That's an interesting point - what relationship does privacy have to freedom?
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Big Brother is watching you: The 2007 International Privacy Ranking
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tweaked for accuracy:
Originally posted by Imran Siddiqui
Privacy allows for freedom in private. When the government can't tell what you are doing in private, you have the opportunity to easily oppose it and do whatever you will in private.
Privacy has no bearing whatever on our freedom in public places. And of course such freedom admits to limitations. The government is prudently allowed search warrants and the like as allowing murder or rape or other heinous crimes to go uninvestigated just because they weren't committed in public places would be going too far.
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good god, what an argument...
Originally posted by Ben Kenobi
That's retarded, paying taxes doesn't entail heavier monitoring schemes.
True, not all high taxes will lead to greater monitoring, but you can't have heavy monitoring without also having high taxes.
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Originally posted by Whaleboy
That's an interesting point - what relationship does privacy have to freedom?
As for freedom, knowledge is power. Every one of us has information that could be used against us. That's bad enough when we are dealing with the limited capacities of other people, but when we deal with powerful institutions like corporations or the state, the power differential becomes rather more lopsided.
Without the ability to keep certain kinds of information from others unless one so chooses to disclose, a human life is impossible. The cost of this is a somewhat lesser ability to combat crime, but the alternative is worse.Only feebs vote.
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Originally posted by Agathon
There's a strong relationship with welfare. People are social animals, and the ability to keep certain relationships, interactions and information to yourself or within a close circle of family and friends is essential to living a properly human life.
As for freedom, knowledge is power. Every one of us has information that could be used against us. That's bad enough when we are dealing with the limited capacities of other people, but when we deal with powerful institutions like corporations or the state, the power differential becomes rather more lopsided.
Without the ability to keep certain kinds of information from others unless one so chooses to disclose, a human life is impossible. The cost of this is a somewhat lesser ability to combat crime, but the alternative is worse.
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Originally posted by Geronimo
When you say information that could be used against us do you mean we all have evidence that would implicate us in criminal activity or what?
We need to keep some things to ourselves and close friends and family. Can you imagine a recognizably human life without it?Only feebs vote.
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So you found smoking harder. Just because smoking is more addictive doesn't mean that marijuana is not addictive.
No, Ben, it's not. Like Aggie, I've experienced both. I also think there is research that backs this up, because obviously two anecdotes don't a fact make. Not that you'd be swayed by it...
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Marijuana isn't addictive at all. You don't even think about giving it up. Nothing happens. Believe me, giving up smoking is awful.
There's a difference between objecting to inequality per se, and objecting to inequality because it causes certain inefficiencies. One is a moral objection and the other an economic objection.
I have never met a panhandler in New Zealand. Not one. Ever. That's because we have a more generous welfare system.
Actually, I don't see the homeless as a problem that needs to be gotten rid of. I really don't see payments to support them as a solution to their underlying problems. I don't care how much it would cost to 'solve the problem of homelessness', it's wrong to take money from other people and give it to the poor without their consent. It's a fact that the societies with the highest rates of taxation have the lowest rates of charitable giving because they believe that is what their taxes are for. So you haven't really accomplished anything through taxation as a means of charity then to rob people of the feeling that comes from helping others.
If payment is voluntary, then people will free ride, because they will benefit from the charity of others toward the homeless, and so hardly anyone will pay and the problem will remain. The rational thing to do is compel payment, so the problem is solved and people are happier. Individually, it doesn't cost us very much to do something about homelessness.
People would buy more smokes. What's your point?
You don't get it. If people are allowed to opt out, then we will end up with a worse overall outcome for everyone. That's irrational.
In certain respects, being more free can make us worse off. That is the whole point of the Prisoner's Dilemma.
When Libertarians argue for maximum freedom, they are essentially arguing for behaviour that is individually in one's interest, but collectively destructive. Since we are members of society, we will all sufferScouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
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Originally posted by Agathon
Would you like nudie pics of yourself plastered all over the internet without your consent? Or would you like your medical history made available for everyone? Could you conduct a love affair if everything you said was made available to everyone to read? Would you like it if there was no place in the world where you could go and be alone and not be monitored by other people?
We need to keep some things to ourselves and close friends and family. Can you imagine a recognizably human life without it?
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Originally posted by Arrian
No, Ben, it's not. Like Aggie, I've experienced both. I also think there is research that backs this up, ...
The question of addiction is especially intriguing. The majority of marijuana users do not develop addiction: they do not experience loss of control; they use when they choose to, in the amounts they choose to, getting the results—in general—that they intend to get. Parents of today certainly recall many acquaintances from college in the 1960s or ’70s, or high school in the ’80s and ’90s, who smoked marijuana without developing dependence or any other long-term negative consequences. But just because addiction doesn’t occur in all users, or even most users, doesn’t mean that addiction doesn’t happen to any user.
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