This in your profile made me curious:
"Pro-Democracy. Pro-Rights. Pro-Freedom. In that order."
So if it is democratically decided to abolish fundemental rights, you would support it since democracy is more important than rights?
Not trying to give you a hard time, just a fair question about your stance.
Depends on how you use "rights" I suppose.. in its more general usage you are correct.. but more typically its used to mean natural human rights.. which is a specific set of rights that many hold to be sacred.
@toiletpaper @freemo @LouisIngenthron
By this reasoning - if I don't like the speed limit, I can just say "no" and ignore it?
When we live in civilization, we give up the ability to do whatever we want; it is the price you pay to participate. I can't just drive 90 mph on a residential street without breaking the law and expecting to be punished for it - and that's good. Anyone who thinks "rights" means "I can do whatever I want in all circumstances without cpersonal consequences" is using a very non-standard meaning and is being disingenuous. That's not rights - it's anarchy.
Sure you could just say no and ignore it... its just, there are consequences :)
@toiletpaper @freemo @LouisIngenthron
I'm entirely unconvinced that most human beings, without some sort of compulsory framework, will do the right thing - simply because history, especially recent history, has given us so many spectacular counter examples. Argue philosophy all you want, but when it comes down to it unless we stop them, we repeatedly screw over others for profit or convenience or sheer bloody-mindedness. As they say - every consumer protection law was written in blood.
@Biggles @toiletpaper @freemo @LouisIngenthron I don't know that is both universal and true throughout human history. I think it becomes a lot easier when we live in larger and larger social groups. Then you can ignore the humanity of the people you are scamming, because you never have to see the consequences. Few people aggressively and voluntarily screw over their family members, for example. A huge part of humans' evolutionary fitness, with our soft hides, lack of claws, and totally helpless offspring, is our cooperativeness. Without it, our brains could never have grown so large in the first place.
@freemo @toiletpaper @Adrasteianix @LouisIngenthron
It may well not have been true at the village level in the distant past when everyone you ever interacted with lived in your monkey sphere. But - I don't live 800 years in the past. Which is good, I like medicine and cheeseburgers, and I like the fact that people I don't know and have never met can mostly be trusted for both of those because we don't just let people do anything they want. The minimal loss of freedom seems an excellent trade-off for the safety and prosperity we gain.
@Biggles @freemo @Adrasteianix @LouisIngenthron
Do you agree this new tax law?
Everyone whose username begins with "L" will be taxed at 100% of wealth and earnings and the proceeds of the tax will be evenly distributed to everyone in this thread.
@Pat @Biggles @freemo @Adrasteianix Any reasonable person would understand why that's an unjust law and vote against it, even if doing so would be against their own best interests.
The goal, then, is for a society to consistently produce and select new generations who are more reasonable than selfish.
Obviously, that tends to work better with larger sample sizes and lower margins of error, but we'll see if this poll can end up demonstrating my point anyway...
All I heard was free money, Im in!!! Besides fuck those L-named haters, what have tthey ever done for me! They only look out for their own interests.
@Adrasteianix @Pat @freemo @LouisIngenthron
It's also worth noting that democracy doesn't exist in a vacuum - indeed, one of the first things the US founding fathers did was the Bill of Rights, precisely to set expectations and prevent abuses.
The original assertion was overly simplistic - in reality, democracy and rights and laws have feedback loops and influence each other in both directions. There is no absolute hierarchy - nor I think would we really want one.
It's a rhetorical poll. I'm not actually expecting responses. The point is, that putting democracy ahead of rights exposes people to dogpiling. Assuming that people will always vote against their own personal self-interest and choose what's best for the common good, is to expect people to be angels. If all people were angels, no government would be needed (paraphrasing Madison).
Governments need to be designed to withstand the worst of human nature, because at times people can get really evil. (Here in the US, we just had a few people in the CDC kill over a million Americans, for greed, power or who knows why).
>"The goal, then, is for a society to consistently produce and select new generations who are more reasonable than selfish."
A worthy goal, but I've never seen that happen in the real world. Natural selection in politics supports the opposite -- the most ruthless gain the power.
@Pat @LouisIngenthron @Biggles @Adrasteianix
A tyramny of the majority as the founding fathers put it.
@Pat @Biggles @freemo @Adrasteianix So your rhetorical poll that you weren't expecting responses to (despite having immediately voted yes on it yourself) didn't go the way you expected.
That's because of a simple miscalculation: I don't expect everyone to be angels all the time. I just expect at least half of people to not be complete shitheads when it counts.
I can't honestly say that those meager expectations have always been met in the past, but I think on a long enough timescale, this mechanism moves us slowly-but-surely in the right direction.
Sounds like something someone would say with a name that begins with L... Youve convinced me to change my vote, tax em!
@LouisIngenthron @Pat @Adrasteianix @freemo
Most people are good, or at least fair.
The laws protect us from the toxic minority who treat other people as marks, or prey, or as not human.
@Biggles Depends on where and when you are.. I would say in many places and at many times it has been the majority who is toxic.. the USA is an example with a toxic majority.
That said even the worst of people view themselves as good and intend to be good by their own personal skewed definition of good.
@freemo the US is under attack by fascists; the fact that they haven't won and our institutions hold is good evidence they're a loud minority. It's typical for the party in power to lose seats in the midterms - and the fact that it didn't happen is heartening. I truly believe we're suffering the last gasp of the old ways, and will come out of this stronger for having resisted it.
Sometimes it just takes time and effort to rouse good people from complacency.
@Biggles @Pat @Adrasteianix @freemo And the third category: those who tacitly participate in, and uphold, ongoing systemic harm because of ignorance and/or indifference.
I did not vote in the poll because it was a rhetorical poll. I don't know how many of the people in this thread are ignorant about the meaning of the word rhetorical, but of the remaining 5 people in this thread (besides myself), 7 of them voted.
Sounds like this little election was rhetorically stolen. 😂
>"but I would prefer to live in that situation over one where we still have rights but live under a dictator."
That statement is oxymoronic, because one who lives under a dictator does not retain their rights.
@Biggles @Adrasteianix @freemo
@toiletpaper That's nice in theory, but in practice, the world just isn't that simple.
How do you say "no" to someone polluting the river you depend on to live 500 miles upstream?
There are a lot of benefits to individualism; I'll give you that. But at some point, this rock will get crowded enough that we need to start thinking as a collective species.
equal rights belong exclusively to individuals. all rights rest upon the ability to say "no" and have that respected without reprisal. otherwise consent is impossible. fundamentally, to respect the word no is the first mutual agreement which must precede all others.
since an individual cannot delegate a right they do not possess, a group can no more rightly supersede or abrogate the rights of the individual (save to protect another from such a violation), lest the foundation of society rest upon coercion rather than liberty.
following that there's the question of tension between private ownership vs perceived public need. now if you put our society in view of that lens, you'll start to see how things go off the rails. in the typical western democratic models we try to make the end justify the means by extorting our way to philanthropy, euphemizing it as taxation.
yet to correct course would start as simply as replacing taxation with voluntary crowd-funding. there would be some growing pains at first, but I'm sure we could adjust without major calamity. anyway I think that would make the powers that be a lot less prone to corruption and waste, if people simply had the ability to say "no" and choose a different provider. if people understood that saying "no" is the fundamental basis of their rights.