the point of the original claim is that voting is (usually) a form of initiating aggression because the likely results will be force or fraud and are realistically forseeable by the voter.
voting on best costume does not violate NAP.
voting for one candidate vs another, when it is known that either candidate will then have power to enact laws that violate NAP.... does violate it.
in my view, at least.
voting on best costume does not violate NAP.
voting for one candidate vs another, when it is known that either candidate will then have power to enact laws that violate NAP.... does violate it.
in my view, at least.
Actually, this is a common misunderstanding of the NAP. The NAP prohibits one from *initiating* aggression. It doesn't prohibit the use of force in self defense. No utopia required. Government voting means the government is already there and claiming a monopoly on force -- including the initiation of force. To avoid that (self-defense), one can vote without violating the NAP.