But never at 45 degrees.
That decal places it as a M43 ckl64 Heer SD helmet worn by much feared Tibetan Security Service.
The idea is that everybody shares power and takes responsibility for their community. I have previously described it as everybody is the government, rather than there is no government.
The DFNS is around 3 million people, a mixture of urban and rural communities. It seems to be working, and once you reach that number you are well past Dunbar’s number and the problems of scaling.
They have prisons, but hardly anyone is in them. The only way to be put in one is to be found by a court to be a rapist, murderer/attempted murderer or a member of Daesh (which means you want to be a rapist and murderer).
OK, I spent some time getting at least a basic primer on this. It seems to me this group DOES have a police force - it is just not run in the typical way we think of them, with citizen members and decentralized power. This means when there are issues, there is someone they call on to enforce the rules.
So I suppose I have to concede your point, but I still don’t have faith in every group running their system so well.
…which is a universal concern for any system.
If someone can come up with a system that works flawlessly no matter how shitty the people involved are, political theorists will finally be able to get on with something else. Until then all human societies can only be as good as people allow them to be.
That’s kind of like asking how many non-alcoholic non-incestuous Alabamans there are.
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