Trying to eliminate the threadjack of the SC credibility watch thread to continue the conversation here.To be honest, I don't disagree with the fact that being born in a country involuntarily makes you under their control. Control which is maintained through force. These aren't arguable points. The arguable point is that the protection given to us is worth the cost and that actual freedom doesn't really exist.If you weren't controlled by the government, you'd just be controlled by someone with more guns than you.Another thing I'd like to address:
1/26/2011 1:34:29 AM
Im not sure if im interpreting this correctly because i generally agree with your posts....But please tell me you arent saying using drugs isn't victimless because people are dying trying to supply you with drugs?Those crimes are only happening because the US govt has created a black market for drugs.If drugs werent illegal the entire business model would change and violence would give way to more efficient means of production and distribution.If anything, the US govt is the cause of such violence.[Edited on January 26, 2011 at 1:51 AM. Reason : edit]
1/26/2011 1:50:53 AM
I'd guess that's a fair point but I'd like to explore it a bit further. Would legalizing drugs in America eliminate the demand for drugs from other countries? I'm not certain of that.Would legalizing drugs in the U.S. change the methods by which drug cartels operate? Aside from having easier avenues to export into the U.S? I see no reason to think they would become legitimate non-violent organizations. If we could produce enough drugs that we wouldn't need to import them, sure, that would do a lot of damage, but isn't that in itself a concession that U.S. demand is the problem?
1/26/2011 8:51:45 AM
oh wait, i forgot you are a troll[Edited on January 26, 2011 at 9:18 AM. Reason : trolly troll troll]
1/26/2011 8:55:51 AM
1/26/2011 9:26:44 AM
The only thing we can control is our demand for drugs from forgeign countries. If drugs were legalized alot of the production would move inside US borders and most demand would be filled by internal manufacturers. That might cause less violence in other countries or it might cause more violence due to poverty caused by the loss of export revenue. But thats not our problem. The only thing we can do is control what happens inside our borders. The same arguments were made for prohibition and they're also made for gun control, but both were and are massive failures. If you want to look at why this stuff exists, follow the money. Drug offenders fill up prisons which is big $$$. Anti-drug policy is a very simple appeal to the hysteria of the masses which is big $$$ for politicians. It also means the fed can demonize drug offenders without having to look at why they started doing drugs in the first place and without helping them fix their lives. That means more power and $$$ for the fed.Drug policy in the US is all about using authoritarianism to line the pockets of private contractors. Just like the medicare, the military, and homeland security.
1/26/2011 9:40:24 AM
Canabis is the only drug that merits legalization, and it can most definitely be produced locally dirt cheap. The difficulty of growing it without law enforcement noticing is the only reason why it gets smuggled from other, less vigilant nations.^"Gun control is a massive failure"....self-eviden truth right?
1/26/2011 10:16:23 AM
1/26/2011 12:32:07 PM
1/26/2011 1:10:34 PM
1/26/2011 1:20:18 PM
1/26/2011 1:20:59 PM
1/26/2011 1:48:50 PM
^ I don't really have a position on the success of gun control, but I know that it's failure is not a given fact like the failure of Prohibition.
1/26/2011 2:53:30 PM
cont. from other thread
1/26/2011 3:56:35 PM
1/26/2011 7:20:28 PM
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1/26/2011 8:02:04 PM
1/27/2011 2:12:58 AM
d357r0y3r's historical analysis:- Iraq's current government is more corrupt and less democratic than the Saddam Hussein regime.- The Nazi's did not threaten to conquer Europe (bonus fact: The US is becoming the Third Reich)- The United States is to blame for tensions on the Korean peninsula.If some of this sounds like the kind of crackpot nonsense expected from people with severe mental abnormalities, sociopaths, and drug addicts, fear not - these claims are solidly based on his "research."
1/27/2011 8:36:32 AM
I disagree with the implication that it's possible to be free from coercion. There will always be externalities that prevent true liberty.
1/27/2011 9:47:03 AM
just take a look at somalia, people are reasonable and can work out their issues without a government. somalia is currently undergoing the greatest economic boom in the history of the country, the people have access to more food and have more rights than ever before. there are absolutely no power struggles or oppression; every man, woman, and child in somalia has access to any future that they choose. its an example that should be heralded for how well things work when there is a power and leadership vacuum.
1/27/2011 10:21:06 AM
^ Old information. The stateless experiment of Somalia has been crushed by the U.S. funded invaders and warlords.
1/27/2011 10:47:02 AM
so in a perfect libertarian societies there are never outside governments or organizations looking to inject their influence? interesting, sign me up. or are you pointing out the need for a government to protect from that kind of thing?
1/27/2011 10:49:00 AM
1/27/2011 11:02:41 AM
1/27/2011 12:06:35 PM
Even the strongest defense agency would be unable to maintain force over the entire country in the long-term. National defense (and really, all government operations), as it exists today, relies on a few things: tax money (collected by force), indoctrination (instilling nationalism in children from a young age, having them recite a pledge of allegiance in classes - in short, making sure that government schools produce students loyal to the state), and control over the money supply.As I mentioned before, the state can only wage the wars it wages and punish innocent people because it has no mechanism by which to control costs. Certainly, Congress is not doing it's job. The treasury sells whatever bonds it has to in order to cover costs, and if no one is buying, they'll sell to the central bank. Cost minimization has never been a stated goal of the government.[Edited on January 27, 2011 at 12:19 PM. Reason : ]
1/27/2011 12:19:03 PM
1/27/2011 12:30:09 PM
If you believe in the creed "the people get the government they deserve," then you'd agree that the Iraqi people had the government they deserved. Our government gave the Iraqis a government that [our government] thought Iraqis deserved: one that would funnel resources to the United States and protect (what TBTB perceived as) U.S. interests.Genuine democracy comes about when the people say "we've had enough" and hold their leaders accountable, not when a band of foreigners shows up and tells them it's time to honor democratic principles.
1/27/2011 12:48:02 PM
lazarus: Oh no! My preconceived notions of interventionism and democracy have been challenged! Must attempt to discount the other party by calling them crazy because I have no legitimate argument.
1/27/2011 12:51:48 PM
1/27/2011 1:45:16 PM
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1/27/2011 2:06:59 PM
1/27/2011 2:12:45 PM
1/27/2011 2:20:00 PM
1/27/2011 2:23:53 PM
or another government with a standing army and overlapping interests
1/27/2011 2:37:30 PM
This has got to be the weirdest thread this board has seen in a while.If I were a moderator, I would lock it, and probably ban half the people in it.But I'm not, so you guys just keep kickin' that hardcore knowledge.
1/27/2011 2:40:34 PM
1/27/2011 2:43:55 PM
1/27/2011 3:01:28 PM
1/27/2011 4:12:46 PM
1/27/2011 4:18:41 PM
^^ You did not say that. All you said was "without a strong federal government and standing army". Any human environment will have authority of some kind, be it mob rule, private security firms, or a city council. Take your pick.
1/27/2011 4:29:45 PM
1/27/2011 4:48:04 PM
^^ i never said any of thatdnumbers thinks any government is bad
1/27/2011 4:49:46 PM
^^^ No, I said that, and you're missing the point: If the strongest military forces are not controlled by elected officials, what stops them from doing what they want?
1/27/2011 4:58:31 PM
1/27/2011 5:16:19 PM
1/27/2011 5:22:07 PM
1/27/2011 5:30:32 PM
1/27/2011 6:35:07 PM
Indeed. They set up a constitutional system of checks and balances. We see how well that worked out. The military is a case where there are no longer checks and balances. Congress is supposed to declare war, but in the two wars we've started this decade, the President declared war.I agree with the second part. As Thomas Jefferson stated, "The natural progress of things is for liberty to yield and government to gain ground." You also talk about a reset button. Thomas Jefferson also said that every generation needed its own revolution. I agree with that - in order for liberty to be secured, every generation has to beat back the state, in whatever form it takes. That's the crux of my argument: the people must be educated, informed, motivated, and empowered. Otherwise, the chances of any genuinely free and lasting society are...not so great.
1/27/2011 6:54:00 PM