MarvinTheParanoidAndroid
This will all end in tears, I just know it.
True & Honest Fan
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2015
Really? I didn't know that.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Really? I didn't know that.
That's falseBasically , if you can fool and convince somebody to sign a contract with you, you can do whatever you wish, no matter how evil.
Libertarian is frankly a sort of synonym for pedo.
- Thank God this Rothbard lolbertarian never had any children.
- Vaush is a disgusting coombrained swine.
- Anyone caught with CP should be thrown in the ocean with a millstone around his neck. Decency, morality and the Lord commands it.
This is what it comes down to really, blue sky thinking based on a flawed premise of possibility, you can file it away with "actual communism" and "the wealth will trickle down" in terms of "is this shit ever going to happen/do we really want it to?".Basically Rothbard's whole thing was he wanted to make an ethical system centered purely on property rights. This is a pretty flawed idea for reasoning like this.
I think libertarians have the more embarrassing fetishes. Humiliaiton,masochism and exhibitionism are pretty embarrassing.Nope. Pedophilia as a sexual trait is absent for both male and female right Libertarians. You might expect therefore that pedophilia is in the domain of left Libertarianism though, right? After all, left-libs are the hippy dippy free love LSD dopers, right?
No, that's wrong too. Turns out the political outlook most strongly associated with pedophilia, ageplay and 24/7 power dynamics is right Conservatism.
View attachment 6784335
I always thought Lysander spooner opposed Intellectual property and most libertarians do as well. I was under the impression his defense of it was more of a thought exercise and more of him saying "If intellectual property has to exist this is how it should work"If you want a better example of a libertarian, try Lysander Spooner. His main hiccup is on intellectual property.
In a truly free market with no government regulations, what will prevent companies from doing every shady thing they can think of?There are many stipulations according to which contracts are partially or completely null and void
The consequences.In a truly free market with no government regulations, what will prevent companies from doing every shady thing they can think of?
But who is going to enforce it?If I agree to your deal and transfer a sum of money to you, then you have committed implicit theft via fraud. In that situation, I am within my rights to use force against you in order to regain my money in case you don't comply with restitution.
But all of that might not do a thing.Protests (assuming NAP compliance), boycotts, ostracization, blackmail, slander, libel, or simple reporting on shady deals and consumer advocacy, nobody has the right to stop you from doing any of these.
A smear campaign can be very cheap.Do bear in mind that "shady shit", especially aggressive "shady shit", is really fucking expensive.
"Implicit theft" in whose opinion? For example, a Californian government might judge being white as an "implicit theft" and "use coercion" to extract reparations. Doesn't sound very libertarian to me. If it's in the "victim's" judgement, then anyone is allowed to do anything as long as they can confabulate an explanation.Insofar as a "shady thing" is logically equivalent to implicit or explicit theft, it is legitimate to use coercion against the culprit.
And if you can't? For example, if a criminal organization has tanks and bombs, and they rip me off, I can't possibly make the situation right. And when starting a criminal organization, you start with soft targets (isolated and/or impotent individuals), and use what you extract from them to prepare yourself for harder targets.That is, it is legitimate for you yourself or your agent(s) to use force in order to make the situation right.
Most people are preoccupied with their livelihood and shit; "sussing out disinfo", when it's even possible, is very time- and energy-intensive, which is precisely why mis/disinformation persists and propagates in the first place. And in any competently-performed disinfo campaign, debunking it will require information that the rube cannot access. The reality of the situation is that a broadly truthful information environment is essentially impossible in the modern day, as any system of "checking" is itself just as suspect as that which it "checks". I think an upstanding and self-sacrificing journalistic culture is the only way possible, and creating/sustaining such a culture is against the interests of everyone in power.Unlike in today's world where there is a general trust in and benefit of the doubt in favor of official reporting and official media (because if it was fake news, surely there would be legal penalties), there is nothing of the sort in a truly free society, meaning that sussing out disinfo becomes just as much of a crucial skill in having a successful life as personal finance skills or taking care of your health.
No it isn't. You can strangle lonely old ladies who failed to pay your protection racket with your bare hands, and that's free.Do bear in mind that "shady shit", especially aggressive "shady shit", is really fucking expensive.
Seriously, just think about this for a moment. Why does the government erect barriers to entry? Corporate influence. Without a government, where would barriers to entry come from? Corporate influence. The difference is that instead of the Police attacking you for competing (who are bound by jurisprudence), it's the Walmart Gestapo, who have no duty or obligation to have any mercy whatsoever.Especially since there are no government barriers to entry and compete. No IP laws or licensing.
In the first instance: You.But who is going to enforce it?
I'm not God, I can't predict that.And how expensive will it be to prove it if there are no regulations in the market?
And?But all of that might not do a thing.
That is nonsensical.Some companies also have monopolies in certain industries in a lot of areas.
It's not bait, you whore.I took the bait![]()
Libertarian legal philosophy. At its core, libertarianism is a legal philosophy, and everything else (free markets, capitalism, etc.pp.) are just the logical results of people abiding by the legal code that is compliant with this philosophy."Implicit theft" in whose opinion?
Tough luck.And if you can't?
Yeah, we're having that issue right now with most governments. One thing I advocate for is sabotage in combination with asymmetrical warfare. It's been proven to work against overwhelmingly superior foes.For example, if a criminal organization has tanks and bombs, and they rip me off, I can't possibly make the situation right.
Which is why people are willing to pay for others to do it for them. You know what else is also time and energy intensive? Refreshing storefront websites and staying in line to obtain a product that is on sale at a (too) limited quantity. "Scalpers" are essentially brokers, instead of you paying in time and energy, you pay in money to obtain access to such a product. When there are problems, people will find solutions.Most people are preoccupied with their livelihood and shit; "sussing out disinfo", when it's even possible, is very time- and energy-intensive
If everybody in society is tolerating people who go around and strangle lonely old ladies for seemingly no reason, then surely the problem is society, no?No it isn't. You can strangle lonely old ladies who failed to pay your protection racket with your bare hands, and that's free.
Name one (1) way how a barrier to entry can exist in a free society while not violating the ground rules of society (cf. libertarian legal theory)Without a government, where would barriers to entry come from? Corporate influence.
You dense motherfucking retardI look forward to your textwall in response wherein you cite pompous dead retards and presuppose that bad actors will ever give a shit about the "NAP".
"Libertarian legal philosophy" is not an actor who can enforce rules and make verdicts against the will of the perpetrators. For a philosophy to be implemented in the real world, it needs representation in the form of force.Libertarian legal philosophy.
The "logical results" of an obvious logical impossibility. The human animal is not pre-programmed with libertarian philosophy. And if you're thinking that you'll have a grassroots imposition of libertarian ideals onto everyone, I have a bridge to sell you. I mean, you're experiencing a failure to convert someone right now, and I'm not even a psychopath profiting from the status quo.just the logical results of people abiding by the legal code that is compliant with this philosophy.
"Tough Luck" to an unpunished violation of the NAP is an admission that your "philosophy" could not survive even in a society where it has (however impossibly) been made predominant.Tough luck.
I addressed this in the post you're responding to. The credibility of the checkers is just as suspect as the news organizations themselves.Which is why people are willing to pay for others to do it for them.
"The problem is society" is just admitting defeat. It's not good enough to just thumb your nose when your system doesn't work. Ultimately, the problem is the species, which is why every functioning society on Earth has law enforcement. (see: Bystander apathy)If everybody in society is tolerating people who go around and strangle lonely old ladies for seemingly no reason, then surely the problem is society, no?
You have conceded twice at this point that the "ground rules of society" are not at all inviolable. ("Tough Luck", "Problem is with society")Name one (1) way how a barrier to entry can exist in a free society while not violating the ground rules of society (cf. libertarian legal theory)
I quite simply think it is impossible for such a culture of unorganized vigilanteism to win against emerging governments existing within the same society because determining the rules and enforcing them demand greater commitment and coordination from uninvolved bystanders than is realistic. And not "realistic" in any particular society, but "realistic" for the human psyche.In the status quo, bad actors who don't give a shit about "NAP" can just go and become politicians or use other political tricks to get away with all sorts of shit.
In a free society, not giving a shit about the "NAP" comes with a risk of getting shot on sight.
You moved the goalpost. You asked according to whom. You didn't specify that the who had to be an actor."Libertarian legal philosophy" is not an actor who can enforce rules and make verdicts against the will of the perpetrators.
Prove it.The "logical results" of an obvious logical impossibility.
And the observable universe is not pre-programmed with ray-tracing GPUs, complex financial derivatives, MRT machines, and skyscrapers.The human animal is not pre-programmed with libertarian philosophy.
Are you fucking retarded?"Tough Luck" to an unpunished violation of the NAP is an admission that your "philosophy" could not survive even in a society where it has (however impossibly) been made predominant.
If you're a more credible checker, congratulations, you can make money off your virtues by providing a better service that will reach more satisfied voluntarily paying customers.The credibility of the checkers is just as suspect as the news organizations themselves.
See above"The problem is society" is just admitting defeat.
Are you laboring under the misapprehension that a free society is devoid of law enforcement?Ultimately, the problem is the species, which is why every functioning society on Earth has law enforcement. (see: Bystander apathy)
Why do you presuppose a "culture of unorganized vigilanteism"?I quite simply think it is impossible for such a culture of unorganized vigilanteism to win against emerging governments existing within the same society because determining the rules and enforcing them demand greater commitment and coordination from uninvolved bystanders than is realistic.
Where's your free society? Where does it actually exist, in the real world, in lasting form, at any point in history? Also, you're supporting my point with this very conversation: You are failing to impart the values that necessary for a society governed by your principles to exist.Prove it.
Show me this obvious logical impossibility.
Since it's obvious, it shouldn't be a big challenge for you.
Obviously crime will always exist. Ideally, society would minimize and punish crime. "Tough Luck" and "it's society's problem" are failures to minimize or punish crime. What I "want from you" is for you to realize that the NAP isn't some sacred tablet handed down from God, and that some magical system existing on paper doesn't necessarily result in real-world improvements.If I (honestly) assert that, as long as human nature is the way it is, it is predictable that there will always be crime, there will always be people willing to break established rules in the hopes of obtaining a personal profit, you (retardedly) say that the philosophy can't survive.
What the fuck do you want from me?
Are you laboring under the misapprehension that a free society is devoid of law enforcement?
Why do you presuppose a "culture of unorganized vigilanteism"?
If everybody in society is tolerating people who go around and strangle lonely old ladies for seemingly no reason, then surely the problem is society, no?
The problem is that the average person can't discern credibility. Trying to be a "more credible checker" doesn't fundamentally solve the issue that each person chooses what to believe and what not believe, and that they will think things are credible that aren't. That said, this issue of mis/disinformation is not by any means specific to your philosophy, so I'm only criticizing your assertion that it will be solved, not criticising the philosophy for having the problem.If you're a more credible checker, congratulations, you can make money off your virtues by providing a better service that will reach more satisfied voluntarily paying customers.
The free society exists at every point in time and at every location at which people abide by the ground rules.Where's your free society? Where does it actually exist, in the real world, in lasting form, at any point in history? Also, you're supporting my point with this very conversation: You are failing to impart the values that necessary for a society governed by your principles to exist.
You spoke of obvious and logical, I am still waiting for your logic.The "logical results" of an obvious logical impossibility.just the logical results of people abiding by the legal code that is compliant with this philosophy.
Are you fucking braindead?What I "want from you" is for you to realize that the NAP isn't some sacred tablet handed down from God, and that some magical system existing on paper doesn't necessarily result in real-world improvements.
Yes, which is one of the reasons why I am in support for the free society.The problem is that the average person can't discern credibility.