"Freedom" thread or something |
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Ambient Hurricanes
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 25 2011 Location: internet Status: Offline Points: 2549 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 12:19 | ||||||||||||
I'll let Rob answer the rest but...seriously? Do you realize how the one-child policy has wreaked havoc on Chinese culture, or how many kids (and adults!) have been murdered because of it? Sorry, but that's a really bad example of how to deal with overpopulation. The issue right now is not as much that the world is too crowded as it is that large numbers of people are cramped into small areas. The problems that do exist are being taken care of, at least in the west, by condoms and contraceptives; which people use quite freely without government coercion or provision. Although these things are not currently widely available in other parts of the world, they will only become more commonplace as the west continues to have influence on the rest of the earth. |
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I love dogs, I've always loved dogs
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HarbouringTheSoul
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 21 2010 Status: Offline Points: 1199 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 12:48 | ||||||||||||
Because the control you have over the government, while tiny, is not zero. The control you have over the hypothetical "evil overlord" in a completely government-less world is exactly zero.
It has happened before, but part of the problem was that people elected or at least accepted those evil lunatics. Edited by HarbouringTheSoul - June 17 2013 at 12:48 |
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Gerinski
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 10 2010 Location: Barcelona Spain Status: Offline Points: 5154 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 12:49 | ||||||||||||
If you don't think that the world is too crowded nor that it will be too crowded in the future (exceeding the possibilities for a decent living standard for all its inhabitants) then there's nothing to discuss. If you think that the world is or will be too crowded, then the question arises: what should we do about it? if you think that promoting condoms is enough, good luck to you. The libertarian agenda suggests that reaching the point of having to regulate procreation, those with money will be allowed to have as many children as they wish and those without money will be requested to be sterile. I personally don't care as I don't have children and I'm not gonna have any, but it's not a pleasant thought. |
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32550 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 12:54 | ||||||||||||
Look in the history of the world. How many of these evil overlords happened because there was no government?
So I have a tiny say in my government...but the majority may still elect or be potentially okay with evil lunatics? You're not strengthening my faith in government. Edited by Epignosis - June 17 2013 at 12:57 |
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32550 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 12:55 | ||||||||||||
Where is this suggested? |
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HarbouringTheSoul
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 21 2010 Status: Offline Points: 1199 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 13:01 | ||||||||||||
When was there ever no government?
Well, the alternative is that the evil lunatic can just do whatever he wants without even asking for power in the first place. |
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32550 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 13:08 | ||||||||||||
There you go. My point is that there will always be power-hungry thugs; government ultimately legitimizes and empowers them further.
No, that's not the alternative. That's what we have now. Edited by Epignosis - June 17 2013 at 13:08 |
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dtguitarfan
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 24 2011 Location: Chattanooga, TN Status: Offline Points: 1708 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 13:12 | ||||||||||||
I am not sure which one you're referring to now. I read one that either you or Rob posted that to be perfectly honest didn't answer anything - it just snidely asked questions. Let's be clear - there is no such thing as a libertarian, republican, or democrat country. But when I talk about healthcare and say socialized healthcare works, then point to Canada, England, etc., I am demonstrating that a type of system is actually being practiced with success. Now Rob would like to distract from this by saying " the definition of 'works' is up for debate." That's BS. People in those countries pay pennies if anything at all for their healthcare, they don't wait in long lines (as the fear mongers would like us to believe it's a natural result of such systems), and implementing those systems did not cause the collapse of their economy (another scary story we're told by conservatives). You have a better idea to fix our sh*tty healthcare system in America? Tell me about it, and you MUST show me a country where it's being implemented and working better or I'll just point and laugh. Those are my rules. I insist we be scientific. |
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32550 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 13:18 | ||||||||||||
It's not BS. If your car gets you from point A to point B but there's a chance it will explode, then I would say that your car doesn't work.
You're not scientific. You're a very humble fellow who likes to point and laugh and make rules. Edited by Epignosis - June 17 2013 at 13:31 |
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HarbouringTheSoul
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 21 2010 Status: Offline Points: 1199 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 13:35 | ||||||||||||
What kind of argument is that then? "My idea has never failed because it has never been tried out" is a worthless statement, and in no way does it say anything about whether or not it will fail in the future.
It only legitimizes and empowers thugs if people explicitly choose to award them with power. Contrast with a government-less system where anyone can empower themselves unless people explicitly refuse and actively stop them. If you had no choice but to be enslaved (a rather crude metaphor because I don't believe government is anything like slavery, but apparently you do so let's go along with it), would you rather choose the person who enslaves you (in the hope of picking someone who will treat you relatively well) or submit yourself to whomever comes first?
Obama is the democratically elected president of the United States. He did ask for power in the first place and people awarded him that power. So no, that's not what we have now. Edited by HarbouringTheSoul - June 17 2013 at 13:35 |
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Gerinski
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 10 2010 Location: Barcelona Spain Status: Offline Points: 5154 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 13:43 | ||||||||||||
I can say that in Spain, public health system does work and works very reasonably well. Whether it is worth the taxes we pay for it or not will depend on who you ask, those who never needed assistance will say it's not, those who got a titanium pelvic prostheses without having to pay an extra penny will say it is. Waiting lists may be long though if your problem is not urgent. Medication is 100% free in most cases and hospitalization is also free.
In Belgium where I live now it's slightly more liberal, public health exists but it's co-payment, besides the taxes everybody pays for the health system, every time you go to a doctor, get medication or receive some treatment you have to pay a part of it (roughly around 15 to 20 %) and if you need to be hospitalized you better have a private insurance or you have to pay a lot of money. |
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Ambient Hurricanes
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 25 2011 Location: internet Status: Offline Points: 2549 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 13:50 | ||||||||||||
They were rhetorical questions. They were supposed to point out that no libertarian countries exist because people don't want libertarianism because it's easier to just let the government take care of them. This, in the author's view (and in mine) is a very bad thing. G.K. Chesterton once said,
I say the same thing about libertarianism. I actually do have an idea to fix the healthcare system. First, you drastically decrease governmental interference in the private healthcare system and let the market do its own work. Then, you return to the good old common law principles of people taking care of their own families. Yes, this would have to be enforced by laws. No, this isn't overly coercive. Most libertarians would still agree that parents have a legal responsibility to take care of their kids. This proposal would merely extend to an obligation to care for the rest of your family. Brothers, sisters, parents, grandparents, etc. This system would help people afford healthcare (and life's other necessities) while discarding the ridiculous idea that everyone should be forced on threat of imprisonment to share their wealth with perfect strangers, and would take wealth-sharing out of the hands of the government and into its proper place within the family unit, and otherwise at the discretion of individuals and private institutions. It would not be a perfect system, as some people have no living relatives (or only have impoverished living relatives) but it would eliminate much of the poverty and healthcare problem and create an easier problem to tackle for private charities. And no, I don't know of any country where this system is being used, but, as I pointed out earlier, that's rather irrelevant. We have social security and medicare, to a large extent, because people didn't want to take care of their parents. Taking care of your family is difficult and annoying. But it's still the right thing to do. And similar systems have worked in history - for example Jewish law required children to take care of their parents in their old age. |
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I love dogs, I've always loved dogs
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32550 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 13:57 | ||||||||||||
It's not an argument. It's the truth. Libertarianism has never failed because it has never been tried. Makes sense to me. But don't change the subject- you assumed that "evil overlords" will pop up in a government-less place. I asked you for evidence of this historically, and you could give none. And again (I feel like I say this so often, it hurts), Libertarianism doesn't exist to succeed or fail. And even if it did, nobody has told me what success looks like. Geoff refuses to. Perhaps you would like to tell me what success looks like? Here:
I don't believe government is like slavery. Where did you get that idea? The US government must work for us, not the other way around. That's what the Constitution says, anyway. But if it doesn't, and that government starts killing its own citizens via drone strikes without due process, are you okay with that just because it was elected by a citizenry who are "too practical" to vote otherwise?
You didn't read the article, did you? |
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Gerinski
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 10 2010 Location: Barcelona Spain Status: Offline Points: 5154 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 14:02 | ||||||||||||
Sorry to call you naive.
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Ambient Hurricanes
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 25 2011 Location: internet Status: Offline Points: 2549 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 14:03 | ||||||||||||
The fact that you apologized for your ad hominem attack does not change the fact that it is an ad hominem, which is a fallacy, and does not answer my argument. |
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I love dogs, I've always loved dogs
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HarbouringTheSoul
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 21 2010 Status: Offline Points: 1199 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 14:08 | ||||||||||||
You hit the nail on the head here. Governments make things easier for people. That's why they were invented, and that's why they will never go away. If you abolished all governments, people would elect new ones right away. If you radically reduced the power of governments, people would just give them back those powers over time. Governments are inevitable, and that's why I don't see the practical point of libertarianism. Is it a purely philosophical exercise? An alternative moral code that will never be commonly accepted because people don't want to accept it? I admire the philosophical consistency that lies underneath it, but I don't see the practical benefit. If you get down to the bottom of it, most people simply wouldn't choose ultimate freedom over everything else. |
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Gerinski
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 10 2010 Location: Barcelona Spain Status: Offline Points: 5154 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 14:14 | ||||||||||||
I don't know what do you expect from me, to explicitly say that big business corporations don't give a s*t about being honest to their customers? And that they are clever enough as 'to prevent the open markets from tempering their greedy and exploitative tendencies'? If so OK, I'm saying this explicitly.
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dtguitarfan
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 24 2011 Location: Chattanooga, TN Status: Offline Points: 1708 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 14:16 | ||||||||||||
Jacob, the system you are proposing really isn't all that different than what I'm proposing, I've just taken the Bible to its ultimate logical conclusion and extended "family" to everyone - is this not the message of Jesus?
Also I find it interesting that you admit your system will not work without law enforcement. And when you talk about the government backing off and letting the free market do its work for a while - know what's going to happen? A lot of death, that's what. I'd like to skip over that part please. |
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Ambient Hurricanes
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 25 2011 Location: internet Status: Offline Points: 2549 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 14:26 | ||||||||||||
Point #1: I agree. Of course they don't care about being honest (neither does the government, by the way). One of the proper functions of government is to enforce the principle "do all you have agreed to do," a "natural law," as Richard J. Maybury puts it. Did you read my post? I am suggesting that, instead of being regulated, businesses would merely be required to be honest with their customers. Point #2: I think that business owners are clever enough to know that they have to meet the demands of the consumer to make money. |
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I love dogs, I've always loved dogs
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32550 |
Posted: June 17 2013 at 14:29 | ||||||||||||
But Erin won, right? And those big corporations- did they live in a country with regulations or in a Libertarian fantasy land?
If I did not like the offer, I could have countered or looked elsewhere for work. Turn it the other way around- would you be okay with the government telling you how much you were allowed to work for?
Many public armies have gone rogue and did bad things. Or they followed orders and killed innocent people. I am asking you to describe how private armies are fundamentally different than public ones. I will tell you that the only real difference is where the money comes from. That's all. Kings hired mercenaries all the time. Were they public or private armies?
I don't think we're anywhere near close to population overload, and I think abortion is reprehensible.
Personally, I'm not okay with it, but if it's your organ, it's yours to do with as you please. |
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