Fine, I'll read the book then, but if the 'answers' to the questions I have are as vague as the one's you posted above, all I'm going to have is more questions.
Thank you, but I would appreciate a response to the following statement:
If you wish to have a peaceful society, it is universally preferable to not initiate the use of force, much in the same way that if you wish to continue life, it is universally preferable not to ingest a handful of arsenic.
Again, what do we mean by "universally preferable"? That isn't as clear of a term as both Steven Molyneux and you are pretending it is. Those two words combined have many potential meanings. Am I to take those words at dictionary, face value? In what context and in what sense? Or are they defined in some other means in the writings of Steven Molyneux? This is the problem with all this Libertarian ideology is that they create these ingenious little juxtapositions of words that either obfuscate their intentions or scuttle a true understanding of the topic discussed. They use these rhetorical Trojan horses as means of indoctrinating the unobserved to their ideological adherents. Hayek used "collectivism", Bastiat used "plunder", Hazlitt's was perhaps "the forgotten man", Ron Paul uses them all, and all of them are a way to evoke emotional responses and pretend to have a discussion - BUT to the careful reader you see that they never define their terms and that that is not at all surprising. Sophistry and Ideology are ALWAYS a war and an assault against language, it is a form of intentionally being vague and intentionally trying to create confusions in the topic they are supposedly attempting to lay bare. In an argument, or in a "school of thought", whenever you see the wording being abused and misused a 'red flag' should go up that you are trying to be played.
The problem with saying that any logical construct, such as the NAP, lay between the actions you are taking, choices you are making, or any otherwise moral decisions and the universal platonic axiom "of justice" is that it does nothing but get in the way. Like I was mentioning earlier we could spend the rest of our lives defining justice through specific actions but never would be able to fully codify justice into a set of ridged and strict procedures. This obvious truth should raise the question in everyone's mind: if we identify an action, law or choice that nobody has ever considered before and innately know if it is an action in accordance with justice, then where did that knowledge come from? How is it that we have an innate
knowing about such things? Justice, like a conception of a circle, resides, in its most true form, in the realm of thought or noosphere. Creating artificial, mechanistic, procedural filters might seem useful, but it fact it is not - it is counterproductive to understanding justice. We could think of a myriad list of scenarios to which this version of the NAP applies that would harmonize with what we know justice to be, and in that sense, all these supposed Libertarian axioms are all true - except when they are not; and such is my criticism of them: something that has exceptions is not an axiomatic expression of morality and is not wisdom. Concurrently we could apply this version of the NAP to scenarios in which it is not preferable, and abiding by the NAP would, in fact, be a greater injustice than simply letting the scales fall from our eyes and acting in accordance with what we know is right.
It raises the question: if you (or any Libertarians out there) would like to 'put their money where their mouth is' then why won't you move to Antarctica or some otherwise deeply remote region where you could 'live in peace' completely alone and alienated?
http://freestateproject.org/Nothing new here, just the same old yapping.
Why does the individual get to unilaterally decide what they wish to follow with regard to the safety, welfare and preservation of the rest of the group? Isn't it up to the group how they are going to define their own safety, well-being and protection?
A group does not "decide" anything. Individuals decide things. the closest a group comes to making a decision is taking a vote. That is, each individual makes a decision, and lets that decision be known to the rest of the group. Unless this vote is unanimous, any acting on that vote represents the majority of that group forcing their decision upon the minority. Why does the majority get to unilaterally decide anything for the minority?
The individual making a decision to speed, or not wear a seatbelt, or smoke a cigarette, is taking a risk. If that risk harms someone else, they are liable for recompense, also known as restitution.
Oh my, let us please not split hairs here. I'm trying to use conversational language for a general audience. If you read my earlier posts on the NAP regarding Society then you should know that I'm not saying that a aggregation of individuals 'makes decisions', as such, I'm speaking generally for the sake of what little brevity I can possibly muster by using general terms. In a forum consisting generally of ostentatious Libertarians I should know better.
Majority rule is something that is rather innate to social aggregations; it isn't like someone invented it, if individuals of a group largely agree on anything then that is typically the way the social structure is governed simply by default. There isn't any way to otherwise conduct the affairs of society that would be in concurrence with 100% consensus - it is totally impossible and ridiculous and you haven't presented: any logical coherent framework that can solve this 'problem', any historical example that could solve this 'problem', any legal framework that could solve this 'problem', nothing. So until you figure out how to design your perfect utopia and how to get us there from where we are, then we are left with other solutions. My solution, being from the traditional American System, is majority rule with the rights of individuals protected by law. If we worked in this framework we would all individually have much more actual, tangible, pragmatic, real, concrete, legitimate, economic and social freedom and liberty; not the will-o-wisps promised by the Libertarian schools. I think that all this fear of the group largely stems from a fear of knowing your interdependence with the rest of society, then noticing how degraded and debased they have become, and then pretending that you 'simply don't need them' and can chant these Liberal/Libertarian doctrines and soothe your conscious, believing that somehow their plight is not your own. Well it is unfortunate, for all those that are content to 'hunker in their bunkers', that the opposite is the truth.
So many fallacies and implicit arguments here that it is a little overwhelming.
* The fallacy of cynicism: The fact that they don't pay taxes presently due to the system that they corrupted means what exactly? That they could never be taxed (ignoring all history to the contrary)?
Any system by which we attempted to tax them would be corrupted. If they've done it once, they'll do it again.
And we can fix it again, our survival literally depends upon it. There is a perpetual class-struggle that is invisible and ignored by the victims of the Liberal Doctrine. Even someone as sold out as Bill Clinton was able to raise the higher bracket tax rates, how can you explain that if we are to believe (that you seemingly do) that the rich are some type of Brahmin, untouchable class in our existing system? They are not, but pretending that their 'victory' is inevitable does nothing but hasten their grip on our system and hastens the eventual collapse and destruction of the system that results whenever oligarchy has fully taken grasp of the power in any society. Most stark and recent examples being Russia in the 1990s.
* The misconception of taxation: It appears you are putting forth the tired "tax is theft" argument.
Is it anything else?
Here's my challenge. Whenever you complain about anything or decry its injustice I want you to frame it in the better context of a new system (that is functional, logical coherent, preferably historic in nature) and argue for that over the existing system. But not to simply complain about it in a vacuum as if it doesn't exist for any present reason.
I'm not going to go repeating the questions and absurdities that arise in a system where we consider "tax = theft", it's too sophomoric and imbecilic. However I will agree with you that over-taxation is unjust and is something approaching or within the spirit of theft. But that's a broad discussion. The reason that these "tax is theft" arguments have traction is that the middle class pays an overwhelming percentage of the taxes in this country if you look at: proportional taxation, and (I'd say more importantly) what the average middle-class worker gets for their level of (over) taxation. I posted earlier my tax policy and, if my policies were enacted then you're tax burden would fall dramatically and it would go to those that presently pay little or nothing, while reducing the national debt dramatically. But this all requires that we
fight for it and know what is in our best interest.
* The mythology of The Market: Ignoring actual economics, ignoring game theory, ignoring everyday examples to the contrary. What, pray tell, "Market" are you referring to?
The market is the sum of all voluntary actions. No more, no less. In other words:
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?board=5.0Like I said in my Ron Paul book review: "Of course Ron Paul also cites the Myth of the Invisible Hand of the Free Market. The Free Market is just an allusion to actually having a policy discussion. You can simply wave your hand, point over the horizon, and say that the Free Market / Invisible Hand will solve our problems."
Besides the point that you simply ignored the things I posited against this allusion you apparently know nothing about Game Theory. Which I find to be completely fundamental to any understanding any actual functions of the market (the real one, not the Zeus-God of Libertarianism). Are you aware that your non-conception of "The Market", as such, is an undigested shibboleth, a black-hole of rhetorical discussion? You can simply route all arguments to the following argumentative memory-holes: "The Market", "Choice", the "NAP", "Self Ownership", etc. All of these things actually have zero meaning or nebulous meaning that changes to suit the sophist that is weaving those arguments. And notice how this little 'tool belt' of rhetorical blurbs supposedly arms the ideologue with a "solution" to every possible problem or question that could possible arise in a discussion of these topics? You can literally read a single Libertarian book and become a full policy expert on any possible facet of: civic policy, social policy, economic policy, morality, etc. It is the handbook for those blinded by their own pride of the want of knowledge and blinded by their own lack of humility; believing that the world could be so simple.
Here's a great lecture on game theory:
http://www.thegreatcourses.com/tgc/courses/course_detail.aspx?cid=1426 (you can probably find it elsewhere for free, library, etc).
This one is quite "businessy" but worthwhile:
http://www.amazon.com/Game-Theory-Business-Primer-Strategic/dp/0964793873/ref=sr_1_9?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1342209349&sr=1-9&keywords=game+theoryA great theoretical primer:
http://www.amazon.com/Game-Theory-Analysis-Roger-Myerson/dp/0674341163/ref=sr_1_10?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1342209349&sr=1-10&keywords=game+theoryI can't believe that you don't see your own contradiction. If force, as outlined by the NAP, is against the ideals of Libertarian Thought then what "restitution" could you possibly be referring to? How would "restitution" not require force? Is "restitution" not fundamental to a legal system which seeks to compensate those who were wronged by, indeed, use of force? Is there an initial requirement of force to enact the universal principles of Libertarianism (in order to 'reset the scoreboard', so to speak) where thereafter we will be ruled by Libertarian Thought as the logical, rational and moral conclusion? In short, how do you reconcile the stark incompatibility of NAP and "restitution" as a "key component" nonetheless?
You seem to be confusing libertarianism with Jainism. Initiating force is a violation of the NAP. If a crime has been committed, then restitution, righting that wrong, is perfectly acceptable.
Oh no, out come the shoe-boxes with all the labels on them! Again the pedantry of the Libertarians is always stunning. This last sentence contradicts so much of what you've said on this forum before that I am at a loss of words what to say. Shaking off my dazed expression, I ask: define "crime", define the statute of limitations of that crime, who is the initiator of force in this context?
There is nothing legitimate that should set the ruling class above us.
Thank you. That's all I needed to hear. Libertarianism is the radical notion that since the "ruling elite" are no different from any other person, that they be held to the same standards. The best way to remove the power that they claim to hold over the rest of us is to simply ignore it. I suggest you read the book I have posted, the New Libertarian Manifesto, which details this concept.
Should I pull my "blankey" over my head while I "ignore it" or do you recommend hiding under my bed? Ignoring what we're going through it like saying you can simply "ignore" forced buggery. Again, we see the cowardice of the modern man fully expressed, I call it "the retreat into the subjective self" where the individual simply 'writes off' the real world because they have believed the rigorous and ubiquitous social conditioning that they've been exposed to, to perfect their own learned helplessness. We see it with the far Left and their "you create your own reality" garbage and we see it with the Rugged Individualism of the Right with their blindness of the awareness of our social codependency. Both of these are a jettisoning of our social duties and both of them breed weakness, cowardice, isolation and eventual misery in the people professing them. Not to mention that they are the ideology of defeat, of apathy, or weakness and of ruination among the populace; all of which greatly serve the historical needs of oligarchy.