Editing Family Road Trips and Feudal Crowdsourcing

From Bibliotheca Anonoma

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The theory of the legitimacy of democratic states states (pun not intended) that in return for popular support, financial and military, governments protect the lives, property, and other rights of the people. Yet lords neither pay for nor help to defend legally (the equivalent of military service) the running of the servers which host their fiefs. Theoretically, lords are the tools of kings. Practically, kings can't keep track of, never mind watch, what's in their toolboxes. Here, then, is the first major mismatch between feudal crowdsourcing and the traditional model of government as an exchange of loyalty for security.
The theory of the legitimacy of democratic states states (pun not intended) that in return for popular support, financial and military, governments protect the lives, property, and other rights of the people. Yet lords neither pay for nor help to defend legally (the equivalent of military service) the running of the servers which host their fiefs. Theoretically, lords are the tools of kings. Practically, kings can't keep track of, never mind watch, what's in their toolboxes. Here, then, is the first major mismatch between feudal crowdsourcing and the traditional model of government as an exchange of loyalty for security.
   
   
This mismatch is carried downward. The serfs have a similar relationship, or lack thereof, with the lords and knights. Serfs can't pay for something that's free in the first place, or fight for something they can lose as easily as they got.
This mismatch is carried downward. The serfs have a similar relationship, or lack thereof, with the lords and knights. Serfs don't need to pay for something that's free in the first place, or fight for something they can lose as easily as they got.
   
   
The lord-knight relationship is the only one that remains sort of functional. This is because getting someone to do something for you is almost implicit in the concept of society, and is represented as the common-law agent-principal and attorney-client relationships. These are manifestly not reciprocal relationships like the government-citizen one is, for agents receive only such powers as they need to do their duty, and are under an obligation to put themselves strictly in their clients' shoes and act only for their clients' benefit. Bureaucracies rely on this principle and the lord-knight relationship is no exception. Lords are free to appoint, command, and remove knights; knights have no rights of their own arising from this relationship.
The lord-knight relationship is the only one that remains sort of functional. This is because getting someone to do something for you is almost implicit in the concept of society, and is represented as the common-law agent-principal and attorney-client relationships. These are manifestly not reciprocal relationships like the government-citizen one is, for agents receive only such powers as they need to do their duty, and are under an obligation to put themselves strictly in their clients' shoes and act only for their clients' benefit. Bureaucracies rely on this principle and the lord-knight relationship is no exception. Lords are free to appoint, command, and remove knights; knights have no rights of their own arising from this relationship.
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