Wow, I read the first 5 pages of this thread and the last page I read most of, sorry just couldn't wait to post and all of the quote, response, quote, response quote, response was making my eyes glaze over.
IMO I don't believe pure philosophy and government mix, in fact I think its just plain dangerous. I would have this as part of my moral code but wouldn't dare impose it on any of you guys.![Big Grin](https://apolyton.net/core/images/smilies/biggrin.gif)
Obviously the libertarians have enough criticisms about our modern governments, some I agree heartily with but most I could not disagree more with, I must say. What I cannot do is debate philosophical reasons why a system is morally wrong, evil whatever. Could you tell me, because I really am curious, how you would implement a truly libertarian society, whether you believe a truly libertarian society is even possible? To assure you I'm not trying to set you up for a trap let me give you some of the fundamental questions I have.
The general philosophy, someone posted earlier and I have no idea whether all libertarians agree, that everyone has a right to liberty(in the truest sense of the word, whatever that is) and the only responsibility one has is to respect the liberty of others. Its fine enough that you believe that, but how do you enforce it, yes I know I'm using that dangerous word "force." Obviously people aren't going to naturally gravitate to this idea. Will their be an authority of some sort? Perhaps some private corporation?
I won't go to far, I'd prefer not to have a quote war.
Infrastructure, roads, water, education, electricity. Do a persons fundamental rights include water or access to water? If so how do you ensure this? Is this all run by private corporations/individuals, is education simply the responsibility of individuals and individual families? If private utilities are run by corporations/individuals what do you do when their actions might inhibit the freedoms of other people in some hazy way. Monopolistic policies, price gouging that might endanger the lives of individuals or groups, certainly in the cases of water and electricity, etc...
Unrest, this might go under authority but I'm curious, many of the socialist policies undertaken in modern nations are often for IMO the very pragmatic reason of keeping the masses complacent. Certainly the GI Bill in the post-WW2 US. Couple-a million highly trained and experienced soldiers coming home, let's give 'em some stuff. Same for welfare systems and social security, these go a long way in easing the masses so perhaps we don't see quite as much rioting and unrest as we have in the past. If you don't agree please explain, otherwise what do you do with unrest, rioting or other general mass unpleasantness. Crime in general too, are these private policing organizations, private armies, home-grown militias?
Thats it for now, hope to get some informative posts.
IMO I don't believe pure philosophy and government mix, in fact I think its just plain dangerous. I would have this as part of my moral code but wouldn't dare impose it on any of you guys.
![Big Grin](https://apolyton.net/core/images/smilies/biggrin.gif)
Obviously the libertarians have enough criticisms about our modern governments, some I agree heartily with but most I could not disagree more with, I must say. What I cannot do is debate philosophical reasons why a system is morally wrong, evil whatever. Could you tell me, because I really am curious, how you would implement a truly libertarian society, whether you believe a truly libertarian society is even possible? To assure you I'm not trying to set you up for a trap let me give you some of the fundamental questions I have.
The general philosophy, someone posted earlier and I have no idea whether all libertarians agree, that everyone has a right to liberty(in the truest sense of the word, whatever that is) and the only responsibility one has is to respect the liberty of others. Its fine enough that you believe that, but how do you enforce it, yes I know I'm using that dangerous word "force." Obviously people aren't going to naturally gravitate to this idea. Will their be an authority of some sort? Perhaps some private corporation?
![Smile](https://apolyton.net/core/images/smilies/smile.gif)
Infrastructure, roads, water, education, electricity. Do a persons fundamental rights include water or access to water? If so how do you ensure this? Is this all run by private corporations/individuals, is education simply the responsibility of individuals and individual families? If private utilities are run by corporations/individuals what do you do when their actions might inhibit the freedoms of other people in some hazy way. Monopolistic policies, price gouging that might endanger the lives of individuals or groups, certainly in the cases of water and electricity, etc...
Unrest, this might go under authority but I'm curious, many of the socialist policies undertaken in modern nations are often for IMO the very pragmatic reason of keeping the masses complacent. Certainly the GI Bill in the post-WW2 US. Couple-a million highly trained and experienced soldiers coming home, let's give 'em some stuff. Same for welfare systems and social security, these go a long way in easing the masses so perhaps we don't see quite as much rioting and unrest as we have in the past. If you don't agree please explain, otherwise what do you do with unrest, rioting or other general mass unpleasantness. Crime in general too, are these private policing organizations, private armies, home-grown militias?
Thats it for now, hope to get some informative posts.
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