uh, i think that part isn't too crazy (other than the hyperbolic language). certainly not as off the deep end as a lot of stuff he thinks! i mean, i and lots of other people agree with the overall sentiment of what you just quoted (though certainly not to as extreme of a degree).
6/1/2008 1:52:43 PM
I guess the " " hinges on whether or not the word "criminals" was hyperbole.The idea that once a democratically-elected government moves beyond defense and transportation it becomes criminal is... errm, interesting.
6/1/2008 3:47:43 PM
It becomes criminal long before it "moves beyond defense and transportation"Would it be criminal for you, personally, to hold a gun to my head and demand that I protect you, or provide money to pay for your protection?Then why do you think it is legitimate for you, by voting, to depute someone to do the exact same thing to me in your name?If people want to get together and pool their resources for their common defense, that's fine. If they want to call that "Government", that's fine too. I have no problem with that. Where it crosses the line and becomes naked criminality is when you start forcing people to participate in your little protection racket who don't want to participate, who are competent to bargain for their own protection, and who think paying for "protection" should get them more than just not having their figurative kneecaps broken by their supposed protectors, because that's really the only kind of protection the government (so-called) provides.Courts have repeatedly ruled that the police have no obligation whatsoever to protect anybody or their property. If you want protection, you contract with a private firm. That's why private security outnumber pigs by two or three to one.Most of the crime that you and I need protection from is the result of generations of bad government policy. Government systematically punishes, through progressive taxation, those people who engage in honest, productive enterprise. Meanwhile, broken families, laziness, short-sightedness, irresponsibility, indulgence and a sense of entitlement are all subsidized by a vast system of government handouts. It is the permanent, dependent underclass thus created, that threatens the safety and property of productive citizens, not other productive citizens.Government has, over the years, also attempted to progressively disarm peaceful, productive citizens making it harder for them to access the tools to defend themselves from private criminals and making the cost of crime lower for those engaged in it.The only reason we need the kind of protection that governments (so-called) claim they exist to provide is because of those self-same governments. Yet despite all the posturing, the protection money you pay mostly just keeps you out of federal prison for tax evasion.
6/1/2008 4:07:47 PM
Hay guise lets go play Bioshock.
6/1/2008 4:56:27 PM
Jesus.
6/1/2008 5:13:34 PM
Bollocks, that's pure superstition. I've never seen any "social contract." You're going to have to do a hell of a lot better than that. Your argument is identical in form and content to "By choosing to live down by the waterfront, you're implicitly giving the mafia consent to extort from you."
6/1/2008 5:39:50 PM
I'd try to fuck with Kimbo Slice before I'd fuck with Andrew Jackson....at least Kimbo would have mercy
6/1/2008 5:50:09 PM
they forgot to mention old ass teddy roosevelt calling woodrow wilson a pussy and trying to get him to come out side the white house so that teddy could whoop his ass for not entering WWI
6/1/2008 6:03:43 PM
6/1/2008 6:11:47 PM
I hope you're not arguing that majorities define what is just and unjust. They can no more do that than define what is true and false.If you're simply trying to suggest that I'm a lone crackpot, then you needn't bother. If that's the case, my ideas would be easy to pick apart, and you'd be better served by doing that than by committing ad hominem or appeal to authority fallacies.But fundamentally, my idea of justice isn't even different from most people's. The only remotely novel aspect of what I say is that I assert that justice is the same for all people, and isn't magically suspended if you have a lofty title or a fancy hat, or call yourself or your offenses by the right euphemisms.[Edited on June 1, 2008 at 7:19 PM. Reason : than]
6/1/2008 7:15:52 PM
haha yeah if Teddy Roosevelt hadn't been on the list it would have been a worthless one.
6/2/2008 10:07:04 AM
I'm in no way, shape, fashion, or form a McCain supporter...... but if he became president, do you think he would ever get put on such a list as this one? I'm read excerpts from his books. Seems like he's a pretty tough dude. And I heard he has a temper too.
6/2/2008 10:30:58 AM
6/2/2008 10:56:17 AM
6/2/2008 1:42:14 PM
look, another retard who attended a taxpayer supported university complaining about the illegitimacy of taxes.
6/2/2008 1:54:37 PM
Where have I ever said that might makes right?If I believed that, I would never challenge a political system supported by the vast majority of the 300 million inhabitants of this part of North America. Clearly they're more mighty than I am, yet I still maintain that I'm right.My entire attack on the USA's democratic form of government is that it rests entirely on the principle that you may do to your neighbor what you wish, so long as your gang is bigger than his gang. No government has ever been a more naked application of "might makes right" than this. It is the self-evident fallacy of this sort of "morality" that makes me wonder how you people can accept it so uncritically.
6/2/2008 1:56:24 PM
6/2/2008 1:56:33 PM
Being a libertarian socialist reduces the cognitive dissidence involved in attending a public university and complaining about the state.
6/2/2008 2:00:06 PM
but does nothing to reduce the cognitive dissidence involved in being a libertarian socialist.
6/2/2008 2:03:49 PM
I've found surprisingly little cognitive dissidence in the theory. Putting into practice is the problem. At least libertarians have mountains of guns and an unheathly love of violence. Anarchists only have dumpstered vegan food.
6/2/2008 2:12:09 PM
No cognitive dissidence required, I get ripped off by the state, so I try to get back some of what's mine.What next, should I stop driving on roads? Should I stop drinking tap water? By your logic, I should apparently retreat into the wilderness and completely disengage from the rest of humanity, since that would be the only way to avoid getting involved with criminal extortion rings.That is, however, a retarded option.
6/2/2008 2:12:20 PM
6/2/2008 2:15:56 PM
6/2/2008 2:22:08 PM
By attending a taxpayer supported university you have helped contribute to this "theft" After all, the amount of money the taxpayers paid to subsidize your education is far more than the state has taxed from you. Be a man of your principals and attend a private college/university. Only then can you end the cycle of perpetual theft.
6/2/2008 2:29:43 PM
6/2/2008 2:38:40 PM
6/2/2008 3:57:21 PM
6/2/2008 4:05:35 PM
^^ Intellectually, I agree. In practice, when someone with a gun tells you the state exists, you start believing. As this started hundreds of years ago, most humans are conditioned to accept it. I remain optimistic, but breaking this conditioning hasn't proven easy.
6/2/2008 4:40:47 PM
6/3/2008 5:40:10 AM
6/3/2008 8:54:33 AM
Uhh this thread went to shit.....I was enjoying page 1.
6/4/2008 2:20:42 AM