Governments are ruling classes which force society to obey their laws through force. — AntonioP
A law is comprised of words on paper. If I wrote down some random rules such as "You can't eat ice cream on Sundays" or "You must wear a red hat on public buses" and called them laws and claimed that you have to obey them because I have declared them as laws, would you take me seriously? If not, then why should the politicians who write their own dictates and call them "laws" be taken seriously? — AntonioP
. However, if you try to explain or answer why society should have to follow their laws, there will be no satisfactory answer — AntonioP
If not, then why should the politicians who write their own dictates and call them "laws" be taken seriously? — AntonioP
Briefly speaking, anarchy means "without rulers". Anarchists argue that the institution we refer to as "government" is illegitimate, because no one has the right to rule over another. Ruling over others is akin to owning them, which is essentially the model of having masters and slaves. — AntonioP
Governments have violence as the last resort, but have several options before the beating and shooting begin. — Bitter Crank
What would you call a household where everybody does what the head figure wants out of fear of getting beaten?
And what would your reaction be if the head figure excused themselves by saying the beatings are only a last resort for when the fear isn't sufficient to force obedience? — Tzeentch
I'd call that domestic abuse, and awful parenting. — Tzeentch
I am looking forward to your thoughts and feedback! — AntonioP
What would you call a household where everybody does what the head figure wants out of fear of getting beaten?
And what would your reaction be if the head figure excused themselves by saying the beatings are only a last resort for when the fear of being beaten isn't sufficient to force obedience? — Tzeentch
Imprisonment is coercive, certainly, but coercion is not the same as violence (beatings, torture, execution etc.). — Bitter Crank
Force and coercive measures are not inherently violent. — Bitter Crank
Violence or nothing is a false binary. Societies use coercion (fines, for instance) to enforce rules. Leave your car on the street after a snow storm, and it might get towed away--a coercive measure people find quite aversive. Coercion yes, but the streets cannot be cleared of snow if people don't move their cars out of the way. — Bitter Crank
I don't see why it would be acceptable in one instance, but not in the other. It seems like a double standard to me. — Tzeentch
Societies have an implied social contracts which bind citizens to treating each other more or less civilly (and most of the time, the contract is honored). There are mutual obligations which are understood. The law, however, is not an IMPLIED social contract -- it is explicit. We understand that if we violate the law, there may well be quite unpleasant consequences. Prison is one of the possible consequences. — Bitter Crank
Besides, what if the social contract is obviously defunct? Do I still have to abide by its rules? — Tzeentch
I invite you to envision a family — Tzeentch
The social contract (which is, granted, not a signed document. and nobody thinks it is) yields mutual support and benefit. That's how a functioning society works.
The social contract of mutually beneficial behavior would exist in an anarchist society as much as, maybe more than, it does in a hierarchical society. Our human ability to mirror other people's needs, desires, pains, etc. long preceded civil society. — Bitter Crank
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