Well, that's probably my deeply hidden fruitfly brain part talking then. The part beneath the olfactory lizzard part. I smell powerful tendencies here... :smile: — Hillary
Simply that the state ought to mind it’s own business — NOS4A2
There's a reason capitalists are obsessed with state capture - i.e. effective control of government and its regulatory apparatus - because they know very well just how much they are dependant upon the state for their continued survival. — Streetlight
In my mind the proper role for government is to defend liberty, — NOS4A2
For every man who would exploit his neighbor is another who would not. This is why I have faith in the absence of state fetters. What prohibits a man from exploiting his neighbor is not the state, but a conscience and a reasonable set of moral principles. — NOS4A2
Would you seek to dominate others should there be no state? — NOS4A2
The moral and just way to fund any institution is voluntarily, whether through subscription, donation, etc. — NOS4A2
I don’t want to abolish democracy, nor do I want to completely abolish the government. I just don’t think the task of government is to meddle in our livelihoods. — NOS4A2
No. One is not at liberty to interfere with another’s liberty. — NOS4A2
I just don’t think the task of government is to meddle in our livelihoods. — NOS4A2
the abolition of state control over economic activity would come to fruition. — NOS4A2
Or are you one of those libertarians who are all for the liberties of the corporations and against the rights of the people? — ArmChairPhilosopher
Preserving human liberty is not a 1-to-1 ratio with regulating the economy, and it is neither rationally nor emotionally satisfying for me to accept such non-sequiturs. — NOS4A2
One can and should do that without a state because, if history is any indication, the state is often incompetent in that regard and violates those same rights. According to author RJ Rummel, the body count for which the state is to blame in the 20th century is 262,000,000, and this is only acts of genocide. — NOS4A2
But the usefulness of the term doesn’t automatically justify regulatory behavior, nor does it negate minding your own business. Anyone can mind his own business, refuse to regulate another’s economic activity, refuse to be an interloper, so I don’t think the principle is as nonsensical as you make it out it to be. — NOS4A2
Protectionism, mercantilism, subsidies, corruption—this is state intervention in a nutshell. I could be wrong but it appears that you are more concerned about who benefits from state intervention rather then the behavior of state intervention as such. — NOS4A2
Speaking of nonsense, how many years and how many votes have you spent waiting for a return on your investment? — NOS4A2
just as it is wrong to steal the fruits of someone’s labor. — NOS4A2
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