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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
odds and ends
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 3:59 AM
SIGNYM
I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.
Quote:Describe a mechanism that will prevent my following prediction from happening. "If government exists, someone will buy it."
Quote:Force. It ain't rocket science, Siggy. Lemme repeat in small words so you can understand. 1. If you are not using force, no force will be used on you. 2. If you are using force, force will be used on you.
Quote:In what strange world is a predatory financial system part of a free market?
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 4:14 AM
CANTTAKESKY
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: Quote:Force. It ain't rocket science, Siggy. Lemme repeat in small words so you can understand. 1. If you are not using force, no force will be used on you. 2. If you are using force, force will be used on you. I added to the scenario. I posed a question which you have not answered.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 4:20 AM
Quote:I answered the question. (See underlined above.) The answer, again, is FORCE. Kidnappers are using force, so... Force. Is. Used. On. Them. See?
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 5:07 AM
BYTEMITE
Quote:Pushing the "reset" button for the thousandth time isn't going to help.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 7:17 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: so, your proposal would be to have individuals willy-nilly kill slave-owners?
Quote:They have used their monopoly on tantalum to gain greater weapons. They have organized. And knowing that the best defense is a good offense, they invade. Then what?
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 12:13 PM
MAGONSDAUGHTER
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Magon, In what strange world is a predatory financial system part of a free market? If the people are under these taxes, mortgages, etc., they're being forced into a social labor system by that society's designers.
Quote: This is closer to the heart of the problem. This sounds to me like a stock analysis of civilization that you might get from some professor and then accept as part of your reality when it should be recognized as pure supposition which is easily disproven by studying primitive societies where there is plenty of division of labor, or looking at the actual cost of food. What it doesn't sound like to me is a Magon's eye view of the world. There's no point in telling us what someone might have fed you at some earlier point, analyze the situation for yourself, I think you'll come to a different conclusion. That doesn't mean you'll come to my conclusion, but you'll come up with something better than this.
Quote: I see no reason why it should.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 12:42 PM
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 1:34 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: no intervention, no organisation, no governance, no laws....CTS like rules, only she doesn't want them implemented.
Quote: If you believe that rules are great but shouldn't be enforced, then I guess they aren't rules, they're ideals.
Quote:Do you think that everyone shares your views? What if what others want is some form of governance, laws and regulations, a police force to enact them, an army to protect them? What do you do if the majority of people want what you do not?
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 1:57 PM
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 2:26 PM
Quote:Ah, well now I see how you can have such a flawed world view. Rule Number 2 is the key. So force has never been used on someone who does not use force? No one has robbed from someone unarmed? No one has beaten up a passive victim? No country has ever invaded a weaker, undefended country?
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 2:46 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: So force has never been used on someone who does not use force?
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 2:51 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: Because, I mean, the people acting on behalf of the wronged person in their minds are only dishing out justice, but what about the friends of the person they just used force against? They wouldn't see it as justice, and they'd then go after those attackers.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 3:05 PM
DREAMTROVE
Quote:"If government exists, someone will buy it."
Quote: Nothing more to discuss, I see.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 3:19 PM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: But the simple answer is: direct democracy, because then you'd have to buy off the majority of the population.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 3:46 PM
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky: Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: So force has never been used on someone who does not use force? When did I say that MY rules have been followed throughout history? Are you THAT bent on twisting everything I say? My Rules #1 and 2 are what SHOULD happen. In my ideal world. Not what has happened or has never happened throughout history. Sheesh. In my ideal world, if someone with guns forces a woman--who has not used force--to sit at the back of the bus for no reason except that she is a woman, then said woman or her relatives get to use guns on this someone. If someone with guns forces this woman--who has not used force--to pay 10% of her income for "protection" of her house, then said woman or her relatives get to use guns on this someone.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 3:48 PM
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky: Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: Because, I mean, the people acting on behalf of the wronged person in their minds are only dishing out justice, but what about the friends of the person they just used force against? They wouldn't see it as justice, and they'd then go after those attackers.That's exactly right. That is a very real danger. Either everyone would die very quickly (the whole world would be blind and toothless as the saying goes), or people would learn quickly to use force as a last resort. It behooves all parties involved to mediate and agree on restorative justice rather than punitive and violent justice.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 3:59 PM
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 4:08 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: Shall we keep the conversation to what is possible?
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 4:54 PM
Quote:By and large, I believe ...
Quote:Shall we keep the conversation to what is possible?=-Magon So do you like things exactly the way they are? Do you not dream of change? - CTS
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 5:04 PM
Quote:1) You don't think corporations will have the money to buy off the majority of the population? 2) What is keeping the majority of the population from voting out current bought politicians? You don't think the majority of the population is already bought?
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 5:11 PM
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 5:17 PM
RIONAEIRE
Beir bua agus beannacht
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 5:51 PM
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky: Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: Shall we keep the conversation to what is possible?So do you like things exactly the way they are? Do you not dream of change? And when you do, and when someone simply dismisses your ideas patronizingly as "Shall we keep the conversation to what is possible?", do you find that a valid critique of your ideas? Or does it sound like someone is simply being a tosser? I am willing to entertain legitimate critiques, like those Byte has raised. My ideas have very real flaws like any other. But what I get is obtuse misinterpretation or deliberate strawmanning. And the forum equivalent of "You're such a poopoo head that you suck donkey doo doo." This is not debate.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 6:29 PM
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 6:34 PM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: Quote:I answered the question. (See underlined above.) The answer, again, is FORCE. Kidnappers are using force, so... Force. Is. Used. On. Them. See? And then I said... so, your proposal would be to have individuals willy-nilly kill slave-owners? But the slave owners, they're not following YOUR rules. They have used their monopoly on tantalum to gain greater weapons. They have organized. And knowing that the best defense is a good offense, they invade. Then what? Can I give you a hint, DT? The Founding Fathers, they went through this already. They had to create an army, which... at the very beginning... was only supported by 30% of the population. And then, because an army is a non-producing segment of the population, they had to impose taxes in order to fund it which BTW were also opposed by a significant portion of the population AND the states. And then, they had to create a common currency which would be accepted in all states. Scrip, as I recall. Now, they COULD just as easily... in fact. MORE easily... sat back on their haunches and accepted British rule.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 7:06 PM
Quote:Abe Lincoln was not a founding father.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 7:12 PM
Quote:Depends on the economy. Some economic systems self-select against larger businesses.
Quote:With enough technology, any manufactured product could become easily produced locally.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 7:24 PM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: In order to WAGE WAR you must COLLECT TAXES.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 8:09 PM
Quote: Depends on the economy. Some economic systems self-select against larger businesses.
Quote:Really? I've heard of 3D laser-printing plastic parts, but you can't make an engine out of that, or a computer. It would be nice if all technologies could be reproduced at the local level, but we're not there yet.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 8:27 PM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: Quote:Abe Lincoln was not a founding father. Apparently you don't understand hypothetical examples. There is no point in talking about this further with you, because you're too busy building "your" world, "your" free-market, "your" rules, in your head.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 8:32 PM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: I've heard of 3D laser-printing plastic parts, but you can't make an engine out of that, or a computer. It would be nice if all technologies could be reproduced at the local level, but we're not there yet.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 10:27 PM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: 1) Socialist is a most excellent word to describe what you would otherwise have to term "One of Stalin, Mao or the Nazis, or any regime which has copied them" and it just so happens that all of those regimes and their copiers have called themselves and their governments "socialist." 2) It just also happens to be a terrible system whose design flaws become apparent when you study them. 3) Personally, when someone does something like puts "socialist and proud of it" as their tag line, I feel it's the moral equivalient of a swastika avatar, and I cringe every time I see it. An actual swastika avatar, which I have seen online, is usually less offensive, as it generally means the user is a hindu jain, unless you're on stormfront.org. Do I call anyone socialist who doesn't call themselves socialist? No. I don't. After 250 million dead and over a billion more if you count eugenics, then why should we *ever* try it again? So, do I want to entertain this idea? No. I don't. Now that said, yes, the problems that are socialism-created are created by socialism. I'm not making it up. But not all problems are socialism-created.
Quote: In the Sudan you have a right wing religious extremist govt. which is trying to hang on to colonial territorial claims because that land has resources, even though much of it is not inhabited by Sudanese. Darfur is just such an example. They have oil, no money, and they're not sudanese. The govt. had been trying to institute sharia law, and the Darfuri, like the Luo and the Beja, decided to secede. Chad, with asst. from the US, sent in some militias that in a non-US supported operation we might have defined as "Al Qaeda" at any rate a islamic terrorist mujahideen with direct ties to Osama bin Laden, with aid from the US, stepped in to help the Darfuri. The govt. responded by trying to wipe them out.
Quote:In Yugoslavia what happened was the fall of the berlin wall coincided with the death of marshal tito, creating a power vacuum in the nonsensical versailles creation.
Quote: I agree that things could be better done, and I think the US is headed for a disaster. Our main problem though is probably not economic, but the encroaching police state.
Quote:Here's a Fraser institute list of free market countries (used by the world bank and with competitiveness index) 1 Hong Kong 9.01 2 Singapore 8.68 3 New Zealand 8.20 4 Switzerland 8.03 5 Australia 7.98 6 Canada 7.81 7 Chile 7.77 8 United Kingdom 7.71 9 Mauritius 7.67 10 United States 7.60 11 Bahrain 7.59 11 Finland 7.59 13 Slovakia 7.56 14 United Arab Emirates 7.54 15 Denmark 7.52 15 Estonia 7.52 15 Hungary 7.52 18 Cyprus 7.51 19 Austria 7.50 20 Luxembourg 7.49 21 Germany 7.45 22 Japan 7.44 23 Panama 7.41 24 Lithuania 7.40 25 Ireland 7.38 26 Taiwan 7.37 27 Georgia 7.36 28 Bulgaria 7.34 28 Oman 7.34 30 Albania 7.32 30 Netherlands 7.32 30 South Korea 7.32
Thursday, January 5, 2012 3:51 AM
FREMDFIRMA
Quote:Or it may happen from wild-eyed idiots mowing down a whole lot of innocents. Plenty of places in the world where the rule of law is enacted by criminals, gangs and rogue armies and the government is impotent. Not particularly pleasant places to live. Me, I'd prefer a police force to be less aggressive, minimally armed - specialist weapons units only and limits and checks on their power as well. But like all these issues you don't do it via hope alone, but structures to limit powers, dare I say - laws.
Quote:But systems are NOT people, and they don't behave like people. Whether you want to believe it or not, large groups of human beings will form systems, just as groups of animals and plants form ecosystems and computers are more than collections of metal and plastic. Human behavior is not just the average of its parts. The moment people start gathering in more than a monkey-sphere, non-monkey-sphere processes start. Groups stay in one place, tools aggregate, property rights become important, labor is divided, stability becomes paramount, cooperation necessary, rules are created, memes persist, power concentrates... all sorts of things happen which will not ever happen in small groups. Frem, have you ever designed or built a circuit? Do you understand the concepts of amplification, and positive and negative feedback, underdamped systems and so forth? Human systems can be described using those terms. No matter how much you try to reduce these complex interactions to "people"... to the individual components on the board... groups of people will persist in behaving in complex ways. The American Medical Association does not act like your average doctor and corporations live, eat, grow, adapt, evolve, and die on a non-human scale over non-human lifetimes.
Select to view spoiler:
Thursday, January 5, 2012 5:23 AM
Quote:that RSA vid I am fond
Quote:We can do better, and I believe we will - all just a matter of time.
Quote:but again I posit to you that one good look at american history shows that if government had not intervened EVERY SINGLE TIME on the side of corporations, we wouldn't be having this discussion.
Thursday, January 5, 2012 6:56 AM
Thursday, January 5, 2012 7:13 AM
Quote:You can build just about anything with CAD/CAM these days.
Quote:The founding fathers didn't issue a new currency, they minted bullion coins exchangeable for any other bullion coins on the world market.
Quote:Early American currency went through several stages of development in the colonial and post-Revolutionary history of the United States. Because few coins were minted in the thirteen colonies that became the United States in 1776, foreign coins like the Spanish dollar were widely circulated. Colonial governments sometimes issued paper money to facilitate economic activity. The British Parliament passed Currency Acts in 1751, 1764, and 1773 that regulated colonial paper money. During the American Revolution, the colonies became independent states; freed from British monetary regulations, they issued paper money to pay for military expenses. The Continental Congress also issued paper money during the Revolution, known as Continental currency, to fund the war effort. Both state and Continental currency depreciated rapidly, becoming practically worthless by the end of the war. To address these and other problems, the United States Constitution, ratified in 1788, denied individual states the right to coin and print money. The First Bank of the United States, chartered in 1791, and the Coinage Act of 1792, began the era of a national American currency.
Quote:The national government had few responsibilities and no nationwide tax system, relying on donations from the States for its revenue. Under the Articles, each State was a sovereign entity and could levy tax as it pleased. When the Constitution was adopted in 1789, the Founding Fathers recognized that no government could function if it relied entirely on other governments for its resources, thus the Federal Government was granted the authority to raise taxes. The Constitution endowed the Congress with the power to "…lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises, pay the Debts and provide for the common Defense and general Welfare of the United States." Ever on guard against the power of the central government to eclipse that of the states, the collection of the taxes was left as the responsibility of the State governments. To pay the debts of the Revolutionary War, Congress levied excise taxes on distilled spirits, tobacco and snuff, refined sugar, carriages, property sold at auctions, and various legal documents.
Thursday, January 5, 2012 8:20 AM
Quote:So, maybe the rule is.... no governments representing more than ten million people. You get more than ten million? You have to hive off. Or maybe the rule is no banks. Or maybe the rule is no police and no armies.
Quote:There is also no art
Thursday, January 5, 2012 5:43 PM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: There's "belief" again. But the question remains.... HOW??? That is a discussion that nobody, not even you, seems prepared to have, and that's the ONE question I have been asking over and over. What I was looking for is not to set off a firestorm of emotion but someone who could help answer the question....
Thursday, January 5, 2012 6:02 PM
Thursday, January 5, 2012 7:15 PM
Quote: In USSR, what they had essentially was the same autocratic government that they always had. The Tsar had absolute rule, life and death, over his subjects. So did Stalin.
Quote:It wasn't even close to what Marx envisaged as a perfect society
Quote:Magon: You think that conflict in the Balkans started then?????????
Quote:the state owns stakes in firms that comprise perhaps 60% of the GDP
Quote: You've got a bit of blind spot regarding socialism, sport. You cannot compare totalitarian regimes of the USSR and Korea with governments that fund services such as those in Europe, Canada and Australia.
Quote:The word socialist gets kicked around all over the place, a bit like Nazi,
Quote: and I've noticed that Americans in particular drag it out when they want to criticise anything that involves government funding of anything, including healthcare and education.
Quote: Yeah, everything I've read about the US says something similiar. One in 100 of your citizens in jail, long prison sentences for crimes of even a non violent nature and aggressive and armed police.
Thursday, January 5, 2012 8:41 PM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: But then again, what is? I mean, the US is a terrible democracy, and most democracies are worse. We also have a terrible capitalism. Adam Smith would be appalled. We're even a terrible America, the founding fathers would be appalled.
Quote:You have to plan for disaster,
Quote:Also, though, I think there's an inherent flaw in large centrally planned structures, because the more you engineer, the less thinking ironically that's involved in the result, because only those who set it up will be doing the planning, not the millions who will be in it later on.
Quote: Don't confuse the actions of the Nazis in WWII with the actions of the socialist regime in the 1990s.......
Quote: On Singapore, I see where you went wrong on this, the statement in wikipedia is misleading: Quote:the state owns stakes in firms that comprise perhaps 60% of the GDP It owns stakes, it does not own. The singapore state spending is less than 15% of GDP. Singapore is a highly corporatist state, it's been criticized in the other direction for being essentially "run by a corporation" and in the australian press a couple years back for being "run by a drug ring." I figure all of these accusations are probably not entirely unfounded, I get the feeling it's like the US style capitalism on steroids, and everything i hear seems to the support the idea that it's somewhat of a police state. I see that it has that reputation online as well, and there's much arguing about it, but statistically it is maybe only as bad as the US?
Quote: There are socialist countries in Europe? Well, I suppose there's Belarus. Also, I thought we just concluded that Australia was the 5th omst free market nation on earth and now you dub it socialist? I think it has a reputation as pretty right wing. Also, Canada, socialist? Not sure what you're smoking.
Quote: Yes, they're almost synonyms, except that socialism is a more encompassing term as it includes soviets and maoists. Nazi+Soviets+Maoists together represent the founding ideology of basically almost all socialists states of the 20th c. There's a list of close to a hundred regimes there, and you can find a number of websites devoted to it. just over half IIRC were unmitigated disasters on an apocalyptic scale, the others were just unproductive govts. with a serious human rights problem.
Friday, January 6, 2012 6:55 AM
Quote:when really my single point was that revenge cycles get played out in countries all over the world and that it is difficult to diffuse conflict by more conflict. Nothing in your history diatribes really demonstrated that this doesn't happen.
Friday, January 6, 2012 7:41 AM
Friday, January 6, 2012 7:52 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: Quote:when really my single point was that revenge cycles get played out in countries all over the world and that it is difficult to diffuse conflict by more conflict. Nothing in your history diatribes really demonstrated that this doesn't happen. I don't think DT disagrees with this. It's part of the Tao. I think the socialism thing is hanging people up in the conversation. I figure it's none of my business if someone's socialist so long as they don't try to make me be socialist or make me part of theyf the system they're building.
Friday, January 6, 2012 10:09 AM
Friday, January 6, 2012 11:45 AM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: As to Australia, I have some relatives down under and I've known a lot of australians, but I'm not familiar with it, no. I'm just telling you the outside impression, which is that australia is kind of a conservative place. Your international image is Mick Dundee and Steve Irwin. I've known some australians who buck that, and one who was even an avid socialist, but I've also known a lot of australians who reinforce that outback stereotype.
Friday, January 6, 2012 11:54 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Fremdfirma: Sanity and Empathy is relative, Siggy - that 0.0001% can't control *anything* without people willing to obey their orders, and those as a general rule are the ones mentally and emotionally warped into doing so by a system apparently designed to do exactly that, which is why I strike at the root of it, something which although I never thought to see a positive effect from even in my lifetime, is bearing fruit already, although not much of it, sure.
Quote:Also, infrastructure isn't an on-off switch, by reframing the debate into an all-or-nothing thing, you lose any chance of real discussion - time and time again I've pointed out there's structures and systems even a generally Anarchist society *would* keep, but by throwing the argument to extremes and then piling emotional investment in on top of it these discussions always go to hell, especially when people make assumptions that wouldn't even be possible regarding the society in question.
Quote:People, neighborhoods, communities, simply do not change that radically, that quickly - while various forms of entertainment may play with (and tremendously exaggerate) the notion of peoples response to a lack of rules, or being given power - power only changes people according to their nature.
Quote:On that note, I'd recommend you watch the series "Jericho", it's pretty well done overall, but I think you might find interesting just how little most of the people involved are affected, most of it being a change in perspective, and over time they *do* run into a lot of the problems we've discussed, and handle some of it as badly as humans do.
Friday, January 6, 2012 1:01 PM
Friday, January 6, 2012 6:20 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: Particularly CTS - well possibly just because I actually get what she is proposing,
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