It does. Without military, you have no state. Without state, you have no property rights to protect and “enforce” through your security guards.
— Xtrix
Secirty guards aren't law — Garrett Travers
None of the above statement changes the fact that I am not responsible for the children other people created and abused, or their healthcare. — Garrett Travers
What's been in dispute is the necessity of the state to do so. — Garrett Travers
No one has claimed security guards are “law.” Quite the opposite in fact. The law is what grants property rights— in the real world. True, they could be handed down from Zeus— but that’s irrelevant. — Xtrix
But our government could be — and should be. I’m happy to see my tax money go there. You aren’t. Fair enough. You and Scrooge would get along very well. — Xtrix
No, that hasn’t once been in dispute — except while talking to yourself. You brought that irrelevant point up, not me.
“Property rights are granted by states through laws.”
“Yes, but most protect their own property.”
Still wrong, incidentally — but even if true, totally irrelevant.
Sorry that you’re struggling. — Xtrix
No one has claimed security guards are “law.” Quite the opposite in fact. The law is what grants property rights— in the real world. True, they could be handed down from Zeus— but that’s irrelevant.
— Xtrix
No, the law recognizes that my property rights are not to be violated, as there are no rights without property rights. It doesn't grant me them, it recognizes them. The founders of this country made that explicitly clear. — Garrett Travers
Private property cannot exist without a political system that defines its existence, its use, and the conditions of its exchange. That is, private property is defined and exists only because of politics.
You may have your feelings about government, that's fine by me. What is not fine by me is you, or anyone else, choosing for me. — Garrett Travers
When you give that authority to the state, it uses such authority to double the harm for every good it does. You know this just as I do. — Garrett Travers
Except they aren't. They're recognized by law — Garrett Travers
It is not a concept that requires law. — Garrett Travers
How about this, you stop insulting me, and I'll quit insulting you, and let's have this discussion and see if we can't work something out? — Garrett Travers
You already know where I'm coming from: I follow the precepts of Stoicism, Objectivism, Utilitarianism, and Virtue Ethics; and I generally get where you're coming from, a general left leaning perspective on social issues and what appears to be basically Deontological Ethics. — Garrett Travers
As if property rights are handed down by God. Irrelevant. What is relevant is that they're legal rights granted and enforced by states -- i.e., a gift from states. — Xtrix
There are plenty of "rights" without property rights. There's no private property in China, for example, yet they go on just fine anyway. — Xtrix
I suppose if we define property as literally anything, then you can get your answer in one step. But I was assuming we're talking about the real world. In the real world, we can talk about legality. What's much harder to discuss is rights as "natural" or "God-given" or something of that sort. — Xtrix
(2) Property rights -- or any rights -- as legal entities.
I'm talking about (2). We could argue about (1), but I'm willing to grant it. In which case, whether states "recognize" or "grant" rights is irrelevant. — Xtrix
What's relevant is that they create the legal right. Perhaps the Native Americans had "rights" to the land they inhabited for centuries -- I would argue there's something to that. Did they have legal rights? Unfortunately no. That doesn't mean they didn't fight for their lands -- of course they did. — Xtrix
Like I said before, there's no logically inconsistent about objectivism, in my view. I was into Ayn Rand for a while myself -- and still respect a lot of what she says. But I think her views on capitalism are in part a reaction to her experiences of the Soviet Union, and what was taken as socialism/communism. So she pushed the other way, in favor of laissez-faire -- but that's an ideal, one that has never really been tried, one that may not even be possible, and one where even if implemented could arguably lead to destruction. I don't share the value that competition in the free market leads to all kinds of great things. — Xtrix
And for full disclosure: I think we need to move towards anarchism (in the traditional sense), i.e., democracy all around (including the workplace) and then, in the long run, perhaps a system along the lines Plato discussed in the Republic, or Nietzsche hints about. — Xtrix
And no, they do not go on just fine. They've been the conductors of multiple genocides and millions of people live in squaler and heartache. — Garrett Travers
Okay, now were getting somehwere. Alright, so you grant one, that rights are inalienable. — Garrett Travers
To reiterate, you maintain your rights when not violating the rights of others. — Garrett Travers
It is not and never has been the purpose of Laissez-Faire to lead to anything other than the freedom of individuals to produce as they see fit, granted they respect the rights of others. That is the only point to Capitalism. Not that it is going to produce all these great things, which, it simply happens to. — Garrett Travers
I happen to be an anarchist, myself. As far as I am concerened, states, all of them, have lost there right to exist long ago. — Garrett Travers
The only proper functions of a government are: the police, to protect you from criminals; the army, to protect you from foreign invaders; and the courts, to protect your property and contracts from breach or fraud by others, to settle disputes by rational rules, according to objective law.
One thing I can say about markets, they have never produced such carnage or tragedy outside of state influence. — Garrett Travers
I'll ask you, do you see how we're far more compatible than dissimilar? I'd like you to. — Garrett Travers
Yes, plus endless wars, overwhelming inequality, global hegemony keeping many nations oppressed, etc.
And China's pretty bad too. — Xtrix
Yeah but this ignores that we live in a community. To speak of individual rights is fine, but we also have an impact on others around us -- every choice we make. In some ways, even the guy who goes to live in a cave is having an impact on others. — Xtrix
I think we can and should ask more of our collective efforts than this. — Xtrix
They've only existed with state influence. So yes, if we blame slavery, the crash of '29 and the depression, the crash of 1907, the crash of 1987, the crash of 2008, etc., the monopolies we see today and throughout history, the stagnant wages, the outsourcing of jobs, the shuttering of factories, the financialization of the economy, the massive CEO compensations and stock buybacks, etc., to the state -- then that's simply selection bias. Anything that happens that's negative...that's because of the state. Anything positive is because of the free market and capitalism. — Xtrix
Corporate America -- and even good capitalist -- knows very well that they need the state. They need the laws, the protection, the infrastructure, the subsidized labor, the handling of externalities, the bailouts and the favorable monetary policy of the Fed. They also know that when things go wrong, the people get angry, and revolution is always a possibility. They're not stupid. So who's to blame for the widespread discontent? Easy answer: the government! The president. The congress. Corrupt politicians. And we see that. It's Trump, or Ted Cruz, or Obama, or Biden, or whoever. I rarely hear the average American talk about Jamie Dimon or Larry Fink, or the Business Roundtable, or ALEC, or the WEF, etc. There's stirrings of it a little more these days, after Occupy and the Tea Party, but that's a fraction. Both the mainstream left and right put all of their attention on the government. I think it's all a mistake if we ignore the major powers that control the government. — Xtrix
Rights do not require that you hear of them, nor understand anything of their history, but only that your sovereignty as an individual is recognized — Garrett Travers
The way I look at it, the value of the sovereignty and protection of freedom of the individual must grasped from a ‘selfish’ perspective. That is , we give such such protections to others because that’s the only way to assure them for ourselves. But I think this applies as well to the political atmosphere of our urban communities, in which support for government taxation and participation in aspects of life from environmental protectionand climate change mitigation to gun control to protection of alternate genders is done out of such ‘selfish’ motives. Why the willingness of over-educated urban and academic ( and increasingly , high tech corporate) America to sacrifice individual sovereignty when traditional small town America finds such public interference to be an intolerable breach of rights? — Joshs
I prefer to talk about these in terms of individual innovation and creativity. My theory is that 21at century academic and educated urban cultures are organizing themselves i. increasing complex ways. They are globally networked and interactive such as to promote continual innovation. I think the willingness for sacrifice of individual
sovereignty is for the sake of a richer potential
for individual expression of creativity. — Joshs
The left encourages publically structures social experimentation and manipulation. because they see person as a nodes in a giant feedback loop that has the potential to enrich all participants, not just as participants in a larger whole. but as individuals who can paradoxically express their individuality more and more fully through such means. — Joshs
I think the idea of social engineering is so profoundly threatening to traditional Americans because they simply don’t belief that human beings are able to understand each other well enough for such engineering to be anything but a disaster, or simply because they are for indicating freedom. Public projects whose inequivocal value is obvious to them they do support ( like the trans-continental railroad or the interstate highway system)
This objection comes up over and over again in conservative think tank writings I’ve followed over the years. They simply believe that it is hubris to think humans can mess around with God-given or natural human nature and make any sense of it, much less
turn it into social engineering policies. so best to leave it to its own devices , the invisible hand.
The accusation of selfishness leveled against the right from liberals I think misreads this skepticism and caution as a lack of caring. — Joshs
Nicely put and I suspect this is correct. Misreading skepticism and caution as a lack of caring is a new one for me which I will mull over. — Tom Storm
The idea that I am not caring if I discriminate in my considerations on whether I will provide aid to someone is bizarre. It's what everyone does in any given situation. You don't just open your home to beggers and orphans. — Garrett Travers
China is much, much worse. — Garrett Travers
Yeah but this ignores that we live in a community. To speak of individual rights is fine, but we also have an impact on others around us -- every choice we make. In some ways, even the guy who goes to live in a cave is having an impact on others.
— Xtrix
No, it is specifically this concession that allows for the existence of community. If you respect the sovereign boundaries of your fellow human, community emerges as a by-product, and so does respect and empathy for one's circumstances. Sovereignty is the cover charge to peaceful society. — Garrett Travers
Providing for the general welfare does not mean forced federal taxation to pay for any social cause statists can get their hands on — Garrett Travers
Anything positive is because of the free market and capitalism.
— Xtrix
It's not like I wish it to be that way, my friend. It simply is that way. — Garrett Travers
Capitalism is nothing more than a domain that recognizes the right of every individual to accrue, exchange, and produce private property. It is inherently anti-state. Systems that show any disregard to this model, predicated on anything other than protecting the citizens from harm, are in direct violation of Capitalism. I just described every single state that has ever existed. It is the state that sanctioned slavery, it is the state that caused the depression, it was states the ground 100mill humans into nothingness in the last century, and so on... That was not the recognition of every human to own and trade and produce private property. It was the exact opposite. Even simple taxation is the violation of Capitalism, as my private funds that are my property are stolen from me without recourse, involuntarily, and with no hope of negotiation. I could go all day on this topic.
Discontent? The internet. This always happens in history when a mass communicative paradigme shift occurs. — Garrett Travers
On what metric? Let's be concrete. I agree -- I wouldn't want to live there -- but a lot has been overblown, while ignoring the good (it's often said that "capitalism has risen more people out of poverty than any system", for example, when it's overwhelmingly China that's responsible for this -- is that "capitalism"?). — Xtrix
What I'm talking about is externalities. I may do something that's good for me, or for my company -- or may make a trade that's beneficial to me and another person. What doesn't get considered in all this are the effects to third parties. Pollution is a good example, as is climate change. Right now we're heading to disaster with the warming planet. Why? Because fossil fuel companies, using the same tactics as the tobacco companies, have successfully delayed any transition away from their products -- all for short term profits. Can we fault them when they're doing what companies (supposedly) are required to do? — Xtrix
That's capitalism. It's based in private ownership and private profit. The less its regulated -- i.e., moving more towards "freedom" of the market -- the worse things get for the rest of the country, as we see in the neoliberal era. Global warming is one example -- but there are countless others. Quite apart from politics, something is going awry. It's just that people blame it on different things. One side says it's the government, the deep state, the bureaucracy, or the liberals; the other side says it's the Republican party, the 1%, etc. — Xtrix
Nor does it mean taxation to pay for what Rand considers proper functions of government -- protecting private property, law enforcement, courts, etc. I didn't agree to that. You have no right taking my money to pay for those things either. Can't have it both ways. As long as their is taxation, however, and billions are spent on military funding and corporate America, I think we can take a page from other countries and provide national healthcare as well, etc. Given especially that we're the wealthiest country on earth (or maybe that's China now -- but we're close). — Xtrix
Saying capitalism is a "domain that recognizes" is incoherent to me. You're defining it out of any relevance. Capitalism is a socioeconomic system, one based on private ownership and unique in its relationship between employers and employees. Like feudalism before it, we have a different organization of power. — Xtrix
But what about corporate allocation of profits? How is the state responsible for those decisions? They're not. This is one area which I mentioned specifically for the very reason that the state plays no role. It's up to the board of directors of these institutions. So why all the stock buybacks? If we say it's because the government, the SEC under Reagan and guided by Friedman ideas, changed the rules -- then yes, you're mostly right. So I guess in that case we should re-implement the regulations that were in place prior to 1982? Or is that anti-free market? — Xtrix
I think the discontent goes far beyond the Internet. The Internet -- particularly social media -- has exaggerated it, but the feelings have been brewing for years. Which isn't a surprise when you look at the numbers. Look at real wages, at debt, at the cost of education and home ownership, at healthcare outcomes, at the enormous transfer of money from the bottom 90% to the top 10% over 40 years (something like 50 trillion dollars, according to the RAND corporation), etc. Yeah, it's no wonder people are pissed -- left, right, and center. — Xtrix
Well, there are birth restrictions, and active on-going genocide, forced poverty, ideological suppression, just to name a couple things that should serve the purpose. — Garrett Travers
the proper way of saying that is: to the degree that China has exapanded rights of property and the freedom of markets to operate naturally, is the exact degree to which people in China have been lifted out of poverty. It isn't Capitalism, much closer to Fascism, or Socialism (as administered by the state). — Garrett Travers
There isn't single Capitalist that I know of, that assesses these issues rationally, that doesn't have a problem with the above highlighted conscerns. However, I will remind you that the tactics that are put in place that allow such companies to not only grow to that size, but to comport themselves in the manner in question are generated by the state, and the state funds them and protects them in doing so. Free Market businesses and corps with those kinds of standards would be phased out in almost no time at all as a result of competition. As it currently stands, Corps are the protected class and the State is the ruling class that protects and authorizes them. — Garrett Travers
That's capitalism. It's based in private ownership and private profit. The less its regulated -- i.e., moving more towards "freedom" of the market -- the worse things get for the rest of the country, as we see in the neoliberal era. Global warming is one example -- but there are countless others. Quite apart from politics, something is going awry. It's just that people blame it on different things. One side says it's the government, the deep state, the bureaucracy, or the liberals; the other side says it's the Republican party, the 1%, etc.
— Xtrix
Well, no, it isn't, because they are funded via taxation of state created fiat currency controlled and manipulated by both the Fed and Congress. — Garrett Travers
Not to mention the protections and contracts and anti-trust and patent laws. Far from Capitalism, my friend. — Garrett Travers
Dirigisme, that's what you're identifying. — Garrett Travers
And the only time in 20 years we've moved away from heavy, deep regulation was under Trump, and it wasn't near enought to stop the Fascism slowly approaching. — Garrett Travers
They also thought they could provide for their people, with all that juicy money coming from the oil fields. What happens when people stop buying, when America goes oil independent? Then everything falls apart and everyone loses their minds. — Garrett Travers
Saying capitalism is a "domain that recognizes" is incoherent to me. You're defining it out of any relevance. Capitalism is a socioeconomic system, one based on private ownership and unique in its relationship between employers and employees. Like feudalism before it, we have a different organization of power.
— Xtrix
No, my friend, these are Socialist lies. — Garrett Travers
The Feudal system was NOT an ecomic relationship between people, it was a power hierarchy predicated on brute force and the Divine Right of Kings to rule. — Garrett Travers
Feudalism, also known as the feudal system, was the combination of the legal, economic, military, and cultural customs that flourished in Medieval Europe between the 9th and 15th centuries. Broadly defined, it was a way of structuring society around relationships that were derived from the holding of land in exchange for service or labor.
Capitalism is NOT a power dynamic, but many hierarchies — Garrett Travers
The closest examples that we have of Feudalism in the modern world are North Korea and Saudi Arabia, to name a couple. Those are NOT free market societies. — Garrett Travers
Here is the definition of Capitalism: an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state. — Garrett Travers
As far as stock buy-backs, that isn't an issue. Stock buy-backs do nothing to the bottom line that workers recieve, or anything like that. — Garrett Travers
You might recall the printing-press and the reformation that followed, of which the Earth still holds echo. — Garrett Travers
These aren't metrics. True, there are birth restrictions and suppression of information. I assume by genocide you're referring to the Uyghurs. The US knows all about crimes against humanity, of course -- especially to Muslims. As far as forced poverty goes -- not sure what you're referring to, considering they've lifted 700+ million people out of poverty (per the World Bank) and Xi's government has spent billions attempting to pull even more out of poverty -- and apparently has succeeded. — Xtrix
I'd prefer to live in the United States, myself -- but just because I'm a citizen and feel that way doesn't prove or disprove anything. In many respects, China has been a huge success and is currently outpacing the United States in many metrics. — Xtrix
The level of state intervention in the Chinese economy is overwhelming. There are no free markets. China has opened trade with the world, which was a smart move -- but they're still an authoritarian regime. — Xtrix
That's simply motivated reasoning. There's no evidence for it, and nothing that can be used to disprove it. — Xtrix
Now true, we can blame the government. But to me that's kind of like blaming the puppet. The real power in America comes from concentrations of wealth. The rest -- politicians included -- become their employees. That's capitalism for you. — Xtrix
What does the "they" refer to? Who's funded by taxation? — Xtrix
The results of the last 40 years has been a disaster. I could go through the specifics if you like, but if you compare the era from the 40s-70s to the 80s-today, the results may surprise you. One era you had what Friedman and Rand railed against (the New Deal policies), the other you had policies they advocated for. You say the latter is dirigisme makes me wonder: what ISN'T dirigisme? Has it ever existed? Has it even come close to existing? When? Where? — Xtrix
Trump was continuing what had been going on for decades, beginning with Reagan -- who did far more damage than Trump, in many ways. — Xtrix
You mean when the US imposes severe sanctions? Yes, it's pretty obvious to anyone what would happen. — Xtrix
A power hierarchy doesn't involve relationships between people? The very heart of feudalism was the relationship between a lord and a vassal. The divine right of kings is somewhat related. As for brute force, I'm not sure what you're referring to. Force was a factor there as well, but not central. — Xtrix
Maybe an outside source can help a little: — Xtrix
Feudalism had many hierarchies as well. Hierarchies are structures of power, and involve power dynamics -- almost by definition. — Xtrix
So there you go. That, in my view, is the heart of capitalism. — Xtrix
There are no free markets. If free markets is how you're defining capitalism, then it doesn't exist any more than a communist utopia exists. — Xtrix
then capitalism exists exactly nowhere. — Xtrix
Happy to give references. — Xtrix
There's no doubt technology is playing a huge role. My only point was that this discontent pre-dates a lot of the more recent, and more troubling, technology (iPhones, social media, etc.). — Xtrix
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? — ssu
Damn, that was a long forum.... These are gonna get longer. Wanna move this chat to private? No pressure. — Garrett Travers
(Actually I agree with the latter)Of course not, but I think some people, including active service members, might think that those things are indeed indicative of pervasive wokeness in the military that needs to be fought and eliminated. And I think people like Milley give those people ammunition by saying that "white rage" caused the January 6th insurrection, for example - which I think it was just a bunch of idiotic Trump supporters being idiots; as far as I can tell it wasn't racially motivated. — ToothyMaw
Yet what can one say? Only that there are these juicy narratives that people want to use and fit everything into. If the narrative is that "The Democrats are making the military woke...and thus the combat capability of the military is in danger", then you will try to find every small detail that you can use for that narrative, be it maternity flight suits or whatever. — ssu
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