The Entrepreneurial Manifesto

Foundation For Global Economic Revolution

Entrepreneurial Manifesto Synopsis

Scott Wojack

The Entrepreneurial Manifesto outlines a framework for global economic revolution. The Entrepreneurial Manifesto, unlike its adversaries, communism, socialism, and mercantilism (corporatism), seeks to free people to pursue their self-interests and keep their property under their full control. If one reads between the lines of The Communist Manifesto its subtle purpose was to re-establish a new Aristocracy and rectify the loss where once everyone was bound to his “natural superiors”. Communism’s greatest critique of Capitalism was its destruction of the Feudal order where everyone knew their proper place in society. In practice communism and socialism have established a new Aristocracy of the rich to rule the masses. Modern day China is a perfect example of what communism set out to accomplish. A country where the wealthy control the masses. In contrast, Entrepreneurialism seeks to liberate the masses from the oppressive rule of the state and make the State subordinate to the people all the while allowing true egalitarianism to be the primary principle of government. The state must be a creature of the people and not the people a creature of the State.

The Entrepreneurial Manifesto contains ten sections outlining a process that the reader can understand which lays the framework for global economic revolution. The first section is the Manifesto. The manifesto defines the three great qualities of the entrepreneur, self-reliance, individualism, and freedom alongside the concepts of the tools of production and one’s identity. The manifesto also explains why fascism is so easy to implement when identity is associated with group politics as opposed to the entrepreneur’s individualism. The second section explains why the result of labor is property. With this foundational explanation and its relevance in a modern society one will understand why the primary purpose of government is to protect private property and why property is never the result of the State or its legal system.

In the third section, the value of property is explained and thus by extension the value of labor. The reader will have a solid understanding of why no property has an intrinsic value, but all value is determined by everyone else except the laborer who created the property. The fourth section extends the ideas from the previous sections and explains why money is also a form of property in a modern society. A common assault on private property is to treat money as a creation of the State and not private property. From these fundamental ideas, the fifth section explains why any control over property or money is control over labor and thus a form of slavery or involuntary servitude. From this idea, it is easy to understand that the greatest struggle in preserving private property is the fight against an unjust tax structure.

The sixth section takes a short detour and contains a brief history of taxation. This section explains the historical relationship between the property and income tax and its role in measuring obligation to the State. This section also explores the competing theories of taxation, the benefit, and ability to pay theories. Section seven builds on the previous arguments and explains why property tax is a form of slavery. In simple terms taxing property already owned requires labor to pay the tax and thus a form of slavery. Section eight is short but takes the next logical step and shows why income tax is also a form of slavery. With both property tax and income tax shown as systems of unjust taxation section nine then reveals a true form of just taxation. The VAT or consumption tax can be the only true just tax as it allows all property to remain private and unknown to the State until it is sold on the open market. Since all market transactions use the infrastructure provided by the state a truly just tax system will only raise revenue on the value of the transaction. This section also explains the power the people will have to influence government revenue once income and property taxes are abolished. The final section looks at the injustice of prolonged exclusivity of copyright and patents and how this issue relates to the previous arguments. With modern technology and the rise of the internet, these issues have far greater impact on the individual than ever before in the history of mankind.