The problem with utopia, Fukuyma says, — csalisbury
those who do have the right view can't get the kick of explaining, scolding and berating those who don't. — csalisbury
Stop being an idiot. Why is carbon dioxide stable? Because one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms collectively form a lower energy state than the same three atoms wandering around by themselves. — apokrisis
So out of spite, you will spread your arms, step off the cliff, and thus demonstrate your contempt for the constraints of gravity? — apokrisis
We are the end-point. Our world has already been shaped by a succession of increasingly specified constraints that start at the brute physical level, work their way up through biology, sociology and culture, and right on through in terms of our community, our family history, every other aspect of our world that is shaping out habits of thought. — apokrisis
The free world is losing it’s meal ticket. The elites are watching their power wane. No more free rides. — NOS4A2
I’m indifferent to the degree it doesn’t impact on my freedoms. That is the “personal” answer anyone would give who is unable to talk about a wider view. — apokrisis
creativesoul
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I’m indifferent to the degree it doesn’t impact on my freedoms. That is the “personal” answer anyone would give who is unable to talk about a wider view.
— apokrisis
The health and safety of all Americans is not at all a concern so long as it does not impact on your(one's own) personal freedoms?
That's the mindset that is common, as you've hinted at, that is a part of the unraveling. The overvalued notions of individual freedom and liberty at the expense of the community. — creativesoul
It's all about enshrining narratives. It is ironic that the sacrifices and community-oriented nature of WWII are seen as patriotic, yet by some of the same people, will not be applied in any other realm of time, space, and governance. It is also interesting how the idealized post-war years of the late 40s-70s were run by mainly moderate to liberal policies with upwards of 90% tax rate for wealthy.
Thus the narratives of sacrifice and community are only revered when crystallized in nostalgic times and never to be actually implemented in the present. The narrative of individualism at all costs for government-mandated community action reigns supreme at all times for some folks. Why then and not now? People need to have something to rebel against? Even if it is themselves and their fellow citizens they are rebelling against in the bigger picture? Narrative of individualism and falsely associating it with a form of "freedom" is too ingrained for many people. — schopenhauer1
That's the mindset that is common, as you've hinted at, that is a part of the unraveling. The overvalued notions of individual freedom and liberty at the expense of the community.
— creativesoul
Allow me a loud AMEN! Especially for that last sentence. — Frank Apisa
That's the mindset that is common, as you've hinted at, that is a part of the unraveling. The overvalued notions of individual freedom and liberty at the expense of the community. — creativesoul
If you aren’t free to be unaffected by things then you aren’t really free. But there is no point to freedom unless it is so as to be able make choices in forming your communities - your social interest groups. — apokrisis
Isn’t the US unravelling in the sense that two opposed interest groups are forming more strongly - the woke against the rednecks? — apokrisis
And aren’t both of these something like coercive tyrannies if you don’t particularly care to get involved with them?
When it comes to the pandemic response, What strikes the outsider about the US is its social confusion. — apokrisis
What could hold it back is that while it is a highly creative nation in terms tech and economics, it seems very poor at rewriting its political institutions to fit the times. The constitution and federation of states locks it into the past. The political sphere has long been captured by billionaires, industry lobbies and elite interest groups. — apokrisis
To the second point, you've summarized the general idea underwriting the laws(now defunct) that forbade black people from buying property in some community or another because they wanted to exercise their freedom to choose their own community members. — creativesoul
To quite the contrary, I think that that is the opposite of unraveling. — creativesoul
I see you are pretending to take seriously the ironic answer so as to run away from the actual answer which followed.
Not so subtle. Quite transparent in fact. — apokrisis
I agree that history has a direction. — csalisbury
That's the mindset that is common, as you've hinted at, that is a part of the unraveling. The overvalued notions of individual freedom and liberty at the expense of the community.
— creativesoul
That’s the bind. If you aren’t free to be unaffected by things then you aren’t really free. But there is no point to freedom unless it is so as to be able make choices in forming your communities - your social interest groups. — apokrisis
Ah, the fantasy of unfettered freedom. A myth, at best. A weapon to be used against others, at worst. No one on the face of this earth is unaffected by things.
To the second point, you've summarized the general idea underwriting the laws(now defunct) that forbade black people from buying property in some community or another because they wanted to exercise their freedom to choose their own community members. — creativesoul
You are being terribly literal. But yes. Liberal democracy would mean being free to fight for such arrangements and free to contest such arrangements. — apokrisis
It would help if you actually read what I say. What I said was that two cohesive interest groups are emerging via a dialectical confrontation. — apokrisis
Woke people are emerging. Rednecks have been with us for a very long time. — creativesoul
In the interview with George Friedman I cited earlier, he makes the claim that the myth of the individual is comparatively recent, coming into it's own after Nixon as part of the neoconservative economic reforms of the following twenty years.
If that's the case then perhaps these myths are not as fixed as it might seem. Will the failure of the myth of individualism see the rise of a more communally oriented United States? — Banno
Armed militia would worry me. — apokrisis
My pessimism has me thinking a move to the right is the more likely outcome. Along with it, a further rejection of scientific advice and rational discourse. — Banno
Those have been around for a long time as well. — creativesoul
I was thinking more long term. For Trump the narcissist, , power is unimportant; what counts is being the centre of attention. Power was a means to that end, found by cunning rather than strategy.
But there will be those watching who aim for power, and can form strategy. — Banno
That's the mindset that is common, as you've hinted at, that is a part of the unraveling. The overvalued notions of individual freedom and liberty at the expense of the community.
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