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
But what's immoral about imposing on a gamete? — Isaac
One is about impositions, the other about consequences. — Isaac
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
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
Still, if your take on the matter is right, then we need to explain how come not everyone thinks that way (and what to do with the differences). — baker
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
In Thailand it is now impossible to get insurance without your provider being ultimately Black Rock. They own every single insurance provider in Thailand. — Isaac
you don't like the Thai government's laws, your only choice is vote or move.
If you don't like the Thai 'free market' insurance deals, your only choice is move.
Explain to me the difference. — Isaac
But how come you're different than those people? — baker
You don't believe in, for example, "souls" and "life after death", do you? — baker
Don't you find it odd that different people have so widely differing ideas about some topics, specifically, procreation? — baker
How do you explain that not everyone thinks the way you do about procreation? — baker
If your position is one of materialism or something similar (as it seems to be), ... — baker
And on what grounds do you justify the relevance of those differences? — baker
If someone is just advocating widening our understanding, we should not feel threatened by that. There's nothing wrong with that. — Tate
The entity that was forced had no will, no moral status, nothing more than forcing a rock to roll downhill. — Isaac
The person being born was not forced to live. they cannot have been because they didn't exist until after that event. — Isaac
If I recall, that's your argument. Your the one who wants to avoid all responsibility for anything you didn't directly cause. — Isaac
You could claim that the parents forced a gamete to become a person. — Isaac
But are you going to argue that we cannot consider the baby's well-being before the baby was born because there was no baby yet to be born into the lava pit? — schopenhauer1
My problem is that if I say that, for example, murder is unethical then the result, if my view were ever to universally applied (unlikely), would be a happier and safer world. If I say that procreation is unethical then the result, if my view were applied universally (unlikely, again, as you say), would be an empty world. And an empty world, I cannot help feeling, might be a bad thing. I would be promoting an ethical principle which, if applied generally, would lead to a world without humans. That's my problem. — Cuthbert
My only qualm is this: if we all do the right thing and refrain from procreating then the human race will quickly cease to exist. And that (I'm tempted to believe, rightly or wrongly) is a bad thing. So by everyone behaving in a way that is beneficial, right and just - that is, by not procreating - then we would collectively create an empty world. — Cuthbert
If the human race is to continue .... — Cuthbert
Perhaps it's a scent of self-righteous free-loading hypocritical nonsense, or did I forget my after-shave? — Cuthbert
If you really believe that the US military might stand back while China invades Taiwan because they "recognize" the "One China policy" then I got some people you need to talk to who have some beachfront property in Arizona they wish to sell to you at a great price. — dclements
Your argument is a strawman since I have said nothing to indicate that I believe that either Taiwan, Ukraine or Crimea have only symbolic value. In fact, nowhere have I even mentioned anything about Ukraine or Crimea in this thread so it is a given that you can only assume I might have such a position (just as you might assume that of anyone else on this forum) since I have said nothing on such matters. — dclements
If they really want to go to war why should they wait till 2027, ... — dclements
In terms of creating desires for useless stuff— “fashionable consumption,” etc. — this has a long history, has been studied, documented; not a controversial remark. — Xtrix
You’re free to ask me what I believe directly — Xtrix
And yes, China is communist. — Xtrix
Lol. Food, water, shelter, family, community. I view these as needs, or at least different than a new gadget every 2 years. — Xtrix
I guess I’m part of a communist conspiracy. — Xtrix
I don’t think China is an example of communism at all, as I understand it. — Xtrix
But I’m using your meaning, not mine. — Xtrix
Yes, the United States has its problems — Xtrix
Xi Jinping is constantly getting upset about everything that goes on outside of his country that he can't do anything about. — dclements
I think the language used in describing the situation is something like that if China attacks Taiwan, then the US will help Taiwan but not if Taiwan attacks China. — dclements
As I said before when a country like China is constantly threating to start World War III for trivial reasons... — dclements
In fact the entire advertising industry operates on the complete opposite goal: create desires for things not needed. — Xtrix
They can’t? China seems to be doing just fine. — Xtrix
A strange definition of collectivism, but OK. — Xtrix
Unlike Ukraine, the US has pledged that if China invades Taiwan we will get involved and help defend them against China. — dclements
It "may" be in China's best interest right now to look tough and do a lot of sabre rattling, but it isn't in their best interest to start a war with Taiwan and the US. — dclements
Because China's threats are nothing more than a lot of hot air it is the US best interest to go about business as usual and not pay any any attention to their empty threats. If you don't stand up to bullies on the world stage then the rest of the world will look at you as if you don't have any backbone. — dclements
No, that would be capitalism. Brutal, inhumane, and reducing everyone and every thing to capital. — Xtrix
You can have a collective without a state. — Xtrix
Any ideology that fails to take into account human (evolutionary) psychology & biology is going end up a magnificent failure! — Agent Smith
