You are setting up another false dichotomy
No, I'm not. I'm presenting a different way of looking at the fact, and later I
refute that view by showing that it cannot be distinguished from the assumption of selfishness. All I am arguing is that we should it isn't productive to call behaviours 'selfish' or 'altruisistic', since anything can be explained in both ways, so any two opposite behaviours can also be explained in the same way.
Your false dichotomy therefore shoehorns me into the other category: people who want to keep it all and not share it. Yet, every year I participate in the Relay for Life, the MS Walk, and the CROP Walk. I have collected cans of food for local food banks, performed in benefit concerts, and done many other things that have taken up either my money or my time to do good to others. And as the stats I've posted here from Giving USA about a bajillion times show, I'm hardly the only one.
Since I have not claimed that you are 'selfish', this isn't relevant at all to the discussion. But nice to hear that you are doing those things anyway!
For crying out loud, how can anyone look at the VOLUNTARY donations that came about after the 9/11 attacks for the families of the victims and for the restoration efforts claim that people are selfish and don't want to share?
I wouldn't dare.
Lovely argument. What it has to do with libertarianism escapes me.
It has to do with your reaction to jj's claim that libertarianism necessitates the assumption of 'enlightened selfishness'. You say it doesn't, I agree with you, by showing that there is no real difference between enlightened selfishness and enlightened altruism and making a distinction between the two is not in anyway meaningful. Do you disagree?
Intentions and motivations really don't enter into it. It's actions that we say must be examined. If an action is an initiation of force, I don't care what the intention is, then it is unjustified. As I said above, a robber who donates his gains to charity is still a robber.
On the other hand, Libertarians are very much against prosecuting "hate crimes" and other crimes based solely on motivation and intention...for pretty much the same reason. If someone committed murder, then he's a murderer; it doesn't matter if he's a black guy killing a black guy or a white guy killing a black guy. It's still murder.
We agree then.
What you can't do is FORCE people to life their lives the way you think they should.
However, in some cases people who have destructive lifestyles cannot change their life on their own. In such a situation using force to change it for them is not necessarily 'selfish' as it can be an honest attempt to help someone.
This means that in such situations it is not meaningful to label forcing to make someone live differently as selfish, and one should only consider how effective and how necessary such force is. With addicts it is necessary, but unfortunately not often very effective. That should be the only reason not to use force in such a case.
it still to this day has not been shown that solid asbestos sealed inside firewalls and exterior walls posed any risk at all.
If it remains sealed there is no problem at all. That does not mean it always will. Also most of the problems were suffered by people
manufacturing asbestos products: that remained true from the Ancient Greeks right up to close to the 21st century.
I rebutted every single one of them. None of them were what they claimed to be.
Right... How many people did you convince of that?
No, it could simply be "cheaper" or "more efficient."
That woul'd fall under 'good for yourself'.
Nothing at all to do with a moral judgement.
You may have noticed that I put 'good' between quotes. I mean 'good' in a practical sense, not necessarily a moral one.
But force is only justified in defense or retribution to actual harm caused to others.
Yes, that's what you believe. You believe there are only three kinds of force, intiation of force, defensive force and retributive force. Problem is that this is a very limited idea, and I can think of at least two different forms of force:
restorative force, meant to set things right that went wrong, and
curative force, meant to prevent things from going wrong in the future.
What I'm saying is, once you consider that the government will be filled with the same flawed people they're saying we need the government to protect us from, their entire argument falls apart.
I don't think it does.
But suppose you are right, then the same thing can be said about the free market. Let's suppose free market companies are filled with the same flawed people, then obviously these people can give their workers ridiculously low payments and demand them to work in ridiculously bad circumstances. You have explained many times why it wouldn't work like that: workers would choose a different employer.
And voters would choose a different politician. The mechanism is a bit different, but the principle is much the same.
How on earth did you get that from what I wrote?
You said it yourself: it is not about the complexity of the government system. So a government can be as complex as it wants, and you would have no problem with it as long is it doesn't interfere too much with your life?
From what you have presented of Harry Browne's arguments, is that he is very much concerned about the actual complexity of the government system.
I've watched C-SPAN, which covers both the US Congres and the UK Parliament. I have to say I have never seen anything approaching any such thing.
Go
here, click Netherlands, and then '2e kamer'. Well, it's not a 24 hour broadcast of course. But it is a parliament, and it is something I believe that approaches such a thing.
There is no doubt it still has a long way to go, but people do discuss evidence in the form of reports, do present arguments from all sides, etc...
I don't think it is that much different to what happens in US Congress or UK Parliament, but perhaps the fact that it isn't a 2 party system makes some difference.
Except that they are comparable, and the evidence shows that the FDA is causing more harm than it prevents.
I know you believe that. I have not seen you argue it convincingly.
Actually, I have. Several people.
Could those people please identify themselves?
Yes, but that's compassion. We were talking about not condoning actions. Again, two completely separate things.
Of course they are completely seperate things. It just shows that legalization and deregulation isn't the only alternative to 'The War on Drugs.'
So I have to act towards every single person in the world who does things I don't approve of, or I'm condoning their actions?
No of course not. I'm not saying that, am I? What I'm saying is that if you don't do anything to stop those actions, it makes
no difference whether you condone them or not.
I think I'm really starting to understand your mindset here...
Since you fail to understand such a simple sentence, I rather doubt that.