• Quick note - the problem with Youtube videos not embedding on the forum appears to have been fixed, thanks to ZiprHead. If you do still see problems let me know.

Nice flash animation about freedom

Republican: "I'll sell you some property at a good interest rate."

Libertarian: "No thanks, you can take your interest rate and shove it."

Democrat: "All property belongs to the state."

Libertarian: "Get the hell off of my property."

Republican: "The interest rate just went up."
 
Earthborn said:
I am sorry if I was unclear. I did not mean to imply that they are justified that in initiating force, only that they are justifying (falsely) the fact that they do. When people ask for help to be protected by others, they always run the risk that the other will go to far, especially if the other is the government.

That is absolutely true. That's why the government must be absolutely constrained from doing so. Note that the animation specifically says that you don't have the right to have the government initiate force against others on your behalf.

Note that he said 'essential liberties'.

Because he recognized all liberties as being essential, just as he recognized all forms of safety as being temporary. That was his point in saying that.

The animation makes no such distinction.

Of course it does! Most of the animation, in fact, differentiates between the initiation of force and the use of force to defend life, liberty, and property.

Again, the animation doesn't make that distinction.

Yes, it does. It says that people have a right to government protection as long as that protection does not constitute an initiation of force.

The ambulance workers have no way of knowing what I want, even if it is a 'reasonable assumption'.

In the absence of any information from you on the matter, what else are they supposed to do? It is their job, after all.

If you allow that, you might also allow 'liberating people from an evil dictator' since it can be argued that it is a reasonable assumption that these people want that.

No, because those people are perfectly able to express their wishes on the matter, even if there is personal risk involved in doing so.

If someone's wishes prevent them from getting proper treatment, I think they should get treatment.

You're in favor of forced medical treatment?

But there are many situations where I cannot (be trusted to) make that decision for myself.

This is my biggest problem with you. You think people are too stupid to run their own lives and must defer to some kind of authority to run it for them. This is the basis of pretty much every single post I've seen you make. And it is the very antithesis of freedom.

That does not mean it doesn't happen and it does not mean there shouldn't be some sort of authority preventing it from happening.[/b]

When did I EVER say there shouldn't be such an authority?

As a buyer you may not be able to check before you pay, for instance if you order something by mail.

That's just lame. You can still fully check out a product before buying it even if it's by mail or over the internet.

Or you may not have the expertise or equipment to check it

Oh, and it's absolutely impossible to seek out others who have checked it out...riiiight....

When you buy a car, you can not only test drive it, but you can take it to a mechanic and have him check it out. I wouldn't buy a car from anyone who wouldn't let me do that.
 
I believe that the right to (a healthy) life is more important than freedom


This is the first time I have ever seen anyone attempt to justify slavery.
 
I believe that the right to (a healthy) life is more important than freedom

This is the first time I have ever seen anyone attempt to justify slavery.

How is the right to a healthy life slavery? An unhealthy life actually limits your freedom.

Gem
 
Gem said:


How is the right to a healthy life slavery? An unhealthy life actually limits your freedom.

Gem

Slavery does not have to mean chains and work in the fields; it could mean complete loss of choice. Who decides what is a healthy life? And what definition of healthy will be used? I want that type of choice to be left to individuals and not society.
 
Gem said:




How is the right to a healthy life slavery?

I never said it did, and to think so is to misrepresent what I was saying.
 
Forgive me for using Earthborn's words, but I think this is a very good point, and I have yet to see a response.

This idea is also in direct contradiction with modern constitutional democracies. That too imposes leaders on many others by the people who vote for the winning candidate. To achieve this Libertarian goal of people chosing their own leaders but not being able to impose them on others, requires a fundamentally different voting system and political system than the world has ever seen. I'd like to know how it might work.

I tried to make a similar point earlier WRT the Constitution (but it can just as easily be applied to any form of government). *I* didn't voluntarilly agree to be bound by the laws of the US Government, or the state governments, or its elected leaders. Neither did most everyone born in this country for the past 214 years.

Just wondering...

Mike
 
Loved the flash...very nice and neat.

Too bad that in the final analysis, it's just too nice and neat to be useful in a real-world way. If we had a perfect world perhaps it would work. It seems to me that Communism is also a very appealing philosophy...yet real-world applications of it quickily became horror-stories.

I'm there tho Shanek, if only someone can find a way to make it work...without gulags, purges, fuehrers, or "cultural revolutions".

-z
 
I never said it did, and to think so is to misrepresent what I was saying.

You're right.

Slavery does not have to mean chains and work in the fields; it could mean complete loss of choice. Who decides what is a healthy life? And what definition of healthy will be used? I want that type of choice to be left to individuals and not society.

What defines "healthy" should be up to the individual. The problem is that sometimes you don't have a choice of medication either through government (prevents you from buying a drug, for example) or the free market (cannot pay for the drug). What proponents of government or free market approach argue is that it will help everyone/as many people as possible.

What Earthborn said:
I believe that the right to (a healthy) life is more important than freedom

Reminds me of the time in Germany when the nazis were saying "Free to starve." In this case, "Free to be unhealthy/die." If given the choice, more individuals would choose to give up some freedom and be healthy rather than be free but unhealthy. And aren't we giving up our freedom of going wherever we want when we want by going to work everyday? Working gives us a better life by giving up a freedom (a minor one, though). It's a matter of benefit/cost to individuals.

Gem
 
Shanek:
Note that the animation specifically says that you don't have the right to have the government initiate force against others on your behalf.
You are completely missing the point! It is irrelevant whether the government has that 'right' or not, if it can use force no matter what.

I will try to explain it really slow:
- People have a right to defend their rights
- People have the right to ask others to help them defend their rights
- People will likely ask more powerfull people to help defend their rights.
- In doing so, they always run the risk that the people they ask to help them will abuse the power they have.
- So if people are allowed to ask others to help them in their protection, they run the risk of supporting 'evil people'.
- This is why the 'solution' offered at the end of the animation is not a solution at all, as it limits the right of people asking others to help defend their rights.
Because he recognized all liberties as being essential, just as he recognized all forms of safety as being temporary. That was his point in saying that.
So he said 'essential liberties' because he meant 'all liberties' ? Well, if you say so...
Of course it does! Most of the animation, in fact, differentiates between the initiation of force and the use of force to defend life, liberty, and property.
No it doesn't! It doesn't show any use of force. Protection is depicted as putting up a magical force field that stops the force of others. It does not show taking back stolen property, and does not show putting people in jail for murder.
Yes, it does. It says that people have a right to government protection as long as that protection does not constitute an initiation of force.
Where did it do that? I didn't see it.
In the absence of any information from you on the matter, what else are they supposed to do? It is their job, after all.
Well, duh! That is my point: in the absence of any information, they are supposed to act without consent, and it even is the moral thing to do.
No, because those people are perfectly able to express their wishes on the matter, even if there is personal risk involved in doing so.
But you can't expect them to all be able to express their wishes on the matter. If an action is used because most were able to express their wishes, then they are forcing their wishes on the others. But they are not allowed to that!
You're in favor of forced medical treatment?
You can't see any situation where it might be justified? For instance in case of insanity, or in case of people carrying infectious diseases, and giving people a free choice might result in a few people not getting treatment and staying a health hazard?
This is my biggest problem with you. You think people are too stupid to run their own lives and must defer to some kind of authority to run it for them. This is the basis of pretty much every single post I've seen you make. And it is the very antithesis of freedom.
Please note that I am not talking about all people. I am talking about a small minority of people: those people that are actually too 'stupid' or unable to give consent or in another way cannot be trusted to make the decision that benefits them most. Surely you can imagine who they are: people with mental disabilities, psychiatric illnesses, comatose patients, criminally insane people, very small children. Most people have no problem recognizing that these people cannot (be trusted to) make the right decisions for themselves, give consent themselves ie they are 'too stupid', if you want to use that word. This does not mean they don't have a right to health like everyone else. It just means that any health decision is effectively forced on them.

Is that the antithesis of freedom, or a caring society?
When did I EVER say there shouldn't be such an authority?
You didn't, but it is implied in the animation. It argues that an authority cannot use force against others without their consent: it cannot demand that it is able to check whether someone is using fraud or not.
That's just lame. You can still fully check out a product before buying it even if it's by mail or over the internet.
How is this possible if all you see is a small picture? Or are you saying that it should be illegal for sellers to put 'all sales are final' disclaimers in their catalogs?
Oh, and it's absolutely impossible to seek out others who have checked it out...riiiight....
No, it isn't impossible. It should not be necessary.
When you buy a car, you can not only test drive it, but you can take it to a mechanic and have him check it out.
Even before you bought it?
I wouldn't buy a car from anyone who wouldn't let me do that.
You perhaps not. Others might, and they have just as much right to a good product as anyone else.

Grammatron:
Slavery does not have to mean chains and work in the fields; it could mean complete loss of choice. Who decides what is a healthy life? And what definition of healthy will be used? I want that type of choice to be left to individuals and not society.
It is perfectly reasonable to allow the vast majority of individuals to make such decisions of themselves. It is the exceptions that I worry about: how is a baby in an incubator able to make such a choice? Or someone in a coma? In the real world, society does make choices for people. It makes definitions of 'healthy' and what constitutes a 'healthy life'.

I can imagine other situations in which people should not make such decisions for themselves, for instance if religious beliefs prohibit them treatment necessary for surival. I realize that this is a more controversial idea, and don't claim my idea is a definitive answer. What is your opinion on people who refuse to immunize their children because of religious beliefs? No matter how you cut that, whether society forces immunization on these children or the parents force the kids to have a risk of getting ill, even becoming a health risk to others... someone is forcing an important decision on someone else.
 
Gem said:


Reminds me of the time in Germany when the nazis were saying "Free to starve." In this case, "Free to be unhealthy/die." If given the choice, more individuals would choose to give up some freedom and be healthy rather than be free but unhealthy. And aren't we giving up our freedom of going wherever we want when we want by going to work everyday? Working gives us a better life by giving up a freedom (a minor one, though). It's a matter of benefit/cost to individuals.



But, "the right to a healthy life" is not more important than freedom. That was my point. Taken to the logical conclusion, slavery is alright as long as the slaves are healthy.

Do you think slavery is alright as long as the slaves are healthy?
 
Gem said:


You're right.



What defines "healthy" should be up to the individual. The problem is that sometimes you don't have a choice of medication either through government (prevents you from buying a drug, for example) or the free market (cannot pay for the drug). What proponents of government or free market approach argue is that it will help everyone/as many people as possible.


Reminds me of the time in Germany when the nazis were saying "Free to starve." In this case, "Free to be unhealthy/die." If given the choice, more individuals would choose to give up some freedom and be healthy rather than be free but unhealthy. And aren't we giving up our freedom of going wherever we want when we want by going to work everyday? Working gives us a better life by giving up a freedom (a minor one, though). It's a matter of benefit/cost to individuals.

Gem

When there is no alternative yes, but if it's my choice to refuse a blood transfusion or commit suicide why should I not be allowed to make such a choice?
 
I've pointed this out before, but the Libertarian conception of "self-ownership" logically entails the ability to voluntarily sell oneself into slavery.
http://home.nvg.org/~rchg/anarchy/secF2.html
F.2.1 Do Libertarian-capitalists support slavery?
Yes. It may come as a surprise to many people, but right-Libertarianism is one of the few political theories that justifies slavery. For example, Robert Nozick asks whether "a free system would allow [the individual] to sell himself into slavery" and he answers "I believe that it would." [Anarchy, State and Utopia, p. 371] While some right-Libertarians do not agree with Nozick, there is no logical basis in their ideology for such disagreement.

The logic is simple, you cannot really own something unless you can sell it. Self-ownership is one of the cornerstones of laissez-faire capitalist ideology. Therefore, since you own yourself you can sell yourself.
Of course, in Libertopia it wouldn't be called "slavery," it would be a "lifetime work contract." ;)
 
Earthborn said:
Grammatron:It is perfectly reasonable to allow the vast majority of individuals to make such decisions of themselves. It is the exceptions that I worry about: how is a baby in an incubator able to make such a choice? Or someone in a coma? In the real world, society does make choices for people. It makes definitions of 'healthy' and what constitutes a 'healthy life'.

I can imagine other situations in which people should not make such decisions for themselves, for instance if religious beliefs prohibit them treatment necessary for surival. I realize that this is a more controversial idea, and don't claim my idea is a definitive answer. What is your opinion on people who refuse to immunize their children because of religious beliefs? No matter how you cut that, whether society forces immunization on these children or the parents force the kids to have a risk of getting ill, even becoming a health risk to others... someone is forcing an important decision on someone else.


You sure have bought the propaganda, what right does "society" (just a BS word for "the state") have to impose it's will on anybody?
 
Mahatma Kane Jeeves said:
I've pointed this out before, but the Libertarian conception of "self-ownership" logically entails the ability to voluntarily sell oneself into slavery.
http://home.nvg.org/~rchg/anarchy/secF2.html

Of course, in Libertopia it wouldn't be called "slavery," it would be a "lifetime work contract." ;)

It's funny, but things like that already exist. Musicians have to sign 5 year contracts where they have to put out albums, promote them, go on tours, record videos, make appearances. Yeah I know there is some difference, but they are still giving away part of their life so someone else can make a huge profit.
 
You sure have bought the propaganda, what right does "society" (just a BS word for "the state") have to impose it's will on anybody?
The same right as anyone has of imposing his/her will on anybody: I don't know.

So how do you solve the issue of people refusing immunization on their children on religious grounds, where in both possible stances someone's will is imposed on someone else?
 
But, "the right to a healthy life" is not more important than freedom. That was my point. Taken to the logical conclusion, slavery is alright as long as the slaves are healthy.
That's not its logical extreme. Its logical extreme is that while slavery is wrong, it is better to make sure your slaves are healthy than it is to not care for your slaves at all and that when slaves are freed, they should be garanteed the same level of healthcare as they had in slavery and lack of healthcare cannot be justified with 'but at least they are free'.

Can't see anything wrong with that logic. :p
 
Earthborn said:

So how do you solve the issue of people refusing immunization on their children on religious grounds, where in both possible stances someone's will is imposed on someone else?

Wrong or right, you defer to the parent's right to raise their child as they want.
 
Yes, Tony. I am. I don't believe parents should have the right to do anything with their child. There are limits, because their child is not their property: it owns itself and its self-ownership should be protected.
 

Back
Top Bottom