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Price for happiness.


DrTodd13

Which of these is an acceptable price for universal happiness and lack of need?  

23 members have voted

  1. 1. Which of these is an acceptable price for universal happiness and lack of need?

    • One individual's murder, total enslavement, or economic enslavement
      10
    • One individual's total enslavement or economic enslavement but not murder
      3
    • One individual's economic enslavement but not murder or total enslavement
      1
    • None of the above
      9


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It is logical. The needs of the many outweigh...the needs of the few. Or the one. I have been and always shall be your friend. Live long and prosper.

 

We already make these choices all the time (we just don't most of us think about them like this). The Wall Street bailout is $700 billion dollars. Think about the US lives that could be saved if instead that money was used for universal health care. Think about the global lives that could be saved if instead that money was used for food and medicine combating malaria and other problems in the developing world. And a $700 billion dollar bailout will not even bring universal happiness!

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then the means justify the ends... imo

I suppose you are right. How else would you justify means?

Yeah...you're right. The only question is what the proper end is. If you don't think the ends justify the means then you must hold some ideal as more important than the end in question. Then, that ideal becomes your new "end."

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We are all already enconomically enslaved. Has no-one not yet noticed?

How so?

Well, let's see, the government reserves the right to do everything to you that I mentioned as part of economic enslavement. Where are they limited in terms of maximum tax rate? Where does it say they can't nationalize every business and force you to do the job they want you to do? The 9th and 10th amendments are dead my friend.

 

Thank for mr1303 for noticing. One would have to suppose that those voting "none of the above" don't believe that we are economically enslaved. Is a slave not still a slave if he works 1 hour a day for his master versus 16?

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Well, let's see, the government reserves the right to do everything to you that I mentioned as part of economic enslavement.  Where are they limited in terms of maximum tax rate?  Where does it say they can't nationalize every business and force you to do the job they want you to do?

Here is how you defined "economic enslavement" earlier in this thread:

Economic enslavement here means that [...] economically productive actions are under the control of the rest of the population...including dictating what jobs he can and can't do, how he does them, and up to 100% taxation.

We own two companies, and no one (in or out of government) told us we couldn't do that, nor has anyone interfered with our operations.

 

Yes, there are regulations, as there are traffic laws, and we follow them. I don't see that as "enslavement" at all. And our taxes are nowhere near 100%. Yes the government could try to act in a much more oppressive way, and that's a reason for constant vigilance.

 

Your argument seems equivalent to saying that free blacks in colonial America were actually slaves, because the potential was there. I think that the free blacks were in a better situation than the real slaves.

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I don't think your analogy is apt. A free black is a free black. Sure, he could be taken captive and re-enslaved but the possibility isn't what we're talking about. Let's say that a master says to his slave "You can now go wherever you want and do whatever you want until I tell you that I need you again." The slave then goes off and lives his life however he chooses. Is he still not a slave? The master can rescind his temporary freedom at any time. However, if a slave is completely freed, his master can't come back later and legitimately "unfree" him and start ordering him around again. That is the difference. The government has the attitude that they can regulate or tax you to whatever degree they desire. If they choose to not regulate or tax you for some reason, that in no way makes your state less than enslavement. If they try to regulate or tax you too much then you can try to elect someone who will buck the trend (good luck with that) or you can revolt. However, from the government's perspective, you are still at a minimum their economic slaves.
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To the extent that PassedOut is saying what I perceive him to be saying, I agree with him entirely. I think it's a gross misuse of the word "enslavement" to apply it to "all of us," particularly those of us living in the United States and occasionally idle enough to discuss bridge, philosophy, and politics via internet servers. It's right up there with "Nazi" on the ridiculous analogy chart. Whatever's in third is quite distant.
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To the extent that PassedOut is saying what I perceive him to be saying, I agree with him entirely. I think it's a gross misuse of the word "enslavement" to apply it to "all of us," particularly those of us living in the United States and occasionally idle enough to discuss bridge, philosophy, and politics via internet servers. It's right up there with "Nazi" on the ridiculous analogy chart. Whatever's in third is quite distant.

can agents of the federal gov't come to your home at 2 am, bust your door down and take you away for an indefinite period of time with no charges being filed and no notification of your whereabouts? if they can, the fact that you and i can discuss philosophy online doesn't lessen our enslavement, imo

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Of course, if I had slaves, one of my highest goals would be to convince them that they weren't slaves but still keep them obedient. Certainly there are degrees of enslavement but the degree doesn't matter when it comes to the fundamental question of what your state is. Please command on my thought experiment where the slave owner temporarily frees the slave or takes only 10% of his output. Is he still not a slave? How is that different than the current state of affairs where even in the US estimates for the effective tax rate go as high as 50%. Half your productive efforts go to someone else and you dismiss enslavement as a gross misuse?
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Of course, if I had slaves, one of my highest goals would be to convince them that they weren't slaves but still keep them obedient. Certainly there are degrees of enslavement but the degree doesn't matter when it comes to the fundamental question of what your state is. Please command on my thought experiment where the slave owner temporarily frees the slave or takes only 10% of his output. Is he still not a slave? How is that different than the current state of affairs where even in the US estimates for the effective tax rate go as high as 50%. Half your productive efforts go to someone else and you dismiss enslavement as a gross misuse?

A slave on vacation is still a slave, certainly.

 

 

If degree doesn't matter with respect to the fundamental question, then why cite tax rates "as high as 50%"? If you lived in a purely libertarian state, other than the government assessed a 0.1% income tax for infrastructure, would you be a slave?

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To the extent that PassedOut is saying what I perceive him to be saying, I agree with him entirely.  I think it's a gross misuse of the word "enslavement" to apply it to "all of us," particularly those of us living in the United States and occasionally idle enough to discuss bridge, philosophy, and politics via internet servers.  It's right up there with "Nazi" on the ridiculous analogy chart.  Whatever's in third is quite distant.

can agents of the federal gov't come to your home at 2 am, bust your door down and take you away for an indefinite period of time with no charges being filed and no notification of your whereabouts? if they can, the fact that you and i can discuss philosophy online doesn't lessen our enslavement, imo

Can agents of the federal government come to the home of another agent of the federal government at 2 am, similarly? If no one is immune from such a possibility, then who is the "master," and if no one is the master, then how are there slaves?

 

If you want to maximize your chances of living with the possibility of being dragged out of your home in the middle of the night, try anarchy.

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How is that different than the current state of affairs where even in the US estimates for the effective tax rate go as high as 50%.  Half your productive efforts go to someone else and you dismiss enslavement as a gross misuse?

I don't consider my obligation to pay taxes (and I've paid a lot of taxes over the years) to be slavery, or anything of the kind.

 

I believe in a strong defense (which most assuredly does not include attacking countries like Iraq), for example, and I don't consider the cost of that to be giving my productive efforts "to someone else."

 

I share the benefits (dubious benefits, sometimes, I agree) paid for by my tax dollars. I like to drive on good roads over sound bridges. I like to know that the CDC has experts available to analyze threats to the general health. And, in fact, I feel that my country as a whole benefits from many of the government services I help pay for, even when I don't benefit directly.

 

Of course there are government expenditures I don't like and don't approve of. I share the responsiblity for those expenditures because I, and others who share my view, haven't convinced enough people to force congress to put a stop to it.

 

On the flip side, there are expenditures that I think should be made that aren't. But that is what political debate is all about. I'm not going to stop participating just because I disagree with the actions politicians take. And I feel fortunate to live in a country where I can earn enough money to pay substantial taxes.

 

The bottom line for me, though, is that the cost of what we do now - foolish or wise - should not passed down to our children and grandchildren. They'll have even tougher problems to deal with in the future.

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I don't consider my obligation to pay taxes (and I've paid a lot of taxes over the years) to be slavery, or anything of the kind.

Ditto your whole post, but particularly, this part. I just love the thought of some orthopedic surgeon going back in time and sitting on a stump next to an honest-to-goodness mid-19th century slave and saying something like, "Man, we've got it rough, don't we? They took 40% out of my check this week? I tell ya, we're two of a kind."

 

That visual is right up there with the thought of Michael Moore suggesting to a Holocaust survivor that (insert your favorite Republican) is "just like a Nazi."

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God told me a secret. It was that all humans were his slaves. Then He decided to give humans free will, with the option to rescind this concession at any time He chooses. God has recently been noticing trouble makers who have been inventing hypothetical worlds. God has no power over hypothetical worlds as hypothetically, you can invent universal happiness, you can disinvent God and you can disinvent the God's Law of Unintended Consequences. God is displeased and might at any time break into your house and drag you away
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Certainly there are degrees of enslavement but the degree doesn't matter when it comes to the fundamental question of what your state is.

I disagree.

 

Like most other things, enslavement is on a grey scale. Black/white categories like slave/free generally are either illusions or depend on thresholds that are arbitrary.

 

OK I generalize to the extreme, but it certainly applies to the topic of this thread.

 

I value freedom a lot and think Western governments generally interfere more in citizens life than they should. But the 100% laissez-faire government is at best impractical (to put it mildly) or at worst a meaningless concept (because if we abolish the government someone will fill the power vacuum).

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Can agents of the federal government come to the home of another agent of the federal government at 2 am, similarly? If no one is immune from such a possibility, then who is the "master," and if no one is the master, then how are there slaves?

 

If you want to maximize your chances of living with the possibility of being dragged out of your home in the middle of the night, try anarchy.

is that a yes?

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In a hypothetical universe, if the murder, total enslavement, or economic enslavement of one innocent individual could guarantee universal happiness and lack of need, which of these actions would you consider right or wrong to achieve the aforementioned guarantee.  Total enslavement here means that every facet of the one individual's life is controlled by the remainder of the population.  Economic enslavement here means that non-productive personal matters such as religion and family are still under control of the individual but economically productive actions are under the control of the rest of the population...including dictating what jobs he can and can't do, how he does them, and up to 100% taxation.

I think this hypothetical question suffers a little from a lack of data.

One can here construct a setting where this one innocent individual, when economically enslaved, just does not have to suffer the consequences. So assuming he'll be taxed with 100%, the rest of the world just has to provide all the natural goods he wishes for. And while everybody is theoretically able to tell him which jobs he has to take and how he does them, in practice everybody just agrees to take no advantage of that. And why shouldn't they? Everybody's happy and without any needs...It might even go so far that the people, being happy and without any needs, regard any such agreement as redundant.

The same can easily be applied to this individuals total enslavement.

Additionally, albeit there might not be any need for this, to garantuee his state of immunity, the penalty for meddling with this individuals affairs would be severe.

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