No, but they can make your life extremely difficult if you don't. Just like governments can. — Isaac
Indeed, just like there's no restriction on you setting up your own government and vying for power. — Isaac
OK, so if the Thai government used other means - theft, coercion, bullying, grooming, punitive treatment... You'd be OK. — Isaac
When was the last time you know of that the Thai government used violence to enforce its laws? What about the UK government? — Isaac
They can refuse to serve you, which can be problematic. They cannot take your lunch money, or throw you in jail, or send you off to war to kill people for them. — Tzeentch
That isn't to say monopolistic or extremely large corporations aren't a problem. The question is whether more powerful governments are the solution to that problem. Governments seem more likely to jump in bed with powerful corporations than they are to curb their power.
Pfizer couldn't force me to buy their vaccine. The government could. — Tzeentch
Of course there's a restriction for that. Governments have a monopoly on the use of force, and laws against its use. — Tzeentch
it will do all those things if its threats are ignored. — Tzeentch
even here the government uses overt violence against law-abiding citizens with frightening regularity. — Tzeentch
They can basically make you destitute. — Isaac
The reason Pfizer couldn't force me to buy their vaccine is because the government have made such actions illegal. — Isaac
So try harder, get a bigger army. That's the advice given to would-be entrepreneurs going up against the likes of Black Rock. If they say, "it's impossible, Black Rock just have too big a percentage of all the available assets" - try harder, be the American Dream! Gather your own army! — Isaac
So how do you know that corporations wouldn't also do those things if their coercions are ignored? — Isaac
Seems now you're condemning institutions for future crimes they've not yet committed. — Isaac
Like...? — Isaac
Theoretically, perhaps. I don't think we see that in practice. Are Amazon or Pfizer making people destitute? — Tzeentch
In a situation where a company is able to force me to buy their products through violence or threats thereof, they're no longer a company - they've become a de-facto government. — Tzeentch
I'm not advocating anarchy anyway, so I don't see why it matters. — Tzeentch
Companies depend on the free will of people to buy their products. If people are fed up with Black Rock they can stop buying their products — Tzeentch
With governments and armies it is clearly different. It doesn't depend on people's free will, — Tzeentch
That's a pretty common way to deal with threats of violence.
If I threaten you, I will be sent to court for it. — Tzeentch
Yes. Their employment practices, pricing policies, procurement policies, supply chain decisions, environmental policies... all contribution to the destitution of those suffering from their decisions. — Isaac
Nice. so you just make your argument true by redefining 'government' to 'anything which forces' — Isaac
It matters because the opposite of anarchy is government intervention. the one thing you're arguing against. — Isaac
We've just been through this. This isn't going to work if you're just going to ignore what I write an repeat the same thing over again. — Isaac
Of course it does. Government's are elected. — Isaac
Governments can be overthrown. — Isaac
It's that you're judging governments on what they would do, but corporations only on what they do do. — Isaac
What concrete example do you have of either of those companies making people destitute? — Tzeentch
Governments are essentially bodies that hold monopolies on violence. — Tzeentch
On the whole I am highly critical of government interventions, but I'm not categorically against it. — Tzeentch
What you wrote makes no sense, equating a body that protects its monopoly on violence with violence to a body that protects its market position through the free will of its customers. — Tzeentch
Democracy does not mean a government depends on the free will of its people. It means it seeks to gain some form of legitimacy by seeking approval for its coercive practices among a section of its citizens. — Tzeentch
Companies do not need to be overthrown. If people are fed up, they stop buying products and the company will go out of business or offer its services some place else. — Tzeentch
I'm judging governments for threatening me with violence to comply with its wishes - something it does every day, by its very nature. That is what law is.
I'm not judging companies for the same, because I've never been threatened by one. — Tzeentch
Governments have been trying to solve socio-economic issues for ages, and they always fail. While not necessarily fixing the problems, the free exchange of goods and ideas has done more to improve the lot of the common man than any attempt by governments. — Tzeentch
Amazon's pricing policy means that it's suppliers are kept destitute. It doesn't pay them enough to live off. — Isaac
I can be violent if I want. How do they 'hold a monopoly'? — Isaac
Yeah. Didn't think it would take long before this deteriorated into "the government ought to make the laws I benefit from, but not the ones where others benefit" — Isaac
Government doesn't protect its position with violence. — Isaac
Government does what it does the same way corporations do, control of capital. — Isaac
...enough people. Just like governments. — Isaac
They monopolise, cheat, steal, coerce, occasionally outright kill or violently oppress to make sure that you can only buy their product, that you have anything but a free choice. — Isaac
Again, no government threatens you with violence. They just could. — Isaac
Yet they work for Amazon, so apparently however unsatisfying the conditions its better than the alternative. — Tzeentch
Likely those people would be worse off is Amazon disappeared. — Tzeentch
I can be violent if I want. How do they 'hold a monopoly'? — Isaac
I can't take this argument seriously. — Tzeentch
How many people do you think would continue to pay taxes if they weren't threatened with jail (which is a threat of violence) for not doing so? — Tzeentch
Governments function through violence, the free market does not. — Tzeentch
If that's how you want to mischaracterize my position, we will soon be done here. — Tzeentch
In an anarchy or corrupt system perhaps, which is not what I am advocating at all. — Tzeentch
It threatens me with violence every day. — Tzeentch
It's not an argument, it's a question. How do governments monopolise violence? I seem quite capable of being violent.
If you or I armed ourselves and forced our way into someone’s home, or pointed our weapons at someone, or cuffed someone and threw them in the back of our car, we’d be criminally charged. — NOS4A2
Yes, the monopoly on violence is seized and held through violence — NOS4A2
Which is what all the small government bullshit boils down to: a view that human beings are essentially sociopathic. — Xtrix
But I can be violent. Am I the exception? Do you find it impossible to be violent? The government do not seem to me to have the monopoly at all.
If I were violent, there would be consequences, it would be difficult...
But if 'difficult' is the criteria for holding a monopoly, then certainly large corporations hold several monopolies.
Which is what all the small government bullshit boils down to: a view that human beings are essentially sociopathic. — Xtrix
Those are crimes, though. You’d be tried and imprisoned should you commit that violence. — NOS4A2
Can you arrest a police officer or any government agent and jail him for committing violence? — NOS4A2
The term “legitimate” underlies the principle. The principle does not imply that the state is the only entity committing violence, but it is the only entity authorized to commit violence. — NOS4A2
I can set up an internet sales company. Amazon might stop me, or there might be consequences I don't like. — Isaac
Probably because a monopoly in trade has nothing to do with a monopoly on violence. — NOS4A2
Amazon cannot stop you from setting up an internet sales company — Tzeentch
It seems like what you're doing is blaming Amazon for your failed enterprise, when it is you yourself who is to blame for not being able to provide a better or cheaper product that people want to buy from you. — Tzeentch
Does a government let you compete freely on the market? No. Under no circumstance. It won't even allow you to offer your product, let alone compete. — Tzeentch
It doesn't matter if you're able to provide a better product than the government, as soon as you try to put it on the market, you are stopped either by law or by force. — Tzeentch
You then try to make an argument that if only you're able to get above a certain threshold of customers, you would be able to violently overthrow the government, implying this is the same as how companies compete on the market. This is of course not the case, and no such threshold is necessary for a normal business to compete on the market. — Tzeentch
You'll find that it's perfectly possible for large and small companies to exist alongside each other. That's called free competition. Smaller companies often enjoy benefits that make their products cheaper to produce or more attractive locally, and they may compete on that basis. For the government's monopoly on violence that is not so. — Tzeentch
You've got it exactly backwards. — Tzeentch
Does Amazon let me compete freely? No, it does everything in its power to maintain its market dominance. — Isaac
So the only people who commit violence are the government? Where the hell do you live? — Isaac
That is the essence of free competition. — Tzeentch
You understand that competition entails using power to compete? — Tzeentch
crime rings are not participating in a free market. — Tzeentch
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