or you could rely on yourself to do the job. If the defense of your rights runs up against another person's assertion of theirs, then your DRO's will work it out or you can voluntarily choose an arbitrator, or you can fight it out in the street
in otherwords no rules (voluntary or otherwise) but the law of the jungle...
if I voluntarily consent to a rule and then am judged (by whom?) to be in violation yet don't consent - it is law of the jungle time.
You just revealed yourself for the naked statist you are. Do you really think that your economic rent funded government with it's "justified" use of force is anything but the law of the jungle? Has any state ever succeeded in justly protecting anyone's rights? Has it ever been anything other than an organized gang of murderous thugs extorting money, regardless of the justification, at gunpoint? Is there anything special about the people in government that makes them incorruptable and moraly infallible? The answer is no, and yours would be the same miserable failure they all are, despite your sophistic rhetorical diahrrea to the contrary.
At it's root, life often IS the "law of the jungle." When some one is desperate enough, they'll violate your rights, regardless of the institutions or social conventions against it, if they truly believe their potential gain is worth the risk. That is why I take my own self-defense seriously, I am responsible for myself and I don't want to be victimized. I can't just scream out "this man is violating my right to self-ownership!" and expect John Locke to pop in and save me in the name of his proviso. Protecting myself, and my rights, is ultimately my responsibility. If you read the introductory post I wrote in this thread, you'll see where I stand on the idea of rights.
Beyond the question of violence, peaceful people who respect each other's rights can have their disputes resolved by a voluntarily chosen third party or by their respective legal representatives under the DRO model. Smarter, more eloquent men have thoroughly elucidated the concept elsewhere, but you could start here:
The Stateless Society: An Examination of AlternativesEnjoy. You need a break from copying and pasting stuff into this bbs.