vendic wrote:There is no contradiction. It's a leading question that deflects the point of the issue to something else.
SciFiFisher wrote:vendic wrote:There is no contradiction. It's a leading question that deflects the point of the issue to something else.
I refer to it as a logic trap. It also ignores the fact that individuals and governments are not equivalent entities.
One of the best and most crucial questions that Helfeld has asked over the years is simple enough: “can you delegate a right that you don’t have to someone else?”
To use an example, if an average citizen does not have the right to steal from his neighbor, then he can not go ahead and vote for one of his friends to do it. Furthermore, if a particular group, even a group with a majority in a certain area decided to vote for themselves or one another, to steal from innocent people, they would not be justified in doing so. In this situation, these people would essentially be granting a privilege to another person that they themselves did not have, which is obviously a ridiculous idea.
grapes wrote:One of the best and most crucial questions that Helfeld has asked over the years is simple enough: “can you delegate a right that you don’t have to someone else?”To use an example, if an average citizen does not have the right to steal from his neighbor, then he can not go ahead and vote for one of his friends to do it. Furthermore, if a particular group, even a group with a majority in a certain area decided to vote for themselves or one another, to steal from innocent people, they would not be justified in doing so. In this situation, these people would essentially be granting a privilege to another person that they themselves did not have, which is obviously a ridiculous idea.
False equivalence. Does anyone have a right to restrain someone else? Does saying no to that question imply that kidnapping, and restraining kidnappers, must be treated as equally wrong?
Rommie wrote:grapes wrote:One of the best and most crucial questions that Helfeld has asked over the years is simple enough: “can you delegate a right that you don’t have to someone else?”To use an example, if an average citizen does not have the right to steal from his neighbor, then he can not go ahead and vote for one of his friends to do it. Furthermore, if a particular group, even a group with a majority in a certain area decided to vote for themselves or one another, to steal from innocent people, they would not be justified in doing so. In this situation, these people would essentially be granting a privilege to another person that they themselves did not have, which is obviously a ridiculous idea.
False equivalence. Does anyone have a right to restrain someone else? Does saying no to that question imply that kidnapping, and restraining kidnappers, must be treated as equally wrong?
Yes. Law enforcement.
Tarragon wrote:It's fun to watch people tie themselves into logical knots over this instead in order to avoid stating the obvious and appearing anti-social: Rights are a fiction we create to help us get along with each other. When they stop working, we abandon them. Once upon a time, when the world still had wilderness, if someone didn't like the rules - didn't like paying a share of the costs for public works and services- they could GTFO.
People treat rights as if they are immutable. They aren't. Humans are self-programming biological computers and are capable of inventing all sorts of rights, exceptions, and loopholes. Some people seem to think that if we remove all the legalism currently binding rights, that leaves a Golden Age human of the Enlightenment. It doesn't. It leaves the law of the jungle as humans revert to savagery. Civilization is a thin veneer, and libertarians and their ilk take it for granted.
SciFiFisher wrote:Tarragon wrote:It's fun to watch people tie themselves into logical knots over this instead in order to avoid stating the obvious and appearing anti-social: Rights are a fiction we create to help us get along with each other. When they stop working, we abandon them. Once upon a time, when the world still had wilderness, if someone didn't like the rules - didn't like paying a share of the costs for public works and services- they could GTFO.
People treat rights as if they are immutable. They aren't. Humans are self-programming biological computers and are capable of inventing all sorts of rights, exceptions, and loopholes. Some people seem to think that if we remove all the legalism currently binding rights, that leaves a Golden Age human of the Enlightenment. It doesn't. It leaves the law of the jungle as humans revert to savagery. Civilization is a thin veneer, and libertarians and their ilk take it for granted.
I think a lot of Libertarians really believe that if we take away all the rules people will just be nice.
Thumper wrote:Vegazombie.
Thumper wrote:Vegazombie.
vendic wrote:Thumper wrote:Vegazombie.
So I was reading reviews of that meat glue I posted about in the Grill forum.
Turns out you can get it cheap at Amazon in a 50g bag, so I was reading the reviews.
Someone actually asked if it's vegetarian...
vendic wrote:There's a saying a friend of mine liked to say which I'm really getting to be more fond of lately.
"Some people are educated beyond their intelligence".
Tarragon wrote:vendic wrote:There's a saying a friend of mine liked to say which I'm really getting to be more fond of lately.
"Some people are educated beyond their intelligence".
I like it. Don't think I've heard it before. I run into them all the time, and not just when looking in a mirror.
SciFi Chick wrote:Tarragon wrote:vendic wrote:There's a saying a friend of mine liked to say which I'm really getting to be more fond of lately.
"Some people are educated beyond their intelligence".
I like it. Don't think I've heard it before. I run into them all the time, and not just when looking in a mirror.
I started hearing it in the Christian church back in the eighties and nineties. It was started by preachers lamenting the fact that so many young people would head off to college as Christians and come back as atheists.
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