Wouldn't this imply no selfless and caring person has ever had a hard life? And that no selfish and toxic person ever had a good one? — Outlander
Let me guess. You're fortunate enough at present to call yourself happy? — Outlander
I've always found the phrase "necessary evil" a little puzzling. Evil is really a religious word, and if you examine it religiously it really can never be necessary. Like if a doctor needs to cut off a man's arm because otherwise he'd die due to frostbite we might reflexively call this a "necessary evil" but there's really nothing evil about it - it's entirely necessary. If on the other hand the doctor just randomly cut off the man's arm for no apparent reason, yes, we'd call that evil. The evil lies in the complete lack of sense or necessity. Just something to think about. — BitconnectCarlos
The true voluntariety of these agreements is something that socialists generally dispute, as there generally is not a reasonable alternative for many people besides to accept one of several largely indistinguishable bad deals. I don't want to rent from anybody, for instance, but my only practical options are to rent a house from somebody, or rent money from the bank with which to mortgage a house from somebody. I don't want to do any of those things, but I don't have enough money to do none of them, so I pick the one that sucks the least. "Your money or your life" is still a choice, but "your life" is not a reasonable choice, which is what makes that "choice" actually coercion. — Pfhorrest
There's also a question of what kind of agreements (contracts) should be valid to begin with. — Pfhorrest
That does mean I can kick you out of the house I was letting you live in... but it also means I have no use for that house that I'm not living in, since I can't contractually obligate anyone to pay me to live there, since I can't legally owe them the right to live there... without just making it their property, that is. So in lieu of being able to rent it out, I would have no better choice but to sell it... and nobody else will be buying it for a rental property, since they can't rent it out either... so I can only manage to sell it on terms that people who would otherwise be renters could afford.
I think that that revision to which contracts are valid would have far-reaching effects that basically incentivize people not to own things besides for their own use, and so achieve socialist ends -- the owners of things are the users of things -- without actually having to directly reassign ownership. — Pfhorrest
This is interesting but unclear what exactly what you mean. Could you elaborate? — praxis
Do you agree that evicting someone from their home for failure to pay someone else is likewise coercive: "Give me money, or get out, or else"? Or someone "evicting" someone from their workplace for similar reasons: if workers in a business decide not to hand the money that customers paid them over to the owner, so that the owner can give them a small fraction of it back, but instead keep it all for themselves, and the owner says "then get out, or else", is that not coercive? — Pfhorrest
Usually, it's a government enforcing the "or else" there in those situations, but even if there nominally is no government, if the owners themselves can get away with enforcing that "or else" themselves, then they effectively are a government themselves. — Pfhorrest
The original socialists, libertarian socialists aka anarchists, think we just need to stop there being governments that do that kind of stuff, or any other kind of coercive stuff, in the first place. State socialists in contrast think we need a powerful monopolistic government (a "state" in the usual terminology) in order to keep private owners from effectively becoming little warlord states of their own, or else using their influence to corrupt a nominally democratic state. — Pfhorrest
But I also think, and I wonder if you would agree, that inequality just as inevitably breeds authority, so allowing inequality to fester inevitably foils the libertarian objective. — Pfhorrest
I have to say, I'm pleasantly surprised with how open-minded you've been about all of this in this discussion. I hadn't been paying close attention to you before, but I had the impression that you were the usual right-libertarian capitalism apologist. So far, you seem much better than that, and I'm enjoying our conversations. — Pfhorrest
Like, if someone tries to take something that belongs to you, you don't just have to let them, right? (Is that itself violence/coercion, them taking something from you?) It's okay for you to stop them, right? Is it okay for someone else to help you stop them? Or for there to be an organized force of people who help people stop people from doing things like that, taking things that belong to others? — Pfhorrest
But is it good, legitimate violence (if we accept, which you and I both seem to, that there is such a thing), or is it bad, illegitimate violence? — Pfhorrest
Is this a fair judgement? What if one individual’s sense of evil differs from another’s? — Legato
Anarchism is a form of socialism (the original form, actually), so I already answered that for the most part. The difference between anarchism and statist forms of socialism is just the state, which thinks it’s the only one who gets to use violence and that it is justified in using violence to prevent anyone else from doing so, or from otherwise disobeying it. — Pfhorrest
Apparently you do, at least in the case of practicing good driving habits. — praxis
If he can't see it, then perhaps further conversation will reveal it to him. — Banno
"Government = bad". The end. That's all you've got. — Pro Hominem
I can't tell what the point of the question is. I'll say that we're a social species and as such are born with moral intuitions. We're also largely shaped by whatever society we happen to be raised in and part of that shaping is developing a moral framework, which is based on our moral intuitions. There are moral frameworks, for example, that prioritize the moral intuition of liberty vs oppression, such as Libertarianism. Other frameworks favor other moral intuitions. — praxis
You were talking about a dangerous (to yourself and others) habit — praxis
Living in society requires cooperation. Ideally, the cooperation is mutually beneficial. In order for the cooperation to be mutually beneficial, the more autonomous a citizen is the more responsible they would have to be. If a citizen just wants to freeload and take advantage of the cooperative nature of a society they can be as irresponsible as they like, at least until their freedom is curtailed. — praxis
That’s irresponsible because, if you look at driving like a skill, it forms a bad habit that puts yourself and other motorists at risk. Much of the mundane tasks in our lives are done on autopilot, so you’re basically training yourself (and your ‘autopilot’) badly. Again that’s irresponsible, which indicates an abuse of your freedom, and suggests that you’re not worthy of it. — praxis
Also, as I initially touched on, there’s the issue of who pays for the traffic lights, roadways, the land they occupy, etc. If they’re not paid for with taxation then you would have to pay a private party or parties in order to travel. Either way you have to pay. — praxis
You were refuted. You just can't see it. — Banno
Can yo offer an ultimate refutation of their position? — Banno
What a swift refutation. :lol: :up: — JerseyFlight
↪JerseyFlight
It's what I do. — Banno
Do you like the idea of their being penalties for other folk? Or do you think we should leave it up to other people to decide for themselves the utility of following traffic rules? — Banno
Do you support the removal of penalties so that we may each decide how to behave on the road? — Banno
More generally, are you happy for other people to also be guided by your principle: "When it seems useful to me, sure." — Banno
The point of my post was to have you think about your response. Try answering my questions, see what you think of your answers. No need to post them. — Banno
I consider government to be a form of coercion: a means to force individuals to do things by threat of violence. — Tzeentch
Keeping governments small with as little influence over individuals' private goings-on should be an active process. — Tzeentch
You are wrong. About almost everything. Your ideas are dangerous and if they ever become the norm, that society will be hell on Earth. I really wish there were something I could say that would help you and make a difference. Talk to a counselor or something. Unless you really are a sociopath there has to be some way for you to see value in something other than your own selfish interests. Just try. — Pro Hominem
Socialists want to spend other people's money because they think they know best. — Tzeentch
[Government is] a form of coercion: a means to force individuals to do things by threat of violence. — Tzeentch
Governments assert power over individuals based on what are essentially territorial claims, [governments are], at their basis, [...] no more legitimate than a despot — Tzeentch
And beware those who see government as a legitimate means to an end. — Tzeentch
Friend, you have already been utterly refuted by Banno. This is not just an opinion, it's a fact. It's why you didn't answer his valid questions. — JerseyFlight
You did not answer Banno's questions, you did not even engage his argument, which amounts to the total negation of your position. — JerseyFlight
It's pretty clear you have been refuted. — JerseyFlight
What a swift refutation. :lol: :up: — JerseyFlight
I find it disingenuous, if not dishonorable, to disguise the simple desire to keep one's possessions from others by platitudes about limiting the power of government. Why not be honest about one's selfishness? My money, my property, my rights--what could be a more self-centered view of our place in the world? — Ciceronianus the White
Ah. So you are not coerced into following the traffic rules. You choose to out of a sense of utility.
You would follow then even if they were not attached to a set of penalties.
Do you like the idea of their being penalties for other folk? Or do you think we should leave it up to other people to decide for themselves the utility of following traffic rules?
Do you support the removal of penalties so that we may each decide how to behave on the road?
Or do you think that we ought coerce other people - not you - into stopping at red lights? — Banno
There is another way out of this, just let your beliefs about the topic alter. That's the value of other minds. It's pretty clear you have been refuted. Don't hold onto the error, move in the direction of the greater truth. — JerseyFlight
You have already lived way beyond your without-government life expectancy, so if you want to be true to your "values" you should take one of the guns you're undoubtedly stockpiling with your government-given rights and use it on yourself. — Pro Hominem
You stand in opposition to ideas like everyone having access to medical care, every child having equal access to a useful education, ordinary people being protected from the poisoning of their food and environment by uncaring corporations, and levying higher taxes against people who are struggling to make ends meet than against people with access to many billions of dollars. — Pro Hominem
I didn't have to bid for moral superiority. — Pro Hominem
Do you stop at the red light? — Banno
The real irony here, my friend, is that this fella is a beneficiary of government, and more importantly, he is not going to walk away from it any time soon. I mean, he can flee to the mountains with his anarchist gang and they can all be free, but they had better not be leeching off society in any way if they want to remain consistent with their principles. — JerseyFlight
They'd just have to contribute to the welfare of people around them, even though they don't want to or don't care to do so. — Ciceronianus the White
Someone who's concerned about socialism is concerned about his/her money and property being used, by government, for someone else's welfare. — Ciceronianus the White
I suppose it comes down to whether or not a particular state is worth it or provides sufficient value. — praxis
You’re not interested in those things? You’d prefer to not pay taxes and live in a society where everything is privately owned? — praxis
In a world like that you’d still have to pay for travel, security, and everything else. — praxis
This is what the American constitution says: "...in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity."
Without some kind of government it would be exceedingly unlikely that you would secure any of these things. — JerseyFlight
The key is to put the power of this apparatus in check, not to abolish it altogether (though I am totally open to serious conversations on the possibility, they just seem to me like romanticism). — JerseyFlight
The same arrogance that makes any socialist think they know best how to spend other people's money. — Tzeentch
This person is only concerned with their own welfare, and not that of the people around them. — Pro Hominem
This person is only concerned with their own welfare, and not that of the people around them. — Pro Hominem
What makes people from wealthy, academical background lean left? — Ansiktsburk
