One is an idiot, if someone thinks the below argument will float:
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. — ssu
Lead by reason instead of sociopathy. — NOS4A2
I can give you the right to borrow my lawnmower whenever you require it. Rights are bestowed by men, and not all men are legislators. — NOS4A2
Sweet Jesus, wanting to tax people to provide for those who cannot provide for themselves is sociopathy?
Yes, but we need an arrangement that will guarantee that the rights bestowed by citizens to other citizens and the private arrangements that they make are protected and honored, do we not? Don't we need some sort of basic legislation to do this?
So you really would think that the Biden administration would think that maternity flight suits are more important than the threat of Chinese hypersonic missiles are designed to destroy US aircraft carriers?Then maybe I'm an idiot. It sounds like exactly the kind of thing that will float to me, quite frankly. — ToothyMaw
Either rights are a commonly understood recognition of the sovereignty of individual boundaries, or, simply put, anything goes. In a world of no rights, one has no business ever arguing for or against any action undertake by a human, as they have no right to do so. — Garrett Travers
I can give you the right to borrow my lawnmower whenever you require it. — NOS4A2
I think it quite possible to determine what we, and others, should or should not do without recourse to the concept of "rights." And I think one is able to do so without needing to assume the existence of some right-giving, non-human authority, which I consider a benefit. — Ciceronianus
I can claim the right to do whatever I please, and likewise can claim that others may not do things in violation of my rights. That is what may create a situation where it's impossible to maintain that actions taken may not be taken. — Ciceronianus
Absent a common understanding, you would say. But what, and where, is that common understanding? Do you think what you conceive to be your rights are recognized by all, and would not be violated by them absent any penalty which you believe is appropriate (and which you may not be able to impose)? — Ciceronianus
The concept of rights is a useful one for purposes of limiting the power of governments and regulating conduct. But governmental power may be limited without the assertion of a right, by a prohibition for example. — Ciceronianus
I would simply caution throwing out that framework prematurely, dig? — Garrett Travers
Ever read Tom Wolfe's article Radical Chic: That Party at Lenny's? It's about a party Leonard Bernstein held for the Black Panthers in 1970. Bernstein would respond "I dig absolutely" to statements made by the Panthers. I'm showing my age by referring to it, and no doubt by thinking of it in response to your question.
Not that you're a Black Panther. In any case, I do dig. Absolutely. — Ciceronianus
This is objectively false and I have provided you a small article on it. — Garrett Travers
Private property is not a gift from the state, it is a demand from the people — Garrett Travers
You have the right to eat and live, you do not have the right to my labor to ensure that you do. And no, taxation is never required for any of this. — Garrett Travers
The government purports to fund this, while also sending billions to foreign countries and funding, again, murderous wars all over the world for decades. — Garrett Travers
And no, my property rights don't vanish because the state stops stealing my money. Come to my home and attempt to steal my property, I'll show you how property rights are ensured. — Garrett Travers
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
You aren't forced by any other entity than the state which encloses the entirey of this section of the continent, thereby guaranteeing people of your philosophical leanings cannot erect commons on which you can escape the Free Market and private property. It is not employers forcing you into the market, it is the state. — Garrett Travers
Again, private property is not by and large protected by the state, it is predominantly, and it isn't close, protected by individual property owners. — Garrett Travers
Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology — Garrett Travers
who thinks everything can be reduced to “trade.”
— Xtrix
Only a sociopath would use objectively true statements as a means to describe someone as a sociopath — Garrett Travers
Now you just need to organize with others who do the same and on a grander scale. — NOS4A2
I actually promote this idea. — Garrett Travers
Private property is a gift from the state. I don’t care how many private security guards one has. For the millions who can’t afford bodyguards and private security, this is irrelevant. It’s also irrelevant to the law and to rights. Private property rights don’t come from the tooth fairy— they come from the state. No matter how many security guards you can afford. — Xtrix
It’s a right. But the right to healthcare and something to eat? Guess it’s not “demanded” enough.
It wasn’t demanded by the people. It was enshrined in law — in the US’s case, in the constitution. By landholding slaveowners. — Xtrix
Property rights are enforced by the state, which is funded by taxes. Providing for the poor can be done by the state, funded by taxes. When you say “my labor,” if not your taxes I don’t know what you’re fantasizing about. Go clutch your gun if you need to— but no one is coming for “your labor.” No one cares. What I’m talking about is TAXES and how government spends those taxes. If they can spend trillions on defending your private property, they can spend some on starving children. — Xtrix
Property is a right granted and enforced by states. The fact that some people (mostly businesses) hire security guards (many of whom are ex cops) on their own is completely irrelevant. Besides, our military, which protects the entire country (and all property within it), is not a private entity— in fact, we all spent 700 billion dollars on it this year alone. — Xtrix
Predictable. :lol: Called that one.
Ayn Rand’s political philosophy is a joke. Logically coherent, no doubt — but a complete fantasy. And one used to do untold harm. And yes, I’ve unfortunately read a number of her works, fiction and otherwise. — Xtrix
It’s objectively true that everything can be reduced to trade. Imagine that. — Xtrix
You’re not promoting anything except plagiarizing Ayn Rand books. — Xtrix
It surely is a right. My behavior is such that I allow you to use it, yes, just as my behavior is to allow you to speak when I give you the right to speak freely. — NOS4A2
There are no “rights.” People functioned just fine for thousands of years without this concept. It’s a useful construct, but nothing more. — Xtrix
I don't think I understand you. Are you saying I don't have the right to speak freely unless you give it to me?
Those people objectively accrue and protect their own property. — Garrett Travers
Healthcare and something to eat are property, they must be traded for because you do not have the right to the labor of others to provide property for you. — Garrett Travers
Property rights are enforced predominatly by private owners, I have already shown you that. — Garrett Travers
Taxes is theft of labor, of which the government steals from both you and I, — Garrett Travers
Property is a right granted and enforced by states. The fact that some people (mostly businesses) hire security guards (many of whom are ex cops) on their own is completely irrelevant. Besides, our military, which protects the entire country (and all property within it), is not a private entity— in fact, we all spent 700 billion dollars on it this year alone.
— Xtrix
I don't care if it's enshrined in law, it is protected exponentially more often by private owners. — Garrett Travers
90 pound Russian lady single-handly destroyed your political framework — Garrett Travers
Come back to the thread when you have arguments that can withstand scutiny. — Garrett Travers
If there are no rights, then you have no business telling us what your opinion is on ethical topic, you've no right to share. — Garrett Travers
usual sociopathic manner — Garrett Travers
I’m sorry you don’t understand what property rights are, nor apparently what the law is. — Xtrix
Yes, maybe if you repeat Ayn Rand another few times it’ll become true. — Xtrix
You do not have the right to the labor of others to provide you with property rights either. Nor the military to protect you. So like I said, go live in a cave if you don’t want to be part of the civilized world. — Xtrix
Imagine believing that feeding children and providing healthcare for people should be a “trade.” — Xtrix
Which is, again, irrelevant. “I don’t care if property rights are enshrined in law.” Excellent argument.
I “protect” my grill and shoes more often than the state. Ditto my street. Cops and FBI rarely come around. What does this have to do with property rights? Ah yes: nothing. — Xtrix
Gotta love the objectivist cult. Nothing if not predictable. — Xtrix
Yet here I am sharing it.
So much for that theory. — Xtrix
Well done, Donald Trump. Take a claim that accurately describes your philosophy, then regurgitate it and hope it catches on. So very clever.
You’re a follower of a sociopathic cult. You fool no one. — Xtrix
but we have to fight the fascists and neo-liberals — ToothyMaw
I do, the concept doesn't require the law to enforce it. — Garrett Travers
Feeding children and providing healthcare is not any duty of mine, simple as that. — Garrett Travers
You keep saying the state protects property. So, doesn't matter. What matters is, property does not require the state's protection and isn't protected by law enforecement more than property owners as it currently stands. — Garrett Travers
don't expect anyone here to take you seriously. — Garrett Travers
You are here sharing, sweetheart, because you have the right. — Garrett Travers
you will have no business being upset with what anyone does to you, as you have no rights otherwise. — Garrett Travers
Take some drugs and think about it, Mike. — NOS4A2
It does. Without military, you have no state. Without state, you have no property rights to protect and “enforce” through your security guards. — Xtrix
Yes— how very Ayn Rand of you. That devil altruism, the real destroyer of worlds.
I’ll go with sharper thinkers, who actually understood the importance of the commons. Like Aristotle. You stick with Rand. — Xtrix
Totally irrelevant, but also happens to be untrue. Why? Because for the fourth time: states grant the legal right of private property — a state is protected by the military. Regardless of whether BlackRock hires private security guards. — Xtrix
Yes, because *I’m* the one not taken seriously. :lol:
Well done, Mr Trump. “No, YOU’RE the puppet.” — Xtrix
Oh okay. So anything we do, we do because we have the right to. Got it. So if I slept with you wife, I did so because I have the right to. No wait, I don’t have the right to do that. So if I don’t, it’s because I have the right not to. If I speak, it’s because it’s my right. Don’t speak, because it’s my right to remain silent. — Xtrix
Nah, I’ll say and feel what I want. Whether I’ve heard of “rights” or not. Wikipedia the history of rights — fairly interesting. Not as simple as whatever some Russian lady says they are, but still worthwhile. — Xtrix
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