Possibly. Not with Nukes, but... some people would say that we are already in a sort of de facto civil war, albeit one without major armed conflict. Conceptually, in terms of groups of people fighting for resources using govt and media as weapons we certainly are.

The problem I see, is that cheaper capital and cheaper automation both should have made it so both were more available to the masses. This should be resulting in more spontaneous growth , and a more even distribution of both capital and labor. One prime reason being that automation reduces the effects of economies of scale, can drastically reduce initial investment threshold to produce. This in theory should be producing more localized economies.

So why is this not occuring at the rate it should?

After all, during the Industrial Revolution many people lost jobs in certain sectors. However gains were made in others. With the automation revolution, it is a matter of course that some jobs will be lost. So why are other opportunities not more readily becoming available?

Well thats a big topic, and my brain is still shot this morning. So im just gonna quote Hayek for now cause this passage immediately came to mind and possibly return to the topic after some more coffee/etc. Make of it what you will. Bold emphasis added by me.


Originally Posted By: Hayek
What led me to write another book on the same general theme as the earlier one was the recognition that the preservation of a society of free men depends on three fundamental insights which have never been adequately expounded and to which the three main parts of this book are devoted. The first of these is that a self-generating or spontaneous order and an organization are distinct, and that their distinctiveness is related to the two different kinds of rules or laws which prevail in them. The second is that what today is generally regarded as ‘social’ or distributive justice has meaning only within the second of these kinds of order, the organization; but that it is meaningless in, and wholly incompatible with, that spontaneous order which Adam Smith called ‘the Great Society’, and Sir Karl Popper called ‘the Open Society’. The third is that the predominant model of liberal democratic institutions, in which the same representative body lays down the rules of just conduct and directs government, necessarily leads to a gradual transformation of the spontaneous order of a free society into a totalitarian system conducted in the service of some coalition of organized interests.

This development, as I hope to show, is not a necessary consequence of democracy, but an effect only of that particular form of unlimited government with which democracy has come to be identified. If I am right, it would indeed seem that the particular form of representative government which now prevails in the Western world, and which many feel they must defend because they mistakenly regard it as the only possible form of democracy, has an inherent tendency to lead away from the ideals it was intended to serve. It can hardly be denied that, since this type of democracy has come to be accepted, we have been moving away from that ideal of individual liberty of which it had been regarded as the surest safeguard, and are now drifting towards a system which nobody wanted.

Signs are not wanting, however, that unlimited democracy is riding for a fall and that it will go down, not with a bang, but with a whimper. It is already becoming clear that many of the expectations that have been raised can be met only by taking the powers of decision out of the hands of democratic assemblies and entrusting them to the established coalitions of organized interests and their hired experts. Indeed, we are already told that the function of representative bodies has become to ‘mobilize consent’, that is, not to express but to manipulate the opinion of those whom they represent. Sooner or later the people will discover that not only are they at the mercy of new vested interests, but that the political machinery of para-government, which has grown up as a necessary consequence of the provision-state, is producing an impasse by preventing society from making those adaptations which in a changing world are required to maintain an existing standard of living, let alone to achieve a rising one. It will probably be some time before people will admit that the institutions they have created have led them into such an impasse. But it is probably not too early to begin thinking about a way out. And the conviction that this will demand some drastic revision of beliefs now generally accepted is what makes me venture here on some institutional invention.

Hayek, F. A. Law, Legislation and Liberty: A new statement of the liberal principles of justice and political economy (Routledge Classics) (pp. 2-3). Taylor and Francis. Kindle Edition.


For who could be free when every other man's humour might domineer over him? - John Locke (2nd Treatise, sect 57)