Most happiness with social democracy?I guess I agree with some of that. But why not model our government after what we know works and results in the most happiness (social democracy)? — ToothyMaw
Wishful thinking from you, NOS.Quit playing identity politics. It is just as superstitious and divisive as when the right uses it, and for the same reasons. — NOS4A2
I thought it was obvious I wasn’t speaking of some “general individual happiness”, which sounds to me incoherent. Sorry, I should have been more clear. By “individual happiness”, I mean the happiness as determined by each individual. — NOS4A2
the arrangement, if one is required, — NOS4A2
the arrangement, if one is required, should allow individuals to pursuit their own happiness instead of providing happiness to whichever group of individuals hold a majority. — NOS4A2
Ready-made identities suit us perfectly. We don’t need to consider a person on his own when we need only apply an identity and be done with it. Of course, this is to misidentify rather than identify, but who cares at this point? — NOS4A2
Yep. That's the name of the game.Ready-made identities suit us perfectly. We don’t need to consider a person on his own when we need only apply an identity and be done with it. Of course, this is to misidentify rather than identify, but who cares at this point? — NOS4A2
But if you believe everyone has a right to be provided with a minimum standard of living, why won’t you provide it to them? — NOS4A2
But this is an individualist, laissez faire system, such as the one theorized by the founders, but betrayed by everyone henceforth. — NOS4A2
The worry for me is, if you limit caring to paying taxes, why should anyone care for those who cannot take care of themselves if they’ve already done it? — NOS4A2
I think some sacrifices for the greater good are okay, such as taxes. We get a very large utility margin from taxing the super-rich, for instance, something that I believe is necessary because they won't willingly give enough on their own. They don't even suffer for it, really. — ToothyMaw
how about being exploited by corporations, which are fundamentally amoral, for the maximum gain of a few who couldn't care less about your aspirations and desires. We have genuine wage-slaves that have no time to pursue anything other than their next paycheck, let alone meaningful happiness. That's a genuinely shitty arrangement, not the rich and super-rich being taxed. — ToothyMaw
And if you want to make it about rights: everyone should have a right to a decent minimum standard of living, full-stop. If people can't support themselves or their families or their spouses working multiple jobs, it's time to supplement their income. — ToothyMaw
You assume too much. My post was gathered 100% from ToothyMaw's OP. I was wondering why no one could get what he was saying.L'elephant is a person who is within more of the far right culture, so he's probably heard something similar to what you were stating. — Philosophim
There is nothing about your conditions, or anyone else's, that will ever create a warrant on me to provide you with any sustenance. — Garrett Travers
Awesome — so first and foremost let’s abolish private property, which is created and protected by state power. — Xtrix
If having enough to eat and live isn’t a right, neither are property rights. — Xtrix
Unless you can relate it to the growing noise about supposed wokeness in our military. I feel like these people are testing the waters to see if it will *float. Hopefully it won't. — ToothyMaw
Perino’s Fox News colleague Tucker Carlson brought the issue of wokeness in the military to the forefront when he mocked President Joe Biden for prioritizing things like maternity flight suits and hairstyle regulations for female service members while China was focusing on developing masculinity, building new islands and developing hypersonic missile technology.
Yes. A lot of tax payer money (and new debt) going to the military-industrial establishment. Nothing is more lucrative than government demands for acceleration of a weapons program. Or establish an entire new industry.(CNN, Jan 29th, 2022) The Pentagon is preparing to push the CEOs of America's largest defense companies to accelerate hypersonic weapons development by hosting a high-level meeting next week with Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin.
The purpose is to "light a fire underneath the entire hypersonic industry" and "encourage industry to pick up the pace," according to two executives at two defense companies who've been invited to attend the meeting which is scheduled for Thursday.
The United States has "a lot of catching up to do very quickly," according to US Space Force Gen. David Thompson, after recent hypersonic weapons tests by China and Russia surprised US national security officials and indicated the US is falling behind their main geopolitical rivals.
We were talking about the poor, just to be sure. But it appears you’re talking someone broken down on the side of the road. Would you extend the same kindness to the homeless in your community, as you would someone who cannot fix their car? — NOS4A2
No, private property is almost exclusively protected by individual owners — Garrett Travers
The "private property requires a state," argument — Garrett Travers
The state has quite literally NEVER protected any peice of my property. — Garrett Travers
If having enough to eat and live isn’t a right, neither are property rights.
— Xtrix
This is where you're having serious trouble. You have a right to live, you do not have a right to my labor so that you may live. It is not your right to dictate that my body to be used as your giver of sustenance, that's called slavery. — Garrett Travers
You canot have your right to property recognized, without also recognizing my right to property, which ensures that you don't get to eat my food, which I accrued through my labor, without my permission. . — Garrett Travers
Would you extend the same kindness to the homeless in your community, as you would someone who cannot fix their car? — NOS4A2
And I would never help someone on the side of the road as if it were some duty, but only to be kind. — Garrett Travers
It is not. The rights of private property are gifts from the state. Those rights are also protected by the state. If a bum is on your property, you can call the police. Most people wouldn’t open fire. If a group with greater numbers or greater weaponry wants your land — the state, with their law enforcement and military and technology, will protect you — because the law says you’re the owner. — Xtrix
The right to eat and live is just as much a right as property rights — which also requires taxes to support. If we support one, we should support another. — Xtrix
I’d prefer my money go to a starving child, yes. That’s the greater good, in my view. The government, which I fund through taxes, should do this. Not in agreement? Fine — then give up property rights as well, which is also a state supported gift. — Xtrix
What’s slavery is being essentially forced to work for wages. It’s called wage slavery. I have a little say in government — I have zero say when it comes to the profits I generate for the owners I work for. Sociopaths usually have little to say about this dynamic, oddly. I guess it’s really “freedom.” Government is also the real problem, in this fantasy. — Xtrix
No one is asking anything from you. If you want to live in a cave, go do it. If you want to be part of society, and contribute to it through taxes — then those resources should go to more than protecting property rights. They should also go to helping children who are starving. Especially in a country of abundance. Most people don’t own property anyway. — Xtrix
“I feed my kids because I want to — not because it’s the law!” — Xtrix
I don’t help people because it’s a “duty.” It’s because I’m not a sociopath who thinks everything can be reduced to “trade.” — Xtrix
There are no rights but legal rights, e.g. rights having the sanction of law, recognized as such, and which may be enforced through the mechanism of the law. It's sad but true, sorry. What we call "rights" if they're not legal rights are what we think should be legal rights, but are not; which we think should be honored, regardless of whether they are. But what we want, what we think we're entitled to, is simply that and no more, absent incorporation into the law--wanabee legal rights. Why speak of them at all, except in the context of seeking their inclusion in the law? As well declare yourself master of the universe (or sovereign citizen, for that matter). — Ciceronianus
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