I don't see how right action necessarily absolves the State of its abundance of wrong action. Also, since the State exists and operates by way of taxation which is, by definition, unjust it becomes rather difficult for the State to then somehow become just. Yes, the criminal 'justice' system holds murderers accountable; that same criminal 'justice' system also perpetrates an abundant amount of injustice as well.
You do admit the state is capable of right action then, correct?
You backtracking to redact any notion it is possible in 3...2...1...
I never argued that you didn't believe the utilitarian gain far exceeds proposed alternatives--a contributing factor to why you support the State (however minarchist), I suspect. In any case, I don't see how you can assume there would be no system of justice--however good or bad--without a State.
There would be none that doesn't violate NAP in some fashion, thus invalidating any potential justice system that isn't hypocritical for an anarchist. That's the point - it undermines your entire morality to even institute one that would actually work.
Not necessarily. Many of them are just thought experiments at this point--I've already admitted and touched on this in previous posts which you apparently missed; however some of them have some examples of practical application in the past and even today. Nevertheless, again, it's somewhat difficult to test these concept and ideas when the State exists and effectively prevents many of them from being tested.
All of them are just thought experiments. Fin.
Apparently it's not a reasonable possibility that the ideas were examined and found wanting. Hell no, clearly it's just the state (that always just seems to pop up) getting in your way.
Analogous to what I speak of here, look at the internet. No one could really do anything with regard to the internet until the State released it from its exclusive grasp. Since then, however, it has evolved into something that most could not have even imagined at the time. Would you say that there could be no internet without the State simply because the State fully regulated and monopolized it? Apparently, that contention has been proven wrong with other things; so I don't see why justice could not be added to that list.
That's a terrible analogy. Now return to finding a justice system that doesn't violate NAP. Thanks.
Just for clarification, I'm really not interested in baseless assertions.
Contracts are based on mutual gain. There is nothing to gain from entering a contract that only surrenders your ability to evade whatever justice system others want to implement. NAP at work and all that, can't be forcing innocent individuals into contracts - afterall, the state does that.
It's not baseless. It's precisely what would happen in reality. I know you really,
really hate to consider the possibility that things happen in real life, but they do.
Again, not interested in baseless assertions. How do you know no one would ever develop a contract within a community that others within that community would find preferable? How can you determine what is perceived as beneficial to others? They don't have to opt in, but if opting in is a requisite to living within a particular community, they also won't be granted access to that community either. So, in the end, the community continues enjoying its way and others who do not agree with that way move on to other communities. But this is to be expected when you realize that valuation is subjective.
...So collectivism can coerce individuals into accepting contracts even under NAP-centric morality by virtue of making their life significantly more inconvenient if they don't take the "offer". Fantastic. No coercion there at all.
I'm truly sorry you cannot imagine civilization or society without the State; but your lack of capacity to imagine such a thing does not make such a thing impossible.
I can imagine it, and it's an extremely unlikely occurrence even if you ignore the (obvious) problems like a lack of justice system if NAP is still the holy grail. Much like with communists you can play
No True Scotsman fallacy all day long to defend your notion that, "Just because it hasn't happened doesn't mean it won't", but when we have thousands of years of human history to use in examining the possibility of actually getting a truly stateless society it becomes exponentially more doubtful.
I'm interested in the utilitarian aspect, not fantasies.
Presuming to know a future which may concern the individual preferences and actions of countless people in the absence of a State (a reality you have never known) is beyond arrogant.
Not really. Try living the human experience, it's an interesting ride. Try interacting with other people, you may find that there are most definitely a lot of individuals that fit precisely what I describe.
But, if only the State can remedy 'real life problems' then shouldn't you be advocating big government, as opposed to a minarchist government?
Do you want to figure out which fallacy this is? Well, actually there are two at work there, but still...
The State
can remedy the justice system problem. It is the result of considering NAP
generally good, but defective as an absolute in real life. Viewed from an axiological perspective that still leaves me well away from big government, even if on the statist side of things. I'm cool with that.
No, it doesn't. Again, NAP doesn't hold that force cannot be used; it merely says it should not be initiated. Defensive force is quite conducive with NAP, even if it is via a third party.
Get your head into the real world for a second. You don't always know exactly who initiated the aggression and have to prove it. NAP is going to get violated every time it's not a super-obvious solution. Which is a lot of the time, but hell...don't let reality bother you. It certainly hasn't yet.
Horror is a pretty fair description after even a cursory look at the statistics and realities of the current 'justice' system, to say nothing of other statist systems of 'justice'.
Sure thing boss. Firstly, criticism of the existing system (which isn't how a minarchist would have it, by the way, making it a strawman) still leaves you without a proposed solution. As usual, you don't have any. Secondly, it's better than no system at all as far as I'm concerned - that doesn't mean it doesn't need fixing, however.
Pity. I thought you'd actually be worth engaging. Apparently that was expecting too much. Let me know when you're done acting like a buffoon; then perhaps we can continue our discussion.
There's nothing to engage. I can boil down this waste of time thus:
You: Statism is bad regardless of circumstance, actual solutions are unnecessary. Ignoring common human behavior and circumstances is totally fine.
Me: Minarchism offers a solution that keeps in mind common human behavior and circumstances. NAP is not the holy grail, it just comes close.
We good? We seeing eye to eye? Great - now give me actual
solutions or quit discussing the point. Hoping and wishing is not a solution, it's what children do. If you want to believe in pure philosophy somehow winning the day over human nature be my guest, but don't bother me with the nonsense.