Tu quoque? — jorndoe
one man - unscrupulous in nature - could occupy the sole position of government and all duty bound to it, and cause it to be used for what is socially deemed negative, controlling, or destructive. Now all goods and services are subject to this maligned pursuit. But if you have freedom of ability to produce or not produce what you want when you want, it now requires greater effort and coordination to ensure the average citizen is now subject to said pursuit. Make sense? That's the argument at least. — Outlander
There are potential concerns that may or may not have eluded you, say, suggested by — jorndoe
Either way, the Ukrainians said no. — jorndoe
Gravity is considered true, as is quantum physics but they do conflict.
Two truths can certainly conflict based on perspective.
An observer may experience a different, but equally valid truth but their reference frame may result in conflict when they are compared. — universeness
Steven Pinker's 75 charts and graphs have been described as:... — universeness
The data presented ... is at least contentious, where it’s not plain wrong. ... twenty percent of the data Pinker uses to categorize the violence of the entire planet’s tribal peoples (excluding ‘hunter-gatherers’) is derived from a single anthropologist, Napoleon Chagnon – whose data has been severely criticized for decades.
Everyone's here taking friendly potshots at one another, soft jabs to the midsection — Outlander
well go tell them to stop fighting then. Shoo, off you go. — jorndoe
Like indirectly supporting Putin. For example, right-wing and left-wing extremists are united in calling for an end to supporting the Ukrainians' struggle for freedom with weapons. — Jacques
the money measures you gave DO conflict with the overall historical evidence highlighted on the Steven Pinker chart I posted. — universeness
The Greek/Roman/Mayan/Egyptian civilisations would suffice for my purposes.
The how, would be the economic power of your average citizen at the time and the level of governmental protection they had regarding their legal status, their educational opportunities and their personal well-being. — universeness
I can tell you, with a very high personal credence level, what policies I think work and what efforts created the improvements many people NOW have in our world, that they did not have in earlier times. But you may not agree, perhaps because 'you' are part of the 'us' you refer to. Subjectivity, is forever present in threads such as this one. — universeness
He didn't say that. He said that there's no fundamental difference. — Michael
There's no "objective measure" for how many people must be affected by something for that thing to matter. — Michael
But that was all YOU offered, statistics! — universeness
Would you not agree that since the days of the ancients, the level of global poverty has significantly reduced for a large portion of the global population — universeness
and that this has been hard fought for? — universeness
You just seem to be arguing that because the differences between Republicans and Democrats don't affect you then they're not significant. I disagree. — Michael
Democrats are doing what they can to protect abortion rights, but where they don't have enough votes the Republican's anti-abortion policies are preventing protections for abortion. — Michael
Wealth disparity isn't the only measure of the differences between political parties. — Michael
the stats you highlight are globally true — universeness
we also have indicators of the hard work done by all humanists/socialists etc worldwide — universeness
You don't see a significant difference between Democrats wanting to codify abortion rights in law and Republicans passing laws against abortion that don't even allow for exceptions for rape or incest, or when it's a pregnant 10 year old? — Michael
I think Count Timothy von Icarus did a good job at outlining some of the major differences:
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/802555 — universeness
there is a significant difference. — Michael
They're significantly different on welfare, healthcare, guns, abortion, and LGBT issues. — Michael
When it comes to welfare, healthcare, guns, abortion, and LGBT issues, there is a huge difference between Democrats and Republicans, and so it’s overly simplistic to say that because they’re both pro-business that it’s a one party state. — Michael
I'm not going to quote, it'd seem like fingerpointing. — jorndoe
They don't conspire, they buy boats — Quentin · Cube (1997)
The state is an alien Kafkaesque entity, remote and distanced from oneself.
(Almost like an implicit definition.)
What's up with that? — jorndoe
Chomsky is just doing what demagogues always do, boiling down a complex problem filled with feedback loops, shifting alliances, histories of unintended consequences from reforms, etc. into a simple story of "bad, evil, greedy people make society bad. The truth is that everything is coordinated behind the scenes by a monolithic group. Thus, if we all unite we can replace the evil people with the righteous (us) and all shall be well forever." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Ok? — frank
You’re using money that is already taxed. — NOS4A2
If you do not earn enough money to pay tax, you probably won’t get tax relief on your donation. — NOS4A2
After having read it, it doesn’t appear that you’re avoiding or evading taxes at all. — NOS4A2
All the ones that moved their manufacturing overseas. — frank
According to the government, your words alone might make any scrupulous tax man report you to the authorities, submitting you to investigation — NOS4A2
I have noticed that both right-wing and left-wing radicals get along very well when it comes to restricting citizens' freedoms and to support dictators. — Jacques
I have nothing against conservatives or progressives as long as they are moderate and as long as they prioritize the preservation of civil liberties above all else. — Jacques
I care about democracy and autocracy. In other words, if someone acts against civil liberties, I don't care if he is left or right. — Jacques
American corporations have been doing that for a good while now. — frank
Tax evasion and tax fraud aren’t crimes in the UK? — NOS4A2
You also disclosed that you profit from tax collection insofar as you draw from the government’s finances. — NOS4A2
That's a difficult calculation, and no one can be sure of the numbers that lie in the future. — unenlightened
given the particular history of Ukraine under Soviet rule, I can understand any Ukrainian's calculation that a few million dead is a price well worth paying. — unenlightened
if that was my history and someone was offering me some arms, I wouldn't be questioning their motives before accepting the offers. — unenlightened
A point that’s almost always glossed over when discussing wage jobs. “You’re free to go elsewhere, you consented to it.” Way too cavalier, and ignores reality.
As justified as saying “don’t like the state? Leave the country.” Which I’ll often say; the connection is not readily understood, in my experience. — Mikie
That's fair enough.
The current status quo involves a massive amount of coercion too. I suppose we just value the two differently. — Tzeentch
It's all hypothetical of course, but assuming violence is completely off the table as we've discussed, and that means you are not being deprived of your basic needs, why even care about big corporations at that point?
Let them build their sand castles.
The difference to me is, I would not be forcibly made complicit in what the big corporations get up to, in the way I am now being made complicit in what my government gets up to.
This is a real problem for me. Because the state makes me a part of its wicked scheme, I am forced to care, and protest. — Tzeentch
This is a real problem for me. Because the state makes me a part of its wicked scheme, I am forced to care, and protest. — Tzeentch
A difference would be, in one case resistance is met with possible bodily harm and your loss of freedom. In the other, resistance seems perfectly acceptable, and the price, at most, seems material possessions(?).
That's a big difference, because to me resistance to being made complicit is an ethical duty. — Tzeentch
Yeah, thieves grabbed more than land. For some reason, I'd (personally) prefer the "breadbasket" under Kyiv than the Kremlin, regardless of what Ukraine is the "breadbasket" of. Poor assessment on my part? — jorndoe
Basically, yes. — Tzeentch
that the fact that the individual can try to resist, so therefore the state does not hold a monopoly on violence is misleading. There is obviously some threshold at which point the entry barrier becomes too high to overcome, at which point we start viewing things as monopolies. That goes for companies and states alike. — Tzeentch
Possibly so. In a theoretical case where violence is taken out of the picture completely, I would argue distribution by those remaining forms of power is preferable, albeit not perfect either. — Tzeentch
However, the means of arbitration that states use - unilateral imposition under threat of violence - is arguably the absolute worst way to do it, hence my protests. — Tzeentch