From an absolutely delightful New Yorker review of Peter T. Leeson's The Invisible Hook: The Hidden Economics of Pirates comes this relevant quote:
[Even] in piracy's golden age people were aware that an unregulated marketplace invites predators. During the South Sea Bubble of 1720, speculators claiming to be able to make wealth out of debt fleeced British investors and ruined many banks. Pirates who spent that year killing and plundering, Nathaniel Mist grumpily wrote, could salve their guilty consciences, if they had any: "Whatever Robberies they had committed, they might be pretty sure they were not the greatest Villains then living in the World."
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