| | Quotes from Joe (quoted by a guy who -- due to insufficient civilian information -- was squarely against the START of "Operation Iraqi Freedom") ...
================= ... you can't accept the Objectivist politics without the philosophical base. =================
Darn tootin', you can't.
================= ... libertarians do not have a common philosophical base that they agree on. =================
Darn tootin', they don't.
================= there is no necessary difference between the Objectivist and libertarian views =================
Darn tootin', there isn't.
================= Libertarians tend to start with politics, ignoring ethics in order to be more inclusive. =================
Sho' enuff', many do.
================= Without the ability to relate the NIOF principle to a wider standard of value, it turns into a context-free rule. =================
Inherently true (by properly defined terms).
================= Obviously the NIOF principle is an important part of our lives, but it aims to further our lives. If a context appears where it doesn't further our lives, following it would be suicide.
The case that comes up the most is in a war situation where innocent civilians may be killed in the process. =================
Internally valid, sure, but its external validity rests on facts not usually available to average citizens ("we" haven't necessarily "known" when "following it" would've been "suicide" -- so we often "trust" our leaders).
================= Without a connection to a wider moral standard, violations of the NIOF cannot be compared with one another. That means all rights violations would have to be treated as equally bad. =================
Great (not merely "good") point.
================= To give an example, some people suggest that the United States is a police state without freedom of speech, comparing it to totalitarian regimes.
Others suggest that the US is less free than China, because we have seat-belt laws while they don't. The fact that freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, and freedom of reproduction are violently repressed in China is ignored because you can ride around without a bicycle helmet. =================
Shameful Libertarians, to be sure.
================= The next major difference between libertarian and Objectivist politics is the Objectivist position that the deaths of innocent people in the process of exercising retaliatory force is the blame of the person who created the situation. =================
True enough, but this proposition is hampered by a subtlety -- that same subtlety previously mentioned regarding contextual enforcement of NIOF (the contextual enforcement of "retaliatory force").
================= The immoral act was made by the one who created this situation and who destroyed the harmony of interests that the NIOF principle is based on. =================
Right again, but if it's taken as a twin-dictum that these dictators are both immoral, and have destroyed humanity's rightful harmony (ie. mitigated our own pursuit of value), then the party line retort would include a utilitarian setting-up of a hierarchy of repressive regimes, and then attacking those that are most repressive to the most "potential trading partners." Cuba, sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, North Korea, China, Russia, and every Islamic country in the Middle East -- are all begging to be invaded in an objective pecking order (due to the twin facts of: Their immorality, and: Our potential benefit from their country's freedom).
Of all these "choices" -- Russia and China appear to offer the most "expected value" (or at least, higher than could ever be expected from invading Iraq). From the limited access of average citizens then, it appears that the Iraq invasion wasn't the best use of our military potential. A more enlightening explanation (from those "in the know") may rectify this conundrum -- but we (taxpayers) haven't yet been given a more enlightening explanation to date. Instead, we've been asked to look at Iraq altruistically -- and that request doesn't even deserve comment in an Objectivist forum. The invasion of Iraq may have been the right thing to do at the time -- but it has not been "shown" to have been the right thing to do at the time.
================= The emphasis by libertarians is on the lack of initiation of force. As I've mentioned in my article "Two Sides of Libertarianism", this position wouldn't successfully differentiate libertarianism with pacifism. That means retaliatory force is seen as not entirely immoral, but probably not virtuous.
It also has the problem that it focuses on what you shouldn't do, instead of giving you options. It doesn't address the issue of how you go about securing freedom at all. It's more concerned with moral judgment than with life-directed action. Securing your freedom is less important than absolutely avoiding accidentally violating someone's rights. The result is that it worships inaction in the face of rights violators. =================
Again, there are damned, shameful Libertarians out there. And good on you, Joe, for bringing their shamefulness to light. Overall, I really liked this essay. I learned from it. I grew from it.
Thanks for that,
Ed
|
|