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{{Short description|American abolitionist and legal theorist (1808–1887)}}
'''Lysander Spooner''' (] - ]) was an American legal theorist of the ].
{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2021}}
{{Infobox writer <!-- See Template:Infobox writer. -->
| name = Lysander Spooner
| image = Lysander Spooner by Hardy.jpg
| birth_date = {{birth date|1808|1|19|mf=yes}}
| birth_place = ], U.S.
| death_date = {{death date and age|1887|5|14|1808|1|19|mf=yes}}
| death_place = ], Massachusetts, U.S.
| occupation = Entrepreneur, lawyer and writer
| nationality = American
| subject = ]
| notableworks = '']'' (1845)<br />'']'' (1867)
| module = {{Infobox philosopher|embed=yes
| region = ]
| era = ]
| school_tradition = ]
| main_interests = {{hlist|]|]|]|]|]}}
}}
}}
{{individualism sidebar|thinkers}}
'''Lysander Spooner''' (January 19, 1808 — May 14, 1887) was an American ], entrepreneur, lawyer, essayist, ] ], ]ist, ], and writer often associated with the ].


Spooner was a strong advocate of the ] and is politically identified with ].<ref name="Rosemont 2015 p. 78">Rosemont, Henry Jr. (2015). ''Against Individualism: A Confucian Rethinking of the Foundations of Morality, Politics, Family, and Religion''. Lanham: Lexington Books. p. 78. {{ISBN|978-0739199817}}.</ref>{{Sfn|Marshall|2008|pp=387-389}} His writings contributed to the development of both ] and ] political theory.{{Sfn|Marshall|2008|p=389}} Spooner's writings include the abolitionist book '']'' and ''],'' which opposed treason charges against secessionists.{{Sfn|Smith|1992|p=xix}}<ref name="Barnett 2011" />
<table align=right><tr><td>]</td></tr></table>


He is known for establishing the ], which competed with the ].
He was born on a farm in ], ], on January 19, 1808, and died "at one o'clock in the afternoon of Saturday, May 14, in his little room at 109 Myrtle Street, surrounded by trunks and chests bursting with the books, manuscripts, and pamphlets which he had gathered about him in his active pamphleteer's warfare over half a century long." -- from ''Our Nestor Taken From Us'' by ]


==Biography==
Later known as an early ], Spooner advocated what he called ] -- or the Science of Justice -- wherein acts of actual ] against individuals were considered "illegal" but the so-called criminal acts that violated only man-made legislation were not.
===Early life===
Spooner was born on a farm in ], on January 19, 1808. Spooner's parents were Asa and Dolly Spooner. One of his ancestors, William Spooner, arrived in ] in 1637. Lysander was the second of nine children. His father was a ] and it has been speculated that he purposely named his two older sons ] and ] after pagan and ]n heroes, respectively.{{Sfn|Shone|2010|p=viii}}


===Legal career===
His activism began with his career as a lawyer, which itself violated local Massachusetts law. Spooner had studied law under the prominent lawyers and politicians, John Davis and Charles Allen, but he had never attended college. According to the laws of the state, college graduates were required to study with an attorney for three years, while non-graduates were required to do so for five years.
Spooner's activism began with his career as a lawyer, which itself violated Massachusetts law.{{Sfn|Smith|1992|p=viii}} Spooner had studied law under the prominent lawyers, politicians and abolitionists ], later ] and Senator; and ], state senator and Representative from the ].{{Sfn|Shone|2010|p=viii}} However, he never attended college.{{Sfn|Barnett|1999|pp=66-67}} According to the laws of the state, college graduates were required to study with an attorney for three years while non-graduates like Lysander would be required to do so for five years.{{Sfn|Barnett|1999|pp=66-67}}


With the encouragement of his legal mentors, Spooner set up his practice in Worcester after only three years, openly defying the courts. He saw the two-year privilege for college graduates as a state-sponsored discrimination against the poor. He argued that such discrimination was "so monstrous a principle as that the rich ought to be protected by law from the competition of the poor." In ], the legislature abolished the restriction. With the encouragement from his legal mentors, Spooner set up his practice in ], after only three years, defying the courts.{{Sfn|Barnett|1999|pp=66-67}} He regarded three-year privilege for college graduates as a state-sponsored discrimination against the poor and also providing a monopoly income to those who met the requirements. He argued that "no one has yet ever dared advocate, in direct terms, so monstrous a principle as that the rich ought to be protected by law from the competition of the poor".{{Sfn|Barnett|1999|pp=66-67}} In 1836, the legislature abolished the restriction.{{Sfn|Barnett|1999|pp=66-67}} He opposed all licensing requirements for lawyers.{{Sfn|Shively|1971|loc=Chapter 4}}


After a disappointing legal career -- for which his radical writing seemed to have kept away potential clients -- and a failed career in real estate speculation in Ohio, Spooner returned to his father's farm in ]. After a disappointing legal career and a failed career in real estate speculation in ], Spooner returned to his father's farm in 1840.{{Sfn|Barnett|1999|pp=66-67}}


===American Letter Mail Company===
Postal rates were notoriously high in the 1840s, and in ], Spooner founded the American Letter Mail Company to contest the U.S. Post Office's monopoly.
Being an advocate of ] and opponent of government regulation of business, in 1844 Spooner started the ], which competed with the ], whose rates were very high.<ref name=Cato>{{cite journal|last=Olds|first=Kelly B.|year=1995|url=https://www.cato.org/sites/cato.org/files/serials/files/cato-journal/1995/5/cj15n1-1.pdf|title=The Challenge To The U.S. Postal Monopoly, 1839–1851|journal=]|volume=15|issue=1|pages=1–24|issn=0273-3072}}</ref> It had offices in various cities, including ], ] and New York City.<ref>McMaster, John Bach (1910). ''A History of the People of the United States''. D. Appleton and Company. p. 116.</ref> Stamps could be purchased and then attached to letters, which could be brought to any of its offices. From here, agents were dispatched who traveled on railroads and steamboats and carried the letters in handbags. Letters were transferred to messengers in the cities along the routes, who then delivered the letters to the addressees. This was a challenge to the Post Office's ].<ref name="Cato"/><ref>Adie, Douglas (1989). . p. 27.</ref>


As he had done when challenging the rules of the ], Spooner published a ] titled "The Unconstitutionality of the Laws of Congress Prohibiting Private Mails". Although Spooner had finally found commercial success with his mail company, legal challenges by the government eventually exhausted his financial resources. A law enacted in 1851 that strengthened the federal government's monopoly finally put him out of business. The legacy of Spooner's challenge to the postal service was the reduction in letter postage from 5¢ to 3¢, in response to the competition his company provided.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.lysanderspooner.org/STAMP3.htm|title=Spooner vs. U.S. Postal System|first=Lucille J.|last=Goodyear|magazine=]|date=January 1981|access-date=October 25, 2012|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121019155313/http://www.lysanderspooner.org/STAMP3.htm|archive-date=October 19, 2012}}</ref>
As he had done when challenging the rules of the Massachusetts bar, he published a pamphlet entitled, The Unconstitutionality of the Laws of Congress Prohibiting Private Mails.


===Abolitionism===
(As an advocate of Natural Law Theory and an opponent of government and legislation, Spooner considered the Constitution itself to be unlawful, but he nevertheless used it to argue that the government was breaking its own laws, first in the case of the ], and later arguing for the Unconstitutionality of Slavery.)
Spooner attained his highest profile as a figure in the ]. His book '']'', published in 1845, contributed to a controversy among abolitionists over whether the ] supported the institution of ]. The disunionist faction led by ] and ] argued that the Constitution legally recognized and enforced the oppression of slaves as in the provisions for the capture of fugitive slaves in ].<ref name="Barnett 2011">{{cite journal|last=Barnett|first=Randy E.|author-link=Randy Barnett|title=Whence Comes Section One? The Abolitionist Origins of the Fourteenth Amendment|url=https://scholarship.law.georgetown.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1475&context=facpub|date=2011|journal=Journal of Legal Analysis|volume=3|issue=1|issn=1946-5319|doi=10.1093/jla/3.1.165|oclc=8092556588|pages=165–263|doi-access=free}}</ref>


Spooner challenged the claim that the text of the Constitution permitted slavery.{{Sfn|Shively|1971|loc=Chapter 5}} He used a complex system of legal and natural law arguments to show that the Constitutional clauses usually interpreted as adopting or at least accepting implicitly the practice of slavery did not in fact support it, despite the open tolerance of human servitude under the original Constitution of 1789; even though those interpretations would only be superseded by the amendments to the Constitution passed after the ], viz. Amendments XIII-XV, prohibiting the states from enabling or enforcing slavery.{{Sfn|Shively|1971|loc=Chapter 5}}
Although Spooner had finally found commercial success with his mail company, legal challenges by the government eventually exhausted his financial resources. He closed up shop without ever having had the opportunity to fully litigate his constitutional claims.


From the publication of this book until 1861, when the Civil War overtook society, Spooner actively campaigned against slavery.{{Sfn|Shively|1971|loc=Chapter 5}} Spooner viewed the ] as trying to deny the ] through military force.{{Sfn|Smith|1992|p=xvii}}
He wrote and published extensively, producing "Natural Law or The Science of Justice" and "The Unconstitutionality of Slavery", but he is best known for the essay "Trial By Jury" which argued for the still-controversial doctrine of "]" according to which, the jury's role in a free society is to try both the facts of an individual case and also the law itself.


===Later life and death===
Lysander Spooner died in 1887 at the age of 79. He had influenced a generation of abolitionists and anarchists, including ] who published Spooner's obituary in the journal Liberty.
] in Boston, Massachusetts]]


Spooner argued that "almost all fortunes are made out of the capital and labour of other men than those who realize them. Indeed, except by his sponging capital and labour from others".{{Sfn|Martin|1970|p=173}} Spooner defended the ], who stopped working because they believed the world would soon end and were arrested for ].{{Sfn|Shone|2010|p=viii}}


Spooner spent much time in the ].{{Sfn|Shone|2010|p=xv}} He died on May 14, 1887, at the age of 79 in his nearby residence at 109 Myrtle Street, Boston.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/77666634/ |title=Lysander Spooner, One of the Old Guard of Abolition Heroes, Dies in his Eightieth Year After a Fortnight's Illness. |first=John Boyle |last=O'Reilly |author-link=John Boyle O'Reilly |date=May 15, 1887 |page=8 |work=] |access-date=May 13, 2021 |via=]}}</ref> He never married and had no children.{{Sfn|Shively|1971|loc=Chapter 9}}
''References and external links'':

* ''''
==Political views==
*
Spooner was an anti-capitalist individualist.{{sfn|Long|2020|p=30}} This association is wrapped in the definition of capitalism, whether viewed as a system of managerial domination and exploitation, or a simpler definition of free market with private property, since Spooner supported the latter.{{sfn|Long|2020|p=30}} According to ], "the egalitarian implications of traditional individualist anarchists" such as Spooner and ] have been overlooked.{{Sfn|Marshall|2008|pp=564–565}}
*

*
As an ], Spooner advocated for pre-industrial living in communities of small property holders so that they could pursue ] in mutual honesty without ceding responsibility to a central government.<ref name="Rosemont 2015 p. 78"/> In addition to his extra-governmental post service and views on abolitionism, Spooner wrote ''No Treason'' in which he contends that the Constitution is based on voluntary consent and that citizens are not bound by involuntary allegiance.{{Sfn|Martin|1970|pp=191–192}} Spooner argued that the national Congress should dissolve and let citizens rule themselves as he held that individuals should make their own fates.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Gay|first1=Kathlyn|last2=Gay|first2=Martin|title=Encyclopedia of Political Anarchy|chapter=Spooner, Lysander|date=1999|isbn=978-0874369823|publisher=ABC-CLIO|pages=193–195}}</ref>
*

==Influence==
{{libertarianism sidebar|people}}

Spooner's ''The Unconstitutionality of Slavery'' was cited in the 2008 ] case '']'' which struck down the federal district's ban on handguns. Justice ], writing for the court, quotes Spooner as saying the ] was necessary for those who wanted to take a stand against slavery.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://supreme.justia.com/us/554/07-290/opinion.html|title=District of Columbia v. Heller 554 U. S. ____ – US Supreme Court Cases from Justia & Oyez|last=Scalia|first=Antonin|author-link=Antonin Scalia|publisher=Supreme.justia.com|access-date=June 24, 2012|archive-date=August 2, 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080802142631/http://supreme.justia.com/us/554/07-290/opinion.html|url-status=live}}</ref> It was also cited by Justice ] in his concurring opinion in '']'', another firearms case, the following year.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/08-1521.ZC1.html|title=Mv. Chicago|last=Thomas|first=Clarence|author-link=Clarence Thomas|publisher=Law.cornell.edu|access-date=June 24, 2012|archive-date=July 1, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100701164905/https://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/08-1521.ZC1.html|url-status=live}}</ref>

==Publications==
Virtually everything written by Spooner is contained in the six-volume compilation ''The Collected Works of Lysander Spooner'' (1971). The most notable exception is ''Vices Are Not Crimes'', not widely known until its republication in 1977.{{Sfn|Shone|2010|p=xv}}
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* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190222152033/https://www.aier.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Spooner-Two_Treatises.pdf |date=February 22, 2019 }} (2018)

===Archival material===
There are collections of letters written by Spooner in the ] and the ].{{Sfn|Shone|2010|pp=viii–ix}}

==See also==
{{cols|colwidth=21em}}
* ]
* ]
* ]
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* ]
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* ]
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{{colend}}

==References==
{{reflist}}

== Bibliography ==
{{refbegin|2}}
* {{cite book |last=Barnett |first=Randy E. |author-link=Randy Barnett |chapter=Was Slavery Unconstitutional Before the Thirteenth Amendment?: Lysander Spooner's Theory of Interpretation |editor-last=McKivigan |editor-first=John |year=1999 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OeoaqhaZ-iMC |title=Abolitionism and American Law |pages=65–102 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=0815331096 |access-date=December 11, 2015 |archive-date=August 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240809150935/https://books.google.com/books?id=OeoaqhaZ-iMC |url-status=live }}
* {{cite book |last=Cover |first=Robert M. |chapter=Formal Assumptions of the Antislavery Forces |year=1975 |title=Justice Accused: Antislavery and the Judicial Process |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QovkZrJ2bK0C |publisher=] |pages=149–158 |jstor=j.ctt32bmbr.13 |isbn=978-0-300-16195-3 |access-date=July 23, 2024 |archive-date=August 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240809151002/https://books.google.com/books?id=QovkZrJ2bK0C |url-status=live }}
* {{Cite book |last1=Long |first1=Roderick T. |editor-last1=Chartier |editor-first1=Gary |editor-link1=Gary Chartier |editor-last2=Van Schoelandt |editor-first2=Chad |chapter=The Anarchist Landscape |title=The Routledge Handbook of Anarchy and Anarchist Thought |date=2020 |isbn=978-1-315-18525-5 |publisher=Routledge |pages=28–38 }}
* {{cite book|first=Peter H.|last = Marshall|author-link=Peter Marshall (author, born 1946)|chapter=American Individualists and Communists|title=]|year=2008|orig-year=1992|location=]|publisher=]|pages=384–395<!--387–389-->|isbn=978-0-00-686245-1|oclc=218212571}}
* {{cite book|last=Martin|first=James J.|year=1970|orig-year=1953|chapter=Lysander Spooner, Dissident Among Dissidents|chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/menagainststatee00martrich/page/166/mode/2up|title=Men Against the State: The Expositors of Individualist Anarchism in America, 1827–1908|location=]|publisher=Ralph Myles Publisher|isbn=9780879260064|oclc=8827896|pages=167–201}}
* {{cite book|last=Shively|first=Charles|year=1971|chapter=Biography|chapter-url=http://www.lysanderspooner.org/biopgraphy/|editor-last=Shively|editor-first=Charles|title=The Collected Works of Lysander Spooner|publisher=M&S Press|isbn=0-87730-006-2|oclc=151618|access-date=December 2, 2018|archive-date=March 24, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190324212559/http://www.lysanderspooner.org/biopgraphy|url-status=live}}
* {{cite book|last=Shone|first=Steve J.|year=2010|title=Lysander Spooner, American Anarchist|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9MM_cpF9IM8C|publisher=Lexington Books|isbn=978-0739144503|oclc=1253438526|access-date=July 23, 2024|archive-date=July 23, 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240723133524/https://books.google.com/books?id=9MM_cpF9IM8C|url-status=live}}
* {{cite book|last=Smith|first=George H.|author-link=George H. Smith|year=1992|chapter=Introduction|editor-last=Smith|editor-first=George H.|url=https://archive.org/details/lysanderspoonerr0000spoo/|title=The Lysander Spooner Reader|publisher=]|pages=vii-xx|isbn=0-930073-06-1}}
* {{cite book|last=Wiecek|first=William M.|year=1977|chapter=Radical Constitutional Antislavery: The Imagined Past, the Remembered Future|title=The Sources of Anti-Slavery Constitutionalism in America, 1760-1848|publisher=]|pages=249–275|jstor=10.7591/j.ctt207g6m0.16|isbn=978-1-5017-2644-6 }}
{{refend}}

==Further reading==
* {{cite encyclopedia|last=Barnett|first=Randy|author-link=Randy Barnett|editor-first=Ronald|editor-last=Hamowy|editor-link=Ronald Hamowy|encyclopedia=The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism|chapter=Spooner, Lysander (1808–1887)|chapter-url=https://sk.sagepub.com/reference/libertarianism/n297.xml|year=2008|publisher=]; ]|location=Thousand Oaks, CA|doi=10.4135/9781412965811.n297|isbn=978-1412965804|oclc=750831024|lccn=2008009151|pages=488–490}}

==External links==
{{Commons category}}
{{Wikisource author}}
{{Wikiquote}}
* , dedicated website
* {{Gutenberg author|id=552|name=Lysander Spooner}}
* {{Internet Archive author|sname=Lysander Spooner}}
* {{Librivox author|id=3134}}
* {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030412103901/http://www.memoryhole.com/people/spooner/bibliography.html|date=April 12, 2003|title=Lysander Spooner's Bibliography}}
*

{{American Civil War|expanded=Origins}}
{{John Brown's Raid on Harpers Ferry}}
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Latest revision as of 03:05, 13 January 2025

American abolitionist and legal theorist (1808–1887)

Lysander Spooner
Born(1808-01-19)January 19, 1808
Athol, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedMay 14, 1887(1887-05-14) (aged 79)
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
OccupationEntrepreneur, lawyer and writer
NationalityAmerican
SubjectPolitical philosophy
Notable worksThe Unconstitutionality of Slavery (1845)
No Treason (1867)

Philosophy career
Era19th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolIusnaturalism
Main interests
Part of a series on
Individualism
Principles
Philosophers
Ideologies
Principal concerns

Lysander Spooner (January 19, 1808 — May 14, 1887) was an American abolitionist, entrepreneur, lawyer, essayist, natural rights legal theorist, pamphletist, political philosopher, and writer often associated with the Boston anarchist tradition.

Spooner was a strong advocate of the labor movement and is politically identified with individualist anarchism. His writings contributed to the development of both left-libertarian and right-libertarian political theory. Spooner's writings include the abolitionist book The Unconstitutionality of Slavery and No Treason: The Constitution of No Authority, which opposed treason charges against secessionists.

He is known for establishing the American Letter Mail Company, which competed with the United States Postal Service.

Biography

Early life

Spooner was born on a farm in Athol, Massachusetts, on January 19, 1808. Spooner's parents were Asa and Dolly Spooner. One of his ancestors, William Spooner, arrived in Plymouth in 1637. Lysander was the second of nine children. His father was a deist and it has been speculated that he purposely named his two older sons Leander and Lysander after pagan and Spartan heroes, respectively.

Legal career

Spooner's activism began with his career as a lawyer, which itself violated Massachusetts law. Spooner had studied law under the prominent lawyers, politicians and abolitionists John Davis, later Governor of Massachusetts and Senator; and Charles Allen, state senator and Representative from the Free Soil Party. However, he never attended college. According to the laws of the state, college graduates were required to study with an attorney for three years while non-graduates like Lysander would be required to do so for five years.

With the encouragement from his legal mentors, Spooner set up his practice in Worcester, Massachusetts, after only three years, defying the courts. He regarded three-year privilege for college graduates as a state-sponsored discrimination against the poor and also providing a monopoly income to those who met the requirements. He argued that "no one has yet ever dared advocate, in direct terms, so monstrous a principle as that the rich ought to be protected by law from the competition of the poor". In 1836, the legislature abolished the restriction. He opposed all licensing requirements for lawyers.

After a disappointing legal career and a failed career in real estate speculation in Ohio, Spooner returned to his father's farm in 1840.

American Letter Mail Company

Being an advocate of self-employment and opponent of government regulation of business, in 1844 Spooner started the American Letter Mail Company, which competed with the United States Post Office, whose rates were very high. It had offices in various cities, including Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York City. Stamps could be purchased and then attached to letters, which could be brought to any of its offices. From here, agents were dispatched who traveled on railroads and steamboats and carried the letters in handbags. Letters were transferred to messengers in the cities along the routes, who then delivered the letters to the addressees. This was a challenge to the Post Office's legal monopoly.

As he had done when challenging the rules of the Massachusetts Bar Association, Spooner published a pamphlet titled "The Unconstitutionality of the Laws of Congress Prohibiting Private Mails". Although Spooner had finally found commercial success with his mail company, legal challenges by the government eventually exhausted his financial resources. A law enacted in 1851 that strengthened the federal government's monopoly finally put him out of business. The legacy of Spooner's challenge to the postal service was the reduction in letter postage from 5¢ to 3¢, in response to the competition his company provided.

Abolitionism

Spooner attained his highest profile as a figure in the abolitionist movement. His book The Unconstitutionality of Slavery, published in 1845, contributed to a controversy among abolitionists over whether the Constitution supported the institution of slavery. The disunionist faction led by William Lloyd Garrison and Wendell Phillips argued that the Constitution legally recognized and enforced the oppression of slaves as in the provisions for the capture of fugitive slaves in Article IV, Section 2.

Spooner challenged the claim that the text of the Constitution permitted slavery. He used a complex system of legal and natural law arguments to show that the Constitutional clauses usually interpreted as adopting or at least accepting implicitly the practice of slavery did not in fact support it, despite the open tolerance of human servitude under the original Constitution of 1789; even though those interpretations would only be superseded by the amendments to the Constitution passed after the American Civil War, viz. Amendments XIII-XV, prohibiting the states from enabling or enforcing slavery.

From the publication of this book until 1861, when the Civil War overtook society, Spooner actively campaigned against slavery. Spooner viewed the Northern states as trying to deny the Southerners through military force.

Later life and death

Spooner is interred in the historic Forest Hills Cemetery in Boston, Massachusetts

Spooner argued that "almost all fortunes are made out of the capital and labour of other men than those who realize them. Indeed, except by his sponging capital and labour from others". Spooner defended the Millerites, who stopped working because they believed the world would soon end and were arrested for vagrancy.

Spooner spent much time in the Boston Athenæum. He died on May 14, 1887, at the age of 79 in his nearby residence at 109 Myrtle Street, Boston. He never married and had no children.

Political views

Spooner was an anti-capitalist individualist. This association is wrapped in the definition of capitalism, whether viewed as a system of managerial domination and exploitation, or a simpler definition of free market with private property, since Spooner supported the latter. According to Peter Marshall, "the egalitarian implications of traditional individualist anarchists" such as Spooner and Benjamin Tucker have been overlooked.

As an individualist anarchist, Spooner advocated for pre-industrial living in communities of small property holders so that they could pursue life, liberty, happiness and property in mutual honesty without ceding responsibility to a central government. In addition to his extra-governmental post service and views on abolitionism, Spooner wrote No Treason in which he contends that the Constitution is based on voluntary consent and that citizens are not bound by involuntary allegiance. Spooner argued that the national Congress should dissolve and let citizens rule themselves as he held that individuals should make their own fates.

Influence

Part of a series on
Libertarianism
Concepts
Issues
Philosophers
Politicians
National variants
Historical background
Related topics

Spooner's The Unconstitutionality of Slavery was cited in the 2008 Supreme Court case District of Columbia v. Heller which struck down the federal district's ban on handguns. Justice Antonin Scalia, writing for the court, quotes Spooner as saying the right to bear arms was necessary for those who wanted to take a stand against slavery. It was also cited by Justice Clarence Thomas in his concurring opinion in McDonald v. Chicago, another firearms case, the following year.

Publications

Virtually everything written by Spooner is contained in the six-volume compilation The Collected Works of Lysander Spooner (1971). The most notable exception is Vices Are Not Crimes, not widely known until its republication in 1977.

Archival material

There are collections of letters written by Spooner in the Boston Public Library and the New York Historical Society.

See also

References

  1. ^ Rosemont, Henry Jr. (2015). Against Individualism: A Confucian Rethinking of the Foundations of Morality, Politics, Family, and Religion. Lanham: Lexington Books. p. 78. ISBN 978-0739199817.
  2. Marshall 2008, pp. 387–389.
  3. Marshall 2008, p. 389.
  4. Smith 1992, p. xix.
  5. ^ Barnett, Randy E. (2011). "Whence Comes Section One? The Abolitionist Origins of the Fourteenth Amendment". Journal of Legal Analysis. 3 (1): 165–263. doi:10.1093/jla/3.1.165. ISSN 1946-5319. OCLC 8092556588.
  6. ^ Shone 2010, p. viii.
  7. Smith 1992, p. viii.
  8. ^ Barnett 1999, pp. 66–67.
  9. Shively 1971, Chapter 4.
  10. ^ Olds, Kelly B. (1995). "The Challenge To The U.S. Postal Monopoly, 1839–1851" (PDF). Cato Journal. 15 (1): 1–24. ISSN 0273-3072.
  11. McMaster, John Bach (1910). A History of the People of the United States. D. Appleton and Company. p. 116.
  12. Adie, Douglas (1989). Monopoly Mail: The Privatizing United States Postal Service. p. 27.
  13. Goodyear, Lucille J. (January 1981). "Spooner vs. U.S. Postal System". American Legion Magazine. Archived from the original on October 19, 2012. Retrieved October 25, 2012.
  14. ^ Shively 1971, Chapter 5.
  15. Smith 1992, p. xvii.
  16. Martin 1970, p. 173.
  17. ^ Shone 2010, p. xv.
  18. O'Reilly, John Boyle (May 15, 1887). "Lysander Spooner, One of the Old Guard of Abolition Heroes, Dies in his Eightieth Year After a Fortnight's Illness". The Boston Globe. p. 8. Retrieved May 13, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  19. Shively 1971, Chapter 9.
  20. ^ Long 2020, p. 30.
  21. Marshall 2008, pp. 564–565.
  22. Martin 1970, pp. 191–192.
  23. Gay, Kathlyn; Gay, Martin (1999). "Spooner, Lysander". Encyclopedia of Political Anarchy. ABC-CLIO. pp. 193–195. ISBN 978-0874369823.
  24. Scalia, Antonin. "District of Columbia v. Heller 554 U. S. ____ – US Supreme Court Cases from Justia & Oyez". Supreme.justia.com. Archived from the original on August 2, 2008. Retrieved June 24, 2012.
  25. Thomas, Clarence. "Mv. Chicago". Law.cornell.edu. Archived from the original on July 1, 2010. Retrieved June 24, 2012.
  26. Shone 2010, pp. viii–ix.

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