Ronin Truth
Banned
- Joined
- Oct 30, 2013
- Messages
- 22,510
What does the following sentence of the D of I, say? 

R3V, you have confused me with your idea of “Absolute monarchy”, but I have drawn some inference from your reference to his power not being only on paper etc – he should have absolute power!!
This is the thing the founders of America fought strongly against, viz. any form of government having such power over citizens, not merely the monarch.
there were no benevolent monarchs anywhere on earth prior to European conquest of the world – there were only murderers who had usurped power
The one factor common to all these rules is that part of the rulers (generally the priests, but sometimes replaced by another elite as in communism) have had an absolute control over ideas!!! Any thought not tolerable to the ruling elite was crushed ruthlessly, murderously, like public burning of heretics in European Christianity. It was thinking / ideas released from the iron grip of the absolute rulers that brought in benevolent monarchies, not absolutism.
Your argument about what is good or bad for the monarch himself in the long run requires lot of thinking, i.e. ideas
We are equal in terms of rights. Equality on anything else doesn't matter.
How so?
You don't think politicians implement freeshit schemes for the purpose of winning more votes for themselves?
Outside of the US it mostly happens because the politicians genuinely believe in either wholesale redistribution as a communist system, or in safety nets of some kind as a moral duty or efficiency boosting thing.
In the US shit doesn't even happen to buy votes, it happens to pay off lobbyists.
Politicians sometimes eliminate freeshit to win votes.
Just to be clear, absolute power doesn't mean that the king controls every aspect of life.
An absolute monarch could pursue totalitarian policies or he could pursue libertarian policies.
What makes him absolute is that he alone decides which policies to pursue.
All governments have absolute power over their citizens, in the sense that they could pursue whatever policies they like.
That's the very meaning of the state; it is a monopoly of power.
The difference between different forms of government is who decides which policies the government will pursue.
As for the Founders, they were well meaning classical liberals for whom I have a great deal of respect, but they were very naive about how government works
The difference between what power American govt had during its founding, has today, and what the Soviets had between 1917 to 1990 is so huge...
in a rational, free society the citizens restrict the government to the minimal!!!
But I will restrict myself to your one single idea: handing over all power to an all-knowing monarch.
Considering the massive increase in diverse technologies, the hundreds of issues that are going on and on in parliaments, on discussion forums, political parties, media and everywhere -- to think of such a know-all king who will single-handedly implement his benevolent policies without so many government servants, bureaucrats, police – or maybe a large army of robots who have no vested interests (imagine CIA without vested interests), but are programmed to know what’s in the king’s mind on every issue and behave accordingly to govern vast countries like US, EU, China, India – I don’t think MS, Google etc are capable of such programming, and they should also be given into the hands of that king, which is where CIA, FBI etc are headed.
Just because we are unable to handle democracy properly...
should we declare FFs to be naïve?
Why did Europe give up monarchies and follow American leadership if as you say they were far more benevolent than today’s democracies
Net Net for R3V – there are many fallacies in your arguments but I don’t believe there is any point in the discussion
Well, then let me end it:
1. You and democles are the same person, who is also the author of the blog you're hawking.
2. You're incapable of understanding the kind of criticism I'm raising; this is why you repeat slogans rather than respond to arguments.
Adios
I'm always interested to hear another's ideas but so far I do understand how the author's idea varies from any other constitutionalist on this board. Could you contast the author's views to those of Ron Paul's? What consideration has Ron missed and how would it help in restoring liberty to America?
individualist Americans, who are all opposed to the welfare state, will never join hands
Universal suffrage is a terrible, terrible idea. Some unfortunate truths:
An 18 year old man does in fact possess the physical prowess necessary to serve as an effective soldier. He almost never, however, possesses the moral and intellectual prowess needed to serve as an informed voter.
Women vote with their hearts, not their heads. Yes there are exceptions. No that doesn't negate the argument.
People with no wealth, who pay no taxes, will only ever vote for more confiscation from those who do have wealth and do pay taxes.
Universal suffrage will always destroy society.