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Post 20

Friday, October 17, 2014 - 9:27amSanction this postReply
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@ Steve Wolfer (Post 18)

 

"And without a government, there is no realistic hope for the acceptance and implimentation of any single set of rules.  It is pure fantasy to imagine otherwise."

 

Nonsense, Steve, it is not pure fantasy to disagree with you.  As already pointed out, government (defined as a group of people separate from other citizens) throughout history has been the source of too many laws, constantly changing and self-contradictory and self-serving for the ruling elite.  Your faith in such a gang being the hope of mankind is touching, but "pure fantasy", given the historical record of all ruling elites.

 

If you want a single set of rules, then have everyone agree to a single set of rules.  Having everyone agree to a single set of rulers who will then (maybe) make a single set of rules simply puts you further from your goal of a single set of rules.  

 

Why do you believe that choosing rulers rather than choosing rules is the efficient way to go?   



Post 21

Friday, October 17, 2014 - 10:40amSanction this postReply
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[When] is the last time we have seen a presidential candidate that wanted to end the Federal Reserve  that wasn't laughed off the stage as a crazy by the media?

Apples and oranges, Dean. I was just saying that in a representative type of government the control of the government by elected officials is only effective until a certain stage in a move towards tyranny. When that stage is reached, the government ignores or abuses the electoral process - just another of the steps they take to move sovereignty away from the individual and to themselves. What the electorate understands - what political principles they accept and vote on - that's a different thing. We have seen the educational system more or less taken over by the left and the result is an electorate that votes more and more to the left. And the media is made of the students graduating from what are now very left-leaning schools of journalism.



Post 22

Friday, October 17, 2014 - 11:20amSanction this postReply
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John Howard wrote:

Nonsense, Steve, it is not pure fantasy to disagree with you. As already pointed out, government (defined as a group of people separate from other citizens) throughout history has been the source of too many laws, constantly changing and self-contradictory and self-serving for the ruling elite. Your faith in such a gang being the hope of mankind is touching, but "pure fantasy", given the historical record of all ruling elites.

I didn't say it was fantasy to disagree with me. I said it was fantasy to imagine that without a government there could be the acceptance and implimenation of any single set of rules.

 

You explicitly define government as "a group of people separate from other citizens." I have to say that that isn't an adequate defintion.

 

There are good governments and there are bad governments and the difference between them lies in their relationship to the proper purpose of government - the protection of individual rights.  Government is a man-made thing, and we make things for a purpose.  And we can judge a purpose as we can other things - in its relation to our fundamental values.  Sure, through-out history we have seen forms of tyranny in government.  But we have also seen the thread of a movement towards a government that protected liberty.

 

Contrary to what you wrote, I have no faith in gangs or 'elites'.  I have a belief in the need to institute laws based upon individual rights as the only way to secure liberty.  And I know that government, done properly, is the only way that can be achieved.  

 

You clearly believe that there are a minimun set of rules that it would be good to have.  But no set of rules for proper human behavior comes to us as self-enforcing.

 

There once was a time when "given the historical record" it would have been deemed a fantasy to imagine people flying but now it is a commonplace means of travel.  Your argument that we need to throw out the idea of government because of its history is not a sound argument.  Once upon a time there were people who could not imagine a working flying machine, and apparently there are people today who know what individual rights are, but can't imagine a working government that protects them rather than violates them.

 

You wrote, "If you want a single set of rules, then have everyone agree to a single set of rules."  No, that isn't workable as the whole plan.  You get a majority who agree on most of the rules in a set of rules - a set of rules based upon individual rights. Then this majority elects representitives to manage the government that impliments those rules. This is necessary because:
A) Rules aren't self-enforcing,

B) Not everyone will agree with the rules and would violate them,
C) Governments are also required to provide a mechanism for non-violent resolution of honest disagreement (and to force people to use that mechanism rather than to initiate violence).

 

You think getting everyone to agree on a single set of rules would work? You'll have to explain how that is done.

 

I don't believe in "choosing rulers" - I believe in choosing people to adminster laws based upon individual rights so as to minimize my need to worry about people attacking me, stealing from me, or resorting to violence to settle disagreements.  Liberty doesn't grow on trees.  It is a man-made product - a product of the creation and maintenance of specific kinds of structures, administrators, rules, and political and legal understandings.



Post 23

Friday, October 17, 2014 - 1:24pmSanction this postReply
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Begging the question?

if a government is doing it's proper job there's no need for me to hide my vote - the government will respect it on it's own behalf and will protect me if others should they initiate force against me because of that open vote

if a government is elected in secret votes I smell a fishy rat somewhere beneath it ... either by the government wanting to empower itself secretly or by the voters trying to pull one over me



Post 24

Friday, October 17, 2014 - 2:02pmSanction this postReply
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@ Steve Wolfer (Post 22)

 

You said it was fantasy to imagine that without a government there could be the acceptance and implementation of any single set of rules. I disagree, so according to you, I suffer a fantasy. You thus begin your argument by throwing out a blanket epistemological insult at anyone who might not share your opinions.

 

You claim that there are good governments. This is news to me. I doubt you could prove it.

 

You claim a ruling elite is necessary to "administer" correct rights-protecting law. By administer, you mean enforce and arbitrate (judge). But anyone who claims the right to a monopoly on either enforcement or judgement is violating rights the moment he attempts to enforce such a monopoly. Why is person 1 right to enforce a good law and person 2 wrong to enforce that same good law?

 

You also claim that a ruling elite is necessary since some people might not agree on the laws and would violate them. But some people might not agree on who is to be the ruling elite and might ignore your choice of ruling elite

 

Why is it that somehow we can manage such disagreements about rulers but not about rules? Why must our majority decisions be handed off to a minority ruling class?

 

How about voting on "deciders" to decide our "rulers" for us. But wait! That's called the Electoral College. We can't choose our rules, but somehow we can choose the deciders who will choose the rulers who will choose the rules for us. Why does it make sense to make decisions at a triple proxy distance? Decision by proxie is irresponsibility.

You say that "this majority elects representatives to manage the government that implements those rules." How come? What does the majority need reps for? What is this "management" that you think needs doing? Enforcing and arbitrating are both services that anyone can provide in the service market. Why do you insist on monopolizing these services and calling the monopolists "government"?  No one has a right to aggress, right? Enforcing your monopoly is aggression, right?

You say, "I don't believe in "choosing rulers" - I believe in choosing people to administer laws based upon individual rights."

 

Well I may believe in choosing different "administrators" than you. I may decide to administer law myself. Where's the problem? Why does good law become bad when enforcement and arbitration are decentralized?

 

There certainly is a need for good rules, for instance a rule that says that the parties to a dispute may not act as the arbiters over that dispute.  But all government - by its nature - is a violation of that good rule, is it not?

 

(Edited by JOHN HOWARD on 10/17, 2:05pm)

 

(Edited by JOHN HOWARD on 10/17, 2:07pm)



Post 25

Friday, October 17, 2014 - 3:39pmSanction this postReply
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You said it was fantasy to imagine that without a government there could be the acceptance and implementation of any single set of rules. I disagree, so according to you, I suffer a fantasy. You thus begin your argument by throwing out a blanket epistemological insult at anyone who might not share your opinions.

It wasn't my intention to insult you.  Referring to an opinion as being based in fantasy is, or at least was intended by me, to mean that it isn't supported by reality. Quite often people hold opinions that turn out not to have a basis in reality - there may be some of those people who should look to their epistomological processes, but most just need to reexamine the opinion that had thought to be reasonable but really isn't.  

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You claim that there are good governments. This is news to me. I doubt you could prove it.

I would never undertake a fools errand of trying to point out a good government to someone who claims that no government, by its nature could be good.  Just as I wouldn't have tried to tell someone in the 1700's that one day there could be flying machines after they had declared such things to impossible by the nature of things.

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You claim a ruling elite is necessary to "administer" correct rights-protecting law. By administer, you mean enforce and arbitrate (judge). But anyone who claims the right to a monopoly on either enforcement or judgement is violating rights the moment he attempts to enforce such a monopoly. Why is person 1 right to enforce a good law and person 2 wrong to enforce that same good law?

I never used the words "elite" or "ruling" in this context.  It is precisely because the violation of individual rights requires force, fraud or theft that these things must be illegal. There must be laws to define what actions constitute those violations. There must be a monopoly on the laws for a given jurisdiction. The absurd chaos that would result if anyone could make up their own rules is obvious. For all things that properly flow from human choice in a social setting (which is anything that doesn't violate the rights of another) there should be no monoply or restriction. But for anything that flows a human choice to violate individual rights, there should be a monopoly of laws.   Choice - Free, Initiated force - Not Free.

 

I don't care about who enforces the laws, only that they are a proper set of laws (objective and based upon individual rights) and fairly and efficiently enforced. Anarchy always comes up with floating abstractions rather than workable concepts to explain how things could be handled without a government.

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You also claim that a ruling elite is necessary since some people might not agree on the laws and would violate them. But some people might not agree on who is to be the ruling elite and might ignore your choice of ruling elite

Again, I never used the terms elite or ruling in this context. Those are your words, not mine. The vote on the choice of representatives is the least objectionable fashion for solving the problem of how to staff a particular function which must get done even if some people aren't in agreement.  People do disagree, but the majority will get their way in that choice. Those who disagreed are free to do whatever they want, under a proper set of laws, as long as they don't violate the rights of others.

 

I don't agree with Obama, but I don't exactly know what it would mean to ignore him as the choice people made. If that means that I ignore the mandates of, say, ObamaCare, that is a disagreement about the law.

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Why is it that somehow we can manage such disagreements about rulers but not about rules? Why must our majority decisions be handed off to a minority ruling class?

On one level we aren't managing disagreements on either laws or representatives - at least in the sense that we are now more factionalized and partisan a society as we have ever been, with the exception of the time before the American Revolution and during the Civil War period.  Our division intensifies when the gulf between the opposing sides becomes more fundamental. On another level, we are managing the conflict fairly well in the sense that voting and variations on Roberts rules of order, and court decisions are keeping us from going at each other with violence.  It is to prevent violence between factions that we have the monopoly of laws for a jurisdiction and the enforcement and the use of the vote.

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How about voting on "deciders" to decide our "rulers" for us. But wait! That's called the Electoral College. We can't choose our rules, but somehow we can choose the deciders who will choose the rulers who will choose the rules for us. Why does it make sense to make decisions at a triple proxy distance? Decision by proxie is irresponsibility.

You are wrapped up in talking about rulers instead of workable mechanisms and structures and processes for making the non-use of initiated force the standard of everyday society.  That's the proper purpose of government which is just a man-made structure and organization. The electoral college exists because the founding fathers had a deep distrust that a run-away democracy might elect tyrants.  In practice the electoral college  helps to decentralize power by ensuring that a few highly populated states didn't make the votes of the less densely populated states meaningless.

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Well I may believe in choosing different "administrators" than you. I may decide to administer law myself. Where's the problem? Why does good law become bad when enforcement and arbitration are decentralized?

Without a government how do we get "law"? Do you make up the law you adminster? Can anyone else make up the laws they adminster? I don't see anything workable in what you are suggesting.

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There certainly is a need for good rules, for instance a rule that says that the parties to a dispute may not act as the arbiters over that dispute. But all government - by its nature - is a violation of that good rule, is it not?

Government isn't monolithic. By design it made of different parts that act as checks and balances against one another. The constitution was designed to limit power of the government. The use of the vote is designed to let citizens choose the representatives. Anyone can argue that the these designs have been ignored and trampled on more and more with each passing year, but that doesn't mean they are the source of the failure to achieve a higher degree of liberty. No nation will ever get a government that is significantly better than the people's understanding and passion for freedom. There is a lot of truth in the old saw that in government a people get what they deserve.



Post 26

Friday, October 17, 2014 - 5:09pmSanction this postReply
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@ Steve Wolfer (Post 25)

 

I have already made very clear that I agree to a single set of right rules, but object to anyone having a monopoly on the enforcement of those rules or arbitration concerning those rules. I object to any legal difference between individual citizens, period. I also object to "democratically-elected" positions if those positions hold power not held by every other individual. Individual rights and majority rule cannot both be moral principals. Morally, they are mutually exclusive.

 

In your reply, you consistently imply that, without a group of elected individuals having a monopoly power over certain functions, then the set of right rules will not prevail and many different sets of rules will compete.

 

This makes no sense. It is merely a baseless prediction. We could as easily argue that having more than one person in the government will result in many rule sets being enforced. And you indeed turn around and claim that the gang of rulers calling themselves "government", given the power of arbitration, will somehow not always rule in their own favor because there are many of them and they can counter-rule one another (disagree about the rules).

 

As I understand your position then:

No matter what, we must have a ruling elite. If the objection is that they are a monolithic power, the answer is "no, no, they are individual actors keeping an eye on one another (balance of power)." If the objection is that they are unnecessary since individuals can keep an eye on one another in a free society, then the answer is "no, no, individuals will disagree and we need a unified authority." A gang of power-lusters is both a unified authority and a group of differing thoughtful individuals, as convenience dictates. Heads you win, tails you win.

 

That you do not use the terms "ruling elite" does not take away from the fact that what you are promoting is a ruling elite with a monopoly power over others.

 

The moral principal that you violate is the NAP. You cannot and will never offer an example of a ruling elite holding such a monopoly without violating the NAP. It is not possible.

 

Your main argument is a prediction: that without a group of power-lusters and their gunslingers ruling the rest of us, we will have chaos. All of history is a record of the sadistic chaos caused by such gunslinger-backed power-lusters. Telling me that there is a magic yet-to-be-attained-someday where power will not corrupt, is not a valid or convincing argument. Telling me that if only government was a gentleman's club of Objectivists, all would be good, makes me want to check my ammunition.

 

A monopoly on power is utterly unnecessary and utterly evil - pure, stinking evil. All we need are good rules and legal equality (all rules applying equally to all individuals). Government is always and neccessarily a violation of both of those principles.

 

You seem to believe that people can agree on anything except liberty and equality, but that they should agree on a benevolent tyranny. A gang holding a monopoly on power over others is a tyranny, no matter how they rule. And how they rule will progress, always, from bad to worse.  That's my prediction.

 

(Edited by JOHN HOWARD on 10/17, 5:28pm)

 

(Edited by JOHN HOWARD on 10/17, 5:30pm)



Post 27

Friday, October 17, 2014 - 7:17pmSanction this postReply
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I have already made very clear that I agree to a single set of right rules, but object to anyone having a monopoly on the enforcement of those rules or arbitration concerning those rules.

I've asked how in the world you will get your single set of right rules agreed to or enforced. You don't answer.

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Individual rights and majority rule cannot both be moral principals. Morally, they are mutually exclusive.

Saying that doesn't make it so.  Individual rights can only be violated by the initiation of force, threat to initiate force, fraud or theft.  And it is possible to have a constitutionally limited government that uses majority voting to select representatives of a government that does not engage in that kind of force, fraud or theft.

 

We use a vote to pick who is on a board or holds what position in a private organizations. It is a mechanism. It doesn't violate any rights. The violation of a right has to be an action that uses force (fraud, theft).  An action that is legal when it shouldn't be, or illegal as it should be.   

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In your reply, you consistently imply that, without a group of elected individuals having a monopoly power over certain functions, then the set of right rules will not prevail and many different sets of rules will compete. This makes no sense. It is merely a baseless prediction.

Are you serious? You think that if people could make up their own rules that no one would? You seriously think that if there was no enforced monopoly on the making of laws, that there wouldn't be a bunch of sets of laws?

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...you claim that the gang of rulers calling themselves "government", given the power of arbitration, will somehow not always rule in their own favor because there are many of them and they can counter-rule one another (disagree about the rules).

"calling themselves 'government'"  Give me a break, we all know what a government is. And, you put words into my mouth.  I did not make such a claim.  I did not say they would never rule in their own favor.  I said that we design the structures and processes of a government to make it more likely to stay true to its purpose of protecting individual rights.  That is the purpose and you don't seem to get that.

----------

 

Your main argument is a prediction: that without a group of power-lusters and their gunslingers ruling the rest of us, we will have chaos. All of history is a record of the sadistic chaos caused by such gunslinger-backed power-lusters. Telling me that there is a magic yet-to-be-attained-someday where power will not corrupt, is not a valid or convincing argument. Telling me that if only government was a gentleman's club of Objectivists, all would be good, makes me want to check my ammunition.

No, your main argument is a prediction: that without government a single set of right rules will come into being and that a chaotic fire-zone of warring gangs wouldn't become the norm. All of history is a record of the sadistic chaos caused by people who get away with using violence to get their way as crooks or bad governments and the best way to stop them is with a good government. Telling me that there is a magic yet-to-be-attained-someday where people will all accept this magical set of voluntarily adopted and self-enforcing rules, is not a valid or convincing argument. Telling me that if only we eliminated government that the nation's population would suddenly become a gentleman's club of Objectivists, and all would be good, makes me want to check my ammunition.

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A monopoly on power is utterly unnecessary and utterly evil - pure, stinking evil. All we need are good rules and legal equality (all rules applying equally to all individuals). Government is always and neccessarily a violation of both of those principles.

A monoply on the making of laws is absolutely necessary. To call for anarchy is utterly mistaken, and anarchy is totally evil. To say that we can get good rules - magically, out of thin air, or suddenly growing like friendly fruit on every bush is nonsense.  It is a bald assertion put forth with no substance, no history, no evidence and no logic.

-----------

You seem to believe that people can agree on anything except liberty and equality, but that they should agree on a benevolent tyranny. A gang holding a monopoly on power over others is a tyranny, no matter how they rule. And how they rule will progress, always, from bad to worse. That's my prediction.

I've never said that people can agree on anything except liberty and equality. Don't make up words and stick them in my mouth. There is no such thing as a benevolent tyranny.  If it is a tyranny it is so because if violates rights and there is nothing benevolent about that.  I believe that people can, and will disagree on almost everything - that's normal. But they shouldn't be allowed to violate rights - even if they believe it is okay.  They have to be stopped from violating rights.  I've been very clear in stating how I believe that government should be structured and why in order to make a political environment that is as friendly as possible to individual rights.

 

You haven't given us any explanation of the how and why of your imaginary government-free nation would work.  Anarchy is every bit as bad a political idea as communism, socialism, or facisim because it leads to the kind of political environment where individual rights are violated on a massive level.



Post 28

Saturday, October 18, 2014 - 8:02amSanction this postReply
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Rand made the argument -- well, and early in her career, in "We The  Living"  -- that we need government like we need plumbing.

 

But agreeing that we need plumbing is not the same as agreeing that we need to be ruled by plumbers. (Her succinctly made point.)

 

As well, agreeing that we need government is not the same as agreeing that we need to be ruled by emperors, a ruling 'elite.'

 

It is agreeing that we need state plumbers.   

 

It is agreeing that we need to hand them plungers, and ask them to do the honorable job of keeping the plumbing of state clean and free flowing.

 

There are good plumbers and there are bad plumbers.   On average, there are average plumbers.

 

We still need plumbing.

 

Plumbers influence in our lives is constrained to the plumbing, which we all agree we need.

 

State plumbers influence in our lives -should- also be constrained to the plumbing of state.

 

I could be crude and extend this analogy to the shit flowing inside the pipes and not all over our lives, but that would be crude and so unlike me.

 

D'OH!

 

regards,

Fred



Post 29

Saturday, October 18, 2014 - 8:02amSanction this postReply
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@ Steve Wolfer (Post 27),

 

OK, the majority can come together to create a ruling elite, but not rules. They can peacefully choose enforcers and arbitrators by majority vote, but they can't enforce and arbitrate by majority vote. They can delegate decision making, but they can't decide. 

I get it.



Post 30

Saturday, October 18, 2014 - 8:10amSanction this postReply
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John:

 

The issue for freedom and liberty is, on what matters can(may?) they decide, no matter how decided?    If unconstrained, then suddenly it is important.

 

It is -that- decision -- the acceptance of what is and isn't proper in a free political context for public 'decision' -- that is the only important decision.   It is the fundamental decision.

 

If unconstrained, then it is anathema to freedom and liberty.

 

If properly constrained -- ie, if the fundamental decision is properly constrained -- then it matters little how we choose the state plumbers, how they 'decide' on what is decidable, or if they are good, bad, or average at their state plumbing.

 

If properly constrained, then decisions could be based by polling randoms in the phonebook and taking a poll.

 

"We're painting double yellow lines fairly down the middle of the road; what do you think, Navy Yellow or Safety Yellow?"

 

The American model of 'what is an acceptable issue of public policy' has become all but totally unhinged.   Anything is fair game.   The plumbing of state is wide open, and the shit is spilling all over our lives.

 

regards,

Fred

 

PS: In matters of state(ie, Marx's definition of state), the difference between 'can' and 'may' is critical to freedom.   Because in fact, the biggest slobbering beast in the Jungle -- the Majority -- -can- do what it wants.   In a political context of freedom, it -may- not do all that it -can- do.   Ultimately enforced how...

 

(Edited by Fred Bartlett on 10/18, 8:18am)



Post 31

Saturday, October 18, 2014 - 8:14amSanction this postReply
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If it is criticallyimportant to us how government decides anything, then that government is empowered to do too much.

 

Freedom has already lost if government is unconstrained in what it can decide upon, and what it can't decide upon.

 

regards,

Fred



Post 32

Saturday, October 18, 2014 - 8:16amSanction this postReply
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@ FredBartlett (Post 28),

 

I appreciate your metaphor of plumbers, but I can think of no "plumbing" that requires anything other than a free market in services rendered. If you need a plumber, hire one. But telling me that I need your plumber and can only be allowed (by your plumber) to hire your plumber, then it is time to drop the metaphor and tell me what plumbing service requires not only a coercive monoply but forced participation as well.

 

I can't think of any such "service".



Post 33

Saturday, October 18, 2014 - 8:31amSanction this postReply
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@ Fred Bartlett,

 

"If it is critically important to us how government decides anything, then that government is empowered to do too much.

 

Freedom has already been lost if government is unconstrained in what it can decide upon, and what it can't decide upon."

 

Absolutly right!  But, to me at least, it also follows that it doesn't matter who does what as long as important functions are done right.   I see no reason to give anyone a monopoly over any function.



Post 34

Saturday, October 18, 2014 - 8:41amSanction this postReply
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John:

 

But that's an easy one:   I'm not advocating you use my plumber.   We already live in a system where there are officially 535 + 1 + 9 state plumbers plus their currently growing unbounded staffs.

 

I'm advocating that we agree to mutually defend our right to be free from each other, period, and that we each -- each of us -- agree to constrain the 'official' state plumbers to actions that are consistent with our right to be free from each other.

 

To under all instances, for those state plumbers in any form, be 'empowered' only to prohibit forced association, and to promote only free association.  Including, by themselves -except- for the purposes of that limitation.   A paradox.  Yes, the Paradox of Freedom.   United We (plural, not singular) Stand in our mutual defense of ultimately being free from each other.   An idea worth banding together to die for, so our children could live free from each other(except under rules of free association, not forced association.)

 

Coercively empowered only to inhibit coercive power.   The Paradox of Freedom is identically the Paradox of Violence.

 

I sleep like a baby pointlessly advocating what I advocate(it will never happen.)   Because were it to happen:

 

a] Our official plumbers would be harmful to nobody's freedom.

b] You would still be free to hire your own plumbers...constrained only by the reasonable constraint that we reasonable folks have agreed to on advance; restricted to free association and prohibited any form of forced association, enforced by those official plumbers whose only mission and empowerment is to prohibit forced association-- especially by themselves, but not only by themselves.   By folks building private plumber forces as well.

 

So freely hire all the plumbers you want and believe are necessary, and I your peer in freedom will do same, which is only possible in a political context of freedom, which is only possible with rational constraints on forced association.

 

regards,

Fred



Post 35

Saturday, October 18, 2014 - 8:53amSanction this postReply
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John:

 

And then the camel's nose enters the tent:  "But if we permitted just a little forced association, we could make real Progress with Jesus' Mission Here On Earth.   We could end poverty, ignorance, disease, and homelessness.  We could be Progressive..."

 

Scott Nearing Christian becoming Scott Nearing activist Socialist.   "Social Religion" published twice by Scott Nearing in early 1900s.   Once as a frustrated Christian.  (Why aren't we using the power of the state to more quickly advance Jesus Mission on Earth?)  and just a few years later, same book published as a newly energized Socialist.   Same book.  Same religion.

 

 

We need a Nancy Reagan for Forced Association:  "Just say No to Forced Association."

 

In freedom, here is the reasonable non-freedom eating alternitive for Scott Nearing, other than eating all of our freedom for his really, really good ideas:

 

Hire his own plumbers.  Establish his commune of utopic perfection in the woods of Vermont, and watch all the free association feet vote willingly towards or away from.    And when the frustration of 'not enough towards and too much away" under the rules of free association results in an urge to take over the plumbing of state to implement 'just a little forced association for My Latest Really Good Idea and Who Wouldn't Want to Make Baby Jesus Smile Down On Us From Heaven If Impementing My Latest Really Good Ideas Would Do That?' ...

a sane nation of free people smiles and says "Good luck with your next experiment in the woods of Vermont" instead of sleeping at the wheel while a stealth religion sends termites into the foundation of all our freedoms, including, religious freedom.

 

regards,

Fred



Post 36

Saturday, October 18, 2014 - 9:16amSanction this postReply
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@ Fred Bartlett (Post 35)

 

All good, as long as he owns the acres in the woods.  I await anyone willing to explain why any monopoly in anything is a good thing to enforce.

 

And if there is no monopoly, why continue to call it "government"?



Post 37

Saturday, October 18, 2014 - 9:17amSanction this postReply
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John:

 

Reasons to be optimistic.  (And those who have read my rantings are no doubt laughing at that...)

 

A political context devoted to the concept of free association, which defends against forced association, has a primary mission of 'defence' in a world over-run with totalitarian leanings.

 

For the first 150 years of America, national defence was the number one priority(and expense)of our federal government.

 

Since the 70s, this primary function of national government(can hardly call it 'federal' at this point unless 'federal' has no meaning)has been manned not by 'forced association' but by a 100% volunteer force.

 

If we cannot justify 'a draft' -- forced association -- for the number one priority of national government in the context of freedom, then ... what mission of our federal government can we justify 'forced association' for?

 

Apparently that includes MEDICARE, SOCIAL SECURITY, and now ACA.

 

So how is 'forced association' justified for those programs?

 

With lies, deceit, and prevarications.   Because the definition of politics(to me) is: the art and science of getting what you want from others using any means short of actual violence.

 

The existentially terrified among us want what they want, and in this universe, on this smooth damp rock that is proportionally smoother and more spherical than a regulation billiard ball, with nothing but a thin whispy atmosphere that at the scale of a billiard ball would be 0.001 inches thick as the only thing separating us from the inhospitable void of space, that includes a risk free guaranteed safe long and comfortable life free from want, even if that is guaranteed by riding the backs of others who take risk and run up hills while we claim our right to stand still without effort.   In a universe that is predominantly mostly Hydrogen, where every single atom heavier than H was forged inside the furnaces of stars long dead, where self aware arrangments of heavy molecules are a long shot miracle of epic proportion, that still yet are governed by this harsh universe and its laws and its gradients and its entropic traffic cop,  that the existentially terrified among us exist is not a surprise.   What is a surprise is that they rule the day.

 

Why do those who take on risk and run up hills tolerate the parasitic flailings of the existentially terrified, when those flailings, as part of an out of all control mob, eat the freedom of all of us?

 

On a lifeboat being swamped by their irrationality, if they couldn't be subdued, they'd be shot and thrown over the side before they ended us all, resulting in a half filled lifeboat moving on.

 

Or vice versa, ultimately leading to an empty lifeboat seeking out the bottom of the sea.

 

regards,

Fred

 

(Edited by Fred Bartlett on 10/18, 9:39am)



Post 38

Saturday, October 18, 2014 - 9:37amSanction this postReply
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John:

 

You are not a fan of singularities and paradoxes, but they are all around us.

 

And yes, of course a Scott Nearing would need to own the woods he formed his commune in.    The only thing prohibited of him is forced association.

 

Not even a monopoly.  Empowered with only one primary power as the underlying axiom foundation for all of its permitted actions: the inhibition of forced association, including, by itself, but not limited to itself.

 

That would not prohibit you from forming your own plumbers to prohibit forced association or encourage free association.  (So where is the monopoly?)

 

That would only prohibit your from forming your own plumbers to project forced association.   That act would be the only thing prohibited anyone in freedom.  It would be the foundation of all law.  The only foundation of any law.   The only licensed use of state force, period.

 

So examine any law -- including existing law -- for evidence of forced association.  (It is my personal litmus not a national litmus; the nation I am imagining doesn't exist anywhere.  America came closest once but not since before you and I were born.)

 

Clean Air Laws.    Yes, In fact, I see the clear evidence of forced association.   Third parties are forcefully exposed to the effects of commerce and industry of others who pollute the air without regard or compensation for their use of it to partied unrelated to the commerce or industry, who unwillingly are exposed to consequences of others actions and interests.   This isn't a prohibition against commerce or industry; only of forms of it that project forced association.

 

ACA, MEDICARE, SOCIAL SECURITY:   These are the poster children for forced association/national socialism.     They not only do not address any form of forced association, they themselves are the initiation of forced association.

 

Again, if some freely living in the Tribe believe that a commune in the woods of Vermont would be utopic if only run under such models, then freely build the communes and run the experiments and we will note the stampeding of free feet either towards or away from.   And thats it.   As long as the experiment is supported by free association.

 

FDR's New Deal and LBJ's Great Society are examples of 'national socialism' which is to be distinguished from 'socialism.'    "Socialism' is what would freely exist in those communes in the woods of Vermont.  "National Socialism' is impressed on an entire nation at the point of the states guns via forced association.   "National Socialism' is not 'socialism.'     "National Socialism" is anathema to freedom(and hence, the hostility towards freedom and liberty by the left in our political context.    Not that the right hasn't also sold it out.)

 

regards,

Fred



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Post 39

Saturday, October 18, 2014 - 11:19amSanction this postReply
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Fred,

 

You provided Mr. Howard with the metaphor of the plumbers.  And he said he appreciated it, but stated that no plumbing service requires a coercive monopoly (post 32). And in post 33 he stated, "I see no reason to give anyone a monopoly over any function."

 

In post 34 you explained that the state plumbers would be constrained to doing nothing but protecting freedom, and not able to violate anyones freedom. And that anyone could hire all the plumbers they want, and those plumbers would only be constrained in not being able to engage in forced association. So it wouldn't be much of a coerced monopoly.

 

But Mr. Howard remained focused on what he damns as a coercive monopoly.

 

You were very explicit in post 38: "Empowered with only one primary power as the underlying axiom foundation for all of its permitted actions: the inhibition of forced association, including, by itself, but not limited to itself.

That would not prohibit you from forming your own plumbers to prohibit forced association or encourage free association. (So where is the monopoly?)"

 

Following the essentials of those posts it is clear that it is not the plumbers, private or state, that are the real problem from Mr. Howard's perspective.  He says it is, but logic says otherwise.  It is the rules.  It is a monopoly of rules that is the issue.  You can't call something a rule in a political context unless it is intended to be enforceable.  If you imagine some fantasy system where there are no people to enforce any rule, then rules won't matter, because chaos will reign. (An uneforceable rule is not a rule.)  If you imagine a fantasy system where there are enforcers but no rules, it is an evil system because the whim of the moment would be enforced and gangs would prey on everyone.  Enforcers without rules is just the jungle.  Conflicting sets of rule bring enforcement that is war - a competition in the use of violence.

 

There will always be enforcers (people and/or organization who use force against others) and like fire, it is best seen as a force we can control and use to improve our lives rather than to have it burn down our houses.

 

You have a rule that you propose be adopted as the primary, fundamental rule governing all else.  No forced association.  You mentioned that everyone should agree to it... like a contract.  I say that no one needs to agree to it, because one has to step totally outside of morality to violate it. For example, I don't need to get everyone, or anyone,  to agree to not steal my stuff.  But the important point here is that you are proposing that this rule hold a monopoly status - that is, no one can act according to any other rule that is contrary to this rule.

 

And that is proper.

 

The old saying is that freedom ends just before your fist reaches my nose.  Just another way of saying that you have the right to do anything that doesn't violate my rights. Or, as Rand said, "There is no right to violate a right." This is the foundation for a set of laws that hold a monopoly over a jurisdiction. It is the fact that some rules are bad and some are good that requires that we choose between rules. And it is the nature of rules that they must be enforced or they are not rules. Good rules are like those that would logically arise out of, and be fully consistent with your free association axiom. Or, Rand's definition of individual rights. Good enforcement is enforcement that lives within the rules, is applied consistently, equally, openly, objectively. If we want to live a life where we are free to pursue our own goals, we need to ensure that others live within good rules, and that means we must live within good rules, and we must have the rules enforced or they are useless, and it must be good enforcement.

 

Our purpose is to have a good life.  In a social context this requires freedom and freedom is the absence of initiated force.  To achieve our purpose we take that basic rule and enforce it.  We want that rule to be a monopoly.  We want it to be well enforced.  This is purpose of a proper government - proper enforcement of good rules.  Anarchists will never accept those simple facts.  They will obsess on some  side issue that is taken out of context - like objecting to a monopoly of rules, or a monopoly of enforcement of those rules, when that is a misuse of the term monopoly and a position that will forever be based upon a fantasy of some sort - like everyone will agree to the same rules, or like it is possible to have free competition provide the functions of justice even though the marketplace isn't free (the use of violence hasn't been removed as a tool of competition because there is no such rule that applies to all and is enforced).



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