Either there are logical, objective ethical standards or there aren't.If there are, these standards are necessarily universal and permit of no exceptions. They apply to all people equally. Government, at its most basic, is a group of people who maintain "we can hit you but you can't hit us." That is not a logical, objective moral principle. That is illogical, inconsistent and unequal.If logical, objective ethical standards exist, government, as such. cannot be permitted.If no logical, objective ethical standards exist, then any assertion that the government is justified on the grounds that it provides some good, or that it prevents some evil, is absurd, foolish, baseless, nonsensical and fraudulent, since there is no logical basis for deciding what is "good" and what is "evil", since there is no objective basis on which to form a preference for one over the other, since the very concepts of "good" and "evil" are meaningless.Either way, no government can be permitted, no government can be justified.
6/8/2008 6:09:22 PM
who was it that said "a democracy would only work when based on christian principles"well, looks like christianity is out the door.... so i guess monarchy is next for us unless we plunge into anarchy first
6/8/2008 6:16:57 PM
^ Not sure who that was, but they've obviously never been to India.
6/8/2008 6:25:33 PM
so tell me, is the modern day liberals mantra:1) counter anything that has to do with christianity2) be anti-american and pro socialist in every way?
6/8/2008 6:44:34 PM
How the fuck would I know what the liberals mantra is?
6/8/2008 6:46:47 PM
good point. with you're pea sized brain, you'll need all the government you can get to take care of you.
6/8/2008 6:47:43 PM
the government should exist to:1. Defend us.2. Regulate monopolies while protecting intellectual capital.3. Support infrastructure. After that - there is no need for the helping hand of someone else to live our lives.
6/8/2008 6:49:24 PM
Justifications: The bigger weapon has domain.Reasons for Existing: Complacency, wanton ignorance, and fear of responsibility.[Edited on June 8, 2008 at 7:12 PM. Reason : \/ i like the format]
6/8/2008 6:57:04 PM
Justifications: noneReason for existing: nature abhors a vacumn
6/8/2008 7:05:54 PM
Does everyone subscribe to these same principles, and respect the rights of property, life, and liberty in your idyllic situation?How are all you guys in the same camp? Rat's babbling some incoherent nonsense about Christianity and democracy, though he is a special case, TreeTwista and some of the other guys seem like they mostly don't want to pay for shit for other people, and Megaloman and a few others seem both to not trust other people to the extreme and to think that everyone follows the same principles as they do at the same time.
6/8/2008 7:14:48 PM
6/8/2008 7:32:10 PM
But people do violate them, now, in the face of the very real threat of imprisonment and death, or at the very least an ass-beating by a cop who's irritated that the guy tried to hit him to get away. What's the incentive NOT to break these very simple rules of yours in the absence of authority? Barring the "I'll shoot the guy" argument, because you seem to be a basically decent person, so you operate on an entirely different set of rules than someone who would be looking to do you harm in whatever way.
6/8/2008 7:35:37 PM
6/8/2008 7:55:06 PM
Amateur philosophy is a fun way to hide a total lack of practicality, experience, evidence, and sense.
6/8/2008 11:15:33 PM
6/8/2008 11:22:54 PM
Lighten up GOP, this is what the internet is for. Besides porn and Wikipedia.I surely do know people who do that sort of thing fairly regularly. I went to high school with them. They steal cars and other things, engage in date-rape and domestic violence, sell and deal drugs, including meth and coke, and beat people up. You don't know anyone who does any of this?I don't think that violent criminals are numerically a large portion of the population, but neither are the sort of people who take time and effort to deliberately track them down. Most people do not vigorously assert their rights or their will on others (see: last 4000 years of human history). Leaving that aside, legal disputes need to be mediated, those accused of crimes need impartial trials, or as close as we can get, as well as completing objectives for the public good that may not benefit any individual enough to cause them to demand it. I've never bought into anarchy as a realistic world system, because I frankly believe it is a part of human nature to organize, and that there is a practical need for some entity to make and enforce laws. I do think we should strive to keep as much individual freedom as is possible, but to say that no government at all is a good idea just doesn't compute to me. But if you're committed to the idea at this point, I really doubt much I can say is going to change your mind anymore than you're going to change mine by claiming that any infringement on anyone's liberty is totally unacceptable. Check out The Leviathan. I don't buy all or even most of his ideas, but his reasoning against anarchy is pretty strong.[Edited on June 8, 2008 at 11:37 PM. Reason : Remembered something else.]
6/8/2008 11:34:29 PM
6/8/2008 11:39:00 PM
I think the government should exist to:Protect us from the initiation of force or fraud, whether it be the thieves in our backyards or a foreign threat of war. That's it.
6/8/2008 11:56:59 PM
6/9/2008 1:37:48 AM
Let's take up the case, here.Let's assume government is objectively evil from the outset. (It does, after all, infringe upon an absolute condition of liberty, so we'll assume that as a minor evil.)However, in the complete absence of a government, all of your rights are in constant peril. Everyone is free to do what they want, which necessarily involves some uncomfortable overlap. Enter a "social contract." We agree to give up some small portion of our liberties for the agreement that everyone else will do the same, and cede the monopoly on force to a single entity (the government) to maintain this contract.Therefore, it is assumed the gain we achieve in securing our rights from constant threat is outweighed from the liberty we surrender. Therefore, government is an evil, but the absence of a government to protect our rights is a greater evil.
6/9/2008 1:44:14 AM
that's kind of the Barry Goldwater school of thought, which I also subscribe to.The legitimate functions of government are conducive to maximizing freedom. "Maintaining internal order, keeping foreign foes at bay, administering justice, removing obstacles to the free interchange of goods--the exercise of these powers makes it possible for men to follow their chosen pursuits with maximum freedom."I happen to believe that the U.S. Constitution lays out a pretty good plan for achieving these ends, and it is in large part an instrument for restricting the power of the U.S. government in order to keep it in the "sweet spot" of allowing it provisions for the levying of judicious governance and restriction to maximize liberty, but not so much as to curtail liberty.Unfortunately, we've long since stopped paying anything more than a degree of lip service to the Constitution, other than invoking its supposed authority on occasion when it is convenient to the whims of a cause.I am not so much the strictest sort of constitutionalist as much as I am at least a moderate libertarian. I believe that the Constitution needs to be amended in a few regards in order to better serve our society in current times, which would make actually operating within its limitations more practical. However, since the process for amending is wonderfully cumbersome, we've taken it upon ourselves to simply ignore it, and somehow, no one has stepped up to prevent these transgressions. However, I do believe that adherence to our Constitution would go a long way towards preserving liberty.[Edited on June 9, 2008 at 2:13 AM. Reason : VOTE DUKE IN '24]
6/9/2008 2:12:40 AM
idk imo you are making the constitution to be more important than it is or something...not trying to be an asshole but i get that "damn man this guy is hard up for the constitution" vibe(weird one) when i read posts like that...like a "damn..this guy REALLY cares about the constitution"...idk maybe thats a good thing and i'm cynical
6/9/2008 2:18:04 AM
I'll let someone else respond to that. It's hard to type with your hand on your forehead.
6/9/2008 2:24:37 AM
So we don't continue to muck up the UN thread.http://thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=528858
6/9/2008 2:41:53 AM
6/9/2008 2:44:51 AM
fuck I'm not reading all that.Justify your existence, and then I'll get back to you about government.
6/9/2008 3:40:31 AM
when I can no longer afford beer because the cost of barley and hops goes through the roof government is no longer justified.until then I'm ok with it.also Christianity was heavily influenced by Greek teachings as was democracy. I think Rat is looking at democracy as a straight line from the church to democracy rather than them stemming from similar teachings that existed before them both.
6/9/2008 8:31:13 AM
if you want to sit around guessing what i think you can.. but here i'll just tell youi think democracies were created b/c they only work when the people are by and large christian believers. other religions have shown they need a monarchy or a socialist republic to control them or they'll get out of hand and kill each other. this nation has shown that 1000's of religions can live together peacefully. even the growth of islam and others hasn't shown any violent results. our only source of violence has been pure racial aka riots aka slavery roots, which we still pay for. no reason to disban the government yet. sheesh.democracy has worked fanstastic for 200 years and it's finally slipping b/c the population is turning away from christianity.i never said one came from the other or whatever you were trying to say.
6/9/2008 9:22:55 AM
6/9/2008 9:57:03 AM
HAY GUYS, SORRY I'M LATE
6/9/2008 10:19:43 AM
Why would you want to live in a governmental system where one person may harm another, with no consequences except for the urge of his victim to retaliate?
6/9/2008 2:57:05 PM
Don't waste your time with this regression argument.
6/9/2008 3:12:30 PM
6/9/2008 6:39:40 PM
6/9/2008 7:09:24 PM
6/9/2008 8:07:58 PM
6/9/2008 8:09:19 PM
^ Absolutely, you should be allowed to carry a gun or other weapon to defend yourself. Furthermore, the campus should be secured by an efficient, friendly and private security team that you can turn to for additional protection.The ideal solution, however, if for you not to need protection to begin with. We are never going to achieve exactly that, but I believe an anarchist society more closely approximates the ideal than any statist one ever could. This is true even if we only look at private crime and neglect the chance of being violently aggressed against by our own government. http://www.thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=527965&page=2
6/9/2008 8:49:04 PM
"Refusing to retaliate against an aggressor is to sanction his aggression -- and to welcome more of it. Yet, if he is living in a society of other men, it is not enough that an individual determine in his own mind that his use of force is retaliatory. Since whether an act of force is initiatory or retaliatory is not self-evident, and since a man who initiates force is by that fact a threat to society, any man who engages in force that has not been proved by objective means to be retaliatory must be considered a threat. This is the deepest reason why the use of retaliatory force must be delegated to the government: an act of retaliation that isn't first proved to be an act of retaliation is indistinguishable from an act of aggression -- and must be treated as such.What, then, are "objective means"? To determine that an instance of force is retaliatory, men must know what the act of force was, the general standard by which guilt is to be determined, and what evidence was used to meet that standard in a particular case. Every member of society must have access to this information. And, of course, each of these elements must be objective (the laws, standards of evidence, and the evaluation of whether the evidence in question meets that standard). By its nature, then, objectivity in retaliation cannot be achieved without a government (assuming we are speaking here of a society of men and not individuals or isolated tribes). If an individual uses force, by that very fact he is an objective threat to other members of society and may properly be restrained, even if he was responding to another man's aggression. He has no grounds for claiming his rights are being violated.Imagine you are walking down the street and a man walks up and punches the person next to you in the face. The anarchist would argue that if you use force to restrain that person, you are initiating force if it turns out that the man he punched hit him first. Yet that is pure intrinsicism. It is non-objective in the same way that the audience's applause was non-objective. He may be retaliating but you don't know it.The point is not that individuals are unable to make objective determinations of what constitutes retaliatory force -- it's that objectivity demands they prove it to every other member of society."This is why I advocate laissez-faire capitalism, not anarchy.
6/9/2008 11:21:34 PM
6/10/2008 12:02:33 AM
6/10/2008 12:38:04 AM
6/10/2008 1:56:18 AM
6/10/2008 5:20:17 AM
A just principle of law is that every man is considered innocent until he's proven guilty. Another such is that every man is entitled to a speedy trial. Not to mention the punishment prescribed by law will surely vary from what you might prefer to dish out.How can you ensure that a system of competing courts will yield objectivity in retaliation? I think this cannot be achieved without a government.
6/10/2008 8:51:33 AM
6/10/2008 11:27:01 AM
You don't think it's worth the money to the parent of someone you shot dead, assuming they can afford it, to pay to punish you as much as possible? Let me add a couple of lines of extra context to your hypothetical NRA situation.Junior (who stuck you up) has a drug problem. It's not hard to get the drugs, because Appalachia demonstrates pretty clearly that any idiot, no matter how uneducated or inbred, can make meth on an impressive scale pretty easily. He needs that fix, and can't borrow the money anymore. This is where you meet him, and blast him in the face, chest, or other vital area.Junior's parents are likely to spend a LOT of money on your pay-for-judgment court, even if they won't necessarily win, because they're pissed you shot their poor, misguided Larry Jr. instead of handing him your 30 bucks. If they have more than you, they can buy more judgments, so you're found guilty, even though you're justified for having shot the guy who threatened your life, and then you lose your stuff and you're vulnerable to the revenge you describe. Although, really, it's a lot cheaper if they're into revenge to show up in the middle of the night and anonymously set your stuff on fire, especially since there's no one to investigate it to determine whether it could have been intentional. Unless you're a fire investigator?We can probably say pretty clearly that rationality is something that goes out the window in a lot of disagreements (TWW) and especially where there's money involved. Are you assuming that people start from the same place, either in the broad strokes of life, like who your parents are and what they have, or in the business world, that both partners bring similarly valuable assets to the agreement and are able to balance each other out? Or are you into a Darwinist-type model where the weak are out-competed and fall behind?
6/10/2008 2:05:30 PM
6/10/2008 2:54:50 PM
What if the insurance company decides to not pay out the money to you? Where do you find your redress?
6/10/2008 3:03:26 PM
I don't think I'd insure a guy who was so liable to bust caps in people's faces and shrug it off, especially in this kind of Wild West scenario. You'd never make any money.[Edited on June 10, 2008 at 3:08 PM. Reason : I don't reason. I ACT, SON.]
6/10/2008 3:06:27 PM
^^ My insurance contract would presumably stipulate which court I would go to in search of redress. I would have an incentive to make sure the contract is stipulating a reputable arbitrator before I sign it. As I've just explained, no reputable court would rule in favor of my insurance company over me simply because they have more money. That would destroy their capacity to offer anything of value (like impartial judgment) on the market.^ You've just identified another powerful disincentive for misbehavior.[Edited on June 10, 2008 at 3:10 PM. Reason : ']
6/10/2008 3:09:22 PM
who pays for these courts?
6/10/2008 3:10:43 PM