ah I see -- Are you a Libertarian? You sound very much like one -- I suppose you could consider me somewhat of a Libertarian as well (I voted for Ron Paul too -- small world!) I actually understand and agree with what you're saying here to an extent.
I guess my ideology falls along the lines of lower case L libertarianism. I find upper case L Libertairans, the card carrying type and especially the national party, fairly useless.
First, I want to say that I do agree that the Somalians are in a very interesting predicament. They do indeed have a legitimate grievance as to the dumping of toxic material in their coastal waters AND the fact that nobody will do anything about it (that I am aware of). But while I understand this situation, I do not believe it condones boarding commercial vessels with heavy arms and threatening to kill innocent individuals (those who had nothing to do with the dumping of chemicals). It's a classic situation of two (or more) wrongs not making a right.
Their response does leave something to be desired. But then analogously it's like our citizenry saying We don't believe in heroin use. Fine and dandy and all that, I avoid it myself. But then we take users, many if not mostly nonviolent themselves, and throw them in prison to be sex slaves for the indigenous populations therein. Not the most civilized way to do things I'd say. And the essential difference between actions like that on the part of our government and some 'piracy' by a Somali with an AK47, a legitimate gripe, and an attitude problem escapes me at this point in my life. Give an AK47 to the crabby endomorph at the DMV that I go to in order to renew my car's registration evey couple years, you have the same situation. She's maybe marginally more polite about things and has better office furnishings. The gun is still where the presumed authority comes from, even if it isn't evident or on blatant display.
To anyone who claims authority over me, though practicality may dictate a more life preserving response in some situations, what I inevitably ask these days is, "Who the hell are you to tell me what to do with myself when I'm otherwise leaving other alone and minding my own business?" Somali pirate or cop with a maglite, it's all the same to me.
But as for the property theory you were discussing, one thing I do believe is that the world would essentially be anarchy if it wasn't for moderately strong government.
Why? Anarchy is used as a synonym for disorder, but it isn't. The government doesn't dictate the content and form of our language, yet speakers of respective languages can still understand each other. The government doesn't dictate the acceptable theories in physics, yet crackpots are mostly marginalized. Systems tend to arrange themselves pretty well without government intervention.
If you don't have government agencies to dictate who is right and who is wrong (even though they don't get it right 100% of the time), you would have people killing each other over everything
Why would they do that? Would it be conducive to furthering their lives and well being in dealing with others in the future? I mean say I want to return a TV to Best Buy, they say no. It's not like I'd murder the clerk if not for the government's presence. I grant the need for a function of arbitration between people, what makes you think the government is the only way to accomplish this? People settle disputes all the time without involving the government and without killing each other. Insurance companies do it every day in accidents with no criminal liability.
I mean, why is it that we can agree in the context of an auto accident to let our two insurance companies determine who is at fault, to what extent, and what proper damages are, but can't do that in any other dispute of any other kind? What's the logic or circumstance that prohibits it?
'it's not the best thing in the world, but for the most part, it works'.
For practical purposes yeah, it isn't going anywhere. Except the Somalis have a warm place in my heart, because they did tell their government to go away. And it did. What's left is hardly a perfect society, but as they recover, and they have a GDP that's expanding like crazy it seems, all the things which people say we absolutely
need the government for are to one extent or another being provided for on a private basis in that country. Phones, water, security, electricity, etc. Imperfect? Yeah. Would everyone want to live there? Probably not. But as the only existing social experiment in something even remotely resembling anarcho capitalism, and with all its deviations from that ideal, it does show one thing: it
works. No one claims a world without central government would be perfect or to everyone's liking. But it does
work.
Now imagine what a possible, somewhat more orderly surrender on the part of the government to the private sector by more civilized folk might be like.
Continuing that same point, your farmer analogy, which I agree with for the most part, could easily result in chaos without government permission. Say that farmer works the land for 10 years, then some other farmer comes in and claims he owned it way before the first farmer ever worked it. There is no way to determine who is lying and, in my imagination, they would fight or kill each other and that would be that. If one had government authorization, it would be settled. Not the best system; I fully realize this, but I feel like we would slip into certain chaos without a strong central or state government (like many third-world countries have unfortunately done).
Sure there is. It's done all the time. There's nothing magic about a judge that makes him able to tell right from wrong. What's to stop two people with such a dispute from finding a third party to settle it?
I any event this is wandering OT, for all I know that's an 'infraction' on these boards these days too. Best we continue this in a more relevant thread or something.
On the note of personal liberties, we do share some common ground in the form of Libertarian ideology (I think!), although I may actually adhere more to Constitutionalism. However, I understand the need to regulate certain substances -- namely mind-altering substances. While I feel it is morally correct to let people do what they want in terms of their own body, I can't help but consider the argument that MAS pose a substantial risk to those in the surrounding environment.
Existence poses a risk to people in the surrounding environment. The issue is whether or not the action is
per se harmful to others. Taking a pill? Nope.
Alas, the counter-argument might be something like 'if alcohol is okay, why isn't everything else?' I don't know the answer to that one -- still working on it. I think personal values play a huge part in this as well, and given the 'final say' by the government on an issue with opinions varying widely from person to person, may be the reason why so many people are unhappy with some of the laws here. (I am pro-life due to my own moral compass (conservative value), but am essentially agnostic/logically evaluative and do not support monotheistic religion (liberal/moderate value).
This is good discussion! I am beginning to understand where you are coming from on this.
The alcohol argument is off the point. Approaching it that way acknowledges illegitimate authority. The argument then turns to, "You're right, so let's outlaw alcohol again..." Prohibition itself of any
per se harmless activity is unjust, unethical, immoral, and not the proper use of government power. It is neither authorized in the constitution or consistent with its letter or spirit. In fact that the constitution had to be ammended to prohibit alcohol shows just how far such prohibition is from what it authorizes in terms of powers.
I'd recommend Chaos Theory by Bob Murphy for some reading on private alternatives to assumed government functions. It's a good read.