errr... I'm not American so I've got excellent social security but I do pay about 52% taxes after deductibles. I wouldn't know what a realistic upper middle class US family income would look like.
Depends why you want lower taxes.
People make irrational choices all the time, for many reasons. If you decide on a goal and to your best ability, given the available evidence, make a choice which you've concluded is in service of that goal, then you're being rational. There's always a chance you're wrong, of course. Mistakes happen, etc.
They precisely did vote irrationally. They vote against their interests (irrationally) when one person's policies would have had an empirically demonstrable positive effect on your community and the other exactly the opposite, yet you vote for him or her anyway. I'm talking about specific communities, but the argument can be made nationally as well.
Math works, but it's not a belief, it's a language, and the system of this language are based axioms. I doubt axioms.
Let's at least be very clear: Bernie is an avowed "Democratic Socialist." It sounds like I'm splitting hairs, but it happens to matter in this case. Why? Because Bernie, as anyone would expect, does not identify with the state owning the means of production or any Soviet-type government. He's not in favor of dictatorship or authoritarianism. What Bernie means is a label for New Deal style policies. That's all. Given that, any way you feel about socialism, its history and track record, is already moot -- why? Because that's not what Bernie is talking about. That's precisely why he adds the "democratic" part, to differentiate from Russian and Cuba and others.
Likewise, what people think ought to be the case, or what they want, is not relevant to the good. What actually hurts them is, though.
Though I think ↪god must be atheist's point is a useful exercise, I'd like to criticize the premise that "justice can hurt society sometimes".
However, there is no logical alternative to a concept of justice other than the public good
Which is just? Your paying the $5, or not paying the $5?
And the point of complaint isn’t that a specific price point of house is out of my reach, but that ANY house available for purchase (not a MH on rented land) in a very very broad area is out of my reach, and consequently out of reach of almost everybody else in that area, who mostly do barely scrape by check to check.
If I tried to mortgage right now it would be yeah, which is why I need to save a ton of money for a huge downpayment in order to make it manageable. I basically have to pre-pay-off over half the house in order for “buying” (mortgaging) to not delay the day I have something paid off even longer than renting + saving already will take.
Justice for one man is injustice for the other.
My point is that I’m already doing every right, doing better than a supermajority of people, and I’m still facing an impossible uphill battle, which is a sign that something is systematically wrong that I personally am not responsible for single-handedly overcoming or else helplessly succumbing to.
As I suspected, rather than offering actual solutions, you’re just denying the problem exists.
A systemic injustice makes it nearly impossible for tens of millions of people to secure the right to continue living where they’ve always lived without constantly paying someone else for that privilege
I have a year’s expenses in cash set aside besides my down payment fund IRA, so no.
It’s like those blowhards who say if millennials ate less avocado toast they could afford a house.
I think the topic of justice is about the means, while the topic of morality is narrowly about the ends. I think they are analogous to the topics of reality and knowledge, respectively.
It’s not a matter of pride, it’s a matter of not just giving in and letting us be forced out of our home so that some rich asshole can move in here instead (or, more accurately, so some super-rich asshole can buy all the housing stock and rent it out for profit).
In telling me that I should move, you’re saying that almost everybody in the entire state of California, the most populous state in the country and one of the largest, also shouldn’t live in the state that they do
Aren't there still countries trying to eradicate down's syndrome?
Are you over 50?
I think you would be surprised in schools today. It is the opposite attitude. EVERYONE can do ANYTHING.
Thanks for the explanations and applicable anecdotes :smile: .
but when it's not my personal fault that I can't afford to stay here, and the vast majority of my compatriots, the hundreds of thousands of people who can afford to live here even less than me, aren't getting out first, I'm not just going to accept defeat.
I was talking about income there, as apparently the mean personal income (which I approximately make) falls at around the 75th percentile of personal incomes, i.e. 75% of people make less than that.
That perspective just seems dumb and detached from reality to me, and it certainly would not have any sort of supporting argument. Sorry you ever had to deal with it...
But if I said "sorry you had to deal with that disability", would that be the problem I described above?
I think its not meaning that returns to you in that instant.
I don't think I have said anything that would disagree with this, but please point it out if I did :grimace:
By positing this possibility of an absolute conceptual perspective to relate to, we can make more objective sense of our subjective relation to each distinction.
Contrast two descriptions of using a wheelchair. An amputee finds that with a chair they are able to go to cafes, to shop, to attend concerts, to participate in society. But then someone describes them as being "confined" to their chair. That view is a media cliche, one that preferences the perspective of the able bodied to that of the disabled.
Why is wrong to preference the perspective that the majority of people have...?
Of course, this line of thought creates serious problems because you are left with the idea of thanking God for the holocaust, hurricanes that kill tens of thousands, the 9/11 attacks and so on.
but that when we are judging something as good or bad, we do so on the basis of making people feel good or bad. You may not be obligated to give someone a back rub, but it's still a nice thing to do, right? We'd judge that action positively, even though we don't think it would be morally wrong in a blameworthy way to not do it. Why would we judge it positively? Well, because it made someone feel good. And punching random people on the streets is definitely morally forbidden, but by what criteria are we judging it to be so wrong? Well, that it hurt someone, inflicted suffering, made them feel bad.
"God did not create evil, rather God created good, and evil exists where good is absent (Guide for the Perplexed , 3:10).
To your greater thesis that Christianity worships a fundamentally different diety than the Jews. I'm hesitant to accept.
Regardless, how can there be bad when God is all good? That's a tough one.
That question is relevant to religion but not to religious law.
Since there is no rule in religious law that mentions what tools you should use to eat with, this question does not even come within the purview of religious law.
In that case, it will no longer be a formal system of morality. A legitimate formal system of morality can only mirror the relevant moral rules.
Yeah, that is obvious. The problem is full of contradictions, and you clearly have no solution for that.
In a formal system of morality, it will not be possible to justify its first principles from within the system itself. The reason for that is very simple: It is never possible to justify the first principles of any formal system from within the system itself.
For example, how are the first principles in number theory justified by number theory?
They obviously aren't, simply, because that is not possible.
One should avoid at all costs that the animals kept in one's house as domestic pets be allowed to defecate on the lawn of the neighbor.