Market Anarchy Explained lays down a fearless, logical, rigorous yet accessible case against the State, against the democratic system, and the case for Market Anarchy and complete, unbridled, stateless freedom. Tremblay gathers all the important arguments and pieces of evidence from the literature, and builds a much-needed bridge between the Market Anarchist academia and the common reader. To the freethinker, this book is a breath of fresh air in a propaganda-soaked society. Chapter 1 starts with a by proving that the State's existence cannot be justified, and then detailing anti-State arguments. The premises of the democratic system are exposed and analyzed, and the State, in addition to being unjustifiable, is found to be supremely immoral. Other topics exploitation, propaganda, perpetual wars, the Non-Aggression Principle, the "social contract," the State as monopoly, State Capitalism, poverty, and "social justice." Chapter 2 defines Anarchy and dispels the illusions and hypocrites associate
Is an excellent book if your new to anarcho-capitalism. I was not new to it so it taught me very little. It shows many examples of where anarcho-capitalism was practiced in history. I disagreed on how he approached a few arguments, but overall I'd recommend it to a open-minded libertarian.
This book is a mess of unbacked philosophical assertions and poor organization. The author went insane a few years after writing it and is now a communist.