You do understand that aside from things like the NAP, libertarians also want a decentralized form of government, yes? There are capitalistic libertarians and there are socialistic libertarians, and in our utopia, everyone would be free to create as large or small a network as they wanted to live within, with many networks overlapping. It's not as rigid as a society formed on Dunbar's number, but it's in the same vein.KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
Humans. Yes. No. Maybe. Enact checks and balances with clear, concise rules and constraints. Been spending years here arguing against the consolidation of power. Maybe. Maybe.Jay wrote:
Who do you expect to staff your model government? Are positions earned on merit? Are they by lottery? Or do you maintain democratic elections? How do you prevent your expanded government from becoming corrupt? Are you not worried about concentrating all power in the hands of a small cadre? If not a cadre, do you do direct democratic voting? Representative democracy? What exactly does your ideal government and world look like? If you abolish private property and all profit, how do you deal with the tragedy of the commons? How do you prevent people from shirking? What is supposed to motivate people to go to work every day? How do you assign jobs?KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
I don't have any delusions about creating a utopia. I do think we can create a better functioning government that serves a larger chunk of society at a lower overall cost to the average person.
I'm not sure what you are talking about re: California. You still think I'm in lock step with the DNC despite spending close to 15 years here describing them as one of the heads of a two-headed dragon? It's like your default defense mechanism is to just call people liberals, or democrats or something. Very weird.
Why do we have one hundred thousand homeless? If you'd like to have this discussion, we can. I have spent a large chunk of time and energy helping out the homeless youth in orange county over the last 3 years, and can talk at length about it. There are far too many factors to discuss in one post.
Regarding our "state" utilities, you are aware that these are private enterprises with shareholders and everything, right? Why did PG&E elect to issue bonuses to their executives and shareholders instead of maintaining their systems? Seems like exactly the type of indictment against free-market capitalism. Sorry, maintenance and prolonged health are negative externalities in the marketplace, we can't properly account for them! Are you aware that the state had to threaten to take over PG&E in order to get them to enter in to arbitration agreements to start paying into funds for the people who's homes and entire livelihoods were ruined? Do you actually have any clue what you are talking about here?
To be clear, you are NOT a capitalist. A capitalist has...capital! You are a worker. Just because you've graduated from lumpenprole to petit bourgeois doesn't mean you are a capitalist. You are a flag bearer for capitalists, but definitely are not one. Bootlicker!
I don't very much align with the whole kumbaya hippies, but yes, I do want to live in a society that looks to uplift the less fortunate, and punish people who take advantage of other people. I think you're actually the one that more closely aligns with the peace and brotherhood thing. NAP and all that, right? It's just that the NAP hasn't properly priced things like the environment or mental health, but once all those negative externalities are properly accounted for, the fREEEE market will win.
I will always live my life in a way that prioritizes helping people who are worse off than i am. I know that humanity can be vicious at times when reduced to person to person interactions - i've experienced it many times. My solution is to keep plodding forward, not curl up into a ball and say "fuck it, I'll make sure to get mine." And I will continue to advocate for a system of governance that prioritizes the same.
It's easy to criticize and say what you don't want or like. Tell me what you do want.
My ideal world is a series of decentralized states, representing exactly Dunbar's number of people, who then report into a structure that also mimics dunbar's number of decentralized states, so on and so on. From there it's (dunbar's) turtles all the way down.
I don't fully believe we need to reinvent the wheel. I think our system of governance can be modified without the need for revolutionary measures and a completely new form of government. Empower the people, empower the institutions, fight back at demagoguery.
Maybe we need a new Age of Enlightenment. One that holds to task the supposed liberal system of governance in it's current form. An acknowledgement that we've largely cast monarchy and totalitarianism, dictatorships and cult of personality to the wayside, only to fall in to a new sort of trap where the same key negative aspects of those systems are able to rear their ugly head, just in more subtle but more nefarious ways. Multiple blunt force blows as opposed to the swift chop of the guillotine.
What not to do: say the world is fucked, no reason to fix what's already broken, fuck everyone else because everyone else doesn't care about me, etc etc.
I can't help being cynical. We live in a country with a government that is rotten from the top to the bottom. We have a media that ignores it and opts for trying to play kingmaker instead. I don't think supporting a fraud like Bernie Sanders is the way to get what you want. Nor is it supporting lightweights like AOC.
But you are right, I am your enemy. You want a revolution, and I benefit from the status quo. My perch is rather comfortable, and I have a family to support. Tipping the world into chaos because you think the 1 in a 1,000,000 chance you get some ideal outcome isn't a dice roll I'm willing to make.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat