Travlyr
Member
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2009
- Messages
- 14,088
You have no clue. I support Ron Paul because he makes a hell of a lot more sense than you. Rothbard, like Paul, understood that minimal government was the best possible outcome. You can't eliminate the State. It's impossible in our lifetimes. Get a clue. The Constitution, when followed, limits government. Somehow you believe that you are going to be able to eliminate the State without limiting it? That makes NO sense. If you would take the time to read what others write, then you would understand that the constitution is not a beloved document. It is not even "my" constitution. I simply recognize that it includes the Bill of Rights and forcing the rulers to obey them is a hell of a lot better than what we get if we don't try and stop them. What we get if they are not forced to obey the constitution is what we have today. Rulers who rule with an iron fist.It's obviously a rhetorical question because you won't accept any answer that includes abolishing your beloved mafia extortion, kidnapping, and murder machine. You want to keep it at all costs...because you falsely, inspite of all logic, feel it's not only necessary, but beneficial and benign.
The plan has been stated. Parent children so they are raised to understand the state is immoral. Educate them, and adults, to understand the same. That's 95% of the process. The other 5% is to outlaw the state (the geographic monoplies on roads, money, fire service, police, defense, etc.). Once these monopolies are ended, the state dies. The state is an ideology, not a philosophy. It's simply an idea that needs to end, and then IT functionally ends. You wake up, it's that much closer to abolition.
It's like asking "who will pick the cotton if we abolish slavery?", or "who will wash my clothes and fix my meals if my wife is allowed to work and own property like a man?".
There is nothing impossible about the only non-utopian philosophy. Utopia implies uniformity, something anarchists are dead set against. You want a righteous and moral mafia...that's utopian and impossible.
My proposal is a proposal known for over a hundred years...but you don't seek answers, or you'd look them up online instead of asking us rhetorical questions and posting videos about overly simplistic answers to making your mafia monopoly a thing of the past. My proposal is parenting, education, and allowing competition. My strategy is anarchism without adjectives, and my form of organization and economics is panarchist synthesis. Government should be able to be opted-into and out-of without you physically relocating (panarchism; Voluntaryism). No one should be required to be in any of these social contracts at all, unless they want to, provided they do not harm or defraud anyone or their properties in the act of self governance. It's unethical, illogical, and aggressive to do anything else.
Your Constitution is a codification of a territorial monopoly on mafia, extortion, kidnapping, murder, and any number of services that could be provided by the free market. You love it; but what you love is violence against soveriegns who have not harmed anyone. You fail to care, and continue to claim ignorance of the ramifications of your ideals. Your only retort to any of the philosophy we try to make you face is appeal to authority (or some other informal logical fallacy). We do not want your Constitution...it's a good means to an anarchist/Voluntaryist end...but it cannot be an end unto itself. If it is your end, it is immorality you wish to achieve...the aggression against innocents and the perpetuation of a monopoly on mafia.
You act as if the state doesn't destroy your property rights through tax, by making the state your landlord, the owner of your labor, your consumer choices, your life itself. You do not own what you rent, and the state rents you your property as long as it taxes it. Worse, it can seize it for any reason whatsoever in your Constitution. That's protecting property rights? Peace is initiating force through extortion? Defending you from domestic and foreign initiations of force is achieved by initiating force against you? Orwell had memes for this:
War is Peace. Slavery is Freedom. Ignorance is Strength. Interventions are Humanitarian. Pepper Spray is a Vegetable.
I added the last one, and I'll add two more:
Destruction of Property Rights protects Property Rights. Initiated Force protects you from Initiated Force.
I mean, while we're trading memes, why not, right?
Now I ask you, what is your philosophy? What are your ethics? (More importantly, are you willing to get either? Because you currently have neither.)
Lastly, please stopping quoting an anarchist (Rothbard) out of context to make your sophistic arguments for statism. Your making yourself look like a totally ignorant, or intellectually dishonest, person.
I'll quote whoever I want whenever I want. If you were an honest anarchist, then you would not be telling me what to do. Rothbard, Spooner, and pretty much every smart person in history understood that rulers are going to rule whether the ruled like it or not. The Anti-Federalists knew that. They wrote about it. They made sure that the Bill of Rights were included to do whatever they could do to limit the power of the Khazars. What you don't seem to bother with is understanding who is in charge. It is the Khazars. Just a little bit of study of history helps for understanding. Try it sometime. Obeying the constitution puts them in jail for their shenanigans. That's what Ron Paul and a lot of us are saying. Stop them peacefully if we can otherwise they will take us all out. That's what history tells us.On the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives
September 23, 2004
Remarks on the Constitution by U.S. Congressman Ron Paul
"The U.S. Constitution is the most unique and best contract ever drawn up between a people and their government in history. Though flawed from the beginning, because all men are flawed, it nevertheless has served us well and set an example for the entire world. Yet no matter how hard the authors tried, the corrupting influence of power was not thwarted by the Constitution.
The notion of separate state and local government, championed by the followers of Jefferson, was challenged by the Hamiltonians almost immediately following the ratification of the Constitution. Early on, the supporters of strong, centralized government promoted central banking, easy credit, protectionism/mercantilism, and subsidies for corporate interests.
Although the 19th Century generally was kind to the intent of the Constitution, namely limiting government power, a major setback occurred with the Civil War and the severe undermining of the principle of sovereign states. The Civil War profoundly changed the balance of power in our federalist system, paving the way for centralized big government.
Although the basic principle underlying the constitutional republic we were given was compromised in the post-Civil War period, it was not until the 20th Century that steady and significant erosion of the constitutional restraints placed on the central government occurred. This erosion adversely affected not only economic and civil liberties, but foreign affairs as well.
We now have persistent abuse of the Constitution by the executive, legislative, and judicial branches. Our leaders in Washington demonstrate little concern for the rule of law, liberty, and our republican form of government.
Today the pragmatism of the politicians, as they spend more than $2 trillion annually, creates legislative chaos. The vultures consume the carcass of liberty without remorse. On the contrary, we hear politicians brag incessantly about their ability to deliver benefits to their districts, thus qualifying themselves for automatic re-election.
The real purpose of the Constitution was the preservation of liberty. It's not the Constitution that gives us our freedom, the Constitution is needed to keep the power seekers from usurping that freedom and to hold government in check.
But our government ignores this while spending endlessly, taxing, and regulating. The complacent electorate, who are led to believe their interests and needs are best cared for by a huge bureaucratic welfare state, convince themselves that enormous federal deficits and destructive inflation can be dealt with another day.
The answer to the dilemma of unconstitutional government and runaway spending is simple: restore a burning conviction in the hearts and minds of the people that freedom works and government largesse is a fraud. When the people once again regain confidence in the benefits of liberty -- and demand it from their elected leaders -- Congress will act appropriately.
The response of honorable men and women who represent us should be simply to take their oaths of office seriously, vote accordingly, and return our nation to its proper republican origins. The results would be economic prosperity, greater personal liberty, honest money, abolition of the Internal Revenue Service, and a work made more peaceful when we abandon the futile policy of building and policing an American empire.
No longer would we yield our sovereignty to international organizations that act outside the restraints placed on government by the Constitution.
The Constitution and those who have sworn to uphold it are not perfect, and it's understandable that abuse occurs. But it shouldn't be acceptable. Without meticulous adherence to the principle of the rule of law, minor infractions become commonplace and the Constitution loses all meaning.
Unfortunately that is where we are today. This nonsense that the Constitution is a living, flexible document, taught as gospel in our government schools, must be challenged. The Founders were astute enough to recognize the Constitution was not perfect and wisely permitted amendments to the document -- but they correctly made the process tedious, and thus difficult.
Without a renewed love for liberty and confidence in its results, it will be difficult if not impossible to restore once again the rule of law under the Constitution.
I have heard throughout my life how each upcoming election is the most important election ever, and how the very future of our country is at stake. Those fears have always been grossly overstated. The real question is not who will achieve a partisan victory. The real question is will we once again accept the clear restraints placed on the power of the national government by the Constitution.
Obviously the jury is still out on this issue. However, what we choose to do about this constitutional crisis is the most important "election" of our times, and the results will determine the kind of society our children will inherit. I believe it's worthwhile for all of us to tirelessly pursue the preservation of the elegant Constitution with which we have been so blessed."