Colo Millz
Joshs
Reagan was saying that socialism inevitably nurtures a child-like mindset in the population. Ruthless apathy on the part of the government is essential to protect freedom, because it's only in that kind of climate that people retain their self reliance. It may be brutal, but this kind of neglect is actually a gift.
I agree with this — frank
Joshs
Both Adorno and Heidegger were extremely critical of the Weimar republic, with Heidegger basically coming out as fully authoritarian. — frank
apokrisis
As a starting point, let's think about what Hayek said about the Weimar Republic: that democratic control over economic planning caused people to become reliant on the government, and this set the stage for acceptance of dictatorship. — frank
Ciceronianus
Tom Storm
Reagan was saying that socialism inevitably nurtures a child-like mindset in the population. Ruthless apathy on the part of the government is essential to protect freedom, because it's only in that kind of climate that people retain their self reliance. It may be brutal, but this kind of neglect is actually a gift. — frank
Is Osama bin Laden left-wing or right-wing? How about Robert Mugabe? Who has a more left-wing approach to women’s sexuality: Pope John Paul or Hustler magazine? Consider Fidel Castro. He persecutes homosexuals, crushes trade unions, forbids democratic elections, executes opponents and criminals, is a billionaire in a country of very poor people and has decreed that a member of his family shall succeed him in power. Is Castro left-wing or right-wing? Explain your answer.
Paine
Democracy might begin as a defensible procedural mechanism for limiting government power, but it quickly and inexorably develops into something quite different: a culture of systematic thievery. As soon as politicians have learnt to buy political support from the ‘public purse’, and conditioned electorates to embrace looting and bribery, the democratic process reduces itself to the formation of (Mancur Olson’s) ‘distributional coalitions’ – electoral majorities mortared together by common interest in a collectively advantageous pattern of theft. Worse still, since people are, on average, not very bright, the scale of depredation available to the political establishment far exceeds even the demented sacking that is open to public scrutiny. Looting the future, through currency debauchment, debt accumulation, growth destruction, and techno-industrial retardation is especially easy to conceal, and thus reliably popular. Democracy is essentially tragic because it provides the populace with a weapon to destroy itself, one that is always eagerly seized, and used. Nobody ever says ‘no’ to free stuff. Scarcely anybody even sees that there is no free stuff. Utter cultural ruination is the necessary conclusion. — N Land, page 58
Astorre
Ludwig V
Recognizing that, I hope you don't mind if I post some random comments before everyone moves on.I'm moving on to a description of the Weimar Republic, — frank
The binary division between left and right is really very unhelpful. Dictatorships always seem to end up in much the same place - the same policies crop up again and again.Was Hitler right-wing or extreme left? What exactly do we mean by left and right? — Tom Storm
What interests of its own does the state have? Surely, it is always the creature of those interests that control political (and physical) power.constantly falling under the power of others' (and not its own) interests. — Astorre
I can believe that. It could be his most fundamental mistake. The only beginning we ever have is where we actually are. Whether it is "true" or not - whatever that might mean - is beside the point.Hence, in my view, his desire to find a true "beginning" for the German people and to rethink the role of the state in the technological age. — Astorre
"Thievery" implies property laws. Who makes those? Sadly, most regimes represent only some of the interests in their society and tend to prioritize their supporters in making the law. I can think of ways that might change, but they all turn on being able to recognize and allow for all the interests in society - especially those that are out of power. The problem is, everyone seems to think that everyone should be like themselves.Democracy might begin as a defensible procedural mechanism for limiting government power, but it quickly and inexorably develops into something quite different: a culture of systematic thievery. — N Land, page 58
Yes. It is difficult. People think that democracy is power to the people. But it can only work if people understand how the system works and accept it. (That has to include recognizing people with different interests.)So humans do bring that genetic or ethological legacy with them when trying to do things in a more enlightened fashion. We have to recognise that and be able to deal with it at all levels too. — apokrisis
On the face of it, this is ridiculous. Self-reliance always means, in practice, self reliance within a social structure. Robinson Crusoe was a hero of self-reliance, but he brought his society with him - tools, skills, ways of thinking.Ruthless apathy on the part of the government is essential to protect freedom, because it's only in that kind of climate that people retain their self reliance. — frank
The catch with such criticisms of institutions is always how much is too much. The question is never answered. Which makes the remark, in effect, meaningless. I've never understood why such remarks are so rhetorically and politically effective.So Hayek may have had a point about "too much top-down constraint". But that is just a complaint about a balance issue which is quite fixable in obvious ways in a democracy. A democracy is ideally a scalefree collection of its institutions. So the balance between constraints and freedoms are being dynamically adapted at all its levels from, say, corporations to corner shops, sports federations to local mah jong clubs, national public health standards to staff training in your local cafe. — apokrisis
That sounds very good. The question is how people might learn to accept and work with such systems. It doesn't seem to come "naturally".The system is co-created by the fact that the limits are tuned to create the kind of local actions that are desired. There is a feedback loop to keep the state of hierarchical order in a state that is dynamical and so capable of evolving. — apokrisis
Ludwig V
Are you seriously saying that the greatest obstacle to freeing slaves is their desire to remain slaves? We could sort that out quite quickly by asking them.One of the greatest obstacles to emancipation is not conservatism or liberalism. It's the slave mentality: — frank
Are you saying that slaves expect to be cared for as if they are infants? It seems a bit implausible to me. Most slaves have to work very hard in very poor conditions and put up with a very low standard of living. No-one thinks that an appropriate way to treat infants.the expectation of adults that they should be cared for as if they're infants — frank
None of that has anything to do with slavery. We could, perhaps, have a useful discussion of that view of our society. Perhaps you could explain to me what the soul is.It's the natural result of social conditions in which the soul is eclipsed by the mechanical social role. You are your occupation. You are your sexual orientation. You are your religious attitude. You are your political party. — frank
Sometimes, people need clear constraints and firm discipline. Sometimes people need to be allowed to make their mistakes. Sometimes people need bandages and calm. It all depends on the circumstances. Take any one of those and apply them in the wrong circumstances, and you'll do more harm than good. But there are circumstances in which each of them is just the right thing to do.It's through a few punches in the nose that a person learns to take care of themselves. This means punching is good. So I live with a contradiction, because if I could put a big bandage on the global human psyche to make it calm down and stop punching, I would — frank
180 Proof
I.e. an infinitesmal moment of infinity (Q. Meillassoux) or temporal mode of eternal substance (B. Spinoza).[A]uthentic being emerges only in the awareness ofone's ownfinitude — Astorre
apokrisis
You are quite right about the interaction between freedom and constraint. It's a great pity that so few people seem to understand it. Many of society's constraints are actually the scaffolding of its freedoms. — Ludwig V
Joshs
The US in particular seemed to be fabulously institutional and now just wants to burn it all down. — apokrisis
apokrisis
As a result, we are in a soft Civil War. Rural America wants to burn down the cities, which stand for strong institutions, and we city dwellers perceive ourselves threatened by foreign invaders. — Joshs
Joshs
From the outside, it does seem the US wants to tear itself culturally in two. And is frustrated by the fact it couldn’t be more integrated in being a geographical mix of the urban and the rural over all its scales. — apokrisis
The political issue would seem to be that the US seems fossilised by the glory of its own principled founding. It lacks the ability to evolve its system in response to changing times. — apokrisis
Paine
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