As an aside, we must note that Rothbard fails to realise -- and this comes from his worship of the market and his "Austrian economics" -- is that people value many things which do not appear on the market. He claims that wilderness is "valueless unused natural objects" (for it people valued them, they would use -- i.e. appropriate -- them). But unused things may be of considerable value to people, wilderness being a classic example. And if something cannot be transformed into private property, does that mean people do not value it? For example, people value community, stress free working environments, meaningful work -- if the market cannot provide these, does that mean they do not value them? Of course not (see Juliet Schor's The Overworked American on how working people's desire for shorter working hours was not transformed into options on the market).

Moreover, Rothbard's "homesteading" theory actually violates his support for unrestricted property rights. What if a property owner wants part of her land to remain wilderness? Their desires are violated by the "homesteading" theory (unless, of course, fencing things off equals "transforming" them, which it apparently does not). How can companies provide wilderness holidays to people if they have no right to stop settlers (including large companies) "homesteading" that wilderness? And, of course, where does Rothbard's theory leave hunter-gather or nomad societies. They use the resources of the wilderness, but they do not "transform" them (in this case you cannot easily tell if virgin land is empty or being used as a resource). If a troop of nomads find its traditionally used, but natural, oasis appropriated by a homesteader what are they to do? If they ignore the homesteaders claims he can call upon his "defence" firm to stop them -- and then, in true Rothbardian fashion, the homesteader can refuse to supply water to them unless they hand over all their possessions (see section F.4.2 on this). And if the history of the United States (which is obviously the model for Rothbard's theory) is anything to go by, such people will become "criminal aggressors" and removed from the picture.

Which is another problem with Rothbard's account. It is completely ahistoric (and so, as we noted above, is more like an "immaculate conception of property"). He has transported "capitalist man" into the dawn of time and constructed a history of property based upon what he is trying to justify (not surprising, as he does this with his "Natural Law" theory too - see section F.7). What is interesting to note, though, is that the actual experience of life on the US frontier (the historic example Rothbard seems to want to claim) was far from the individualistic framework he builds upon it and (ironically enough) it was destroyed by the development of capitalism.

As Murray Bookchin notes, "the independence that the New England yeomanry enjoyed was itself a function of the co-operative social base from which it emerged. To barter home-grown goods and objects, to share tools and implements, to engage in common labour during harvesting time in a system of mutual aid, indeed, to help new-comers in barn-raising, corn-husking, log-rolling, and the like, was the indispensable cement that bound scattered farmsteads into a united community." [The Third Revolution, vol. 1, p. 233] Bookchin quotes David P. Szatmary (author of a book on Shay' Rebellion) stating that it was a society based upon "co-operative, community orientated interchanges" and not a "basically competitive society." [Ibid.]

Into this non-capitalist society came capitalist elements. Market forces and economic power soon resulted in the transformation of this society. Merchants asked for payment in specie which (and along with taxes) soon resulted in indebtedness and the dispossession of the homesteaders from their land and goods. In response Shay's rebellion started, a rebellion which was an important factor in the centralisation of state power in America to ensure that popular input and control over government were marginalised and that the wealthy elite and their property rights were protected against the many (see Bookchin, Op. Cit., for details). Thus the homestead system was undermined, essentially, by the need to pay for services in specie (as demanded by merchants).

So while Rothbard's theory as a certain appeal (reinforced by watching too many Westerns, we imagine) it fails to justify the "unrestricted" property rights theory (and the theory of freedom Rothbard derives from it). All it does is to end up justifying capitalist and landlord domination (which is probably what it was intended to do).

F.4.2 Why is the "Lockean Proviso" important?

Robert Nozick, in his work Anarchy, State, and Utopia presented a case for private property rights that was based on what he termed the "Lockean Proviso" -- namely that common (or unowned) land and resources could be appropriated by individuals as long as the position of others is not worsen by so doing. However, if we do take this Proviso seriously private property rights cannot be defined (see section B.3.4 for details). Thus Nozick's arguments in favour of property rights fail.

Some right-libertarians, particularly those associated with the Austrian school of economics argue that we must reject the Lockean Proviso (probably due to the fact it can be used to undermine the case for absolute property rights). Their argument goes as follows: if an individual appropriates and uses a previously unused resource, it is because it has value to him/her, as an individual, to engage in such action. The individual has stolen nothing because it was previously unowned and we cannot know if other people are better or worse off, all we know is that, for whatever reason, they did not appropriate the resource ("If latecomers are worse off, well then that is their proper assumption of risk in this free and uncertain world. There is no longer a vast frontier in the United States, and there is no point crying over the fact." [Murray Rothbard, The Ethics of Liberty, p. 240]).

Hence the appropriation of resources is an essentially individualistic, asocial act -- the requirements of others are either irrelevant or unknown. However, such an argument fails to take into account why the Lockean Proviso has such an appeal. When we do this we see that rejecting it leads to massive injustice, even slavery.

However, let us start with a defence of rejecting the Proviso from a leading Austrian economist:

"Consider . . . the case . . . of the unheld sole water hole in the desert (which everyone in a group of travellers knows about), which one of the travellers, by racing ahead of the others, succeeds in appropriating . . . [This] clearly and unjustly violates the Lockean proviso. . . For use, however, this view is by no means the only one possible. We notice that the energetic traveller who appropriated all the water was not doing anything which (always ignoring, of course, prohibitions resting on the Lockean proviso itself) the other travellers were not equally free to do. The other travellers, too, could have raced ahead . . . [they] did not bother to race for the water . . . It does not seem obvious that these other travellers can claim that they were hurt by an action which they could themselves have easily taken" [Israel M. Kirzner, "Entrepreneurship, Entitlement, and Economic Justice", pp. 385-413, in Reading Nozick, p. 406]

Murray Rothbard, we should note, takes a similar position in a similar example, arguing that "the owner [of the sole oasis] is scarcely being 'coercive'; in fact he is supplying a vital service, and should have the right to refuse a sale or charge whatever the customers will pay. The situation may be unfortunate for the customers, as are many situations in life." [The Ethics of Liberty, p. 221] (Rothbard, we should note, is relying to the right-libertarian von Hayek who -- to his credit -- does maintain that this is a coercive situation; but as others, including other right-libertarians, point out, he has to change his definition of coercion/freedom to do so -- see Stephan L. Newman's Liberalism at Wit's End, pp. 130-134 for an excellent summary of this debate).

Now, we could be tempted just to rant about the evils of the right libertarian mind-frame but we will try to present a clam analysis of this position. Now, what Kirzner (and Rothbard et al) fails to note is that without the water the other travellers will die in a matter of days. The monopolist has the power of life and death over his fellow travellers. Perhaps he hates one of them and so raced ahead to ensure their death. Perhaps he just recognised the vast power that his appropriation would give him and so, correctly, sees that the other travellers would give up all their possessions and property to him in return for enough water to survive.

Either way, its clear that perhaps the other travellers did not "race ahead" because they were ethical people -- they would not desire to inflict such tyranny on others because they would not like it inflicted upon them.

Thus we can answer Kirzner's question -- "What . . . is so obviously acceptable about the Lockean proviso. . . ?" [Ibid.]

It is the means by which human actions are held accountable to social standards and ethics. It is the means by which the greediest, most evil and debased humans are stopped from dragging the rest of humanity down to their level (via a "race to the bottom") and inflicting untold tyranny and domination on their fellow humans. An ideology that could consider the oppression which could result from such an appropriation as "supplying a vital service" and any act to remove this tyranny as "coercion" is obviously a very sick ideology. And we may note that the right-libertarian position on this example is a good illustration of the dangers of deductive logic from assumptions (see section F.1.3 for more on this right-libertarian methodology) -- after all W. Duncan Reekie, in his introduction to Austrian Economics, states that "[t]o be intellectually consistent one must concede his absolute right to the oasis." [Markets, Entrepreneurs and Liberty, p. 181] To place ideology before people is to ensure humanity is placed on a Procrustean bed.

Which brings us to another point. Often right-libertarians say that anarchists and other socialists are "lazy" or "do not want to work". You could interpret Kirzner's example as saying that the other travellers are "lazy" for not rushing ahead and appropriating the oasis. But this is false. For under capitalism you can only get rich by exploiting the labour of others via wage slavery or, within a company, get better pay by taking "positions of responsibility" (i.e. management positions). If you have an ethical objection to treating others as objects ("means to an end") then these options are unavailable to you. Thus anarchists and other socialists are not "lazy" because they are not rich -- they just have no desire to get rich off the labour and liberty of others (as expressed in their opposition to private property and the relations of domination it creates). In other words, Anarchism is not the "politics of envy"; it is the politics of liberty and the desire to treat others as "ends in themselves".

Rothbard is aware of what is involved in accepting the Lockean Proviso -- namely the existence of private property ("Locke's proviso may lead to the outlawry of all private property of land, since one can always say that the reduction of available land leaves everyone else . . . worse off", The Ethics of Liberty, p. 240 -- see section B.3.4 for a discussion on why the Proviso does imply the end of capitalist property rights). Which is why he, and other right-libertarians, reject it. Its simple. Either you reject the Proviso and embrace capitalist property rights (and so allow one class of people to be dispossessed and another empowered at their expense) or you reject private property in favour of possession and liberty. Anarchists, obviously, favour the latter option.

As an aside, we should point out that (following Stirner) the would-be monopolist is doing nothing wrong (as such) in attempting to monopolise the oasis. He is, after all, following his self-interest. However, what is objectionable is the right-libertarian attempt to turn thus act into a "right" which must be respected by the other travellers. Simply put, if the other travellers gang up and dispose of this would be tyrant then they are right to do so -- to argue that this is a violation of the monopolists "rights" is insane and an indication of a slave mentality (or, following Rousseau, that the others are "simple"). Of course, if the would-be monopolist has the necessary force to withstand the other travellers then his property then the matter is closed -- might makes right. But to worship rights, even when they obviously result in despotism, is definitely a case of "spooks in the head" and "man is created for the Sabbath" not "the Sabbath is created for man."

F.4.3 How does private property effect individualism?

Private property is usually associated by "anarcho"-capitalism with individualism. Usually private property is seen as the key way of ensuring individualism and individual freedom (and that private property is the expression of individualism). Therefore it is useful to indicate how private property can have a serious impact on individualism.

Usually right-libertarians contrast the joys of "individualism" with the evils of "collectivism" in which the individual is sub-merged into the group or collective and is made to work for the benefit of the group (see any Ayn Rand book or essay on the evils of collectivism).

But what is ironic is that right-libertarian ideology creates a view of industry which would (perhaps) shame even the most die-hard fan of Stalin. What do we mean? Simply that right-libertarians stress the abilities of the people at the top of the company, the owner, the entrepreneur, and tend to ignore the very real subordination of those lower down the hierarchy (see, again, any Ayn Rand book on the worship of business leaders). In the Austrian school of economics, for example, the entrepreneur is considered the driving force of the market process and tend to abstract away from the organisations they govern. This approach is usually followed by right-libertarians. Often you get the impression that the accomplishments of a firm are the personal triumphs of the capitalists, as though their subordinates are merely tools not unlike the machines on which they labour.

We should not, of course, interpret this to mean that right-libertarians believe that entrepreneurs run their companies single-handedly (although you do get that impression sometimes!). But these abstractions help hide the fact that the economy is overwhelmingly interdependent and organised hierarchically within industry. Even in their primary role as organisers, entrepreneurs depend on the group. A company president can only issue general guidelines to his managers, who must inevitably organise and direct much of their departments on their own. The larger a company gets, the less personal and direct control an entrepreneur has over it. They must delegate out an increasing share of authority and responsibility, and is more dependent than ever on others to help him run things, investigate conditions, inform policy, and make recommendations. Moreover, the authority structures are from the "top-down" -- indeed the firm is essentially a command economy, with all members part of a collective working on a common plan to achieve a common goal (i.e. it is essentially collectivist in nature -- which means it is not too unsurprising that Lenin argued that state socialism could be considered as one big firm or office and why the system he built on that model was so horrific).

So the firm (the key component of the capitalist economy) is marked by a distinct lack of individualism, a lack usually ignored by right libertarians (or, at best, considered as "unavoidable"). As these firms are hierarchical structures and workers are paid to obey, it does make some sense -- in a capitalist environment -- to assume that the entrepreneur is the main actor, but as an individualistic model of activity it fails totally. Perhaps it would not be unfair to say that capitalist individualism celebrates the entrepreneur because this reflects a hierarchical system in which for the one to flourish, the many must obey? (Also see section F.1.1).

Capitalist individualism does not recognise the power structures that exist within capitalism and how they affect individuals. In Brian Morris' words, what they fail "to recognise is that most productive relations under capitalism allow little scope for creativity and self-expression on the part of workers; that such relationships are not equitable; nor are they freely engaged in for the mutual benefit of both parties, for workers have no control over the production process or over the product of their labour. Rand [like other right-libertarians] misleadingly equates trade, artistic production and wage-slavery. . . [but] wage-slavery . . . is quite different from the trade principle" as it is a form of "exploitation." [Ecology & Anarchism, p. 190]

He further notes that "[s]o called trade relations involving human labour are contrary to the egoist values Rand [and other capitalist individualists] espouses - they involve little in the way of independence, freedom, integrity or justice." [Ibid., p. 191]

Moreover, capitalist individualism actually supports authority and hierarchy. As Joshua Chen and Joel Rogers point out, the "achievement of short-run material satisfaction often makes it irrational [from an individualist perspective] to engage in more radical struggle, since that struggle is by definition against those institutions which provide one's current gain." In other words, to rise up the company structure, to "better oneself," (or even get a good reference) you cannot be a pain in the side of management -- obedient workers do well, rebel workers do not.

Thus the hierarchical structures help develop an "individualistic" perspective which actually reinforces those authority structures. This, as Cohn and Rogers notes, means that "the structure in which [workers] find themselves yields less than optimal social results from their isolated but economically rational decisions." [quoted by Alfie Kohn, No Contest, p. 67, p. 260f]

Steve Biko, a black activist murdered by the South African police in the 1970s, argued that "the most potent weapon of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed." And this is something capitalists have long recognised. Their investment in "Public Relations" and "education" programmes for their employees shows this clearly, as does the hierarchical nature of the firm. By having a ladder to climb, the firm rewards obedience and penalises rebellion. This aims at creating a mind-set which views hierarchy as good and so helps produce servile people.

This is why anarchists would agree with Alfie Kohn when he argues that "the individualist worldview is a profoundly conservative doctrine: it inherently stifles change." [Ibid., p. 67] So, what is the best way for a boss to maintain his or her power? Create a hierarchical workplace and encourage capitalist individualism (as capitalist individualism actually works against attempts to increase freedom from hierarchy). Needless to say, such a technique cannot work forever -- hierarchy also encourages revolt -- but such divide and conquer can be very effective.

And as anarchist author Michael Moorcock put it, "Rugged individualism also goes hand in hand with a strong faith in paternalism -- albeit a tolerant and somewhat distant paternalism -- and many otherwise sharp-witted libertarians seem to see nothing in the morality of a John Wayne Western to conflict with their views. Heinlein's paternalism is at heart the same as Wayne's. . . To be an anarchist, surely, is to reject authority but to accept self-discipline and community responsibility. To be a rugged individualist a la Heinlein and others is to be forever a child who must obey, charm and cajole to be tolerated by some benign, omniscient father: Rooster Coburn shuffling his feet in front of a judge he respects for his office (but not necessarily himself) in True Grit." [Starship Stormtroopers]

One last thing, don't be fooled into thinking that individualism or concern about individuality -- not quite the same thing -- is restricted to the right, they are not. For example, the "individualist theory of society . . . might be advanced in a capitalist or in an anti-capitalist form . . . the theory as developed by critics of capitalism such as Hodgskin and the anarchist Tucker saw ownership of capital by a few as an obstacle to genuine individualism, and the individualist ideal was realisable only through the free association of labourers (Hodgskin) or independent proprietorship (Tucker)." [David Miller, Social Justice, pp. 290-1]

And the reason why social anarchists oppose capitalism is that it creates a false individualism, an abstract one which crushes the individuality of the many and justifies (and supports) hierarchical and authoritarian social relations. In Kropotkin's words, "what has been called 'individualism' up to now has been only a foolish egoism which belittles the individual. It did not led to what it was established as a goal: that is the complete, broad, and most perfectly attainable development of individuality." The new individualism desired by Kropotkin "will not consist . . . in the oppression of one's neighbour . . . [as this] reduced the [individualist] . . .to the level of an animal in a herd." [Selected Writings, p, 295, p. 296]

F.4.4 How does private property affect relationships?

Obviously, capitalist private property affects relationships between people by creating structures of power. Property, as we have argued all through this FAQ, creates relationships based upon domination -- and this cannot help but produce servile tendencies within those subject to them (it also produces rebellious tendencies as well, the actual ratio between the two tendencies dependent on the individual in question and the community they are in). As anarchists have long recognised, power corrupts -- both those subjected to it and those who exercise it.

While few, if any, anarchists would fail to recognise the importance of possession -- which creates the necessary space all individuals need to be themselves -- they all agree that private property corrupts this liberatory aspect of "property" by allowing relationships of domination and oppression to be built up on top of it. Because of this recognition, all anarchists have tried to equalise property and turn it back into possession.

Also, capitalist individualism actively builds barriers between people. Under capitalism, money rules and individuality is expressed via consumption choices (i.e. money). But money does not encourage an empathy with others. As Frank Stronach (chair of Magna International, a Canadian auto-parts maker that shifted its production to Mexico) put it, "[t]o be in business your first mandate is to make money, and money has no heart, no soul, conscience, homeland." [cited by Doug Henwood, Wall Street, p. 113] And for those who study economics, it seems that this dehumanising effect also strikes them as well:

"Studying economics also seems to make you a nastier person. Psychological studies have shown that economics graduate students are more likely to 'free ride' -- shirk contributions to an experimental 'public goods' account in the pursuit of higher private returns -- than the general public. Economists also are less generous that other academics in charitable giving. Undergraduate economics majors are more likely to defect in the classic prisoner's dilemma game that are other majors. And on other tests, students grow less honest -- expressing less of a tendency, for example, to return found money -- after studying economics, but not studying a control subject like astronomy.

"This is no surprise, really. Mainstream economics is built entirely on a notion of self-interested individuals, rational self-maximisers who can order their wants and spend accordingly. There's little room for sentiment, uncertainty, selflessness, and social institutions. Whether this is an accurate picture of the average human is open to question, but there's no question that capitalism as a system and economics as a discipline both reward people who conform to the model." [Doug Henwood, Op. Cit., p, 143]

Which, of course, highlights the problems within the "trader" model advocated by Ayn Rand. According to her, the trader is the example of moral behaviour -- you have something I want, I have something you want, we trade and we both benefit and so our activity is self-interested and no-one sacrifices themselves for another. While this has some intuitive appeal it fails to note that in the real world it is a pure fantasy. The trader wants to get the best deal possible for themselves and if the bargaining positions are unequal then one person will gain at the expense of the other (if the "commodity" being traded is labour, the seller may not even have the option of not trading at all). The trader is only involved in economic exchange, and has no concern for the welfare of the person they are trading with. They are a bearer of things, not an individual with a wide range of interests, concerns, hopes and dreams. These are irrelevant, unless you can make money out of them of course! Thus the trader is often a manipulator and outside novels it most definitely is a case of "buyer beware!"

If the trader model is taken as the basis of interpersonal relationships, economic gain replaces respect and empathy for others. It replaces human relationships with relationships based on things -- and such a mentality does not encompass how interpersonal relationships affect both you and the society you life in. In the end, it impoverishes society and individuality. Yes, any relationship must be based upon self-interest (mutual aid is, after all, something we do because we benefit from it in some way) but the trader model presents such a narrow self-interest that it is useless and actively impoverishes the very things it should be protecting -- individuality and interpersonal relationships (see section I.7.4 on how capitalism does not protect individuality).

F.4.5 Does private property co-ordinate without hierarchy?

It is usually to find right-libertarians maintain that private property (i.e. capitalism) allows economic activity to be co-ordinated by non-hierarchical means. In other words, they maintain that capitalism is a system of large scale co-ordination without hierarchy. These claims follow the argument of noted right-wing, "free market" economist Milton Friedman who contrasts "central planning involving the use of coercion - the technique of the army or the modern totalitarian state" with "voluntary co-operation between individuals - the technique of the marketplace" as two distinct ways of co-ordinating the economic activity of large groups ("millions") of people. [Capitalism and Freedom, p. 13].

However, this is just playing with words. As they themselves point out the internal structure of a corporation or capitalist company is not a "market" (i.e. non-hierarchical) structure, it is a "non-market" (hierarchical) structure of a market participant (see section F.2.2). However "market participants" are part of the market. In other words, capitalism is not a system of co-ordination without hierarchy because it does contain hierarchical organisations which are an essential part of the system!

Indeed, the capitalist company is a form of central planning and shares the same "technique" as the army. As the pro-capitalist writer Peter Drucker noted in his history of General Motors, "[t]here is a remarkably close parallel between General Motors' scheme of organisation and those of the two institutions most renowned for administrative efficiency: that of the Catholic Church and that of the modern army . . ." [quoted by David Enger, Apostles of Greed, p. 66]. And so capitalism is marked by a series of totalitarian organisations -- and since when was totalitarianism liberty enhancing? Indeed, many "anarcho"-capitalists actually celebrate the command economy of the capitalist firm as being more "efficient" than self-managed firms (usually because democracy stops action with debate). The same argument is applied by the Fascists to the political sphere. It does not change much -- nor does it become less fascistic -- when applied to economic structures. To state the obvious, such glorification of workplace dictatorship seems somewhat at odds with an ideology calling itself "libertarian" or "anarchist". Is dictatorship more liberty enhancing to those subject to it than democracy? Anarchists doubt it (see section A.2.11 for details).

In order to claim that capitalism co-ordinates individual activity without hierarchy right-libertarians have to abstract from individuals and how they interact within companies and concentrate purely on relationships between companies. This is pure sophistry. Like markets, companies require at least two or more people to work - both are forms of social co-operation. If co-ordination within companies is hierarchical, then the system they work within is based upon hierarchy. To claim that capitalism co-ordinates without hierarchy is simply false - its based on hierarchy and authoritarianism. Capitalist companies are based upon denying workers self-government (i.e. freedom) during work hours. The boss tells workers what to do, when to do, how to do and for how long. This denial of freedom is discussed in greater depth in sections B.1 and B.4.

Because of the relations of power it creates, opposition to capitalist private property (and so wage labour) and the desire to see it ended is an essential aspect of anarchist theory. Due to its ideological blind spot with regards to apparently "voluntary" relations of domination and oppression created by the force of circumstances (see section F.2 for details), "anarcho"-capitalism considers wage labour as a form of freedom and ignore its fascistic aspects (when not celebrating those aspects). Thus "anarcho"-capitalism is not anarchist. By concentrating on the moment the contract is signed, they ignore that freedom is restricted during the contract itself. While denouncing (correctly) the totalitarianism of the army, they ignore it in the workplace. But factory fascism is just as freedom destroying as the army or political fascism.

Due to this basic lack of concern for freedom, "anarcho"-capitalists cannot be considered as anarchists. Their total lack of concern about factory fascism (i.e. wage labour) places them totally outside the anarchist tradition. Real anarchists have always been aware of that private property and wage labour restriction freedom and desired to create a society in which people would be able to avoid it. In other words, where all relations are non-hierarchical and truly co-operative.

To conclude, to claim that private property eliminates hierarchy is false. Nor does capitalism co-ordinate economic activities without hierarchical structures. For this reason anarchists support co-operative forms of production rather than capitalistic forms.

“That’s a big honor,” commented Larry. “The passenger, while they were high up, threw something and hit the pilot, the seaplane went out of control, the man jumped—and then cut free his parachute, cut the sack holding the emeralds, and hid in the swamp.” “I see a light,” Sandy said as the airplane swung far out over the dark water. “A green light, but the hydroplane wouldn’t carry lights.” "No, no; it's a good deal, but it ain't too much. Not that it could be more, very well," he added, and he glanced furtively at the woman within, who had stretched out on the lounge with her face to the wall. Mrs. Taylor was fanning her. But though the 21st of January was to be the day of the grand attack on the Ministry, the battle was not deferred till then. Every day was a field-day, and the sinking Minister was dogged step by step, his influence weakened by repeated divisions, and his strength worn out by the display of the inevitable approach of the catastrophe. The first decided defeat that he suffered was in the election of the Chairman of Committees. The Ministerial candidate, Giles Earle, was thrown out by a majority of two hundred and forty-two to two hundred and thirty-eight, and the Opposition candidate, Dr. Lee, was hailed by a shout that rent the House. Other close divisions followed. The fall of Walpole was now certain, and he would have consulted both his dignity and comfort in resigning at once. This was the earnest advice of his friends, but he had been too long accustomed to power to yield willingly. He was oppressed with a sense of his defeats, and the insolence of enemies whom he had so long calmly looked down upon without fear. He was growing old and wanted repose, but he still clung convulsively to his authority, though he had ceased to enjoy it. "Should think they was bride and groom, if they wasn't so old." "March them right over to that shed there," said the Major, "and the Quartermaster will issue them muskets and equipments, which you can turn over again when you reach Chattanooga. Good-by. I hope you'll have a pleasant trip. Remember me to the boys of the old brigade and tell them I'll be with them before they start out for Atlanta." The train finally halted on a side-track in the outskirts of Chattanooga, under the gigantic shadow of Lookout Mountain, and in the midst of an ocean of turmoiling activity that made the eyes ache to look upon it, and awed every one, even Si and Shorty, with a sense of incomprehensible immensity. As far as they could see, in every direction, were camps, forts, intrenchments, flags, hordes of men, trains of wagons, herds of cattle, innumerable horses, countless mules, mountains of boxes, barrels and bales. Immediately around them was a wilderness of trains, with noisy locomotives and shouting men. Regiments returning from veteran furlough, or entirely new ones, were disembarking with loud cheering, which was answered from the camps on the hillsides. On the river front steamboats were whistling and clanging their bells. "Go out and git you a rebel for yourself, if you want to know about 'em," Shorty had snapped at the Orderly. "There's plenty more up there on the hill. It's full of 'em." "Drat 'em! durn 'em!" "He's dead," said Realf. Should you leave me too, O my faithless ladie!" The odds were generally on Reuben. It was felt that a certain unscrupulousness was necessary to the job, and in that Backfield had the advantage. "Young Realf wudn't hurt a fly," his champions had to acknowledge. Though the money was with Reuben, the sympathy was mostly with Realf, for the former's dealings had scarcely made him popular. He was a hard man to his customers, he never let them owe him for grain or roots or fodder; his farm-hands, when drunk, spoke of him as a monster, and a not very tender-hearted peasantry worked itself sentimental over his treatment of his children. Caro was frightened, horrified—she broke free, and scrambled to her feet. She nearly wept, and it was clear even to his muddled brain that her invitation had been merely the result of innocence more profound than that which had stimulated her shyness. Rough seaman though he was, he was touched, and managed to soothe her, for she was too bashful and frightened to be really indignant. They walked a few yards further along the path, then at her request turned back towards Odiam. Calverley reluctantly departed on his mission, cursing the interruption that prevented his enjoying the degradation of his rival, and the baron now inquired whether Holgrave had confessed himself his villein. HoME国家产免费一级毛卡片 ENTER NUMBET 0017
cite3.net.cn
xiuxila.com.cn
www.danmi3.com.cn
lite6.net.cn
www.hqyl08.com.cn
faqun6.com.cn
www.yubei5.net.cn
www.houmu6.net.cn
www.afrom1.net.cn
www.166webfind.com.cn

欧美激情兽交av 狠狠插衅小说 成人综合幼幼 强奸小姨子黄色小说 波多野结衣逼器 l伦种子 乱伦1综合 男人阴茎人体图片 WWW.1122PB.COM WWW.HHH834.COM WWW.47NH.COM WWW.YNKQN.COM WWW.BBB900.COM WWW.QQLU33.NET WWW.QQKJKL.COM WWW.CCSPT.ORG WWW.55GAOAV.COM WWW.7Y7B.COM WWW.CNBHKJ.COM WWW.0312A.COM WWW.W26UUU.COM WWW.AIP.ORG WWW.DXDXY.COM WWW.JSQHLJ.COM WWW.SHTZ99.COM WWW.3344G.COM WWW.GOMAJI.COM 手机看成人H动漫 seyishu人体艺术 哪些在线av网站可以看 美女巨乳图迅雷 影音先锋资色色导航 高清肥白裸体图片 www257HKcom 人和动物avmp4 www334455com 迷奸漂亮女邻居 欧美成人群交图片库 wwwbu510com 丁香花成人导航 国产77ccrr打五月丁香 淫荡丝袜mm 少女小山雀69Xx 81av·在线视频o191com 3939yt yy6080理论在线宅男日韩福利大全 2017热伦桑拿片 2014免费基地 超碰少女人 森奈奈子青娱乐视频 九九电影网myoukucomwwwhitefgdxrhkeihmcn a片免插件在线观看 玉女修道院 厕所偷拍tiao 直接播放黄色录相一级色相床上做爱完整版 岳母比老婆好中文字幕 安妮贝拉老熟妇性16P 清纯AV色 A∨在线视频 护土夏子的春天 小学生AV910ppcom www4hu58cam3 成人热情激情 7799路com 家庭乱伦加多撸 我xxnxx 亚洲自拍之家的网站 操美鲍 夜夜爱直播视频 一部女生被插jj的完整黄片 亚洲色图1www68elcom wwwwnnn92com WWWbUbUC0川 乱伦尻屁 成人手机网站你懂得 台湾妹娱乐2222vvvv 娟娟系列电影 wwwsese鸡 成人射妹妹影院wwwxx109com domainwww720lucom 华娱激情网 先锋资源av色撸 熟女丝袜AV视频 www123mcmccom av伦理视频免费在线 免费A级毛片 另类性爱群交 乱伦春色卡通动漫 AⅤ动漫天堂 插入小姨的阴户 2017年黄色AaaV兽性感觉视频免费不花钱 漫画美女被插 淫妻交换magnet 操屄影视 台湾美佬下载 食人岛漏胸图片 射小妹 最新普通话成人视频 驱灵师本子 大哥哥妹妹操在线视频wwwkt888comdctbvphmaiicn 啪啪啪爱txt 在线成人电影小说 日韩美女性高表情图 大鸡巴插逼流水水 好屌色53gancom 924eecom 女主大逼淫乱小说 寂寞求插 美美的嫩穴 国产自拍成人版大全迅雷下载地址 爱爱插插的高潮 kk6611 女星hh吧 武侠古典男性同志 成人aⅴ 干妞网免费在钱中文字幕 爱奇艺成人性大片 把肉棒插进心生厌恶的女儿 幼欲影院 gia爷 黄色小说咋下 土逼土逼撸蛋蛋 互奸 国产自拍wwwaa0ecom 大胆美女人体艺术写真套图 大胆人体气式 开心五月天最新电影 人妻性爱哥哥干 优优14岁少女人体艺术 老逼人体艺术 日夜肏屄电影 撸飘飘 母子撸乱 操b网址大全 欧美淫色撸 免费日本电影 欧美肉丝袜熟妇性爱影院 杨永晴ed2k 白嫩漂亮妹妹内射p 2012qiangjianluanlun 大黑吊 操爸爸女儿 强根宝有没有用 免费在线观看日本人av 妹子喜欢我的鸡巴大 oumei熟妇乱伦 日本女优屄香吗 影音先锋 春宫心 伦理小说专区 色青xiaomeimei 乳头人体艺术照 影音先锋日本大奶乳交 吃屎少女 樱井莉亚先锋影院 妹妹汁液 色妹妹成人动漫 xxoopron 在线观看影音先锋2014色色色 国产90后女生爱爱种子 日韩3级片快播电影 爱做爱 伤感带烟的个性签名 黑石塔地图 沂水二手房信息 杨紫的男朋友 我愿逆流而下 最近黄金走势 波多野结衣空使 成人dvd光碟 插幼幼淫网 终于找到她的炮图了12p 成人小说集锦 我和2个女同事做爱 金发美女也用大吊来开包 华人第四色日日色 欧镁色图 WWW98ZKCOM 巨屌日逼 自拍偷拍系列专区 给个黄色图片网站看看 吉吉影音jiuquse 猛插美女私处 乱伦电影删除删除 华为手机美女辣图 男女性爱做爱肛交图片 淫荡小姐 性爱欧美口交淫妻 美女人体写真逼 色四月婷婷网五月天肉文 乱伦无码欧美 www444con 国产夫妻性交视频合集 亚洲色图欧美色图校园纯情快播 河北乱x门四部全集ed2k WWWKARTCOM sesemov 西游记乱乱小说 制服诱惑色妹妹校园春色 有免费的操逼视频吗 美嫩逼逼 好舒服叫床呻吟 哥哥射满妹妹的肚子 拫狠射女优 穴水姐姐撸撸射精 色哥哥妹妹广场 国产自拍网站三级 didi4secom yy111111光棍手机影院黄片三级做爱 闷绝系列漫画 和洋大妈肏屄 女儿与父亲伦欲 找熟女做爱视频 辣妈h视频 外国子撸网站 美女巨乳口交 淫逼逼成人 夜店女郎波野多结衣 VS色色国王 流出淫水 情欲人生禁地 操女家庭教师 网友自怕 21克magnet 第六感bt论坛 经典开心撸亚洲淫乱无码 男人扒女人衣服的电影 亚洲热熟女 xxoo分类 色色男奇米ckplayer 广播电台106.2有声小说 樱井莉亚bthigh123 魔兽世界樱井莉亚 樱井莉亚vagaa bt小泽玛利亚论坛 www.vipshop.com.cn 能用快播看的黄片 网页看黄片 张杰看黄片 韩国网站 极乐岛论坛 狠狠碰在线视频 要你撸 蜜桃95撸管天堂 国产大保健 迅雷 53x成人网 日韩在线第1页小明看视频 天堂鸟社区 magnet 2204bb 天天日东京热 伦理片 国产自拍 箩莉啵啵 前原友纪在线观看 全球最好最牛的看片网站 (完全免费 在线观看 全球语言 搜啥有啥) 网址1 性爱福利公社 秋霞啪啪伦理片 秋霞电影eeuss免费快播 日本一本道最新视频二区 日韩在线观看高清视频福利 我们立足于美利坚合众国 为全球华人 骑兵在线区2012 2018圣爱天堂网 佐山爱家庭老师 magnet 亚洲成八图片天堂 AV147成人 动感之星福利视频高清 非洲美女奶头的视频下载 rosi韩国vip 先锋色丝袜 欧美亚洲日韩无码短视频迅雷下载 女优家庭做爱视频 一级做爱a片免费视频 色老板在线福利小视频 无码 av视频无限看 国产偷窥自拍在线观看混血哥 佳AV国产AV自拍日韩AV视频 秋霞高清在线线观看秋手机版韩国 泰国超碰在线观看视频 调教日记6 番号 李宗全集手机在线观看456 美女国产福利视频大香蕉 2014阿vt天堂网 天天更新影院亚洲图片 2017岛国免费高清无码 早乙女由依在线观看 mp4 卡通动漫av 秋霞电影sseeuu 800av啪啪啪 亚洲东方免费图片 卵蛋网没福利差点信了 空姐AV种子 超碰caoporn任你操 风间由美影音先锋字幕 迪厅 磁力 俄罗斯一级aV大片在级 中出无码无插件 vakaya福利自拍 伦理片∪ 四虎影院紧急通道 聚会的目的3黄片子 美腿黑丝足交视频 www999999kkcom 无码sex视频 木榴影视 国产xxoo网 东京热,嗯, 我要se色 微客录手机在线福利视频在线观看 wwwsao8o8ocom 800在线东方四虎在线视频 女同在线看手机在线 美脚社区o金币踩踏 处女做爱流血种子下载 我被插的狂喷 高桥鸣海番号 色喜 王丹 奇米影影视超碰在线视频 国模人体蜈蚣 任你操AV在线 国产ts人妖视频 pps视频 极品F罩杯二次元狂热少女女生寝室场景视角自拍视频 邪恶3d视频在线看 小女生在h线视频 泄欲哥导航网址 porntub成人直播 亚洲 日韩 在线 制服 17岁日本美女裸体激情视频 做暧暧 图片区小说区香蕉 床震抽插视频 3311ys韩国演艺圈 硬鸡巴操B视频 美女肉棒黄 手机免费观看欧美大片毛片 轮奸路边小骚货干完还一人一泡尿迅雷 爱爱视城 操空姐嫩逼 草妹在线影院 擦腚沟 洪荒魂巫 2016成 人 在线手机版视频 朴妮唛视频最污 最新的一本道082715 吉泽明步 空姐在线 色久久成人影院 日本www929 play088精品视频 成人情影 刘瑞琪空姐门 国产自拍 很紧 啪啪啪露乳头影院 欧洲老年人性爱视频 任你日一色屋 BT亚洲熟女在线播放 87电影院福利成人伦理 自拍BT 西红柿福利直播 骚逼做爱视频福利 四虎影音在线视频 北京屄屄屄屄屄屄屄 苍井男女性交视频 偷拍自拍 颜射 任你干我们只是搬运工 色吧春暖花开|se8|色吧有你 韩国女主播伦理ck在线观看 在线操长筒袜 174cm模特潜规则实录,高喊插的太深了,都到人家子宫了,1080原版 人人看AV官网 琪琪在线狠狠射 欧美性爱a片黑人和金发白人做爱的视频 网友 在线 酒店 国产 天天射日日射体 内射精视频 小说 阿德倩玉雅莉 美尻写真种子 金沙性爱免费视频 加勒比高清日本一区 祥仔aⅴ 八英里 影音先锋 开裆 亚洲 欧美 字幕 制服 13youngtee幼儿tv 好想被你爱夏日彩春 自拍无码 正在播放91大神dr哥 3p m3u8 大美女上厕所各种视频 群啪 小视频 湖力影院 日本专区无码316 有b吗youbbb论坛 宅男福利 视频网站 cacaoporm视线视频 夜草牧场韩漫 nfdm-119磁力下载 feifeishijei 自拍自窥88 瓜皮影院av 狠狠插 magnet 欧洲天堂网 影音资源日本AV映片 羽毛房主题偷拍 色尼姑官方网站下载 2019免费h网站 手机av福利网站导航 四个90后小青年4p 金沙福利 幼女啪啪视频 韩国女生露出胸和鸡鸡视频 操逼网强奸视频 999涩涩 啵啵x影院 免费在线观看av情人视频 久久vs国产免费视频一本道 PPPD-468 JULI 西瓜影音 久久啪啪视频观看 vr自拍 k5qqcom看片 www57w 欧美h片巨无霸 色狼3 bbb991 图片区成人福利 龙泽梦拉磁力 下载 原味小辣椒小视频在线 日处女逼 电车家庭教师苍井空 日本美女艺术照片 huangseyijipianwuzetian 法国超级幼幼女性交片 激情小说换妻在线 欧美色吧我干你 狠狠碰高清无码 我我我877uu 操妹妹狠狠操 饭岛爱被强奸 xinnongfuchengrendianyingwang 跪求不用播放器的a网 嫂子熟女乱伦 少妇性交图25p 黄色视频偷拍自拍 大奥av淫之乱 婷婷五月天四房播客 90侯性交网 美眉掰小穴图 强奸新娘快播 国语luanlun影片 操逼小哥哥 我想看柳岩的屄 束缚av快播 欧美同性毛片 淫色美女张开大腿图平 快播7777av 金品梅做爱照片 偷拍亚洲色图50p 张柏芝美屄 陈佳丽大胆人体图片 国产cenren WWW_AVAV789_COM 吉尺明步最经典的一部 美国骚妇操逼 男人的大阴茎插屄 s80手机电影 台湾成人 812 石家庄高等专科学校 13日本大胆人体艺术 张筱雨魅惑爱人体 黑逼荡妇 大人的裸体番号 插bb电影网 苍井空早期无码 操逼怎样插的最深 淫妻交换删除 就去爱综合 娇妻淫荡色猫av在线视频 色姐姐睡觉小说 有什么y网站能看明星艳照 激情三级乱伦电影 自偷自拍最火郑媛媛 操逼电影丁香 一本和很多韩国女艺人搞到一起的小说 性爱作品展 强奸丝袜女明星妈妈小说 幼女的小屄 爱爱小说乱伦 好av狠狠吸 www510ccam 就爱操我逼 女阴部艺术图片 日本美女的pp 中过女明星的人体艺术照 儿媳妇口交爸爸鸡巴 囗交动态图 人体艺体阴部插图片 成人激情网白白发布 怡红院新主页 欧美最大胆的裸体性感妹妹图片 怎么用手机在线看片子 张柏芝艳照门伦理论坛 苍井操b图片 国语家庭成人视频 谁有mp4小电影下载 joanne李宗瑞av 兽幼网站 成人两性激情五月 小说色综合 少妇漏屄图片 WWW44QQCOM 激情淫荡父女乱伦小说 那那床上大胆艺术 大屄播放 操小妹嫰逼 欧美尻b动态图片 性交淫乱电影 乱伦小说噜一噜 母女妻快播电影 儿子半夜猥亵他熟睡的小姨迅雷 老婆怀孕我和岳母做爱 人体艺术欧美色 日本商炽所潜入 大胆人艺术人生肉图 日本水耙轮图片 快播操逼电影院 寂寞熟女的诱惑种子 幼女恋夜秀场 天天影视自拍偷拍 美女裸体模特 激情肏骚屄图片 色狼tu 王冬瑶视频网站 秋露伦理Av 老熟妇好爽 好吊操在线视频在线观 sRAV美女 3w550yu 干美女网站 精彩的乱伦小说 高中女友小雯辣文网 人妻淫荡长篇小说 涩涩爱图片图图新闻 无需播放器中文字幕αv 3p欧美动态 美州极品丝袜 看看屋艳母 春暖花开雪白女儿乱伦 白富美的美景之屋 周蕙楠最新的奉献 在教室里和老师做爱了19p 青青草设 狠狠草狠狠爽狠狠啪图片 色5阁婷婷五月 考波波网 美女乱伦wwwtb181com 仙女和农夫在线 看奶子直播app 舔b的视频真人夜夜 av综合节目在线观看 叶玉卿被胶带封嘴 农村老头做爱视频自拍 欧美母子奸淫小说 滛乱大家庭系列 最新青楼社区网址 玉足直播平台 我爱看电片app 动画黄色美女露bb htppwww8aame 金8天国美女哥哥干 母女乱伦剧情 无毒成人网址中文字幕 99热ts人妖 婷婷基地婷婷色五月wap83agcom 010各国美女鲍美 漂亮小姨子来访借住一超碰在线视频 mpopoavcomcn www4501cctk60htm selangchengrenwang 另类日本女人 porn姐弟 成人成人片wwwpp558com 日本美女生值器活人展示图 欧洲女郞人体图 毛欢出浆出白浆套图 Av免费播放 ckplayer日韩 色色肉肉伦乱图 手机基地在线国产母子 一本道无玛人与兽 骚女插菊花 偷拍自拍俺也射 gav成人影院 立花里子快播下载 激情艹在线视频 插插黄片 汽车之家 性感妇穴 善良的嫂子中字种子 555dvd版 第九性交电影 美国成年免费网站 狼友基地在线 唐山师范学院官网 母子乱伦3d动画 天天激情mediaweibocn qvodxxoo com乡村成人三级小说 自拍偷窥88title88亚洲图片 床上爱性 骚B爱操操 牛牛免费超碰厕所偷拍 秋霞高清电车痴汉 谁又免费的黄色网站可以看 偷窥自拍国产在线视频 直入骚穴 久久热集百万潮流 hotfreexxxsexvid 啪啪啪20p 久久热超 女同性恋三级片 少妇熟女欧美图片在线视频偷拍自拍人妻乱伦色图 优果网电影在线观看 亚洲色图偷拍自拍美腿丝袜 www224ttcOm 丝袜美腿另类图片 裤衩在线 丝袜制服青青草网站 乱伦尻屁 成人手机网站你懂得 丝袜OL在线 涩涩爱影音先锋视频 开心色色自拍偷怕 另类亚洲激情 av最大网站在线观看 好色520av 婷婷五月天我淫我色 wwwavtb123c0m 日日riripa2016 韩国mm影音 美女艺术摄影 第四色官方网 图片专区亚洲欧美另娄 在线成人3d电影观看 狼友升级 av1区你懂的 男女野战13p 泷泽萝拉预告片快播 操你视频wwwwdz7com 一本道东京电影院 咪咪少妇大香蕉网 91porm手机端 王东magnet 性爱美女30 亚洲av裸模特走秀视频 偷拍网友自拍超碰 熟女人妻乱伦图区 av的qq群 来吧综合网无码av最新 99热这里只有精品视频99999 啊嗯用力嗯好大动态图 av番 爱爱小说magnet 美国人与兽做爱视频 wwwpp645com 午夜av三级片视频在线 高清大图自拍人体写真 擦妹妹之吻 wwwjj14con 日本少妇阴洞写真 我爱日丈母娘骚逼 田野麻衣 黄蓉偷情传 深圳哪里易找到老女人玩视频 国产多毛老太太 夫妻做爱音频 盗摄偷拍自拍a片在线播放 巨乳巨屌 大鸡鸡插美女黑洞图片 濑穴 色五农夫影院 亚州偷拍图 撸撸吧乱伦 韩国女主播朴夏娃视频 女优嫩逼图 2影片白虎 狠狠撸aji为网站 911sebb亚洲色图在线 郑州广播电台小曼 欧美大黑棍pk亚洲美女 快播 操下岗妇女小说 牛仔裤美女视频网盘 oumeirentiyingdao 母ziyinluan 爆乳露点人体艺术 舔足h 日本有哪些内衣模特 黄蓉牟秘密 操妈妈的bb和做爱 好色爸爸插女儿 欧洲最美的屄 偷拍自拍性爱9p 湖南省人民检察院 夏士莲洗发水 广州问题大米 我们一家访问s 上海大众迈腾 淫荡嫩穴草榴 我搞后妈的逼 北京的胖老太太 好看的偷怕女人图片 操女优色图 兽交论坛小说 xb电影网奇米影视 rtys邪恶 WWWAVAVAV5COM 免费成人一级电影 春暖花开性吧欧美动漫 田欣人体艺术欣赏 入屄爽鸡巴 朴曼妮deyanzao 人体奶秀图片图库 我跟处女开苞小说 我爱看片免网页版 播放 偷拍自拍亚洲色图美腿丝袜变态另类 欧美掰阴人体艺术 AV女被群交 日本草b的女人 小妇骚屄诱惑 偷拍高清炮图 七七色狠狠操 肏姐姐屄图片 丝袜足交老师小说 meimvnenxue 干逼色激情电影 开心激情mangent aotu17comwwwaotu17com 做爱乱伦淫水直流 男人与母海豚 大香蕉伊人久草萝莉AV 德国胖老太视频 美国A片乱伦在线观看 五月情包网国语 熟妇福利视频导航 87bbeecpom 女优javhd 五月色色狠撸 百度开心撸 国外成人网ph 在线自拍美女自慰视频wwwweipaiee 250qqcome 抽插怀孕少妇 好屌色qqc 聚百万激情图片之多多影音magnet 女人大屁股草比爽吗 农村老太太性交视屏 手机三级片免费影视在线观看 亚洲丝袜走光图片 深夜福利伦理片电影 非州大鸡巴淫色网 女人下阴人体艺术摄影 陈乔恩合成王国贴吧 嘻嘻女大人体艺术 心春色 解禁樱井莉亚 小泽玛利亚电影ftp h网游游戏 谁有手机黄网啊 快播东京热影院 东京热男 国产黄色小说 护士黄色小说 音羽レオン 插妹妹爽图 我要插逼逼 额来撸 撸网站 肉片成人 太郎的幸福生活3d观看 男女男国产AV免费看无码 在线wwwffff15con 巨人影院 美国大黄a1片免费 舌尖舔逼视屏 台湾佬在线视频 国产成年人网址 某航空公司空姐与男友酒店激情 青青草人人懆aomenxinpujing 秋霞电影手机vi版 性爱福利公社 热の中文lu3555 御姐里番 日韩ar无吗免费 樱井步 骑乘 有故事情节的番号 AV521永久地址 明星换脸视频影院 琪琪国产自拍 x4yycom xo动画版 琪琪色原网暴风影音 变态m女在线电影 耽美粗大侵犯骑木马 苍老师av作品 西瓜影音 小萝莉A 午夜欧美 亚洲a片小视频 猫咪无码资源 magnet 明星被强奸种子 ed2k 一一级毛片录像直播室直播 近亲相奸大作战番号 成人 acg 长腿美女丝袜福利视频 色色视频成人导航 微拍福利秋霞 校花福利视频 gav成人免 98影院播在线 韩国演艺圈卖洷悲惨事在线 sao521 免费中出视频在线 成人向网站 久草在线首页老司机 一级黄色毛片红番闵 失忆av番号 mmm178 老女人小树林偷拍视频 西野翔 夫目前犯 正在播放 av研究院 老炮色 色偷偷351 3837dy MIDE-454在线 男人AV皇宫 磁力链 下载 rki435 男人天堂·手机版在线观看 超碰人人干人人射 张萌橙的视频在线观看 秋霞…26uuu 金瓶双艳 粤语 大香蕉青青免费视频 床半逐个数百度云最近 国产站街女偷拍视频 用春药的女主播磁力 巨乳王瑞儿在线视频 抖阴成人 空姐黄色网站做爱视频 自拍偷拍 p 爆乳女神网红猫女王视频 a v淘宝在线观看 暮光之城1免费版视频pp www,EEE,,119cOn 丝袜磁力 下载 最新一本道dvd高清视频 黄色录像国产 688成人 骚熟女肛交图片 91秦先生琪琪 mp4 欧美,日韩av无码海量资源 中国福利视频导航 欧美tv色无极在线影院 操任你操 破初系列在线观看网站 va午夜男人 小明看片 欧美性交m3u8 8x8x福利视频2018最新版そ 成人性爱在线免费视频 唯一试看萝莉免费视频 黑人巨大vs白鸟寿美礼 连裤袜女秘密电影 91青青草地 亚洲系列手机视频 欧美成人野狗免费视频 国产女浴室在线 t先生 卫校 磁力链接 男鸡巴抽插视频 日本好色妻 外国色色的视频网站 神马影院脱衣剧情 纱奈 下载 国产偷拍无码影院 女主播直播影音先锋 G国产自拍 av床戏在线播放 黒木いくみ饮尿 方祺媛 演过的电影 美国xⅩX图 m2e5图片 在线视频 四虎影院av xoxoxoxoxoxo福利 性交视频新影院 性感空姐啪啪啪 小老弟av影院 性爱动态肉h 写真福利 福利车站 m,yyxf2017,com 老女人乱伦黄色电影大全 月夜影院av 大话腐女 演员表 东方影库正确地址域名 日韩缴情综合在线视频 日韩新片Av一手机版 韩国无码迅雷种子下载 性感韩国美女主播叫床 色a∨在线 国语对白偷拍自拍毛片 台湾佬宝贝综合网 男人同性视频在线观看 - 百度 悠悠影院靠 小黄漫画软件 操大奶子骚逼视频 波多野结衣的丝袜在线电影 马牛叉电影 MIBD-799 影院成人体验区 免费va在线网站丁香五月天 射丝袜漫画 淫淫色播 色avba av洗澡 ssshaodizhivideo 夫妻成人无码视频 1百度云盘在线播放 中国teen 嫩模福利宅男影院视频 亚洲 在线 电影院 西瓜成人版有毛黄视频 FSET-532 揉捏唔 周防雪子家庭教师 手机毛片免费无毒播放 一道本日本无码视频在线播放 小黄福利 安土结无码 mp4 夜生活小视频 肏处女屄射精视频 苍井空在线毛钱 国产现社会美女影院 很纯很暧昧改编陈伟 音影先峰app 天天操哥操天天拍天天干 seMMZZ 黑冰女王sm698 成人做爱小视频一丝不挂 4388xx2 绀野光视频 去色876 把96年白嫩美臀小情人带到宾馆肆意蹂躏穿衣服照样操 网红原味小辣椒VIP视频 拈花网电影 今日六月丁香 近亲相姦无码中文字幕 耄耋视频亚洲 SNIS一481 看看 国产自拍林采缇视频在线观看 亚欧偷拍网友视频 明星国产自拍 影音先锋 在线 国产 日韩 自拍 四方色影 蓝色导航最全面准确中立纯粹的导航 完美看看 黑鸡巴视频粗 啪啪啪日屁淫片 华夏成人影院午夜 日本av免费视频观看 29p午夜影院 5床上视频免费 蝌蚪国产 快手成人在线视频 x'x'x'x'x'x'x'x少妇 成人免费视频 A片 肛塞 呻吟 自拍34p 【2017久草福利资源站合集】久草新时代3视频精品 9494自拍在线福利视频 韩国成人教育无码 72rr 你发个一级黄片 juisewang hmgl丝袜系列番号 四虎影库955nn 大大香蕉芝大香蕉首页 曰本啪啪啪漫画AA 亚洲AV在线播放 开心激情网在线观看 五月天tt 久久国产av侧所自慰偷拍 亞洲在綫AV 红色裙子女孩被轮奸视频迅雷下载 magnet 诱奸乱伦幼女 优优生值器艺术 谁有艳照的网站 研依裸体艺术 亚洲亚色图 他色了 打屁股2升级版 大奶骚货掰开16p 91自拍视频网盘 偷偷yin WWW_49979_COM 大几八色色网 法庭篇肛交 黑人夫妇宾馆作爱视频 操逼小说123 欧美人像顶级大胆人体艺术 含苞欲放父女狂欢