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Perhaps she had a flexible definition of retaliation?
So people don't have rights unless they have a constitutional republic? Makes rights dependent on government. Very dangerous.
I've talked with a few of the Objectivists from the party on Facebook. Apparently only one of them is a big Objectivist; he's philosophy major. He told me the rest are more Objectivist sympathizers. And he said that I've probably read more Rand than anyone else on there by just having read one chapter of her book. Weird.
The majour difficulty i had with Rand was that, practically speaking...if one did not agree with her 100% of the time on 100% of the issues --even when she changed her mind-- then that person was her enemy.I watched the video (I'll watch the other two soon) and I suppose I'll just say what I think so far of the book. I'm 70 pages in and I've found most of it to be utter nonsense. While I obviously appreciate the non-aggression principle, the way she gets to it I find ridiculous. If I recall, Rothbard used similar reasoning in The Ethics of Liberty. She basically assumes that preserving one's own life is the ultimate goal of ethics (or something along those lines). All the rest is worked out from that. Now if she just said that that was her axiom and had no proof for it, then fine, but that's not what she does. She claims her only axiom is reason and that and only that is sufficient to get one to the preservation of human life is the goal of ethics. The rest of the book then views anything that she interprets as harming one's life as irrational and unethical, even if the individual him/herself personally likes/enjoys it.
Ah yes. I'm aware of Rand's arrogance (I can detect it by just reading the book).The majour difficulty i had with Rand was that, practically speaking...if one did not agree with her 100% of the time on 100% of the issues --even when she changed her mind-- then that person was her enemy.
I agree. I generally don't make religious arguments for the NAP or libertarianism in general, but I could if I wanted to. I do have secular arguments, but unlike Ayn Rand and Stefan Molyneux, I don't pretend you'll get to the NAP by just assuming reason. I have other axioms that I readily acknowledge I can't prove. I can maybe offer some evidence, but not proof. And most of these axioms are not to controversial to most people, I think, which is why I find it so much easier to argue for my position going that route rather than making up all this stuff up and calling it rational.Logically speaking, i have difficulty trying to reconcile the very concept of 'rights' with her atheism.
i simply cannot see how rights exist in such a system, unless one presupposes them, which begs the question of why they would exist at all.
One, I don't think he was thinking. Two, it's Stephan, he's a hot head. Three, he was probably being too collectivist in his language and was grouping all socialists as statist socialists.I do remember him posting that link, but didn't pay much attention. Geez, what's he thinking?
It's not an invalid point just one that doesn't need to be made on our facebook pages. Some points just don't pass the consequentialist test. It's like discussing "race realism." Even if it is true you only hurt the cause by discussing it.The problem with using the word "socialist" in any kind of non-colloquial setting is that it's massively ambiguous.
I think the word "state socialist" or simply "statist" would be a far better -- and less ambiguous substitute.
I don't disagree with this message given this substitution. State socialists have as their goal a totalitarian deprivation of life, liberty, and property. Why should those who tell us that at the first opportunity they'll use violence to bend us to their will be idly abided?
I think this ties into a deeper problem I have though with the "liberty movement" -- the whole movement seems wrapped up in this blanked of appeasing and apologizing. Appeasing authority, apologizing for it. Everything is blamed on some amorphous "government" or "state" rather than squarely on the shoulders of those who choose individually to participate in dishing out the violence that creates the abstraction we call "government".
Every police officer dragging an innocent drug user to a cop cruiser is guilty. Every jury that finds that innocent drug user guilty is guilty. Every bureaucrat writing a regulation, every politician declaring a new law. Why are they so easily excused by the "liberty movement"? A desire not to be "radical"?
What are we really against? "Government" doesn't exist. It's not a separate entity that has thoughts and makes choices. It's a gestalt of people acting individually in what they believe is their own best interests by using violence against other people.
They choose to live by the sword, why is it considered controversial -- especially within this movement where we've all taken the red pill -- when someone says they should die by the sword?
He's also strongly against Molyneux's UPB. I haven't read the book and only know about UPB from what he's said in his videos and some articles, but do you guys find UPB arguments convincing?
Rothbard is apostate to Randroids. You're not allowed even to talk about him, unless it's to slander him.Edit:
So I posted an article by Rothbard on the free market on the Laissez-Faire Syndicate Facebook page, and the big Objectivist guy--who was nice and friendly at the party and on FB--explodes at me for daring to post something by Rothbard. He says that he takes back any hospitality he showed, that no honest person could believe what Rothbard said, that he hates Libertarians more than Communists, and that Rothbard was one of the worst enemies of capitalism ever. He said he won't read the article, but whatever is it in is probably BS. Seriously, what the hell's wrong with this guy?
I'd had some interest in UPB latley given David's Gordon's review of the book ( I haven't read the review either). Also this guy's video (if you haven't watched his stuff, do so. He's a Christian AnCap):They aren't anything new, philosophically speaking. They are like an attempt to prove a Kantian secular ethic around non-violence. As the author said, Molyneux thinks that he did in a few years and couple hundred pages what every moral philosopher ever has failed to do in thousands of years and hundreds of volumes. He didn't.
All that UPB proves is that if you want to be moral, you should act according to moral principles. It doesn't prove that anyone should want to be moral.
This is the article I posted: What Is the Free Market? by Murray N. Rothbard Just a nice simple summary of the market. The Randroid has said I have a fair point that he can't criticize it without reading it, so he plans to do so, but still expects it to be BS. I honestly don't know what he could disagree with in the article, but I'm sure he'll nit pick.Rothbard is apostate to Randroids. You're not allowed even to talk about him, unless it's to slander him.
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