All human interaction is political. And at the end of the day it's all about power and force (the two are not the same thing).
You are making some big communications mistakes here, Matt, and this post right here is an example of a major, major problem. You are trying to actually communicate, presumably, with the audience here. That means using words in a way that audience will understand. You know, or should know, perfectly well, how the words "political/politics" and "power" are used by libertarians. Yet you are choosing to use them in a completely different way, with completely different definitions. I do not know if it's intentional or not, because I have run into this confusion and miscommunication with you on
one thread before. Maybe you're just intentionally muddying the waters to confuse the issue.
Let's assume good faith and review again, though.
Politics, in the sense that everyone on this forum always, invariably uses it (except for you, Matt) means: actions associated with trying to control or influence
the state, working within the processes which the state itself has set up for doing so (elections, referendums, signing petitions on the White House web site, etc.). To quote Wikipedia, politics is the process whereby we "choose government officials and make decisions about public policy."
Power, in the sense that everyone on this forum always, invariably uses it (except for you, Matt) means: the power to push other people around aggressively. This word, too, generally has reference to
the state, not just random criminals or malfeasants.
So there's the normal definitions.
Do you get it now? Are we on the same page? Can you now use the words "power" and "politics" like a normal Ron Paul supporter, going forward? Then we can have actual communication, see? It'll be great!
It's not that your definitions are wrong. All acts involving human interaction can indeed be thought of and labeled as politics. A boss' influence over his employees can indeed be thought of as power. So too, in fact, can a violinist's mastery over his instrument be considered power. But these are not relevant definitions. They're not what anyone here is talking about! My guess is you've read/listened to a whole lot of self-help books, with a particular focus on empowerment, and are now wanting to give us all a free lesson in all the marvelous things you've discovered from the
The 48 Laws of Power and
The Art of Seduction. And that's great, but it just isn't relevant to this discussion. And no one's going to learn anything from your terse one-liners anyway. You're just spouting tautologies... to
yourself. No one else is receiving your words.
When IDefendthePlatform says that he's swearing off politics, that doesn't mean he no longer wants to be able to influence his wife to do things he likes! When LoneStarLocke explains how he, too, has given up on politics, that doesn't mean he is giving up on being admired and listened-to at work! They are just saying they have decided to quit electioneering. They've decided to stop fighting the state within the state's own approved processes.