Dirt Roads Scholar
Member
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2008
- Messages
- 18
Sorry.
Good points. I figured someone would bring up the the government being involved in marriage. I don't think it should be either. But there are vested interests in the general welfare that attach to basic family units and the cohesion and stability of society. Encouragement can take many unintrusive forms.
You can find a "church" that will sanction anything. What would it harm anyone's person or property if some of us wanted to go nude? How about having open air sex on street corners. Absurd examples, but the point being people don't live like fundamentalist libertarians - even the people who loudly claim to be one.
Some things obviously work. Other things obviously don't. Judeo-Christian precepts work.
Materialistic, ultra-libertarian theory doesn't.
don't see a conflict between functional, practical libertarian concepts built on the basic foundations of those Judeo-Christian premises.
There's no advocation for cramming religion down anyone's throat, nor is there any for having atheistic secular humanism crammed down anyone's throat.
One problem being that there's no compelling reason for the 'smart monkey' to be personally responsible on his own, besides some whimsical, fickle feeling. I don't see a revival of 'Reason' sweeping the land.
The Founders did better than anyone so far in history. But if the parasites continue to eat the host in the name of personal autonomy, they will find themselves in a thoroughly anti-libertarian environment.
Apart from the State sanction and protection of a man, a woman, and their children as the basic ingredient, 'civilization' is toast.
Good points. I figured someone would bring up the the government being involved in marriage. I don't think it should be either. But there are vested interests in the general welfare that attach to basic family units and the cohesion and stability of society. Encouragement can take many unintrusive forms.
You can find a "church" that will sanction anything. What would it harm anyone's person or property if some of us wanted to go nude? How about having open air sex on street corners. Absurd examples, but the point being people don't live like fundamentalist libertarians - even the people who loudly claim to be one.
Some things obviously work. Other things obviously don't. Judeo-Christian precepts work. Materialistic, ultra-libertarian theory doesn't. I don't see a conflict between functional, practical libertarian concepts built on the basic foundations of those Judeo-Christian premises. There's no advocation for cramming religion down anyone's throat, nor is there any for having atheistic secular humanism crammed down anyone's throat.
There are two competing worldviews identified above. Man created in God's image, but fallen - and man as an accidentally animate piece of meat. The latter can only survive on the stable back of the former. Even then, it must be willing to exercise personal responsibility and restrain to keep the foundation that supports it glued together. And by the same light, the foundation shouldn't force dogmatic adherence on it's passengers, any more than God forces anyone to believe in Him. One problem being that there's no compelling reason for the 'smart monkey' to be personally responsible on his own, besides some whimsical, fickle feeling. I don't see a revival of 'Reason' sweeping the land.
The Founders did better than anyone so far in history. But if the parasites continue to eat the host in the name of personal autonomy, they will find themselves in a thoroughly anti-libertarian environment.
a man, a woman, and their children
sophistry07
mtmedlin,
Are you a fundamentalist libertarian? I don't mean that in a derogatory way. I'm asking if you extrapolate out to it's logical conclusion, rigidly dogmatic libertarian doctrine? Public nudity, and sex etc., for instance. This doesn't really strike me as all that different from liberal wish-world... sounds sorta nice in theory, but don't do any cost / benefit analysis, or worry about unintended consequences, and good heavens, avoid reality at all costs. Have you every really thought about what it would actually mean for everyone to absolutely anything at all that struck their fancy whenever they felt like it? That scenario appeals to you? Would we all have bumper stickers that said, "Just Be Nice"? Do you believe evil is caused by circumstances, and if circumstances were arranged just so, or if all restraints were removed, that men would be 'good'?
This is the kind of thing that gives Paul supporters the bad reputation (not to mention sophistry07) You have to know that a fundamentalist libertarian nation isn't in the cards. Nero's attempt turned out to be highly flammable. It's unrealistic. It's like the useful idiots saying communism really isn't so bad... it just wasn't done correctly. Your godless utopia is a myth, and I think you are aware of the fact. Atheism isn't really godless anyway. It simply transfers the religious worship from a deity to one's self. With Nietzsche as the high priest. Your chances at unrestrained bliss diminish rapidly in the face of truth from the barrel of a gun.
The complaints about Judeo-Christian drawbacks seem a little unappreciative, and dismissive of it's successes. In fact, it seems to catch the blame for a lot of the havoc caused by the unbridled hedonism thrust on us by liberalism and political correctness. There are certainly flaws, but how about comparing Western Civilization to the rest of the world. Of course you may be a revisionist who insists that the 'enlightenment' struggled to overcome the insidious Christians and won. It's sure winning now. France?
But if Sweden or some other socialist paradise strikes you as shangri-la, by all means, emigrate. I'd like my country back.
There have been cultures, though, where a man had many wives. It did not lead to a "breakdown" of the family. Why do you oppose this (polygamy) if your goal is to preserve the family?
By the way, only an extremist Xtian could be this corny:
Wasn't Jesus in a culture like this?
Not only that. Polygamy also has decidedly more clout in anthropology than the american family unit.It did not lead to a "breakdown" of the family.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6rD-LLrrF8
Please respond to what Ron Paul's views are regarding gay marriage and how gay are individuals and not a collective group. I understand the way the Constitution prevents the government from oppressing gays, but I don't quite know how to phrase it so this person will understand how Ron Paul is really his defender and not his enemy.
My apologies. I wasn't aware that there was an officially sanctioned 'tone' I was bound to adhere to. I'll see if I can take note of the humble offerings here and emulate them so as not cause distress with my 'veiled' arrogance. There's already a surplus of ventilated heads.
"More people have been persecuted and killed in the name of the all mighty then any other religion."
The falsity of that statement is easily verifiable, if anyone is interested. If all Christians are required to own the actions of those of their brethren that violate the tenets of their faith, then secularist share the same responsibility.
Greatest Murderers
The simple fact of history is that the greatest evil has always resulted from denial of God, not pursuit of Him. Dennis Prager has noted, "In this [20th] century alone, more innocent people have been murdered, tortured, and enslaved by secular ideologies nazism and communism than by all religions in history."
Grab an older copy of the Guinness Book of World Records and turn to the category "Judicial," sub-heading "Crimes: Mass Killings." You’ll find that carnage of unimaginable proportions resulted not from religion, but from institutionalized atheism.
Guinness reports, "The greatest massacre ever imputed by the government of one sovereign against another is the 26.3 million Chinese killed during the regime of Mao Zedong between 1949 and May 1965. The Walker Report published by the U.S. Senate Committee of the Judiciary in July 1971 placed...the total death toll in China since 1949 between 32.25 and 61.7 million."
In the USSR, Nobel Prize winner Alexander Solzhenitsyn estimated that state repression and terrorism took over 66 million lives from 1917 to 1959 under Lenin, Stalin and Khrushchev.
The worst per capita genocide happened in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge. According to Guinness, "More than one third of the eight million Khmers were killed between April 17, 1975 and January 1979."
The greatest evil does not result from people zealous for God. It results when people are convinced there is no God to whom they must answer.
Gregory Koukl str.org
When a Christian engages in deeds that violate the precepts of his faith, beginning with, "You shall love the Lord God with all your heart, all your soul, all your strength, and all your mind, and your neighbor as yourself.", he violates the precepts of his religion. When anyone else engages in what for a Christian would be immoral or criminal acts, including the atheistic secular humanist, he is justified by 'situational ethics', or any number of interchangeable precepts of his unique and personal religion.
Shame used to be a great regulator of societal norms. It's an extinct concept now. We have 'evolved' past shame. I've also envisioned America in zones, where if you wanted to live your life without having to avoid stepping on copulating couples on the sidewalk you would reside in the Southeast. And if you wanted your children to be free to engage in sidewalk copulation you would live near the West coast, and so on. Does that sound reasonable?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6rD-LLrrF8
Please respond to what Ron Paul's views are regarding gay marriage and how gay are individuals and not a collective group. I understand the way the Constitution prevents the government from oppressing gays, but I don't quite know how to phrase it so this person will understand how Ron Paul is really his defender and not his enemy.
Interestingly enough...
I see no real reason why public nudity and public sex, even massive gay sex orgies in the city square right in front of impressionable little children, need to be prohibited by law, coercion, and the force of government.
Rather, I think the market itself is a pretty good regulator of social norms...if you do things in public that most people in your community find disgusting, you'll quickly become a pariah, have trouble finding work, have trouble being taken seriously by others, etc. People that behave in an unwelcome fashion in more socially conservative communities will gravitate toward more socially liberal communities. Generally speaking, in a libertarian society, people's behavior would come to a natural equilibrium with prevailing social norms through an unwritten social contract for how to conduct themselves in public.
Humans are social beings, and hardly anybody wants to be a total outcast. In my opinion, this alone is enough to keep social order. Such a "hands-off" policy also permits culture to be fluid and to evolve without being chained down by the arbitrary constraints of past mindsets. After all, you don't typically see people walking down the streets in robes and togas anymore. Why do you think this is? Do we have laws that say it must be so? Are jeans and t-shirts somehow inherently better or more civilized? Are suits and ties? No - culture just evolves, but it does so slowly, and at any given snapshot in history (in a particular setting), most people will dress and act within the boundaries of social norms...all by themselves, without any government forcing them to.
The freedom for everyone to believe what they want...
I guess Dahmer, Hitler and Manson would be productive members of this type of society.