Bastiat's The Law
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Your dad is right. Humans are tribal beings. Always have been, always will be. It's in our genetic makeup.
The market is always more efficient at allocating capital. Why? because they can fail. (or should fail anyways) The cost being socialized encourages waste and fraud, and pays for the laws and regulation that restrict entry into a given market. (written by trusts to bust trusts)The market doesn't efficiently distribute resources either. Unless of course, efficiency means "to go to the pockets of the elite asap.
You think humans will ever do away with money? With want? With wishing to trade? And what if I wanted 15 apples but only had car mufflers. Do I not need a middle "broker"? Is gold not convenient? It's as old as civilization. It is needed to gauge the market and dictate where capital is needed. It is, in fact, key to prosperity. Buying and selling should be consider an amicable parting of goods between voluntary parties. You act as if the word "sell" is inherently bad... or "buy" for that matter.You don't buy in the first place. You trade maybe, but you don't buy.
It's all good.I get wrapped up in other threads and check up on those. I don't get reply notifications on here, so yeah I might forget about a thread after a while.
Money will always exist. A wish to trade, to produce, to better oneself... You act as if everyone considers themselves a slave. I like to work and produce. I like having the money to buy what I want when I want it. You go do your anarcho-communist society elsewhere. So long as you don't encroach on my liberty, and vice versa, we'd be fine. I suspect, or rather know, that that would not be the case. That the collectivist, legal positivist weights would come knocking for what they perceived was owed them. Otherwise you'd tell me as much firmly (that I would be free to do as I please so long as another wasn't violated) and acknowledge human rights as being natural to one's being.You can't take a person's money when it doesn't exist. My god, it's as if anarchism is such a complicated idea for you. No one's taking anything from anyone...
Your dad is right. Humans are tribal beings. Always have been, always will be. It's in our genetic makeup.
I never denied that. But why does that require a State, as opposed to voluntary associations?
Your dad is right. Humans are tribal beings. Always have been, always will be. It's in our genetic makeup.
I never denied that. But why does that require a State, as opposed to voluntary associations?
The state is just a more sophisticated hierarchy of power. Instead of fighting with swords for tribal leadership, now we do it with politics. It's a consequence of civilization and therefore inevitable.
This sense of hierarchy is built into our genetics by the way. The gestation period for a baby to be born is rather long and grueling, although modern medicine makes it somewhat easier and much less deadly. That newborn then has a much longer maturation process to become self-sufficient. This has lead the human species and hominids before them to congregate in extended families, clans, and tribes. The family unit is the first hierarchy of power you encounter, and throughout history usually male dominated. The next hierarchy of power you encountered would've been your extended family or tribe. In many ways the family/tribe are the first "state". The emergence of agriculture allowed for civilization and permanency in a certain geographic area; naturally this led to an evolution of the process to determine tribal leader(s).
Translation: Because ... um ... tribalism! And genetics! Um ...
You're free to run an experiment in the real world and prove me wrong.
What experiment? Prove you wrong how? You haven't said anything that is even remotely testable in the "real world" - not even theoretically testable.
I'd be interested in hearing why you believe things are the way they are.
"Things the way they are" (or were, or could be) is a vast subject area with uncountably myriad "whys" involved.
Organic & dynamic interactions between those myriad "whys" makes the subject even more complex & intractable.
Glibly simplistic & scientistic invocations of "genetics" and "tribalism" and such are not even remotely adequate to the task.
Before we can create change, don't we need to investigate how and why things are the way they are, at least at some level?
But there is a trade-off here, in that our "whys & wherefores" become critically dependent on those previously mentioned historically contingent circumstances. Under different circumstances, you'll be dealing with different "whys & wherefores" - and this shift in parameters will change the range of what is or is not possible. (This is why it is bogus to try to use history to "prove" that something - such as voluntaryist anarchism - is not possible. It's like looking at the Moon and Mercury and Mars - and then concluding that oceans of liquid water are not possible).
What experiment? Prove you wrong how? You haven't said anything that is even remotely testable in the "real world" - not even theoretically testable.
I'd be interested in hearing why you believe things are the way they are.
"Things the way they are" (or were, or could be) is a vast subject area with uncountably myriad "whys" involved.
Organic & dynamic interactions between those myriad "whys" makes the subject even more complex & intractable.
Glibly simplistic & scientistic invocations of "genetics" and "tribalism" and such are not even remotely adequate to the task.
The state is just a more sophisticated hierarchy of power. Instead of fighting with swords for tribal leadership, now we do it with politics. It's a consequence of civilization and therefore inevitable.
This sense of hierarchy is built into our genetics by the way. The gestation period for a baby to be born is rather long and grueling, although modern medicine makes it somewhat easier and much less deadly. That newborn then has a much longer maturation process to become self-sufficient. This has lead the human species and hominids before them to congregate in extended families, clans, and tribes. The family unit is the first hierarchy of power you encounter, and throughout history usually male dominated. The next hierarchy of power you encountered would've been your extended family or tribe. In many ways the family/tribe are the first "state". The emergence of agriculture allowed for civilization and permanency in a certain geographic area; naturally this led to an evolution of the process to determine tribal leader(s).
Also, I would like to emphasize that the above quote by me was intended to highlight the absurdities inherent in BTL's suggestion that methods of the natural sciences (such as "experiments") can be used to arrive at conclusions about human society (or any area in which the element of purposeful human action is a factor).
It is in this context that I should be understood when I said the following (in response to your above-quoted post):
The state is a consequence of civilization? Oh please. The State DESTROYS civilization.
A man will fight harder for his interests than for his rights. - Napoleon Bonaparte [...]
Do you believe there are any "truisms", like the quote above?
sn't it of benefit to investigate human nature in any political conversation?
I'm not so concerned about the possibility of anarchism per se, but more as to how the world devolved into the toilet bowl that it is.
Do you think the findings of the Milgram Experiment to be of any value?
Most of the US embraces the idea of a strong central government...why?
[This] is a vast subject area with uncountably myriad "whys" involved.
Organic & dynamic interactions between those myriad "whys" makes the subject even more complex & intractable.
Well ... all my posts in this thread have been concerned about the possibility of anarchism per se - and not at all with how the world devolved into the toilet bowl that it is. So I'm not really sure why you're interrogating me concerning the latter rather than former ...
(I'm not upset or bothered by this - just mystified. IOW: "Whatchoo askin' me for, man?")
Like Napoleon's epigram, the results of Milgram's "experiment" are certainly of value as an illustration of certain behaviors to which some people are prone under some circumstances - but that is as far as you can take it. The only thing it can be said to have "proven" is that those particular people in those particular circumstances (contrived by Milgram) behaved in those particular ways. Nothing more. It certainly does NOT serve to "prove" anything about what other particular people will or will not do in similar (or even identical) circumstances. At absolute best, it only suggests what some people might be likely to do - a very important and useful thing to be aware of, to be sure. But such "experiments" do not allow us to arrive at the sort of conclusions that experiments in the natural sciences (such as physics or chemistry) allow us to arrive at. This is because people are not like photons or planets. Photons and planets do not make choices or engage in purposeful action. This is why we can very successfully & usefully predict the paths of photons & the orbits of planets - but NOT the courses of economies (except in the most general terms) ...
C'mon now, you are being evasive.
Even Protons and Planets only behave based on conditions as we understand.
Society relies on the MAJORITY of people behaving in particular ways, not ALL of them.
No one who studies behavior claims ALL people react the same in a given situation. But with some reliable, albeit anecdotal, evidence, I can assure you that the vast majority of people stop at red lights. [...] Just because people have choice doesn't mean that patterns aren't easily recognized.
At the least, we can safely say that given a choice, people act in their perceived best interest?
By the way, I'm asking you because I respect your opinion.
In regards the OP, I have no doubt that man is a tribal animal, but I don't think that precludes a voluntary society.
My very biased opinion is that man is a fearful, self-absorbed, self-deceptive animal that will stretch the boundaries of his moral fences to justify obtaining anything he wants, from the halls of Capitol Hill all the way down to the aisles of Walmart on Black Friday.
The market is always more efficient at allocating capital. Why? because they can fail. (or should fail anyways) The cost being socialized encourages waste and fraud, and pays for the laws and regulation that restrict entry into a given market. (written by trusts to bust trusts)
What is being "efficient"? The market, being focused on disparity of exchange, doesn't really allocate capital efficiently, except if considered to the elite. Think about it, a worker isn't paid the full value of their labour. Instead, the majority of the value of said labour is not paid to the worker, and sent up the ladder to the top. As such, the worker making the product or providing a service doesn't earn as much in comparison to those at the top.
The "elite" are propped up by fasco-corporatist regulations and favors. If companies were to stand and fall by their own accord, a lot of those you call "elite" would have failed long ago. In your system there are hints (or direct overtones) that this would not happen. That even if there was inefficiency the costs would simply be socialized. Whether cost expressed in dollars or currency or expressed in time etc. there is a cost to it.
Those standing would just become more powerful though. As those companies fall down or are bought out, the remainder stand tall. In other words, monopolies will establish themselves. In my favoured system, companies wouldn't fall down, as they don't really exist to begin with.
You think humans will ever do away with money? With want? With wishing to trade? And what if I wanted 15 apples but only had car mufflers. Do I not need a middle "broker"? Is gold not convenient? It's as old as civilization. It is needed to gauge the market and dictate where capital is needed. It is, in fact, key to prosperity. Buying and selling should be consider an amicable parting of goods between voluntary parties. You act as if the word "sell" is inherently bad... or "buy" for that matter.
You don't need money to trade, and if resources are open to all and distributed based only on supply, trade isn't needed. Everyone would have access to whatever they desire, so long as it's reasonable.
It's all good.
Money will always exist. A wish to trade, to produce, to better oneself... You act as if everyone considers themselves a slave. I like to work and produce. I like having the money to buy what I want when I want it. You go do your anarcho-communist society elsewhere. So long as you don't encroach on my liberty, and vice versa, we'd be fine. I suspect, or rather know, that that would not be the case. That the collectivist, legal positivist weights would come knocking for what they perceived was owed them. Otherwise you'd tell me as much firmly (that I would be free to do as I please so long as another wasn't violated) and acknowledge human rights as being natural to one's being.
Communalists have this fun habit of not really caring about the outside world, so long as others leave them alone. Technocopianists don't really care either. They aren't going to tell others to be part of society, or force them to do it, and rather take the same stance for those that aren't with them.
The market doesn't efficiently distribute resources either. Unless of course, efficiency means "to go to the pockets of the elite asap.
You don't buy in the first place. You trade maybe, but you don't buy. You don't live as you wish in anarcho-capitalism either.
I get wrapped up in other threads and check up on those. I don't get reply notifications on here, so yeah I might forget about a thread after a while.
You can't take a person's money when it doesn't exist. My god, it's as if anarchism is such a complicated idea for you. No one's taking anything from anyone.