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David Friedman's perspective, known as "anarcho-capitalism," is gaining increasing attention as a desirable social ideal. This book is about how the United States benefits from unlimited immigration; why drug prohibition is not consistent with a free society; why the state enriches itself from the poor to help the not-so-poor; how police protection, the courts, and new laws can be used privately; what life was really like under the anarchist legal system of medieval Iceland; why nonintervention is the best foreign policy; and why no simple moral rules can generate acceptable social policies.