Whats wrong with the Libertarians?

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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Exactly!

I have two close friends that are Libertarians, and they both have many things in common. One is white, one is half white and half Korean, and they both are upper middle class, and live in parts of the country that are very progressive.

What you bolded is so true. They're awesome people, but sometimes when I've told them some of the stuff I've seen said and done to black people in my lifetime down in the south, they are shocked, and think I'm exaggerating.

If everything was up to each individual state to decide...There are parts of the south still in 2016 that would easily and openly discriminate against black people and other minorities, be proud of it, and get away with it. I don't at all think it's a given that slavery or segregation would have "died out on its own."

Hell, in NC the majority of the state is against this HB2 bill that our idiot governor passed, and he will probably not get re-elected, but it's not a given that he'll get voted out of office, despite his unpopularity. There are still so many backwards ass people here when you get out of the major cities.

When confronted with this info, these Libertarian friends commonly say, "Well, it's easier to move out of a state if you don't like how things are there than it is to leave the country." Okay, maybe so, but again, they are upper middle class, and they are acting like it's easy to just uproot and leave a state. The type of people that might want to leave a state like Mississippi for a better life somewhere else are precisely the people that do not have the means to do so.

So again, they're taking their own situation of having the ability to easily move them and/or their families across state lines and projecting it as if that's a reality for most of this country. It's not.

Also, state govt. doesn't exactly attract the best and brightest.
Otherwise, utopia
 

David_TheMan

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alot of these "voluntary" ideas have huge holes

half the reason the state operates the way it does is because of checks from departments adjacent and above them

the hierarchy is in place to prevent corruption. Without hierarchy, who enforces law? goodwill?

id like to see an honest answer as to how you would prevent the "truth-skewing" and rule bending that would occur if only the free market determined this. Throughout history human beings choose the easiest path to their primary objective whether that is an honest or dishonest path. The state and law have generally skewed that towards the honest one. How would a stateless society prevent dishonesty :cacwot:

The heirachy is in place to prevent corruption? Whhy hasn't it.

Stateless society doesn't seek to prevent dishonesty, not even an objective. It seems you think the purpose of government is to improve the morality or increase the value of humanity, most libertarians don't view it that way. Government simply formalizes our interactions with each other to enable us to peacefully resolve areas of disagreement. That is it.

Now you to your question preventing dishonesty, it doesn't, neither does any form of government because they can't, but it disincentivizes dishonesty by having an immediate check on it in the form of removing the dishonest actor from power via changing provider (anacap view) or other alternatives depending on the role of the provider, so that you will not have to be subject to the dishonest actor. It does this in a manner not lending towards violence as well, which has the added benefit of keeping society generally stable and peaceful.
 

TheDarceKnight

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Genuine question. Is there currently, or has there ever been a libertarian society that functioned smoothly?

This may seem like a smart ass question too, but I also mean it genuinely. If the free market decides the best system, and if Libertarianism is such an amazing system, then wouldn't Libertarianism be more prominent by now?
 
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Trajan

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Genuine question. Is there currently, or has there ever been a libertarian society that functioned smoothly?

This may seem like a smart ass question too, but I also mean it genuinely. If the free market decides the best system, and if Libertarianism is such an amazing system, then wouldn't Libertarianism be more prominent by now?

That is the problem. It only sounds good in theory.

The solution to everything is ''privatise it'' ''the market will solve it'' :troll:
 

Dusty Bake Activate

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Genuine question. Is there currently, or has there ever been a libertarian society that functioned smoothly?

This may seem like a smart ass question too, but I also mean it genuinely. If the free market decides the best system, and if Libertarianism is such an amazing system, then wouldn't Libertarianism be more prominent by now?
No. Pinochet made the trains run on time though.
 

David_TheMan

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Genuine question. Is there currently, or has there ever been a libertarian society that functioned smoothly?

This may seem like a smart ass question too, but I also mean it genuinely. If the free market decides the best system, and if Libertarianism is such an amazing system, then wouldn't Libertarianism be more prominent by now?
No there has never been a pure libertarian society, much like there has never been a pure communist society.

The argument that if it was good it would have been done, falls apart on its face if you apply the logic consistantly. Lets say those arguing to end slavery in the 1800s were countered with why should we end slavery, if freedom and equality for all men is such good concept it would have been done in the past, ergo it isn't neccessary to free slaves. What would your response to that be?

You would say , appealing to tradition is a logic fallacy first of all, then you would say the merit of what you are arguing should be evaluated on the merit of the actual argument, not on whether it was done before. Society doesn't advance by simply doing what was always done, if that was the case we wouldn't have advanced to were we are now, right?
 

David_TheMan

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That is the problem. It only sounds good in theory.

The solution to everything is ''privatise it'' ''the market will solve it'' :troll:

If it sounds good in theory but isn't applicable in life it should sound terrible in theory, right?

Nice strawman about the solution though, guess its easier to dismiss than to address actual arguments.
:sas1:
 

DEAD7

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Genuine question. Is there currently, or has there ever been a libertarian society that functioned smoothly?

This may seem like a smart ass question too, but I also mean it genuinely. If the free market decides the best system, and if Libertarianism is such an amazing system, then wouldn't Libertarianism be more prominent by now?
Libertarianism doesnt claim this.


But here is what you are asking: If animals are so much better off being free outside of the zoo, why haven't any zoo owners let them out of the zoo?:jbhmm: and why do zoos keep popping up?
 

DEAD7

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The argument that if it was good it would have been done, falls apart on its face if you apply the logic consistantly. Lets say those arguing to end slavery in the 1800s were countered with why should we end slavery, if freedom and equality for all men is such good concept it would have been done in the past, ergo it isn't neccessary to free slaves. What would your response to that be?
h9hYV4N.png
You smart
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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The heirachy is in place to prevent corruption? Whhy hasn't it.

Stateless society doesn't seek to prevent dishonesty, not even an objective. It seems you think the purpose of government is to improve the morality or increase the value of humanity, most libertarians don't view it that way. Government simply formalizes our interactions with each other to enable us to peacefully resolve areas of disagreement. That is it.

Now you to your question preventing dishonesty, it doesn't, neither does any form of government because they can't, but it disincentivizes dishonesty by having an immediate check on it in the form of removing the dishonest actor from power via changing provider (anacap view) or other alternatives depending on the role of the provider, so that you will not have to be subject to the dishonest actor. It does this in a manner not lending towards violence as well, which has the added benefit of keeping society generally stable and peaceful.
The USA is one of the most un-corrupt places in the world.

Put that in perspective.

Now, are there problems? Yes.

But to apply kindergartener thinking the best of everyone else and assuming that everyone else has your morality isn't going to lead to a lot of success. Be prepared for a lot of disappointment and failure.

Theres no laws in your world because you assume the very things you benefit right now in a lawful society will be protected. They aren't and they won't. And this IN ITSELF neglects the long and winding history that led to the very things you claim to benefit from.
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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f
There is no long and thankless reform. You can't reform a blatantly corrupt and immoral system from the inside. You have to remove that system and choose a better one.
Yes there is. Calling things corrupt doesn't fix anything. FIXING things changes them. The USA is one of the most lawful and uncorrupt places on earth, for a country our size and influence. And the presence of corruption doesn't change the fact that the system to expose and correct for that corrupt is in place and is used.

I am of the libertarian group (all don't believe this) that favors privitized security because it removes the inherent flaws and possibilities for corruption that a government funded law enforcement/Justice system has. If you want to discuss these differences, I'm open to do so with you.
Privatized security is paid for...how?

And being privatized doesn't address who has the monopolization of force or who is the ultimate authority when it comes to law enforcement

And being privatized doesn't address who is responsible for preventing the abuse of these security forces.

This is just more pie in the sky bullshyt that seeks to avoid reforming the current system because its too hard in lieu of making up shyt thats easier for you to imagine.

How is it utopian when it has been put in effect in reality?
Private police - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Private police systems have never existed in an environment without a public one. In conjunction? Maybe. Not in the absence of.

Who said there will not be law, who said there will not be compensation, who said there will not be enforcement. You literally ignored everything I typed and what you bolded to say this. :smile:
We can go back to bartering all you want, but there has to be a formalized system to resolve disputes.

I'm not ignoring you. I'm disputing how legitimate it is.

Just admit you want a mixed society of freedoms, not absolute libertarianism.

The argument doesn't rely on altruism, it relies on contract and mutual self interest of members in society, the very self interest that develops societal norms and customs.
You know the US Marshal Service, and Bailiffs and Sheriff departments ultimately enforce those contracts, right?

Self interest means, in many cases, not fulfilling your debt to other members of society.

Self interest means being selfish. And societies dont work that way.


Not against any government, anarchy doesn't mean no government, libertarians attack the state, which is a form of government. It is very important you understand that linguistic distinction.
You can make "the state" as small as you want, except you all can't agree on what size that would be. And that, itself, exposes the extremist views of hardcore libertarians.

I not assuming anything, I'm not making any argument about society reaching anything, nor have I argued there being no legal enforcement.
I'm simply stating there needs to be a new process for exercising society norms and customs, outside the current system clamored for by those in western society, the state.

A new process of norms? Such as what? Decriminalization of puritan drug and sex practices? And? Thats it? and what about the rest of us?
government or the state?
I think you are talking about the state, since no one is arguing regarding government.

the state isn't for the decent person? Yes it is, it is made entirely for the decent person to establish the methods and means for order for the people in that locale/community/populace.

The immoral doesn't care about any rules of the state or government, because they are going to do what they want regardless. Law doesn't stop law breakers, it merely details how those law breakers act outside of accepted norms and usually (fair or just) law prescribes punishment for those violations.

The law doesn't stop law breakers, but its a hell of a disincentive to those on the fence. :ufdup:
Customers who want their service, the same way those who pay private security now. Just expand the base

And poor people get what?
 

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No there has never been a pure libertarian society, much like there has never been a pure communist society.

The argument that if it was good it would have been done, falls apart on its face if you apply the logic consistantly. Lets say those arguing to end slavery in the 1800s were countered with why should we end slavery, if freedom and equality for all men is such good concept it would have been done in the past, ergo it isn't neccessary to free slaves. What would your response to that be?

You would say , appealing to tradition is a logic fallacy first of all, then you would say the merit of what you are arguing should be evaluated on the merit of the actual argument, not on whether it was done before. Society doesn't advance by simply doing what was always done, if that was the case we wouldn't have advanced to were we are now, right?
Libertarianism empowers bigots through their neglect towards minorities under the guise of "freedom"

Its the same "well theres no one stopping you" bullshyt which ignores the fact that under the same notion people can "do what they want" to infringe ever so slightly upon others.
 

David_TheMan

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The USA is one of the most un-corrupt places in the world.

Put that in perspective.

Now, are there problems? Yes.

But to apply kindergartener thinking the best of everyone else and assuming that everyone else has your morality isn't going to lead to a lot of success. Be prepared for a lot of disappointment and failure.

Theres no laws in your world because you assume the very things you benefit right now in a lawful society will be protected. They aren't and they won't. And this IN ITSELF neglects the long and winding history that led to the very things you claim to benefit from.

To say the USA is one of the most un-corrupt places in the world, when you literally have a presidential candidate that handle top secret information and lost it and recieved no punishment, while the same administration, tried to illegally murder and detain Edward Snowden for doing the same thing is ridiculous.

A nation that attacked multiple nations for business interests since the 1930s up to today, while those in power routinely flout the law murdering and causing chaos around the world with no need to even be held responsible for their actions.

No, its very easy to see the US is one of the most corrupt and dangerous nations on the face of this earth. Its absurd to claim it isn't. You have fukking police departments that drive around with extra guns and drugs in their vehicles to drop on the people they murder to legitimize it. You have a nation that imprisons its people for drug usage, while it aids international drug producers in distributing and producing the same shyt. SMH.

---
You can make your text bold and as big as you would like, it will never change the fact that I have not argued for a world with no law or government.
I feel bad that you knowingly have to lie to argue a strawman to try to make a point, but it is what it is.
I have not once argued for no law or no government.
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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To say the USA is one of the most un-corrupt places in the world, when you literally have a presidential candidate that handle top secret information and lost it and recieved no punishment, while the same administration, tried to illegally murder and detain Edward Snowden for doing the same thing is ridiculous.
.

Snowden is a traitor.

Hillary is the next POTUS.

shyts different.

I know people in government as staffers, trust me. The government ain't THAT corrupt. People are scared to have others pay for their salads and shyt. And people get caught all the time. I reject your specious investigation.

A nation that attacked multiple nations for business interests since the 1930s up to today, while those in power routinely flout the law murdering and causing chaos around the world with no need to even be held responsible for their actions.
Whats this got to do with libertarianism?

No, its very easy to see the US is one of the most corrupt and dangerous nations on the face of this earth. Its absurd to claim it isn't. You have fukking police departments that drive around with extra guns and drugs in their vehicles to drop on the people they murder to legitimize it. You have a nation that imprisons its people for drug usage, while it aids international drug producers in distributing and producing the same shyt. SMH.
And there are measures in place to fix this.

The system only works if we make it. Coming up with terms and utopia ideas like libertarianism not only doesn't fix things, it avoids having to be responsible for living in that society.

---
You can make your text bold and as big as you would like, it will never change the fact that I have not argued for a world with no law or government.
I feel bad that you knowingly have to lie to argue a strawman to try to make a point, but it is what it is.
I have not once argued for no law or no government

Oh, so you're not an anarchist...yet you keep pushing anarchy.
 

David_TheMan

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f Yes there is. Calling things corrupt doesn't fix anything. FIXING things changes them. The USA is one of the most lawful and uncorrupt places on earth, for a country our size and influence. And the presence of corruption doesn't change the fact that the system to expose and correct for that corrupt is in place and is used.


Privatized security is paid for...how?

And being privatized doesn't address who has the monopolization of force or who is the ultimate authority when it comes to law enforcement

And being privatized doesn't address who is responsible for preventing the abuse of these security forces.

This is just more pie in the sky bullshyt that seeks to avoid reforming the current system because its too hard in lieu of making up shyt thats easier for you to imagine.

Private police systems have never existed in an environment without a public one. In conjunction? Maybe. Not in the absence of.

We can go back to bartering all you want, but there has to be a formalized system to resolve disputes.

I'm not ignoring you. I'm disputing how legitimate it is.

Just admit you want a mixed society of freedoms, not absolute libertarianism.


You know the US Marshal Service, and Bailiffs and Sheriff departments ultimately enforce those contracts, right?

Self interest means, in many cases, not fulfilling your debt to other members of society.

Self interest means being selfish. And societies dont work that way.


You can make "the state" as small as you want, except you all can't agree on what size that would be. And that, itself, exposes the extremist views of hardcore libertarians.



A new process of norms? Such as what? Decriminalization of puritan drug and sex practices? And? Thats it? and what about the rest of us?




The law doesn't stop law breakers, but its a hell of a disincentive to those on the fence. :ufdup:


And poor people get what?

Calling something corrupt and broken in its very design and saying we need something new and presenting something new is what i've done. So I really don't understand your first paragraph, because that isn't what i've done and you know that, if you've actually read what I posted. Fact of the matter is the system is doing what it is designed to do, you talk about fixing it, it isn't broken so until you come to the realization that the very system you want control of leads to the negative effects you are living through now, nothing will change.

I told you how the security will be paid for, by those who want it with currency. Its very simple.

Privatize security is an answer to monopoly, because you have different vendors to come in the market to compete. That is the point of privatizing and having competition for the anacap.

Nothing prevents abuse, like laws don't prevent crime, the only thing we want is to limit the ability to remedy abuse, and hold those accountable. It is easier to hold private security accountable because they aren't a monopoly, because they don't run every aspect of the process because they don't have full control of investigating their own actions than any other alternative.

Its pie in the sky to say we need to stop doing the same thing with the same results if we want different outcomes, but it isn't when you claim we can fix this with the processes put in place by those in power, which hasn't worked since these processes have been talked about. I think you are projecting.

Yet private policing existed in environments without government policing and its documented in the very link I presented to you, as well as with regard for the wild west and the private security offered there, and in the case of the Wild West, it provided greater security, less violence than the US in the East during teh same period.

Who said anything about bartering, you literally have to pull up things no one said to knock down, because you can't logically construct an actual argument.

Why should i admit someting you want, when i don't believe in that, and i have told you what i'm in favor of? That literally makes no sense. It is if you have given up, but you want me to agree that you are right so you can save face. Very strange.

Self interest is what drives the creation of societal norms and customs, and these have very little to do with an outside body with a monopoly of force imposing them.

What do the US marshalls or sheriffs have to do with what i actually argued? Absolutely nothing.

Self-interest doesn't mean selfish, nice attempt to play on words and by the connotation shift game, but I see through it. If we were to hold your logic constant, you would tell us the "golden rule", do unto others as you would have them do unto, is selfish. No its self-interest of those that follow it.

I have no want to make the state as small as possible, I would like to see the state cease to exist. Again read what i've written instead of arguing with the man inside your head.

I said a new process of enforcing norms, whcih is through more voluntaryist means. Honoring that a person has full control of their property, which means their income, body, land, and etc. Enforcing norms through more ostracization and contract and government via contracting more than monopoly of force through the state.

The law doesn't stop lawbreakers though, and if it had a disincentive effect, it would definitely show up with regard to capital crimes, yet historically studies on the effect of capital crimes show they do not have any disincentivizing effect.

Poor people, rich people, middle class people get nothing but what they work for and buy or what others give them voluntarily.
 
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