Doug, the outcome of the election is that the US is ruled by the Bush junto. I didn't agree to be ruled by the Bush junto. Did
you agree to be ruled by the Bush junto? (The fact that some minority of the population living on US-claimed "turf" elected Bush under statist rules is irrelevant to
consent to the outcome.)
Darrel wrote:No, Darrel was claiming that states don't attack each very often because of the collective glue of tribalistic "America."
I disagree that primitive tribalism is the reason people don't attack or murder each other. I think it has more to do with convention, ESS (evolutionary stable strategy) of non-aggression, the moral faculty that most people have, fear of getting busted, and so on. Primitive tribalism is an insignificant factor. If your
nation-state tribalism theory were correct, wouldn't we see US people attacking Canadians, and vice versa?
BTW, I never claimed Somalia was "a shining example of anarchy" - that was
your claim. I said it was the result of government failure, the expected aftermath of a brutal statist dictatorship.
Doug wrote:You are assuming that modern politicians are rulers and then using them as counterexamples to my claim.
No, I am applying the definition of "ruler." It is true that it follows directly from the definition that politicians who run the US State are rulers. What we have here is your basic verbal argument. For some reason, you refuse to call a spade a spade. You'd rather sugar-coat the relationship of US rulers to their subjects by calling them "leaders" or "representatives." I refuse to use the Orwellian jargon of the statist paradigm.
Hogeye> Some people, the ruling elite, control the government.
Doug> The what? The government? You mean they control other people?
They control the
apparatus for control, the
machinery of power. This machinery of power is the State. With this machinery of power, the people are controlled, regulated, plundered, etc. Doug, can you see the difference between an institution/organization, and the people who occupy
roles in an organization? The State is the organization - not the people in the roles of rulership, not the people in the roles of subjects.
Doug wrote:The president is part of the government.
Yes, he fulfills that role.
Doug wrote:He governs as a person entrusted with power by other people.
Yes, the "other people" being certain political elites, and certain duped subjects. Obviously, this does not imply that any given individual has consented to being ruled.
Doug wrote:OK, so what do you do when some people in your community disagree with the election of a particular person who is in your community? Do you then ostracize or eject that person from your midst?
No, no more than we ostracize people from Fayetteville, or even the library, if they don't come to FayFreethinker's meetings. No more than I ostracize people from Fayetteville if they don't come to chess club, or patronize Ozark Natural Foods or Wal-Mart. Normally, if someone doesn't want to join your group, you pretty much ignore them in the context of the group task. If someone doesn't like the election of Mr. Smith as president of FayFreethinkers or the chess club, they are free to opt out of the club. No problem.
Doug wrote:And what if someone agree to go along with the group on the highway project and the water system, but not on the sheriff election, fire chief, or the river ferry?
To understand a free society, you need to learn to think outside the winner-take-all statist paradigm. Unlike a statist system, these different tasks and services would not be artificially tied together in a free society. If you don't want to pay for a road, no one forces you to. (They may not let you use the road, though.) If you don't want to pay for a water project, you don't. You dig your own well, or transport water, or patronize a competing water company, or whatever. It's called freedom.
Doug wrote:How can you have people in the same community constantly picking and choosing and opting out of services?
It happens all the time with lawn mowing service, home insurance, grocery shopping, sex, and most services. It's called freedom of association in a free market. The market handles it just fine. It would work the same with those services currently captured by governments and funded by coercion, when the government gets the hell out of the way.
Doug wrote:Does this lead to horrid inefficiency in the duplication of duties...
Yes, there is a horrid duplication of grocery stores, and gas stations, and coffee houses, and hardware stores. It's terrible! /sarcasm. Obviously, this "duplication" is wonderful for consumers. It not only gives them choices and allows for different and varied tastes, but keeps the providers efficient and friendly. The inefficent and customer-unfriendly firms tend to go out of business; quite the opposite of govt providers, whose inefficiency and incompetence is so often rewarded with more plundered loot ("funding".)
Doug wrote:OK, so my point about needing an army is still unrebutted. YOU argue that private families can do OK defending themselves against invading armies.
Wrong on both counts. I didn't say an army is unnecessary; I said that an army can be raised voluntarily, without conscription or monopoly. And I didn't say that private families
alone could ward off invading armies; I mentioned militias, guerrilla warfare, and so on. Of course, a well-armed family can't hurt. Recall, to deter aggression one doesn't have to be able to defeat the aggressor; just make it costly enough that
not attacking is in their interest.