If you don't like the USPS, use FedEx, or UPS, or DHL, or the millions of other available options. No one is forced to use the United States Postal Service.
11/17/2010 4:02:31 PM
11/17/2010 4:16:53 PM
11/17/2010 4:26:19 PM
11/17/2010 4:38:10 PM
11/17/2010 4:41:27 PM
11/17/2010 4:44:03 PM
Only the threat of Revolution really. Good thing that's expressly protected by the very same Constitution and our ability to assemble and educate our populace to the same.You're the one suggesting that smaller proto-governments would do better than our large government. We're asking you why.I'm asking how things would be at all different if you replaced the government's authority with private defense agencies.
11/17/2010 4:48:18 PM
11/17/2010 4:58:10 PM
Because we've seen (and currently see) real world examples where smaller proto-governments generally has been ultra-shitty for the general populace. Additionally, the United States is not the only country on the planet. Would national defense also be handled independently by each proto-government?Without a governing body strong enough to threaten everyone equally, the strongest proto-government will simply violently enforce it's law on whatever citizens it can and take from them whatever they wish. Is that how it happens now? Sure, but it happens everywhere evenly and to a lesser severity and extent. That's the trade-off. I don't have to worry if I entered Defense Agency Alpha's protection zone and am now subject to their arbitrary rules. I don't have to amass a giant stockpile of guns to protect myself from whatever Defense Agency feels like taking my property unjustly. I don't have to worry that some civilian crime organization could somehow get more powerful than the Defense Agency I pay and then totally invalidate the system. In short, smaller proto-governments would be chaos.We actually live in one of the best countries to live in on the planet, and you act like it's a fucking gulag.
11/17/2010 5:10:08 PM
11/17/2010 6:45:19 PM
^ Of course, all of that is untrue. If someone takes something from you, they have an obligation to make it right (restitution). This would apply to taking property as well as members of your family. And seeing that a movie theater is private property, they have the right to remove anyone they wish from their property. These ideas really aren't that complicated, it's amazing how hard they are for you to understand.
11/17/2010 10:50:09 PM
If someone breaks into you home and rapes your daughter, do you really believe they'll voluntarily make restitution to you? So then, how do you force them to make restitution without the threat of violence?
11/17/2010 11:18:27 PM
11/17/2010 11:35:53 PM
All of the situations you are talking about involve another person initiating violence. As I have already mentioned, using force to defend life, liberty, and property is justified. I have never claimed that all force is wrong. What you are referring to is defensive force. If someone steals from another person, and they have to use force to get back what is owed to them, they are defending their property, and the other person is the aggressor. I have no problem with that. If you're really having a hard time understanding this, maybe this will help: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-aggression_principle
11/18/2010 9:21:19 AM
Libertarians HATE Nate Dogg and Warren G. "Regulatoooooors, mount up!"
11/18/2010 9:35:04 AM
11/18/2010 9:42:21 AM
11/18/2010 10:23:44 AM
11/18/2010 11:00:19 AM
11/18/2010 11:13:04 AM
11/18/2010 1:16:08 PM
11/18/2010 1:22:41 PM
11/18/2010 3:06:18 PM
I haven't juggled any terms or backpedaled on anything. The quote I just provided was near the beginning of this discussion, explaining very clearly what constitutes aggression. You're just looking for an escape route by going on about the terms because you can't argue the actual point. Using aggression against peaceful individuals to get what you want is wrong. Use whatever terms you want, but that's not going to change. It's the reason slavery is wrong. It's the reason theft is wrong. We all know it, even if you don't want to admit it.
11/18/2010 3:35:37 PM
We're already convinced that our government is exactly like the Mafia and you can't exactly opt out of it. You don't have to convince us of that.What you have to convince us of is how smaller, less structured mafias would be better especially in light of real world examples of government failure awesomely shitting on the quality of life of the citizens therein.
11/18/2010 3:45:19 PM
11/18/2010 3:45:44 PM
11/18/2010 4:27:01 PM
Ummm, you are bound by the laws and protections of the United States by virtue of being a citizen of the United States. No contract required.You can actually opt-out if you wish.
11/18/2010 4:36:30 PM
11/18/2010 4:58:42 PM
Says who? You?I say that social contracts can be used to justify violence upon others as long as the justification is the enforcement of just laws to uphold the obligations of said social contract. There.Which by the way is further validated by the possibility of rebellion.[Edited on November 18, 2010 at 5:07 PM. Reason : .]
11/18/2010 5:03:54 PM
11/18/2010 5:08:12 PM
11/18/2010 5:29:16 PM
You're making up this invisible right to own property and saying it is somehow more legitimate than the invisible right for a government to enforce its laws within its borders and on its citizenry.Neither concept is material. Your house is yours only by some imaginary right of ownership. I'm not saying that ownership doesn't exist, but you can't just handwave away government sovereignty within its borders on the basis that it's imaginary without hurting your case at the same time.
11/18/2010 5:39:53 PM
11/18/2010 6:17:31 PM
11/18/2010 6:55:46 PM
Only because the TSA would probably be sending you to Guantanamo for domestic terrorism. If it was a private bus company, then like I said, their recourse is to make you leave. You only get arrested if you refuse. I can't be made to pay because we have no contract as I never agreed to pay for the trip.
11/18/2010 7:27:00 PM
11/18/2010 7:28:41 PM
11/18/2010 8:58:46 PM
I would say aggression requires intent, it could be done by accident.
11/18/2010 9:32:54 PM
11/18/2010 10:06:10 PM
11/18/2010 10:35:57 PM
11/19/2010 12:44:08 AM
You don't believe in individual rights. You start from the assumption that the government owns us. After all, it has the military, it has the police, and it calls the shots. Any action we could possibly take is not a right, but a privilege granted to us by government. From that perspective, it makes sense that we could deny government its rights. You're a statist. No surprise there, we all know this to be true. The preservation of the state is of supreme importance; liberty can and should be infringed upon by the state when the ends justify the means, as determined by politicians, lawyers, bankers, and corporations.
11/19/2010 1:12:16 AM
Guess what the only thing maintaining our individual rights is? Did you guess protection by our laws and their enforcement? And bingo was his name-o.The government doesn't own us, but it necessarily has the power to enforce our laws. Laws which are written by ordinary people that other ordinary people freely elect btw. Without this power, without the threat of aggression, violence, whatever, your individual rights would almost certainly be impinged upon.Unless of course you had the guns to protect it, in which case what would stop you from impinging on others' individual rights?Now don't get me wrong, I totally agree that we have many unjust laws on the books which don't belong there. But that certainly isn't reason enough to abandon the government or to suggest that every act of enforcing our laws is unwarranted aggression.
11/19/2010 1:21:00 AM
11/19/2010 8:34:20 AM
^^^^ I ignored the rest of your post because you didn't say anything that you haven't said before and that I haven't addressed before. I have no desire to keep going around in circles with you.
11/19/2010 9:08:40 AM
How mature of you. I would have guessed you don't want to reply because you've become rather desperate and began grasping for straws.
11/19/2010 9:55:05 AM