angrydragon
Member
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2007
- Messages
- 3,263
KramerDSP, good thoughts, I think you're doing great job.
The rights for disabled are the same as the rights for the individuals. There isn't a difference. Maybe society and employers may or may not look down on a person for being disabled.
Should government authoritatively force other people to give one an edge or assist one more than another individual? No, that would be taking the property rights of that individual away. It would be the disabled individual's right, as with any other individual, just to hire disabled people and screw the rest. Just like owning a house (or renting), the owner/renter chooses who'd they like to be in their home.
Would it be nice if employers and society accommodated disabled people? Yes it would.
This is a difficult problem, like Dr. Paul says with difficult issues, the more local the solution ought to be. With a more free society without the income tax, less regulation, the more prosperous individuals are, the more wealth they'd be allowed to help and give to charities and people with problems.
Charities and caring individuals will are do more things, in a better way, than a government program or department. Governments don't innovate, the market does. The market creates a lot of good for disabled people.
Government just enforces their will, whatever it be, upon all of us, through force to benefit a few. It benefits everyone, all individuals, all colors, all religions, disabled or not, to have a truly free society. The more free, less taxes, less regulations, the better the society. The less free, more taxes and regulations, the worst off we are as a whole.
Is there bad in the market place? Yes.
In the free-market though, the bad will always be weeded out. It's like the hand of God reaching down and taking them out.
In government, there is nothing to weed out the bad, government don't have that incentive to be good or innovative. With the money they take by force via taxation, it wouldn't really matter to them if they do good or bad, they make their money.
The free society and free-market isn't perfect, but it will always get better.
http://www.lewrockwell.com/paul/paul41.html
The rights for disabled are the same as the rights for the individuals. There isn't a difference. Maybe society and employers may or may not look down on a person for being disabled.
Should government authoritatively force other people to give one an edge or assist one more than another individual? No, that would be taking the property rights of that individual away. It would be the disabled individual's right, as with any other individual, just to hire disabled people and screw the rest. Just like owning a house (or renting), the owner/renter chooses who'd they like to be in their home.
Would it be nice if employers and society accommodated disabled people? Yes it would.
This is a difficult problem, like Dr. Paul says with difficult issues, the more local the solution ought to be. With a more free society without the income tax, less regulation, the more prosperous individuals are, the more wealth they'd be allowed to help and give to charities and people with problems.
Charities and caring individuals will are do more things, in a better way, than a government program or department. Governments don't innovate, the market does. The market creates a lot of good for disabled people.
Government just enforces their will, whatever it be, upon all of us, through force to benefit a few. It benefits everyone, all individuals, all colors, all religions, disabled or not, to have a truly free society. The more free, less taxes, less regulations, the better the society. The less free, more taxes and regulations, the worst off we are as a whole.
Is there bad in the market place? Yes.
In the free-market though, the bad will always be weeded out. It's like the hand of God reaching down and taking them out.
In government, there is nothing to weed out the bad, government don't have that incentive to be good or innovative. With the money they take by force via taxation, it wouldn't really matter to them if they do good or bad, they make their money.
The free society and free-market isn't perfect, but it will always get better.
U.S. House of Representatives, June 27, 2002...we as a people will once again have to dedicate ourselves to establishing the proper role a government plays in a free society. That does not involve the redistribution of wealth through force. It does not mean that government dictates the moral and religious standards of the people. It does not allow us to police the world by involving ourselves in every conflict as if it's our responsibility to manage a world American empire.
But it does mean government has a proper role in guaranteeing free markets, protecting voluntary and religious choices and guaranteeing private property ownership, while punishing those who violate these rules – whether foreign or domestic.
In a free society, the government's job is simply to protect liberty – the people do the rest. Let's not give up on a grand experiment that has provided so much for so many. Let's reject the police state.
http://www.lewrockwell.com/paul/paul41.html
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