What is the point of being a killjoy? — javi2541997
I took your invitation to indulge in irrelevant shit throwing. — fdrake
and the majority of posts you've made would've gotten you banned if we kept the editorial standards from the old site. Your move! — fdrake
I see. Well I suppose you could make a Feedback thread. — fdrake
The majority of Mikie's posts that you were talking about, I believe, were directed toward people who he believed - reasonably - were supporting genocide, the thorough subversion of democracy, and the annihilation of the human race. It is unreasonable to expect anyone to be civil about such things. — fdrake
Oh? Who? — fdrake
Aah yes, manufactured talking points. Projection is one of the biases I was speaking of. — NOS4A2
Like I said, the usual suspects — NOS4A2
For instance when Biden defied the Supreme Court for his illegal student loan forgiveness — NOS4A2
By buy-in and contribute to the laws, do you mean he doesn’t violate them? Personally, the only reason I don’t violate any laws is because I do not want the authorities to have a reason to punish me. So I don’t drive through red lights. Other than that morality is the only thing that guides my behavior. — NOS4A2
Rousseau takes great pains to distinguish between the particular and general will, but I think he failed. There is no general will, and thus no Sovereign. In practice the “general will” always turns out to be the will of some individual or faction or other (a particular will), namely, the rule of those who claim to know and represent the “general will”. The rule of this group or any other can never be the rule of the people. A republic or any other state is necessarily an oligarchy, and no one living in one can ever free. — NOS4A2
To hell with that. You have just undermined the authority that could promulgate such an assurance. — Paine
The mention of a mandate that overruled the preferences of a minority. — Paine
I am guessing from this screed that you have little interest in the topic of individual liberty that occupied your forebears. — Paine
Then I don't see the importance of insisting upon the essay being germane. — Paine
It does. But how does that element relate to the description of power that Land lays out? — Paine
I have my own experiences with divergence and all these different polities being discussed here directly involve my life as I understand it happening. That goes for my family and all the people I love and have loved.
That love extends to people who believe stuff I do not and enemies who wish me harm. That is what Rousseau meant by compassion. I will hurt you if I have to. But no fist pumps and triumphant trumpets. — Paine
one moment, you stand outside of Land's thesis, at another you argue from it. Pick a lane — Paine
He said they had a 'natural' morality, as depicted in the quote given here — Paine
Finally, state capture is inseparable from corruption. Doing business with the US federal government could soon require one to pass a loyalty test rather than a public interest test.

Rousseau says that all human evil starts with interactions
— frank
Where does Rousseau say that? — Paine
As the matter relates to Land's thesis, Land seems to be making the same mistake of Oppenheimer in his The State. The source of evil in Rousseau is the idea of private property. — Paine
Deleuze, Foucault, Nietzsche, Hume—these are the waters Land swam in prior to his political leanings leading to a sort of exile, — Count Timothy von Icarus
No, it isn't, because there's no such thing as being incorrect without further ado. If it's incorrect, then it's incorrect for a reason. A sufficient reason, to be more precise, as demanded by Leibniz's Principle of Sufficient Reason. If you cannot grant such a reason, then you are in the wrong here, not me. — Arcane Sandwich
Because he believes that Democracy is the system that is closest to human nature. Human nature, according to him, is naturally good. Democracy corrupts human nature, according to him, but it's the least corrupting option, in his view. — Arcane Sandwich

