Do you feel like your State is your friend, or is it an interest-pursuing machine which might callously disregard your interests? — Bitter Crank
I don't see the state as being fundamentally other than the people that compose it. — unenlightened
I do agree with unenlightened:
I don't see the state as being fundamentally other than the people that compose it.
— unenlightened — Mayor of Simpleton
For instance, was Austria at it's antisemitic worst merely a composite of its population, OR was the State of Austria different than a composite of Austrians? — Bitter Crank
There are among the 320 million people, numerous and quite different demographics that don't overlap and don't have the same values and interests. — Bitter Crank
I do believe that my state of Arizona operates in my best interest when it comes to showing it's opinion to the Nation as a whole.Do you feel like your State is your friend, or is it an interest-pursuing machine which might callously disregard your interests? — Bitter Crank
Maybe. — Bitter Crank
I think of the state as an entity which is more than the sum of its parts. — Moliere
It's a collection of interests -- and it's goodness or badness is relative to what extent it represents your interests. — Moliere
Do you feel like your State is your friend, or is it an interest-pursuing machine which might callously disregard your interests? — Bitter Crank
You disagree - but you agree? — unenlightened
I say that to the extent that people care about each others' interests, they will have a good state, and to the extent that they care only about their own, they will have a bad state. To measure the goodness of the state according to one's own interests is inherently despotic. — unenlightened
To measure the goodness of the state according to one's own interests is inherently despotic. — unenlightened
But if there are other ways to organize the pooling of resources and cooperative effort then "the state" is not some foregone conclusion. It's not like there's a historical hierarchy where first we had the tribe, then the city, then the empire, then the church, then the kingdom, and then the state. Culture doesn't function in this manner. Culture works more along the lines of history than along the lines of a natural science.
Heck, we see clan v. clan type organizations develop within the state. — Moliere
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.