it seems to me that what emerged out of the past, railways, cities, industries, even government, was driven and built by those who took power and wielded it. Through their own individual desires and the power held by them they created the foundations of the world today. — Brett
I can’t help thinking that we’re not getting much out of consensus, that we’re not growing. It seems to me that collective power is compromised by consensus. More get what they want but everything is a watered down version of their objectives. All around the world governments appear to be ineffective in dealing with their nation’s problems. What we get are watered down policies that add up to nothing more than stop gaps or feel good messages. — Brett
This is potentially just historicism. You've no alternative history of consensus-run groups during the same era to compare with. — Isaac
The point is there's a lot more going on than increases in consensus politics. Singling out one aspect to blame when others are much closer in the causal chain is mistaken. — Isaac
What else might you suggest is behind what I’m calling a watered down version of people’s expectations. — Brett
In my view people's expectations have been watered down by advertising and the media. — Isaac
here in Australia Prime Ministers can lose their position as a result of poor polling — Brett
In the context of social relations I would describe power as "the ability to impose one's will upon another".
I consider that immoral, thus any government that utilizes such a principle I consider illegitimate. — Tzeentch
here in Australia Prime Ministers can lose their position as a result of poor polling
— Brett
Why do you think that is?Is it a complete coincidence that people are so easily swayed by something as rhetorical as polling and this just happens to make extremely profitable consumer base? — Isaac
It’s the politicians who are swayed by polling. But I don’t see the connection between this and business anyway. — Brett
In social science and politics, power is the capacity of an individual to influence the conduct (behaviour) of others. — Brett
... however, as social beings, the same concept is seen as good and as something inherited or given for exercising humanistic objectives that will help, move, and empower others as well ... The use of power need not involve force or the threat of force (coercion). An example of using power without oppression is the concept "soft power," as compared to hard power. — Brett
In the context of social relations I would describe power as "the ability to impose one's will upon another". I consider that immoral, thus any government that utilizes such a principle I consider illegitimate. — Tzeentch
I think you're missing a couple of steps in your thinking. Politicians are swayed by polling because we live in a democracy and so what most people appear to want is what gets them elected, right? so your connection between that and watered down policies which don't make any real progress is only valid if {what most people want} results in a watered down policy which makes no real progress. — Isaac
Isn't thereby a government that exercises power imposing its will upon others? — Tzeentch
In that sense, the problem of power abuse is mostly caused by people who refuse to take revenge, — alcontali
As far as I am concerned, you are allowed to "impose your will upon another" — alcontali
family.
As far as I am concerned, you are allowed to "impose your will upon another"
— alcontali — ZhouBoTong
You are really saying it is morally admirable to force your will onto others. Good luck selling that. — ZhouBoTong
I don’t think it necessarily means it’s morally admirable. — Brett
One way of imposing your will on another is to argue with their point of view and convince them that they’re wrong. — Brett
And if someone was morally contemptible, a paedophile for instance, then why wouldn’t anyone try to impose their will on that person? — Brett
I used to think like that, but in the meanwhile, I have corrected my point of view. As far as I am concerned, you are allowed to "impose your will upon another" on the condition that you are willing to risk your life and die for what you believe in. — alcontali
Of course it is. That’s why they were elected, to enact the policies they were voted in on. To not do so would be a betrayal of the majority. — Brett
Your position is a moral one. But your position isn’t clear to me. — Brett
Modern society has decided that revenge is immoral and hinders the function of society. — ZhouBoTong
The Qisas or equivalence verse in Quran is,[1]
O ye who believe! the law of equality is prescribed to you in cases of murder: the free for the free, the slave for the slave, the woman for the woman. But if any remission is made by the brother of the slain, then grant any reasonable demand, and compensate him with handsome gratitude, this is a concession and a Mercy from your Lord. After this whoever exceeds the limits shall be in grave penalty.
— Quran 2:178
The Qur'an allows the aggrieved party to receive monetary compensation (blood money, diyya, دية) instead of qisas,[6] or forfeit the right of qiṣāṣ as an act of charity or in atonement for the victim family's past sins.
We ordained therein for them: "Life for life, eye for eye, nose for nose, ear for ear, tooth for tooth, and wounds equal for equal." But if any one remits the retaliation by way of charity, it is an act of atonement for himself. And if any fail to judge by (the light of) what Allah hath revealed, they are (No better than) wrong-doers.
— Quran 5:45 — Wikipedia on the Qisas
"Revenge" is a very weak concept morally anyway. — ZhouBoTong
Do those who take power have the right to take it and wield it? — Brett
Forcing people to do things they do not want to do is immoral. — Tzeentch
For example, is a government willing to "risk its life" for its subjects? — Tzeentch
Bureaucracy is a construction by which a person is conveniently separated from the consequences of his or her actions.
If you do not take risks for your opinion, you are nothing. — Nassim Taleb in 'Skin in the Game'
I like to force people to leave others alone sometimes... dunno 'bout you. I would not call such action immoral. Yet, on pains of coherence or special pleading, you must. — creativesoul
it’s a risky move to take a clear position on issues, better to talk around it, seek out some “consensus” and never actually take a chance on what you believe is the right and necessary thing to do. As a result you get ” a watered down policy which makes no real progress — Brett
Something’s behind it and I don’t think it’s because “a small number of groups for whom it is in their best interests to strongly declare the extent to which they are opposed to the other groups”. It’s the response that’s the problem. — Brett
So, what about the minority that didn't elect them?
A case could be made that the power a government has over the people who voted for it is legitimate.
However, as long as there are dissidents, the government is imposing its will on people who do not wish it. What possible moral basis could there be for this? (in the context of government) — Tzeentch
Power over people is acquired in only one of two ways. It is either given by consent, or it is usurped. To which method of acquisition are you referring? — creativesoul
Bureaucracy is a construction by which a person is conveniently separated from the consequences of his or her actions.
If you do not take risks for your opinion, you are nothing. — Nassim Taleb in 'Skin in the Game'
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