I wouldn't call utilizing my personal span of control to direct my own life as being forceful upon others. If I don't like the game you play, I simply will not participate. Other games will pop up.
I wouldn't call utilizing my personal span of control to direct my own life as being forceful upon others. If I don't like the game you play, I simply will not participate. Other games will pop up.
Sure, but since they hold no obligation towards other human beings (e.g. voters), I suppose they can just ignore the vote; it's their freedom to do so. You can avoid 'games' all you want - that doesn't save libertarianism from being an incoherent system. I maintain, universal freedom without accountability is not viable, and eventually leads to a less free society than a system with accountability.
All the problems started with the introduction of multiple choice questions and John McEnroeDChemTech wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 15:12Sure, but since they hold no obligation towards other human beings (e.g. voters), I suppose they can just ignore the vote; it's their freedom to do so. You can avoid 'games' all you want - that doesn't save libertarianism from being an incoherent system. I maintain, universal freedom without accountability is not viable, and eventually leads to a less free society than a system with accountability.
What? You can not be serious!johnny comelately wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 15:25All the problems started with the introduction of multiple choice questions and John McEnroeDChemTech wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 15:12Sure, but since they hold no obligation towards other human beings (e.g. voters), I suppose they can just ignore the vote; it's their freedom to do so. You can avoid 'games' all you want - that doesn't save libertarianism from being an incoherent system. I maintain, universal freedom without accountability is not viable, and eventually leads to a less free society than a system with accountability.
Exactly. Society can not function unless people have at least some accountability of their actions and the associated consequences.DChemTech wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 15:12Sure, but since they hold no obligation towards other human beings (e.g. voters), I suppose they can just ignore the vote; it's their freedom to do so. You can avoid 'games' all you want - that doesn't save libertarianism from being an incoherent system. I maintain, universal freedom without accountability is not viable, and eventually leads to a less free society than a system with accountability.
Agreed. So what is to be done about the bankers, barons, and bureaucrats who over the past half century built up the carbon bomb of the so called developing world?Just_a_fan wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 15:32Exactly. Society can not function unless people have at least some accountability of their actions and the associated consequences.
Precisely.vorticism wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 18:05Agreed. So what is to be done about the bankers, barons, and bureaucrats who over the past half century built up the carbon bomb of the so called developing world?Just_a_fan wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 15:32Exactly. Society can not function unless people have at least some accountability of their actions and the associated consequences.
They are as accountable as everyone that bought the goods, the fuel, the rest of it, that they sold cheaply.vorticism wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 18:05Agreed. So what is to be done about the bankers, barons, and bureaucrats who over the past half century built up the carbon bomb of the so called developing world?Just_a_fan wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 15:32Exactly. Society can not function unless people have at least some accountability of their actions and the associated consequences.
Now do sub-prime mortgages, payday loans, street drugs, etc. Some in the West did try to boycott or protest over the decades the more affordable imported goods because it was impossible to compete with them on labor cost. The poor will try to save money on their purchases inevitably; hence the ship of society does need some decent steering. Saying the passengers and the guys filling the boiler are partly to blame for hitting the iceberg is... odd?
Decent place to start.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 18:18Or if you must start at the top, try going after Blackrock, Vanguard, et al.
But saying "I'm not doing anything to help because I didn't start it" is a bit like saying "I'm not going to throw water on my burning house because I didn't set fire to it". Sure, you can take that position but it's damnably strange one to take in the circumstances.vorticism wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 18:32Now do sub-prime mortgages, payday loans, street drugs, etc. Some in the West did try to boycott or protest over the decades the more affordable imported goods because it was impossible to compete with them on labor cost. The poor will try to save money on their purchases inevitably; hence the ship of society does need some decent steering. Saying the passengers and the guys filling the boiler are partly to blame for hitting the iceberg is... odd?
Not what I said; you're fabricating quotes again. You can use the quote function if you want to quote me. Regardless youre deflecting from the rebuttal. Can you defend the claim I was responding to? Damnably strange, heh, if you couldn't. Also if you keep saying the house is burning when it isn't the fire truck will stop showing up.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 20:23But saying "I'm not doing anything to help because I didn't start it" is a bit like saying "I'm not going to throw water on my burning house because I didn't set fire to it". Sure, you can take that position but it's damnably strange one to take in the circumstances.vorticism wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 18:32Now do sub-prime mortgages, payday loans, street drugs, etc. Some in the West did try to boycott or protest over the decades the more affordable imported goods because it was impossible to compete with them on labor cost. The poor will try to save money on their purchases inevitably; hence the ship of society does need some decent steering. Saying the passengers and the guys filling the boiler are partly to blame for hitting the iceberg is... odd?
I wasn't quoting you. If I were, I'd have used the quote function. As for "fabricating quotes again", I'm not sure to what you are referring, as I haven't made up quotes from you at all.vorticism wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 20:42Not what I said; you're fabricating quotes again. You can use the quote function if you want to quote me. Regardless youre deflecting from the rebuttal. Can you defend the claim I was responding to? Damnably strange, heh, if you couldn't. Also if you keep saying the house is burning when it isn't the fire truck will stop showing up.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 20:23But saying "I'm not doing anything to help because I didn't start it" is a bit like saying "I'm not going to throw water on my burning house because I didn't set fire to it". Sure, you can take that position but it's damnably strange one to take in the circumstances.vorticism wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 18:32
Now do sub-prime mortgages, payday loans, street drugs, etc. Some in the West did try to boycott or protest over the decades the more affordable imported goods because it was impossible to compete with them on labor cost. The poor will try to save money on their purchases inevitably; hence the ship of society does need some decent steering. Saying the passengers and the guys filling the boiler are partly to blame for hitting the iceberg is... odd?
Obviously they didn't or there wouldn't be political discourse as we've known it; however sidelined it may have been. Generally pro-national or pro-domestic types, whatever you would call them, non-economically-suicidal perhaps, were framed as isolationists or xenophobic (lol) for not wanting native industries to compete against foreign slave labor forces. Back to the claim I'm trying to get your defense of:
Who deserves greater blame, the junkie or the drug dealer? What if the dealer is older or more wily? What if the addict is a child? Same for sub-prime mortgages; blame the seller or the financially inept buyer? It's a point about consent and modern governance. Deceivers ruling the deceived, with the deceived continually receiving the blame for the blowback of all the deceivers' actions. Time and again this is the defining characteristic of modern governance; don't forget we're in the era of information, psychology, psychological warfare (intel agencies w/o oversight), propaganda, and advertising.