The Probability Broach: Make the desert bloom


Dry, barren, cracked land

The Probability Broach, chapter 17

Win Bear and his friends are traveling on a high-tech airship. Smith makes a big deal out of the fact that this anarcho-capitalist society prefers this means of air travel, because zeppelines are more strictly peaceful than jet planes:

U.S. airlines are subsidized; every one of those big tin birds can be instantly converted to some military use, blueprints on handy file at your friendly neighborhood airport. Airships have no such potential; they’re vessels of peace, big, fat, and vulnerable to uniformed strangers with evil intentions. Ask Lucy, who wound up touring Europe by shanks’ mare.

But Smith’s own writing contradicts this. In the Prussian war (this timeline’s equivalent of World War I), the NAC did send a fleet of airships as an invasion force. Lucy’s airship was shot down in a dogfight with the Red Baron, as she mentioned, but that doesn’t change this fact. (Or was Lucy just a military ignoramus who went to battle in a patently unsuitable vehicle? Nothing in Smith’s depiction of her character implies this.)

Ed and Win circulate through the cabin, meeting some of their fellow passengers. To judge from this passage, news of the Hamiltonian world-conquest plot has spread, and people are gossiping about it. You’d think that would make the two of them heroes or celebrities, since they’re the ones who brought it to the populace’s attention. But if they’re the focus of any special interest, Smith never says so:

Naturally not all of them were human. Nuclear blackmail concerned every being on the continent—the entire planet, to judge from languages I heard around me. Some felt more threatened than others: Hamiltonians hold that animals have no place in society except as slaves and breakfast. A quarter of the Congress would be chimpanzees.

Bookmark it for later: You’ll want to remember this passage when Win arrives at the Continental Congress.

To pass the time, Ed and Win take some time to admire the scenery. Their zeppelin, the San Francisco Palace, is like a skygoing cruise ship. It’s huge enough to have casinos and shopping malls on board:

We circled around the gambling tables, plunking ourselves down where we could look outside. Half the Palace, more or less, is a tough, transparent skin stretched over titanium bones. These great windows ran from floor to ceiling, twelve feet. Scenery unrolled beneath us as we plowed northward: “Wyoming” now, a barren cattle-dotted plain in my world, a lushly irrigated breadbasket here.

I’ve previously discussed the paradoxical nature of these fictional libertarian utopias. They have no central government, yet somehow they have roads, bridges and other massive public works, none of which have ever existed in the real world without a government to organize and direct the construction.

In an earlier chapter of this book, I talked about this with reference to the North American Confederacy’s road system. It’s implausible that such a thing can exist in a world where private property rights are absolute and a single stubborn property owner who stands in the way can scuttle the entire project.

Air travel would also pose some issues. With no FAA requiring airlines to file flight plans, who’s to ensure planes don’t collide with each other in midair?

But this line about Wyoming being a “lushly irrigated breadbasket”, which L. Neil Smith treats as a tossed-off reference, is the biggest implausibility of all.

What river would you divert to irrigate Wyoming? The most likely candidate is the Green River, which is a tributary of the Colorado River. But who decided it would be Wyoming, rather than a different region, which gets that water? Who planned this project? Who paid to build the dams, the canals, and the other infrastructure necessary for irrigation? And after all that investment, what would they do if someone else wanted to divert the river in a different direction to water their crops instead?

Deciding how to allocate scarce natural resources is a serious challenge in the real world, so an anarchist world would have to wrestle with it as well. And since Smith set most of this book in Colorado, there was a perfect example at his fingertips.

The Colorado River is the major source of water for the southwestern United States. It’s used for irrigation for agriculture, for hydroelectricity generation, and as a source of drinking water for tens of millions of people.

With so much demand, there’s constant wrangling over how to allocate the river’s water among the seven states it flows through (Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, Wyoming, Arizona, California, and Nevada), plus Mexico. The overarching agreement is a 1922 compact that sets out how the water should be divided.

The problem is that this agreement was made during a historically wet period. Now, with climate change causing hotter temperatures and shrinking mountain snowpacks, the amount it allocates to each of these states adds up to more water than there is.

As you can imagine, this has led to years of tense negotiations that may soon escalate into legal battles. So far it’s been deadlocked, because no state wants to give up its ration of water for its neighbors’ sake. No governor wants to tell angry farmers they have to let their crops wither, or tell angry suburban voters they won’t be able to flush the toilet or brush their teeth.

The stalemate has led to a looming crisis: water levels at the river’s two major reservoirs, Lake Powell and Lake Mead, are dropping so low that the hydroelectric turbines in the Hoover and Glen Canyon Dams could soon stop working. That wouldn’t just be an inconvenience, but a huge economic hit and possibly a humanitarian disaster.

This is a hard enough problem in a world with a government. How could you possibly solve it in an anarchist society like the North American Confederacy?

Defenders of the NAC might say that they could reach a water-sharing agreement through private arbitration. The problem is that, even if an agreement was worked out, it would be purely voluntary; nothing would make it binding. Once all the dams and canals were in place, people could just cheat and take more water than they agreed to. Who would know?

Also, what about people who came along later and weren’t party to the original agreement? Why would they regard themselves as bound by a contract they had no hand in negotiating? The river is right there, after all. What would stop them from just digging a side channel and diverting it for their own use, and too bad for everyone who lives downstream?

In a society where selfishness is the rule and there’s no central authority to enforce conservation agreements, this kind of cheating is all but inevitable. People who live upstream would hoard the water for themselves, turning arid lands into gardens, building shimmering swimming pools and planting lush green lawns. The poor people who live downstream would be screwed. By the time the river reached them, it’d be no more than a silty trickle, if that.

And if you were one of those people and you trudged upstream to protest, you’d undoubtedly be met by a heavily armed force of private security guards. When they have the guns and the water too, how could you hope to fight them?

Smith’s vision of Wyoming becoming an agricultural “breadbasket” is a libertarian fantasy. It might happen in a more eco-conscious world, but in his world, the water wouldn’t be fairly distributed or go to the best overall uses. It would go to the richest, the most powerful, and/or those most willing to cheat or use violence to get what they want.

A more realistic outcome, for an ancap society, would be a cluster of mansions owned by the ultra-rich that take all the water for themselves, turning their walled estates into pleasure gardens, while the rest of the state becomes a parched and barren hellscape.

As I’ve often mentioned, libertarians follow a philosophy that can be called “cornucopianism“. It claims, implicitly or explicitly, that natural resources are infinite and so they don’t need to be rationed or conserved. Their ideology forces them to believe this, because the only alternative is an enforceable agreement for who gets what: in other words, a government, with all the laws, taxes and everything else they despise. But the real world isn’t nearly so obliging, and it doesn’t comply with their rosy vision of limitless resources.

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Comments

  1. Ridana says

    Maybe it’s just too early, but I’ve read this several times and still can’t make sense of it. “Airships have no such potential; they’re vessels of peace, big, fat, and vulnerable to uniformed strangers with evil intentions.” If they’re vulnerable to uniformed strangers, how are they different from airplanes that can be repurposed by a government’s uniformed military with evil intentions?

  2. says

    But this line about Wyoming being a “lushly irrigated breadbasket”, which L. Neil Smith treats as a tossed-off reference, is the biggest implausibility of all.

    Libertarians are well-known for tossing off all sorts of laughably implausible ideas, assertions and assumptions. That’s why they’re often referred to as “glibertarians.”

    U.S. airlines are subsidized; every one of those big tin birds can be instantly converted to some military use, blueprints on handy file at your friendly neighborhood airport. Airships have no such potential…

    Why would that be an issue if the government isn’t powerful enough to seize any of those privately-owned airplanes; and there’s no war to seize them for in a world of peaceful happy entrepreneurs creating infinite wealth 24/7? Did Smith get tired, or did he just get lazy?

  3. says

    Also: the preceding chapter of this review had a reference to the “Sahara Sea.” Now we have an indication that the NAC made an American desert bloom, but an African desert somehow just sank into a sea. I may be reading too much into this, but it kinda sounds like Smith has White people doing irrigation right, and Black people being either less competent at it or less lucky. Or maybe whoever was doing these big projects had just decided African land was less valuable than American land?

  4. Pierce R. Butler says

    LMFTFY: libertarians mainstream economists follow a philosophy that can be called “cornucopianism“. It claims, implicitly or explicitly, that natural resources are infinite and so they don’t need to be rationed or conserved.

    Growth! Endless GROWTH!!! will solve all out problems!

  5. JM says

    Smith makes a big deal out of the fact that this anarcho-capitalist society prefers this means of air travel, because zeppelines are more strictly peaceful than jet planes:

    His position on airships is just wrong. Any vehicle that can be used for moving troops and cargo has military applications. Airships have also been used as bombers. They are not effective in the face of strong air defense but that takes a good national level organization so shouldn’t exist in the libertarian world.

    Defenders of the NAC might say that they could reach a water-sharing agreement through private arbitration. The problem is that, even if an agreement was worked out, it would be purely voluntary; nothing would make it binding. Once all the dams and canals were in place, people could just cheat and take more water than they agreed to. Who would know?

    Even if that works binding arbitration between states or between various land owners is not going to be fast. Eventually an emergency like a drought will hit and somebody has to make quick decisions on who gets enough water to survive.

  6. Jenora Feuer says

    Also, the title you used here, ‘Make the Desert Bloom’, reminded me of a takedown of another, probably better-known and even more horrible piece of fiction, Fred Clark’s disassembly of Left Behind, which had as one of its earlier plot points (actually happened before the novel started) the idea that an Israeli scientist came up with an equally handwavy way to make the Middle Eastern desert bloom, which supposedly somehow just as magically settled all the conflicts in the Middle East. Considering that a major part of the tension in the Middle East is based on ‘who has the rights to the water from the Jordan River’ (the Seven Day War was started by Israel attacking a dam project that could have diverted water from the Jordan before it got to Israel), the parallels write themselves.

    Both books very much were dictated by ideology rather than anything about how humanity or geography (or the rest of the world) actually worked. Of course, in Left Behind the ideology was a Bircher-influenced Pre-Milennial End Times checklist rather than a poorly-thought-out ancap fundamentalism, but still, anywhere the plot conflicted with either reality or plausibility, the plot won.

    • andrewnotwerdna says

      Greetings to another reader of the Slacktivist!
      ————–
      So everybody has heard the news about the Hamiltonians’ plans, but no one (apparently) has done anything but talk.

      Compare with the 18th century Americans who were concerned about British oppression – and did things like tear down the houses of British officials (like Thomas Hutchinson) with their bare hands

    • says

      I thought of Left Behind too (I’m a non-commenting slacktivite).
      Something like that Israeli scientist’s formula would make more sense — just assert that without Big Government, scientific genius was unleashed and America discovered Alec Holland’s biorestorative formula (Swamp Thing reference). Still stupid, but not quite as stupid as a massively irrigated Nebraska.

  7. Snowberry says

    This thing about water wars reminds me of a conflict which happened many years ago in my apartment complex. No, really, this is relevant. (It’s even water-related!)

    The laundry room was shut down for weeks in order for it to be partially rebuilt. Since there were no washer-dryer compatible units and the nearest laundromat was several miles away in another town, this was obviously a major inconvenience. (My solution was hand-washing and air-drying everything, annoying as that was.) When the management finally posted the date the room was to be re-opened, apparently several people got together and hammered out an agreement as to when each of them would use the laundry room that day.

    When the time came, all hell broke loose; they apparently didn’t account for the fact that the rest of the residents (including me) had no awareness of the agreement. The others just used the room when they had the chance to, usually overlapping with someone else’s “turn”. Maybe they thought that the schedule would somehow naturally get spread around and everyone else would just go along with it? Or worse, that the people who didn’t socialize much with their neighbors (or this group specifically) simply didn’t matter? Not sure.

    Regardless, this resulted in a lot of shouting, hurt feelings, and at least one physical altercation. Plus two of the residents having a feud, which involved harassing each other, and one of them throwing acorns at the other’s cat. The management eventually got involved in putting and end to that feud, but I don’t know the specifics.

    This demonstrates how the allocation of limited resources when no central authority is involved, isn’t just a recipe for large-scale conflicts, it can be a small-scale or even personal-scale one as well.

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