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http://emotionresearcher.com/politic...mean-and-dumb/
Kind of a summary of some of the core arguments of the book by the author that I currently read. Also, this: http://bleedingheartlibertarians.com...ttle-feelings/ General, vague own doubts, and then Hoppe were main origins for my growing critical attitude towards democracy. It seems I now stumbled over another major name to add to that: Brennan. Like Hoppe, Brennan offers an ill-defended flank for counter attack, for criticism. Different to Hoppe, he admits that there are some weak sides in his alternative model, which he considers to be not complete therefore (whereas Hoppe seems to think he offered a complete and realistic alternative - on which I would disagree). But both men point at the same direction, and they do so for mutually supporting, complementary arguments and reasons. Their diagnosis and description on the hopelessly messed up status quo and the inner contradictions of the democratic concept, is very hard to fight against, I think they simply are very right there. On the alternatives they offer, more discussion and solution-finding is needed. Hoppe concludes that all existence of a state has to be denied and that there is no need for having a state in the first, no matter whether it is a democracy or a monarchy or whatever. Brennan seems to be less radically against having a state as a principal basis of human community, but seems to take the need for state as a basis. But maybe I have not yet read enough by him. Quote:
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If you feel nuts, consult an expert. Last edited by Skybird; 04-24-17 at 06:35 PM. |
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#2 |
Navy Seal
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Unfortunately, lacking any real knowledge, we parrot the words of political leaders, posing them as our own thoughts. We treat politics as a football game. If your guy cheats on a crossword puzzle, damn him, put him in prison, flog him and off with his head, not necessarily in that order.
If our guy takes bribes to give hostile nations a pass on rearming with biological weapons, and incidentally sends them a couple shipments of anthrax, well, that excusable. Anybody could make such a mistake, if that is even a mistake. And we begin to advocate giving anthrax to all nations as a gesture of trust. Our guy good. Your guy bad. That is politics today. That and the pursuit of personal destruction of the opposition, impeaching them, boycotting them, shouting them down when all they wanted to say is that they like puppies, attacking their supporters with knives, sticks and bricks, destroying innocent people's property as some kind of "protest" against a totally different group of people. That is politics today. We should hire a nation who doesn't care about our politics to arrest such houligans and put them in prison, no matter what their political affiliation.
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#3 |
Lucky Sailor
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I was fully expecting a blank post here, but knowing skybird, I knew better.
![]() But do you really need to provide any links for this statement? Anyone who visits GT regularly will attest to this. |
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#4 |
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I sometimes wonder when coincidence ends and synchronicity begins.
![]() Plenty of empoiricla findings there, some very clever experimental settings they have run, too. And the findings are absolutely desillusionising. Most people, the overwhelming majpirty, is clueless about the objcts of poltics. Most form their opinions basing on mechnisms like football fans in a club of fans: team colour decides the right and the wrong exclusively, period. And then came Brennan and referred to all those names I just had started to read about and fired them like torpedoes into the fetish of general elections and the precious, the holy, the hopelessly overestimated shrine of having the right to "vote". The competence to use that freedom, that right, to vote, to decide for this and agaunst that, needs a certain level of infiormation and education that most people simply lack. For reasons of that political psychology calls "rational ignorrance". Indeed, most people are clueless hobbits or bullying, aggressive hooligans. Rational, educated Vulcans there are almost none. Most voters are hobbits. Most activists, campaign helpers and politicians are hooligans. There is heartbreaking plenty of empirical evidence in political psychology showing that becoming politically engaged in the usual, conformal ways society invites us to see as prcious and holy, lead NOT to higher education and informaiton and understanding. I comoare it to a crowd of tourists aboard a Boeing flying towards their holiday destination, all wnat to party and all want to feel fine. And then comes the voting: the voting on what the pilot should do when and how. Passengers decide by majority vote what flap settings he shioukld set for takeoff. Where to set rotation speed? What climb speed? When to retract the gear? What cruise altitude? Where to mark top of descent? Approach speed, which one? Brake settings: 1, 2 or 3? Or even setting 4? Full flaps? Or is 30 sufficient? And so on, passenegers debate it and vote on it and everybody has his say and everybody is clueless and knows no stuff about nothing - but all demand to be treated like a holy expert. Becasue they have a "right". The problem is, the elite Brennan argues to have the lead in politics, called epistocracy, doe snot exist as an elite. Its no Vulcans forming it, it is just more unscrupulous hooligans. We can see it in the Eu wonderfully: the EU just practices what I described: it feels authorized and justified to set the rules and demand that others should follow them. But it is no Vulcans making these rules, it is hooligans making them, lobbyistic holligans, narcissistic hooligans, attention-craving hooligans, ideology-drunk hooligans - but hooligans all of them nevertheless. Hooligans that get electd by clueless hobbits. Ho could any good come from this? How could such an arranegment ever be not dysfunctional? Most people would serve poltic interest best if not getting engaged in politics and over politics, and not being interested at all. To have a voting right for every Peter and Paul, is simply stupid. Such a right should base on whether somebody has the education and informaiton qualifying him, or not. And that alone still does not solv the problem of egoist versus altruist election decisions. Here is where the Ancient Greek come back into play, I think. There, only "citizens" had the right to vote. But the old Greek term for citizen meant by that "bands of armed people", in other words, citizens are military units of any kind. Soldiers. Who was allowed to bear arms? Only men (no women), only free men (no slaves, servants, subordinates), only rich free men (since they had to pay for their equipment and armor l by themselves). The latter is relevant since it was this elite, this wealthy elite, that was to defend the city against foreign aggressors, and to decide - via debate and majority vote on internal city issues and things of public interest. Those who were authorized to participate in these processes, at the same time had much at stake that they invested into the city - their private wealth and property, that is. Between only 5 and 15% of Greek city populations were seen as citizens. And thes ecitizens - were feudal elite of noble men. Thats is what democracy originally was - a feudal form of government! ![]() Good old Ben, twice: "When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic." "The Constitution only guarantees the American people the right to pursue happiness. But you have to catch it yourself."
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#5 |
Eternal Patrol
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Except of course for the part where he never said either of those.
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#6 |
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I seem to vaguely recall either you or somebody else years ago already said that on the first quote. However, it gets allways attributed to him, both quotes, not just on internet quotation sites, but in print media and books as well.
So for the time being, I keep it simple and pragmatic, and do like others do as well. Both quotes by Benjamin Franklin, therefore. ![]() I had just one book about Franklin, but it probably drowned in the flood we had three years ago, together with a good other share of my library. ![]()
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#7 | |
Eternal Patrol
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"When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic."
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/2181646/posts "The Constitution only guarantees the American people the right to pursue happiness. But you have to catch it yourself." http://www.economist.com/blogs/democ...l_inaccuracies Just because everyone on the internet repeats something doesn't make it so. Nor does saying something in a book. A careful search of Franklin's papers reveals that he never wrote anything like either one of those quotes. No one who parrots those quotes (and many others) ever gives an actual attribution ("Letter to so-and-so, such-and-such date"). It's a game played by political hacks who want someone important to back up their own beliefs. It's called "cheating" and "lying". I don't think you're cheating or lying, but I do think quoting the meme without checking on it is lazy at the very least. It only takes a minute to check a quote. To defend that laziness with the comment "no one would believe it anyway" is even worse. The truth is the truth, whether anyone believes it or not. Quote:
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#8 |
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While techncially you are right, I must admit I think there are more important things than to become this pedantic about such famous quotations that are this popular that even in books by best-intending professional authors on for exmaple history or politics and history give these quotes time and again. I really do not know how often I have stumbled over them by now, onine as well as in books. VERY often.
Too judge whether such claimed popular quotes by somebody are fakes or are real, requires an intimate expertise on the author in question. And that is kind of specialised knowledge that most people simply do not have, and do not care to get, for acchieving it means too much investment for them (time), while providing too litte benefits. So there we have it again: "rational ignorrance" that I already mentioned above. Both "quotes" have a meaning and a message, and I think it matches what I wanted to hint, and I also think they meet the general direrciton of thought in Franklin. At least as long as all the other things I read about him and quotes I read that are claimed to be by him, maybe even his full biography, have not been a fake as well. ![]() Relax, good man. No real harm was done, nor intended. And I fear you will need to live with that these quotes will be continued to be attributed to Franklin by many, many people, right or wrongly so. Heck, not even the Bible's originality is beyond doubt in so many passages that might or might not be correctly translated. Not even the Quran is original. LOL.
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If you feel nuts, consult an expert. Last edited by Skybird; 04-25-17 at 06:49 PM. |
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Eternal Patrol
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“Never do anything you can't take back.” —Rocky Russo |
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#10 |
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Steve, I am only saying that I think you simply spend a bit too much attention to somethign that you will not change anyway. Many people will continue to attribute said two quotes to Franklin, no matter what those dudes in that other forum said. It happe, you don't like it, but it happens nevertheless. Its not as if any real serious consequences are caused by this. Its harmless. it does not matter that much. No information damage has been done. Those two statements are good ones. Some say the author is named wrong, okay. So be it. i do not know - the ultimate evidence for the opposite the links you posted do not provide, too, btw. Just some people claiming somethingthign diffefebt, and hinting by wuotes from some other people that the two sentences could as well be collected from the context of words by somebody else. Just saying - I really dont want to start a fight here.
Compare this to me living in a sociocultural habitat where 99,9% of the population seriously believes that this political freak show event around them indeed is correctly attributed to what ancient Greek democracy was about - there you have a big distortion of things, and according consequences! What e call demicracy today, to the old Greeks would have appeared as tyranny! Still we call Greek the cradle of our modern poltical order!? I think my suffering is much bigger than yours! ![]() BTW, I do not "treasure" psychology the way you seem to think I do. Way too much stupid babbling in there, if you ask me, way too much. But not all is bad, and so some stuff I keep on mind. I have voluntarily given up this branch, and not even for one day I have ever regretted to do so - what does this tell you? ![]() ![]() I would share your pedantry on this quoting thing if I would write an academic paper, or somethign meant for professional publishing, a book. There are academic standards and rules for correct quoting: footnotes, sources to be given and colelcted in an appendix, quoting in correct context, and so forth, not to mention: checking the copyrights. But hey, this is a bar, no university, so enjoy the jokes and the cold beer. Life can be easy.
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#11 |
Ocean Warrior
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"The problem of the Internet is that noone verifies the origin of quotes" - Joseph Stalin.
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Grumpy as always. |
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#12 |
In the Brig
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#13 |
Navy Seal
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The issues of quotes brought to mind one of the most argued quotes, actually an exchange between two noted historical figures (a sort of quote on quotes):
“I Wish I Had Said That” “You Will, Oscar, You Will” http://quoteinvestigator.com/2013/09/05/oscar-will/ The link gives as full a background, with citations, as one could hope, and can be found just by typing in Google the basic quote; the link, in fact, was the first one presented in the results, and there are other links on the same subject. It is ridiculously simple to source a quote on the Web; what would have taken me hours in the library pre-Web is now done in less than a few seconds. Not adequately researching a quote, or any citation, for that matter, is nowadays is more a case of either sloppiness or laziness, or both... <O>
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#14 |
Soaring
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Sloppiness? Laziness?
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#15 |
Eternal Patrol
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My apologies. My intent wasn't to derail the thread. It was originally just to point that out, something I will continue to do whenever and wherever I see it. Pedantic? Guilty. OCD? More than likely. Argumentative? Sometimes.
Still, on with the show!
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“Never do anything you can't take back.” —Rocky Russo |
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