That's part of the problem with them. In a functioning society, the rights of the individual are inseparable from the rights of the collective. To suggest otherwise is to ignore the fact that we are part of a system, we aren't just a collection of individuals. If you accept that you want to be part of a functioning society, you have to allow for some collective actions that supersede some individual abilities.
9/25/2013 1:12:30 AM
How can you say that they are not homogonous and then follow it directly by saying what they want? Can't do that.
9/25/2013 7:35:11 AM
Sure I can...libertarians are not homogenous. They want a less expansive, domineering federal government .See? I did it again, and nobody would argue those points.
9/25/2013 8:58:56 AM
then why is it wrong for him to generalize but okay for you?(because I would certainly argue with those points, libertarians are fine with a huge, domineering government for some things)[Edited on September 25, 2013 at 9:06 AM. Reason : .]
9/25/2013 9:05:46 AM
I think they're arguing against libertarianism in its purest ideological form. And there are a lot more than just an "inconsequential few." For instance, pretty much the entire Tea Party, which is possibly the largest faction of the Republican Party. Maybe the individual voters don't want that, but the people they keep sending to Congress are sure doing their best to dismantle government to the point of crippling it.
9/25/2013 10:50:41 AM
9/25/2013 11:47:32 AM
9/25/2013 11:50:38 AM
9/25/2013 11:59:40 AM
A forest is not abstract, a forest is a system. A collective is a system. Individuals comprise groups and those groups comprise the collective. A collective is absolutely quantifiable. It's not an abstract idea, it's just incredibly complex.If you believe that any individual freedom should be taken away (such as murder), then there is no ideological debate left except for a negotiation on what level of individual liberty should be bargained away at the expense of a more optimal society (optimal system). What power and liberty should the individual be expected to cede in order to benefit the "general welfare?"
9/25/2013 12:42:38 PM
Ahhh semantics. The purest form of argument.
9/25/2013 12:47:49 PM
9/25/2013 1:03:23 PM
9/25/2013 1:07:35 PM
9/25/2013 1:18:07 PM
I love how you ALWAYS, I mean, ALWAYS, bring up property in defense of your ideology.You cannot sit there and declare that "the collective" is a ideological construct and therefore absurd, and then turn around and speak about "property" as if it is a universally recognized conceit.
9/25/2013 1:35:31 PM
I see you edited out "property"but you replaced it with this:
9/25/2013 1:42:52 PM
Where did I bring up property?
9/25/2013 1:43:10 PM
I dunno, maybe? Or maybe I just assumed you'd go straight to property.But you really are opening up a can of worms when you talk about theft as denying someone's own method of survival. If a lumber company comes into town and starts removing trees and destroying land that a community needs for their survival, would they be within their right to trespass on the companies property and prevent further excavation of land that they depend on for their survival?Which side would you be on? The side of the company who "purchased" the land legally and was entitled to their property? Or the side of the community that needed that land for their own survival? Hmmmm, quite the rubik's cube.
9/25/2013 1:52:41 PM
I don't really understand what you're trying to argue at this point. The tyranny of the majority? What about the tyranny of economic exploitation? The tyranny of unregulated financial markets? The tyranny of being a victim in any system other than the ideological minority in a democracy? There are countless ways to be oppressed in an advanced, modern society other than by the government.Is increasing productivity of a factory by simply making the workers work harder without additional compensation not the "theft" of their labor, their means of survival?
9/25/2013 1:53:57 PM
9/25/2013 1:56:53 PM
I have to admit, when Libertarianism is focused on real world issues, it's just an absolute home run. Case in point:You just can't disagree with that. It is basically 100% indisputable that there are abuses of government power. I'm not even sure if going after those abuses should even be called Libertarian, it's American.Maybe "Libertarianism" just means that our checks and balances aren't working well enough right now.
9/25/2013 2:03:32 PM
d357r0y3r is more of an anarchist than a libertarian, anyways
9/25/2013 2:05:33 PM
I see the former as the logical extension of the latter. I believed in "minimal government". That's what the U.S. was designed to be. Minimal government opens the door for an explosion of economic development; sociopaths will want to find ways to get a cut of that growth without actually providing additional value, which is where expansion of state power comes in.In short, "cutting back" on the bad parts of government doesn't really work. The mechanisms are in place to add laws, but there's no leverage to remove them. Outright rejection of the bad parts is the purest form of participation. Not throwing molotov cocktails through shop windows kind of "anarchy", rejecting failed state solutions and coming up with better ones.[Edited on September 25, 2013 at 2:15 PM. Reason : ]
9/25/2013 2:12:02 PM
9/25/2013 2:14:39 PM
9/25/2013 2:16:47 PM
I absolutely agree that there are legitimate abuses of government power.Part of the problem, I think, is that as Americans we expect there to be abuses of power. If it wasn't so expected and if we didn't hold bureaucrats to such a low standard then I think that would help. I think not prosecuting whistle-blowers would be a helpful step. I think tightening the rules on lobbyists (and big private money in elections) would help. I think that not hiring people from corporations to run organizations which oversee those corporations would help.Do I naively believe that we can run a perfect government with no corruption? Absolutely not. But there are TONS of things we can do that would produce more favorable outcomes. My problem with libertarians is that they fail to recognize or even debate whether these things would work in favor of the intellectually lazy argument that the government is inherently corrupt. I think a more objective and fair argument is that unchecked power in the hands of the wrong person is a more significant source of corruption, whether that be private or public. But it doesn't mean we should just give up.
9/25/2013 2:18:10 PM
9/25/2013 2:22:29 PM
9/25/2013 2:30:28 PM
9/25/2013 2:37:01 PM
9/25/2013 3:46:39 PM
9/25/2013 4:01:52 PM
Sure, I have no problem with that, as long as they're not putting the people who don't pay up in cages.
9/25/2013 4:03:27 PM
9/25/2013 4:07:36 PM
9/25/2013 4:18:40 PM
9/25/2013 4:20:28 PM
Yeah, because the PR nightmare of sweatshop labor really put a hurtin' for the bottom line of NIKE.Why didn't those little Vietnamese children just sell their stock to protest?
9/25/2013 4:29:05 PM
I like how you focus on only one of many examples I listed. Selling stock is just an option; the purpose of that example was to illustrate choice. If you own stock, you can sell it. With the state, there are no choices, only leaving, jail, death, or extortion.[Edited on September 25, 2013 at 4:32 PM. Reason : ]
9/25/2013 4:31:46 PM
corporations would conglomerate, they would expand both vertically and horizontally until it was economically viable and necessary to have their own military or police force. this isn't fantasy, this is history... and fairly recent history. your logging company would be owned by modern Astors, or Carnegies, or Rockefellers, they would hire modern private military and police forces that would make the Pinkertons look like saints. they would even go to war if that's what it took to secure resources, we've seen all of this before (United Fruit Co., Pinkerton Detective Agency, etc...)what would stop them in the absence of an elected government?now the obvious response is to say, "corporations and the government are the same thing, with the same privileged people playing whatever side works the best at the time." and that is absolutely true, but you are criticizing people for trying to fix electoral politics even though its the only option where there is a chance of having a voice. [Edited on September 25, 2013 at 4:35 PM. Reason : .]
9/25/2013 4:32:36 PM
9/25/2013 4:33:10 PM
9/25/2013 4:33:59 PM
9/25/2013 4:36:04 PM
9/25/2013 4:36:41 PM
9/25/2013 4:39:05 PM
How many deaths were they responsible for? A dozen?This is the "devil we know" bullshit I'm talking about. There are no private holocausts. There are no profit Hiroshimas or Nagasakis. There are no private gulags. Take the top 10 atrocities of the 20th century. Were any committed by private companies?
9/25/2013 4:39:18 PM
9/25/2013 4:39:58 PM
^ If those children in the West Virginia coal mines didn't want to get shot by the Pinkerton's, they could have just sold their stock! Or complained on the internet! Or refused to shop in the company store! Or maybe they could have started a PR campaign highlighting their poor wages!I never denied the existence of property, champ. I'm just saying that you can't call it absolute, and then twist and turn its very definition whenever it doesn't suit your argument (which is exactly what you did in the lumber company example).[Edited on September 25, 2013 at 4:42 PM. Reason : ]
9/25/2013 4:40:37 PM
so your point, now, is that being a slave to corporatism is better than being a slave to electoral politics because the scale of conflicts would be smaller?but what would stop corporations from growing? why would the scale of conflict never get that big? some private companies today already have cash reserves larger than the government. what's to stop them from colonizing, and setting up cities to grow customers? we've seen all of this before, its not theoretical.
9/25/2013 4:43:00 PM
Where have I called it absolute? I have a pretty nuanced opinion on property. I don't think everything can be owned.
9/25/2013 4:44:00 PM
Your definition is only nuanced when you get stuck in a corner. You never seem to acknowledge the grey areas. And I just used the lumber company example because it was easy. You could easily parse down those conflicts to a smaller scale where your "nuance" would really be tested and exposed for inconsistencies. And what you refuse to acknowledge is that your nuanced opinion would most certainly not align with opinions of others. And in your stateless society, there would be no meaningful way to resolve these conflicts, because might would most certainly make right.
9/25/2013 4:52:21 PM
There is grey area (water, natural, unrefined resources, air, etc), but there's also plenty of black and white. The fact that there are areas where we don't all agree doesn't mean that property isn't worth respecting or thinking of as legitimate.Where is this all leading? Property isn't black and white, therefore "the collective" should be able to murder you if you don't give up what is asked from you? Or, there is grey area, so let's have a single government with a single set of laws and all the weapons that will arbitrarily give us a definition, rather than multiple, competing arbitration/conflict resolution organizations?Does anyone want to challenge the assertion that sociopaths are drawn to government in higher numbers relative to private industry? If the idea of ultimate, world-ending power makes you giddy, are you going to shoot for President of the United States or CEO of Burger King?
9/25/2013 5:05:54 PM
in a stateless society i'd shoot for CEO of the large multi-"national" conglomerate corporation that owned that owned Burger King and the cities they were built in, where burgers were bought with scrips that we used to "pay" the people who lived in our cities
9/25/2013 5:30:19 PM