| | Of Anarchy and Lifeboats and Cabbages and Kings
"Also, maybe he can explain why this happening in a "lawless area" has anything to do with it justifying an initiation of force. I can imagine a few answers, like rights are gifts from government, or the only justification for respecting rights is you might go to jail, but those seem like unlikely candidates." -Joe
This is the crux of the matter. I don't believe that rights are a gift from the government. I believe that a minimal state is necessary to instantiate political rights which are justified by argument but which are defended by force. I am not an anarchist, and I don't believe that political rights exist per se in a state of nature, but only where a minimal state - a polity - exists to enforce them. In the state of nature, each man must judge for himself. What is so hard to understand about this? This is not an ideal situation for me, as I have repeatedly said. But in a state of nature, I would not expect my knowledge of Rand to protect me and hence, yes, I do think that relying on her arguments alone is indeed a type of prayer and that people who keep saying - "but you're initiating force!" - while the bullets fly about them are being just plain silly. None of this was an ad hominem attack on anyone, I didn't call anyone names.
So far, you have not quoted my arguments and explained where I am wrong, you have characterized my arguments: "Remember, Ted's argument is that the photographer, by making a profit on the war, is fully complicit with the war." (No, I said he is complicit in the child's murder by making profit on a snuff film.) You have accused me of acting on fear and anger or judging people as dangerous due to my emotions. No, I judge someone who goes to a war zone to make a snuff film as a potential danger to anyone, and, in the lack of any state to protect me, reserve my right to make my own judgements as who is a danger and how to protect myself.
As for the suicide example, to "take you at your words" you did say that I felt entitled to kill such people. Only when challenged did you retreat and admit that, since a state exists under such circumstances, that I would submit judgement to the state. Let me say this. in a state of total anarchy, I would also reserve to myself the right to execute a would-be suicide - not out of anger or fear - but if I judged such a person to be a threat to myself or others.
The whole reason why we institute governments is to take the use of force out of the hands of individuals and to subject it to law. I am all for this. Those who are criticizing me for saying that in the lack of a government I would judge and act for myself seem to imagine that there never is or could be a state where governments don't exist.
Ted Keer
I tire of this repetition. I am a minarchist who believes that the right of judgement and self-defense are retained by the individual in a state of nature. I prefer civilization to the state of nature. I find suicides and snuff film photographers at least potential dangers to myself and others, and I hereby put everyone on notice that if civilization should fall, don't expect to come filming people die around me without running the risk of joining them. Until then, I'll call the police. If this is emotionalism, call me Tom Cruise on Oprah.
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