2/8/2006 10:51:08 AM
emergency assistance, yes.everything else? no.
2/8/2006 10:51:59 AM
I think, as I've said a gazillion times, that the government shouldn't do this or at best should be a regulator for people freely giving their money and resources to each other. If people aren't willing to support their societies without being forced by the government, I don't believe that society deserves to exist.
2/8/2006 10:55:54 AM
^Well..D-Greek, I'm glad you stated it one more time
2/8/2006 11:14:23 AM
2/8/2006 11:22:09 AM
jesus was a fucking commie.
2/8/2006 11:42:50 AM
^^gov't, force, and coercion are nowhere to be found in that text. that the church should be redistributing its wealth to help its poor voluntarily is unquestionable, but when it's no longer voluntary, and enforced at the end of a gun by a secular authority - there gets to be real problems. Not the least of which is finding anything remotely similar advocated in Acts.
2/8/2006 11:54:27 AM
I agree there is a huge difference between doing it voluntarily and being forced to do so. My post only addressed the notion that it is a sin to redistribute wealth.[Edited on February 8, 2006 at 12:00 PM. Reason : -]
2/8/2006 11:59:23 AM
they didnt mean it literally, duh.
2/8/2006 12:03:03 PM
i don't think people should starve.the government should pay for their euthanization.
2/8/2006 12:09:11 PM
I HATE CIVILIZATION RARRRRRRR.
2/8/2006 12:12:09 PM
Obviously the situation is more complex than you care to take in.There is a fine balance/range that needs to exist, and extremes on both sides of it are a road to serfdom.But if you require a simple to the question:
2/8/2006 12:23:43 PM
^^^^^ You have to define "redistribution" pretty loosely for it to include voluntary giving.Redistribution automatically carries with it some concept of a third party intervening and authoritatively taking from one in order to give to another. In that sense, there is no redistribution there.
2/8/2006 12:55:05 PM
Now we are splitting hairs. You also have to loosely define "redistribution" to include involuntary giving, as the definition of redistribution in and of itself does not specify whether wealth was voluntarily given or otherwise.Party 1: Individual members of the church give all of their possessions toParty 2: the apostles which in turn distribute everything toParty 3: the general membership according to their needs.If that isn't redistribution of wealth I don't know what is. It might not fit Walter E. Williams' definition of forced redistribution of wealth but it is redistribution of wealth nonetheless.
2/8/2006 1:27:47 PM
Bogus Thread
2/8/2006 1:45:29 PM
Libertarians.aahahaahahahahahaha
2/8/2006 3:03:47 PM
I have some sympathy for this point of view.Still, stealing to give health care to the poor is better than stealing to bomb folks in other countries and to build bridges to nowhere.
2/8/2006 5:20:46 PM
2/8/2006 6:27:33 PM
it's not your moneyit's the government'sand really, do you think the only people who should ever be allowed to make any kind of changes to our government died 300 years ago?Why do you think the consititution allows for itself to be changed?
2/8/2006 7:39:53 PM
Welcome back Kris! And back to a rip-roaring start I see!
2/8/2006 9:14:26 PM
2/8/2006 10:02:55 PM
don't get too excited, I probably won't start posting too much more frequently unfortunatelyI'm not quite understanding what you're sayingThe government can pretty much do whatever it wants to the constitution as long as it has the support required. What it should and should not do rely soley on the power of the people it represents, and unfortunately for you Earthdogg only very few americans are wackjob liberitarians.
2/8/2006 10:03:48 PM
^ No one is questioning that, Kris. We realize that if the government wished and the generals didn't rebel it could literally do anything. That is not the point at hand. The question is not whether it "can" but "should" it be able to break the law (constitution)? I know you will say yes, the government should be able to rob/execute without trial/warning and all the stuff it can get away with (assuming all the reporters were killed/shut-up). This is why we will always disagree: we don't think the government should be "getting away with stuff" when, if it really had the support of the people, it could democratically amend the constitution thus legally/morally gaining the right to rob/execute without trial/warning etc.
2/8/2006 10:14:37 PM
2/8/2006 10:16:25 PM
^I disagree with this wholeheartedly. What you speak of is democracy. Another way to describe how democracy works is mob rule. A 51% majority can take away the rights of a 49% minority. Do you think this is right? I think the Constitution should be modified in such a way that certain rights, such as the right to freedom of speech, etc., can never be modified by the majority. The federal governments purpose is to protect the rights as outlined in the Constitution, not create new ones (like the "right to healthcare, education, equal pay, bullshit like that). The United States is a constitutional republic, a place where majority rules but not at the expense of the rights of the minority.
2/8/2006 10:28:31 PM
2/9/2006 1:22:51 AM
2/9/2006 2:49:34 AM
Outright, capital-L libertarianism is foolish, just like outright Communism. I have said this many times.The government can take money from people, because the people have given them that right. Sure, there are individuals who disagree, but democracy is not about appeasing everybody, and everybody must surely admit.As it happens, there are a large number -- quite possibly majority -- of people in this country who believe that there is a basic right to certain necessitites. And, as it happens, I am inclined to agree.America can easily afford to provide everyone in the country with the housing, food, and medical care necessary for a basic existence. We can do so with a minimal, barely-noticeable impact on taxpayers -- maybe not under the current tax system, about which I do not know enough to claim certainty, but definitely under a similar and attainable one.It won't get us anywhere acting as though people, left to their own devices, will voluntarily contribute enough to help those in need. They won't. It's that simple. At the end of the day, I am perfectly willing to deprive certain individuals of certain luxuries in order to provide others with basic necessities. I could do so without even a twinge in my conscience.I'm not saying that we should level everything out. I'm not calling for massive wealth redistribution. The individuals who can drag themselves out of the greatest depths of poverty to a prosperous life are so few and far between that every example is a historic and remembered one. In essence, then, no really poor person can lift themselves out of those depths to prosperity when from the very start they cannot afford food, a roof, and basic medical care. Our meritocracy, if it even exists anymore, is not perfect enough to accomodate as much. If "necessities" are a part in "wealth," well, I'm no longer a true capitalist, and I don't mind saying so.I am therefore forced to stand by my beliefs that a true and righteous conservatism must hold dear an equality of means.*---*Last time I said "equality of means," it was radically misinterpreted by TGD and others. I'm talking about the basic tools -- libraries, public education through the university level, and other things with which you cannot do without if you hope to get anywhere in the world beyond your current station. I have to explicitly state that I DO NOT use "means" in the sense of "wealth, money, property," or anything of the sort.
2/9/2006 2:58:52 AM
2/9/2006 8:58:25 AM
2/9/2006 9:47:35 AM
^Not really. Stealing is stealing. I don't care if you are doing it to feed your family or to buy a gucci handbag. Wrong is wrong, and stating that you are doing wrong for a "good" purpose doesn't change the fact that it is wrong.
2/9/2006 9:50:09 AM
i still think likening the government to some thug who clunks you over the head and steals your purse sounds dumb and is a bad analogy.it just seems the entire argument rests on poor people being these lazy dogs who deserve nothing and are there only to sap the great riches you'd have earned without taxation. if that isnt what you beleive, best choose better examples or wording cuz you all sound like tremendous assholes.
2/9/2006 10:38:54 AM
I've enjoyed this thread so far...a interesting range of arguments with relatively little name-calling.My quasi-libertarian approach to gov't is based mainly on the thoughts laid out by Frederick Bastiat in his 1850 booklet entitled "The Law". I highly reccomend it.Basically each of us has a natural right from God to defend his life, liberty and property. It then follows that a group of people have the collective right to defend these rights..because it is based on the individual's right. This is what gives any gov't its legitimacy..the collective protection of individual rights. Once you are ok with this approach, you then run the different things that people want gov't to do through this filter. Let's look at health-care as an example. Put aside the fact that Capitalism would create a much more effective system then today's gov't-mangled mess. Does gov't have the right to put a single-payer plan in place?I, as an individual, cannot go up to a doctor and force him to treat me for free or even at the price I want to pay. I also am not allowed to point a gun at him and force him to treat my poor neighbor. So if an individual is not allowed to commandeer the labor of doctors, so cannot a gov't. Walter Williams states this perfectly.. "when Congress gives one American a right to something he didn't earn, it takes away the right of another American to something he did earn." Law is basically force. Therefore the proper use of law cannot extend beyond the proper functions of force - to protect the individual's right to his life, liberty and property.
2/9/2006 11:02:07 AM
the exact same argument could be applied to anything widely-accessible and public. if view the govt as some huge bully taking your money to directly apply it elsewhere, i dont think you can get far. if you look at it as a large body we elected that requires cash to run, it isnt so bad. they then give the money to what they (and technically we) deem necessary, such as public schooling, defense, social programs, etc.the issue here is that you are taking your philosophy and assuming it to be true, or at minimum assuming everyone agrees with you. as someone else has already said, im sure a majority does not share that view. it isnt taking away your freedoms because you DO use a lot of things that the government pays for. the idea of being able to pick and choose what your funds go to would just make a more bloated and inefficient system and opting out just isnt an option.
2/9/2006 11:09:47 AM
2/9/2006 11:59:22 AM
^And yet you have commented.
2/9/2006 12:01:05 PM
No, I commented about it, not on it.
2/9/2006 12:16:27 PM
2/9/2006 1:02:53 PM
2/9/2006 2:09:55 PM
I have a hard time understanding how any reasonable person can see that it's the government's primary job to protect the lives of its citizens but that it should have no stake whatsoever in preserving the QUALITY of life of said citizens.
2/9/2006 2:16:26 PM
2/9/2006 3:37:19 PM
Seriously, what happened to you Loneshark? We never saw eye-to-eye on most things, but I've never seen you so blatantly make up history. Did you get hit on the head or something?
2/9/2006 4:29:17 PM
2/9/2006 5:40:45 PM
well slaves had the right to pursue happinessI mean they could improve their lives, just look at fredrick douglas, he was a slave and he made a much better life for himself, any other slave that doesn't simply isn't taking responsibility for their situation.
2/9/2006 5:47:11 PM
2/9/2006 8:57:23 PM
You're still very wrong.BUT I DARE NOT MATCH WITS WITH AN ENGINEER
2/9/2006 9:07:19 PM
2/9/2006 10:59:44 PM
2/10/2006 12:09:11 AM
2/10/2006 12:57:37 AM
Well said!As author of this thread and with the powers vested in me...I dub thee Sir Snark.
2/10/2006 2:00:07 AM