- Registrado
- 9 de Jun, 2013
@Uncanny Valley
Why do you hate the blind and people with glasses?
Why do you hate the blind and people with glasses?
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@Uncanny Valley
Why do you hate the blind and people with glasses?
I was trying to do a "Why do you hate roads" joke.Are you honestly telling me you've never seen Event Horizon?
I will give Libertarian some credit. Most ideologies perceive government as a legislative engine (i.e. the government exists to create and implement just laws). In contrast, Libertarianism and its anarchist cousins see the government as institutionalized, overwhelming violence used in service to the preservation of personal power. That position disturbs me. Yet it’s accurate.
So Hong Kong in about 20 years.I think an Aleppo's idea of a libertarian utopia is the market economy of Hong Kong combined with social degeneracy of San Francisco.
Anyone can support the laws they view as necessary and oppose the laws they view as unnecessarily harmful. Libertarians are not unique in this regard. They might believe 90% of the government to be unnecessary, but this is a difference in quantity and not quality. 90% of the government may very well be unnecessary. Even so, in order for a politician to implement the 10% he views as necessary, he will have to concede parts of the 90% that he does not in order to build a viable coalition. Libertarianism remains on the fringes due in large part to its refusal to incorporate broader policies that could create a larger coalition for them at the cost of additional government. While I admire Libertarians for their consistent devotion to the Non-Aggression Principle, politics is fundamentally pragmatic. Purity-spiraling will result in political irrelevance.Libertarians are more often what are called minarchists, in that they have the conception that some government functions are absolutely necessary. They would limit government only to those vital functions and none else.
I'm not a libertarian, but I think that libertarian utopianism is often used as a straw man to ignore the libertarian critique of our current society. The burgeoning police state. An unaccountable intelligence community practicing mass surveillance. Endless overseas war. An executive branch with dictatorial powers. Bureaucracy that stifles innovation and creates pointless overhead expenses. Social safety nets that have been implemented in a way that bolsters the dynamic of the poverty trap. All of these are rational causes for concern addressed by a movement that I too often see lambasted with "muh roads" memes.
Hey, I found the libertarian utopia
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Ah, so free of government corruption.
Does VR S+M mean nothing to you?Why would people even WANT a utopia? Life would be really boring without any conflict or strife.
A lot of the same institutions that exist in Clown World would exist in Libertarian World, except dealing with them would be voluntary. You'd have a choice of contractors to empty the bins at your house, rather than the local government demanding money off you so that they could do it. You'd pick the company that would provide the best service at the best price, and maybe whole streets or towns would club together to negotiate a better price for a bulk deal or something, and appoint some people to manage the contract, and then you've got what looks like a town council except that nobody is forced to deal with it. That would be my libertarian utopia.
the plot twist is that uncharted 4 was rightThe pirates tried doing this in the late 1600s. They called it "Libertalia". Obviously didn't get very far as there's no historical records that even exist. Probably imploded early on or never got off the ground.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libertatia
Then you have that 5% of complete scumbags who would just refuse to pay for any of this, have piles of garbage on their property, which would attack rats and other disease vectors, so even if you were responsible and kept your own shit clean, you'd still be subject to plague and vermin from the people who didn't.
So at some point, there are still going to be antisocial people who will ruin it for everyone else.
It would in general be better if you did have a choice in some kind of marketplace, or at least better than what you have in a lot of cities (especially the NY/NJ area) where you have one crooked Mafia-run operation that bribed the locals for a monopoly.
You're still going to have the free rider problem, or even worse, the problem where one person fucking up a local hygiene issue poisons everyone else.
The pre-1914 world saw no immigration issues or policies, and no real border controls. Instead, there was free movement in the real sense; there were no questions asked, people were treated respectfully and one did not even need official documents to enter or leave a country. This all changed with the First World War, after which states seem to compete with having the least humane view on foreigners seeking refuge within its territory.