Does such a thing as society exist? Does it matter? Do we have any obligations to anyone other than ourselves?I know for a fact everyone believes in sacrificing at least some freedoms on this board. Government by its very nature is coercive. Take for instance, its status as the legitimate purveyor of law and justice. Did you not agree to those laws when you chose to live under that government? Does that not sacrifice your judgment of others lawfulness to the defined laws of another body of people who are not you?PS: the US Constitution is not the definition of freedom, so don't cop out and say "well, I believe in the Constitution and that's it". The Constitution is coercive. This should be a silly thread, but more and more I see people in here talking about freedom being defined as living only for yourself and not harming others, and yet we all still live under a document that provides for a collective declaration of war on other nations. I highly doubt we have any true anarcho-capitalists or objectivists in here, but if so, you're pretty poorly thought-out.
12/3/2009 4:04:32 PM
That is because the Constitution was the unconstitutional product of a counter-revolution against the ideals of the Founding Fathers and their Articles of Confederation. As such, "I believe in the Articles of Confederation and that's it."
12/3/2009 4:21:39 PM
12/3/2009 4:30:15 PM
12/3/2009 4:46:48 PM
12/3/2009 7:02:05 PM
12/3/2009 7:45:41 PM
12/3/2009 8:07:47 PM
True. Not many constitutions (or institutions in general) contain within them a mechanism for their own destruction.
12/3/2009 8:12:43 PM
haha someone is having their first encounters with Libertarianism, I think.Reading some Rand? Rothbard? Friedman? Spooner?
12/3/2009 8:22:07 PM
From what I recall everyone in this thread has long been well-acquainted with Libertarianism. I suspect that the OP is trying to get people to get their thoughts in order, because as he says, there's been a lot of fast-and-loose definitions of "freedom" and "liberty" thrown around lately.
12/3/2009 8:24:37 PM
A lot of people seem to think freedom means forcing someone to give you something. This is actually directly from the original post: "freedom being defined as living only for yourself and not harming others." No one is saying that, that I've seen. That's what the OP would like people to say, because it'd be a lot easier to make the "libertarians only care about themselves" argument that way, but...no, just no.
12/3/2009 8:34:57 PM
12/3/2009 10:42:15 PM
12/3/2009 11:29:23 PM
12/3/2009 11:32:44 PM
PinkandBlack is one of the few posters I don't routinely want to punch in the face, which is more than I can say for, say, Socks``. So I agree with McDanger on this point based on no evidence.
12/3/2009 11:55:26 PM
hahaha
12/4/2009 12:34:35 AM
12/4/2009 8:54:20 AM
compare levels of poverty among the elderly pre and post redistributive programs such as social security and medicare. i've heard plenty of people make the argument that this is a fallacy, that the decrease in this poverty rate was due to some other thing that happened then, but the correlation between medicare and the decrease in poverty among the elderly closely correlates, unlike the decrease in poverty among the elderly and, say, cheaper drugs or medical advances. they no longer have to fear bankruptcy when they need serious treatment.for all the flaws in any health insurance system, at the least i think ones based on the egalitarian ideal of hc as a right are at least as successful in medical outcomes as those here. there are tradeoffs (wait time there vs. cost per person and access for some here), and no system is perfect, but if there is such a thing as society, and the well-being of others is in our interest, then yes, making sure everyone gets coverage without health problems threatening their ability to provide for a family or afford housing is a moral imperative. i know it's not fun and hyperbolic and truly American, but most market economies don't put people's health on the market for profit. yes, market economies. defining anything to the left of the GOP as socialism is about as sensible as saying libertarians can only be mongoloid anarcho-capitalist mental patients like murray rothbard.there are many ways to do this, and you can even make an argument that most of this should be left to the market, but i think that it is a moral imperative and the most basic of provisions we should work on universal access to (without just resorting to throwing all the costs on emergency rooms). I actually think a multi-tier system is good, but hospital trips shouldn't make you go bankrupt. if we support "life", we should support the sustainers of life (so don't pull that "durrr why not give universal cars to all" crap on me).
12/4/2009 9:42:50 AM
i beleive that freedom starts with seeing these-taxation is theft-regulations prevent our best persons from being their best-i shoudl not be forced by government to run my business a certain way
12/4/2009 9:46:20 AM
lol
12/4/2009 10:02:25 AM
I don't deny that social security and medicare have decreased poverty. They've also caused us to run a budget deficit year after year and now the costs are exploding. You can't just provide this crap and not have it paid for. No one is denying that government can pay for people's expenses.I disagree that making sure everyone gets health coverage is a moral imperative. The fact that you have to force someone else to pay for it is my problem with it. The real problem that has to be addressed is healthcare costs, and no one is doing that. I agree that we should be aiming for universal access to healthcare, but that means lowering the cost, not spreading out the cost. I won't claim to know the solution, but I know that prices of all goods and services (that aren't extremely scarce) go down over time when there's competition. Unless the government is involved, of course, in which case prices skyrocket every year.You don't put "people's health" on the market. People's health is not for sale. What is for sale is medicine and medical services. If you couldn't make a profit by being a doctor or developing medicines, not very many people would do it, and you'd have lower quality care across the board. Apparently when you "grew up" and became a statist you forgot about the concept of profit motive. It wouldn't hurt to refamiliarize yourself.
12/4/2009 11:03:41 AM
12/4/2009 11:50:09 AM
back to the original top 3 questions in this thread by the OP.1) individuals typically make up families, that make up small communities or tribes (and do indeed still watch out for each other.. i have decent relationships even in my neighborhood and we look out for each other typically. i trust them less than my closest family, but they are 'up there' i'd say.after that it comes down to politics and voting as really i have no influence beyond that. other than my job.2) i think it can matter, but doesnt have to. if it doesnt we break down into smaller tribes and still 'govern' in groups. if it does matter and we keep honest leaders that are keeping humanities best interests at hand and we trust them that can usually be good too and indeed 'matter'3) once again it's biological to 'have obligations'. mothers/fathers usually fall into their natural roll when children come along it seems. (male turns into hunter/gatherer and does everything possible to get resources for female/child. and female nutures and raises the kid)beyond that it's pretty much optional. i mean you can care for a 'company' b/c it gives you 100k a year. and you want that for yourself and wife/kid?? so you "oblidge" to it. governments though.. and societies.. i mean if you need them for welfare.. healthcare, police care, school care, yes i start giving a damn.but if i can provide my own police/school/health and welfare... fuck it. i'm flying solo and staying under the radar.
12/4/2009 12:06:50 PM
12/4/2009 12:25:35 PM
12/4/2009 12:34:18 PM
12/4/2009 1:26:10 PM
I feel shackled because I can't urinate on people that walk near me in the streets.
12/4/2009 1:33:06 PM
^me too!!
12/4/2009 1:34:25 PM
12/4/2009 2:28:40 PM
12/4/2009 3:01:17 PM
12/5/2009 4:23:57 PM
Probably off topic, but a common complaint against government is that it is essentially a monopoly, and that the free market can avoid all of the problems of a monopoly by promoting competition. But what is to prevent any one company from growing into a monopoly anyway? I'll accept that it is possible for a government to be bought and paid for, and utilized to keep competition at bay by exploiting its monopoly on force and ability to make laws and regulations. But what guarantee do we have that some businesses wouldn't rise to major power in a lawless, anarchic society? If they cannot rely upon the government's force, can't they just buy their own weapons and manufacture their own enforcement? Certainly other businesses would be free to do the same, but then day-to-day life becomes nothing more than daily turf wars. How can a prosperous and peaceful society thrive in conditions like that?
12/5/2009 5:04:22 PM
12/5/2009 5:09:13 PM
12/5/2009 5:42:06 PM
Are you seriously questioning whether history shows time and again governments to be rife with corruption and self serving individuals rather than a benevolent force of individuals who have the interests of the people at heart regardless of the personal cost?As to freedom vs "social contracts" yes, freedom allows for social contracts, and even if it didn't, human nature is to form social contracts, so any definition of freedom which does not account for that tendency is useless and unrealistic.
12/5/2009 6:19:51 PM
well despite all those corrupt individuals, i think democratic government does a decent job of providing for the common (limited) welfare. if it didn't, we'd be living in failed states. come on now. we're doing pretty good for people led by corrupt people. I mean, you can drive to the store and buy things that don't kill you. can't say that for bad governed states.(ps: i think its hilarious how a moderate liberal like me who doesnt' like the hc bill is a socialist on here)but you keep bootstrappin' in the free world, bro.
12/5/2009 6:54:08 PM
1) Yes it does do a decent job. To paraphrase: Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others we've tried.2) We're doing pretty good so far, but we're also a relatively young country. And I would suggest that recent events show that we are not improving as far as corruption and self serving politicians are concerned.3) As to driving to the store to buy things that don't kill you, might I direct your attention to Fen-Phen, and more recently processed peanut butter, and depending on whether they learned their safety lessons or not, NC's new and only approved diabetes equipment supplier for medicaid (http://www.wral.com/news/local/wral_investigates/story/6467764/)4) I don't seem to recall calling you a socialist.
12/5/2009 7:41:43 PM
^^ I disagree. 400 years ago England was the best administered realm in the world, evidence from that time shows an absolute monarch less corrupt in administration than most countries today. Similarly, many democracies today are administered so poorly they are all but failed states. I believe good governance has a strong cultural component. As such, America would be similarly well administered today as either a dictatorship or a communist state. We just can't help ourselves.
12/6/2009 9:57:00 AM
12/6/2009 12:34:27 PM
^lol, self evident truths about human behavior. tell me some of the axioms of this approach to economics, and do it for sociology and psychology while you're at it.
12/7/2009 10:44:44 PM
12/7/2009 11:15:00 PM
i have a hard time separating out the "throw it all away" libertarians from the "meh" libertarians.and the thread was moreso dealing with those who say something like the FDA was coercive and a threat to freedom. if you accept the premise that government, even federal government is legitimate, congrats, you're on my side of this thread whether you realized it or not at first.actually, i think everyone here is when actually pressed for an answer. it came from the threads on healthcare where some people insisted that their money should never forcibly go to help other people.
12/8/2009 8:57:46 PM
The FDA can exist without being coercive, so why not have it be that way? If you choose consume non-FDA approved items, then you deserve what happens to you! We can slap logos on products for which stage of FDA approval they have satisfied (I. This product will not kill you; II. This product will do what it is advertised to do.)
12/9/2009 12:33:59 AM
I believe coercion is a violation of natural rights and as such is immoral. As a result of this foundational belief, I find anarcho-capitalism to be the only morally justifiable political system. I will say that I am pretty new to politics and philosophy in general, so I am still exploring other possibilities and am interested in other views.Why do you claim anyone holding to anarcho-capitalism to be "poorly thought-out"? It seems to me that the philosophy is very coherent, and in fact the ultimate logical conclusion of individual liberty. Or are you contending that individual liberty is secondary to the general well-being of society? If so, then we are starting from completely different premises.
12/27/2009 11:40:26 PM
because if the capitalists don't support the masses, the whole system (capitalism) will ultimately fail. Thus the need for socialism, and a lot of it.
12/27/2009 11:47:10 PM
12/27/2009 11:56:09 PM
^^ Ok, well I do think if it were possible to have a completely voluntary socialist society, that could work also. But I am not convinced it is possible. I am however beginning to study socialist anarchist philosophy to attempt to get a better grasp of their claims. I did not intend for this to be a socialism/capitalism debate... I was under the impression it was an argument for the justification of coercion (although I'm not exactly sure what the argument is).[Edited on December 27, 2009 at 11:59 PM. Reason : ^]
12/27/2009 11:59:00 PM
^^ I agree that the defense industry appears to be the shakiest part of a potential anarcho-capitalist system, but I am not ready to abandon it as impractical yet. I do think it is possible that competition of private defense agencies could exist in a way that would inhibit a monopoly of force from taking over, and am not ready to resign to the inevitability of such a monopoly. It is not completely unfounded to expect market forces to keep these agencies in check. I think that the ultimate goal for a society should be to eliminate all forms of coercion, and this means somehow protecting against this monopoly on force.http://mises.org/etexts/defensemyth.pdf This collection of essays on the subject looks like it could provide some interesting thoughts. I have not yet read it, but hope to get to it soon.
12/28/2009 11:16:31 AM
12/28/2009 11:42:51 AM
12/28/2009 11:59:13 AM