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Brian4Liberty
03-28-2017, 11:25 PM
On a local news story tonight, the term "aggressive individualism" was used to describe the apparent evil that exists at Uber. It was used by Jennifer Chatman, a business school professor at UC Berkeley. It was on a story about diversity reports, which most large tech companies produce, but was absent so far at Uber. Uber is under the gun for not being diverse enough. They have slightly more men, for one thing.

This was on the heels of a somewhat orgasmic story about Hillary Clinton making an appearance. Jesus himself would not receive such glowing accolades.

Apparently individualism itself is the new target for the social justice left. Conform to their collective, or be labeled an outlaw...

Videos at links:

http://www.ktvu.com/news/ktvu-local-news/244437937-story
http://www.ktvu.com/news/244605409-story

fedupinmo
03-29-2017, 06:23 AM
I self identify as an individual. Fuck 'em.

Anti Federalist
03-29-2017, 06:34 AM
I self identify as an individual. Fuck 'em.

Yeah, this.

shakey1
03-29-2017, 06:36 AM
http://i.quoteaddicts.com/media/quotes/3/120613-star-trek-borg-quotes-resistance-is-futile.jpg

merkelstan
03-29-2017, 07:11 AM
I didn't know companies had to file 'diversity reports'. Thanks.

osan
03-29-2017, 07:24 AM
On a local news story tonight, the term "aggressive individualism" was used to describe the apparent evil that exists at Uber. It was used by Jennifer Chatman, a business school professor at UC Berkeley. It was on a story about diversity reports, which most large tech companies produce, but was absent so far at Uber. Uber is under the gun for not being diverse enough. They have slightly more men, for one thing.

The only surprising thing there is that the issue came to fore so late. I'd have thunk it would have reared its genetically misshapen head five or more years earlier as the Age Of Obama took to bloom, what with all the yenta-like emphasis on bitterness, envy, and the hatred that is the product of such parentage.


Apparently individualism itself is the new target for the social justice left. Conform to their collective, or be labeled an outlaw...

Nothing new there, save the level of directness of expression. Prior, the calls of "burn the witch!" against individualists had been shrouded in a fog of the tacit, always hinting in some manner reminiscent of a weakly-scented fart. Apparently, that is no longer the case. "They're" coming out, guns blazing. After all, what have they to lose in the wake of the apparent shellacking they took, this past election? I suspect for many of the ilk, their very mortal existences on this earth seem threatened, what with all this talk of efficiency, shrinking government, and so forth. Forget that none of it is likely to become real; the merest toehold by which their shrieks may be claimed valid is all that is required precisely because shrieking is all that such people do. They are shrieking. They define it. They are made of it, which leads me to wonder what will happen to them should the day of ultimate victory arrive for Themme. On that, the frabjous day, shall the shriekers not only have become unnecessary, but dangerous to Theire victory and the new status quo? Once the city is taken and secured, are those men with all those guns not become something of a potential threat, left idle and with no further purpose to which one might apply them, given the severe limitations of their utility?

I have to admit that there is a morbid little corner of me that would like to see that day, if for no other reason than to witness Themme turning on the useful idiots upon whom they so heavily relied to do most of the heavy lifting in the building of the Final Empire. The looks of astonishment by those imbecile "progressive" lapdogs and other stooges who today make so many strident noises about "social injustice" etc., would have to be truly impressive in pure entertainment value. To watch them being corralled and silenced once and for all by the very authorities they so faithfully served as so many fluffers in a giant low-rent global porn production, would prove most satisfying; especially the part with the cattle cars. I'd like to see just one more cattle car episode, only this time hosting those who actually deserve such rewards. Not very charitable of me, but why should my largesse extend to those who contributed so devotedly and with such dedication to the theft of my freedoms? I could watch such people literally burn alive and feel nothing but a sense of justice in the event.

Gettin' old... and really mean. Don't care a whit about it, either. :)

otherone
03-29-2017, 07:27 AM
http://i.quoteaddicts.com/media/quotes/3/120613-star-trek-borg-quotes-resistance-is-futile.jpg

https://static.infowars.com/2012/07/i/general/YouDidntBuildThat-legosa.jpeg

otherone
03-29-2017, 07:29 AM
http://www.snopes.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/takes-a-village-quote.jpg

http://www.floppingaces.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/ClintonBorg.jpg

osan
03-29-2017, 08:04 AM
http://i.quoteaddicts.com/media/quotes/3/120613-star-trek-borg-quotes-resistance-is-futile.jpg

Obama of Borg... fits so well, it's scary.

osan
03-29-2017, 08:05 AM
http://www.snopes.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/takes-a-village-quote.jpg

http://www.floppingaces.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/ClintonBorg.jpg

Lesbotus of Borg.

YEEEESH...

Brian4Liberty
03-29-2017, 10:02 AM
There are not many hits on Google for the term "aggressive individualism", but not surprisingly, it does appear to be used in articles on feminism, Afrocentrism, LGBTQ, etc.

For example, the following article on a feminist site by someone who feels that the American "myth" of rugged individualism conflicts with her native culture.


3 Ways the US Uses Individualism to Blame Victims for Their Own Suffering

Filed Under: Articles, Posts Tagged With: Fem 101 - November 17, 2015

“If somebody hits you, don’t hit them back,” my father told me. “Run away and look for an adult.”

It was the best piece of advice he gave me, and I’m grateful that he taught me to be nonviolent at a young age. Unfortunately, he was the only authority figure in my life to bestow this guidance. For the vast majority of the rest of my life, I was told the complete opposite.

When I reached elementary school, I started learning about the virtues of “standing up for yourself.” I was taught that the preservation of one’s pride was of the utmost importance, even if it meant violent retaliation against those who you feel have wronged you.

Conversely, our family was Buddhist, and we were taught to be peaceful. In addition, my parents came from Vietnam and escaped from the country when it was in turmoil, so they were more concerned with my survival than they were of teaching me about pride.

But these ideas clashed with “American exceptionalism,” something I didn’t learn until several years later.

I was taught that we were the best country in the world. It gave me a sense of pride and arrogance that I never had before, believing that I could do anything to anyone I wanted.

I later learned about Capitalism, the Declaration of Independence, the Founding Fathers, and other American mythology, and my father’s advice was in the rearview mirror – a distant memory from a time I was more innocent. I internalized these American beliefs because they were taught to me by other authority figures.

When I say “American mythology,” I’m talking about the story that we tell ourselves of who we are as a nation. I mean the constant reiteration of “The American Dream” – that you, as a strong individual, can make it if you just work hard enough.

I’m talking about how we have a narrative of aggressive individualism that’s been indoctrinated into our psyches at an early age so pervasively that the likeliness of ever challenging it is slim to none.

I understand the allure. Aggressive individualism is a powerful feeling.

But this alluring mythology has troubling connotations. The more our mythology harps on how we are strong individuals that can overcome anything, the more we blame ourselves when we can’t live up to those expectations.

We blame ourselves for our own shortcomings, which makes us likelier to blame others for theirs as well.

Our mythology is not a universal truth. It’s simply a set of ideas – and ideas can be challenged.

These ideas are repetitions that your pride is more important than anything else in the world. They are reiterations that everything you do – all of your successes and failures – rest solely on your shoulders.

They lead you to hold such a strong sense of individualism that you feel that you can overcome anything despite any historical and sociological evidence that may suggest otherwise. And if you can’t overcome insurmountable obstacles, you are taught to blame yourself.

So, to unpack such ingrained narratives, we must look at the core of these beliefs and question them – because an unchallenged idea can be extremely dangerous.

1. ‘Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death’

Our mythology begins with our Founding Fathers standing up to the authority of the British Crown and breaking free from their rule.

At the outset, we are rebels – and the ideas of “independence” and “freedom” are very important to us. In this context, “give me liberty or give me death” is a powerful statement from one country to another: We will not be pushed around.
...
Fighting your own battles is seen as a virtue under any and all circumstances, even for children. Seeking help from – or working with – others is a sign of weakness.

Leading children to believe that they must handle verbally and physically abusive situations on their own is a form of child abuse. A classmate once followed me home from school and punched me in the stomach. I took my dad’s advice, ran away, and told some adults. He stopped bullying me shortly after.

I felt good about the outcome, but other students ridiculed me for “tattling.” They couldn’t believe that I’d let someone wound my pride that way, and at the time, I had no idea that pride was such a virtue. That was something I had to learn over time.
...
2. ‘Pull Yourself Up by Your Bootstraps’ (Also Known As ‘The American Dream’)

A few months ago, I was heartbroken to hear one of my friends speak with such self-hating defeat in his voice, “I can’t find a job. I’m so broke. It’s my fault. I’m trying my best, but if I can’t find a job, it must mean I’m just not trying hard enough.”

He refused to blame anyone other than himself.

Whenever I even tried to bring up that the economy was down or that people in general are struggling to find jobs, he told me that he didn’t want to be one of those people who blamed society for his problems.

The fact that he grew up with no money and had to take care of his family since he was fifteen years old was a non-factor to him. Those, he said, were just “excuses.”

Without realizing it, he was regurgitating beliefs we learned in school.

We were taught so many rags to riches stories by teachers – about how so-and-so started with nothing, pulled himself up by the bootstraps, and became a millionaire – from history class to literature courses.

I didn’t realize at the time that the implication was that if it’s possible for them, it’s possible for anyone – that if you aren’t a rags to riches story, then you have nobody to blame but yourself.

Not only is this viewpoint inaccurate and cruel, but it also teaches children at a very young age that lacking empathy is an admirable trait. Pulling yourself up by your bootstraps is fundamentally a capitalistic mentality.

Empathy is the ability to put yourself in someone else’s shoes and think outside of yourself, while American Capitalism exalts ruthless pragmatism (look at how many fans the villainous Frank Underwood has), which is the antithesis of empathy.

To become a sufficient capitalist, one must – at least partially – shut off the empathetic part of their brain and not think about the consequences of potentially destroying their competitors’ livelihoods, and in some cases, their lives.

If a capitalist gets too lost in empathy, they could lose the ruthlessness necessary to achieve financial success. Lacking empathy mixed with victim-blaming (including victims who blame themselves) makes for a dangerous combination.

By encouraging people to believe that they are the only ones responsible for their own successes and failures, we subtly attach morality with financial worth. We imply that with hard work comes success, which in turn means that failure comes from laziness.

As a result, we cultivate disdain for those with lower incomes because we equate poverty with an unwillingness to work hard, and furthermore, view poverty as a trait to vilify.

We kick ourselves and others when we’re down, and meanwhile, we root for the rich and the wealthy, whom take advantage of us all because we equate affluence with success and hard work.

Every time I hear about someone who is struggling, I still have an initial instinct to wonder what mistakes they made in their life to become that way because I was taught the same victim-blaming narratives as everyone else.

I’ve had to train myself to turn on my empathy and question what was always taught to me.

Doing so makes it easier for me to challenge the systems in place and feel compassion for those who are less fortunate, and it stops the toxic cycle of blaming the victim.

3. ‘Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness’

On its face, “the pursuit of happiness” sounds wonderful. Pursuing happiness is such a hopeful concept, and it’s written in our Declaration of Independence.

However, the idea of “the pursuit of happiness” will always have plausible deniability. It can always be used as a scapegoat to attack those who have failed to “pull themselves up by their bootstraps.”

When I was in college and heard my classmates lamenting about injustices in the United States, a conservative would always chime in with the narrative that happiness is not “guaranteed,” only the pursuit is (and a speech about “personal responsibility” would soon follow).

Therefore, one can conclude that failure to achieve happiness is a personal failure, because our Declaration of Independence implies that society has given everyone a fair opportunity (pursuit) and it’s up to the individual to create success on their own.

Thus, those who are struggling and fail to achieve success are victim-blamed by their own Declaration of Independence, which is our sacred document. If only the pursuit is promised, the only thing we’re really guaranteed is the intangible idea of hope.

This makes second-guessing the Declaration of Independence a very delicate act – because to ask others to question the logic of our so-called “inalienable rights” is asking them to consciously shatter their hopes, and for some people, hope is all they have.

Many people will die defending the system that failed them because it’s too difficult to admit that the structure never favored them to begin with. It’s too devastating to accept that we were fed so many lies, and I think this is a large reason why many people victim-blame.

I’ve seen people actually blame Tamir Rice for getting shot by the police within seconds of arriving on the scene. People have asked what the student in South Carolina did to deserve getting beaten and dragged by a police officer inside her classroom. Comedians have made countless jokes asking what Rihanna said to Chris Brown to deserve getting physically assaulted.

In these instances, the focus is all on the victims – and we give less criticism to bullies and predators because if we condemn them, we’re at least partially admitting to the failings of our society.

Admitting that we, in part, cultivate, create, and protect bullies is much a harder concept to swallow than figuring out whether or not the victim deserved what happened to them.

When people spout such vicious victim-blaming rhetoric, I see people who are obviously dripping with hatred and bigotry, but I also see people who desperately fight to preserve order because are deathly afraid of people attacking the very system that they’ve put so much faith in.

They need order to stay intact because the alternative, which is the exposure that we’ve all been sold lies and propaganda that damage the vast majority of us, is too difficult to bear.

Or they’re so desperately afraid that the system might change into something they don’t recognize because they are currently benefitting in several ways, namely our culture’s favoritism of bullies and predators. The thought of losing their status or privilege fills them with terror.

Ironically, in many ways, this current structure likely doesn’t benefit them as much as they believe.

***

The system really only aids those who know how to obtain keep power by cheating the game. It encourages predatory behavior because more than anyone else, ruthless people reap the rewards.

It brainwashes us into thinking that oppressive behavior is a natural state of being when the reality is, very few people are born without a conscience. But the very essence of our society encourages people to have diminished empathy and remorse in order to succeed financially, which, by definition, encourages sociopathic thoughts and behaviors.

I believe we can stop the cycle of blaming victims, lacking empathy, and creating monsters if we collectively pondered where our beliefs came from, who taught them to us, and why we believe these ideas.

I think most people would be astonished to realize that through no fault of their own, they were indoctrinated at an early age.

If we can break out of our own individual bubbles and work with one another, we might realize that most of us suffer from similar hardships. We can begin building our collective empathy and start showing compassion for one another.

And together, maybe we can see that aggressive individualism is toxic for a society, and hopefully we can realize that we’re all in this together.

Maybe then, we can actually pursue genuine happiness in a meaningful way.


Robin Tran is a Contributing Writer for Everyday Feminism. She is a standup comedian and blogger, and she holds a BA in English from UC Irvine. In early 2015, Robin came out as transgender woman and has written about her firsthand experiences ever since. She has performed at the Improv, Mad House Comedy Club, and the Comedy Palace, and her articles have been published in xoJane and Time.com.
...
http://everydayfeminism.com/2015/11/us-individualism-victim-blame/

Brian4Liberty
03-29-2017, 10:10 AM
How Disablist Western Ideas of ‘Self-Determination’ Undermine Social Justice and 5 Ways to Make It Right (http://everydayfeminism.com/2015/03/self-determination-disablist/)
March 15, 2015 by A.J. Withers


...
In many Indigenous world views, the individual is not a rugged self-made individual, but emerges in and through community.

Indeed, the notion of an independent individual self is a European concept that is being imposed around the world as part of a colonial-imperialist project.

When people like me – white settlers – take up the language of self-determination, it tends to be applied to a very different understanding of the self.
...
These are just examples, there are so many things that we can all do.

1. On the level of discourse, challenge the way that self-determination and independence are produced and work towards supporting interdependence, mutual aid, collectivity, and anti-colonialism.

2. Work together to replace the capitalist values that are deeply embedded within activist communities with cultures of care in which everyone is viewed as making important contributions and intrinsically valuable.

On a practical level, this means reconfiguring leadership not around work product, but around lived experience, and attributing meaningful value to things like compassion, dedication, and emotional labor – things that are, not coincidentally, also more typically associated with women and femininity.

3. Ask for help. Disabled or not, we all need help with stuff sometimes. We all have hard times.

Asking for help makes it easier for other people to ask for help and shows that you understand that none of us are rugged individuals. As long we structure help as nondisabled and helped as disabled, we are reinforcing problematic divisions that depict disabled people as excessively needy and nondisabled people as independent.

4. Appreciate and celebrate disabled people’s sexualities. Begin by deconstructing the ways that you have been taught to find normative (white, cis, thin, non-disabled) people attractive. This may also include asking us out on dates and it definitely includes building safe and accessible community spaces.

5. Develop a complex relationship with solidarity. Come to it not through guilt but through love, respect, and an understanding of its necessity while recognizing that the notion that there is an “other” we need to support is deeply problematic.

Because oppressions are interlocked, so too are our fates.

tod evans
03-29-2017, 10:15 AM
4. Appreciate and celebrate disabled people’s sexualities. Begin by deconstructing the ways that you have been taught to find normative (white, cis, thin, non-disabled) people attractive. This may also include asking us out on dates and it definitely includes building safe and accessible community spaces.

:eek:

http://video.metro.co.uk/pix/met/2016/09/06/14/37F9302400000578-0-image-a-2_1473167627389.jpg

Brian4Liberty
03-29-2017, 12:16 PM
...
They are shrieking. They define it. They are made of it, which leads me to wonder what will happen to them should the day of ultimate victory arrive for Themme. On that, the frabjous day, shall the shriekers not only have become unnecessary, but dangerous to Theire victory and the new status quo? Once the city is taken and secured, are those men with all those guns not become something of a potential threat, left idle and with no further purpose to which one might apply them, given the severe limitations of their utility?

I have to admit that there is a morbid little corner of me that would like to see that day, if for no other reason than to witness Themme turning on the useful idiots upon whom they so heavily relied to do most of the heavy lifting in the building of the Final Empire. The looks of astonishment by those imbecile "progressive" lapdogs and other stooges who today make so many strident noises about "social injustice" etc., would have to be truly impressive in pure entertainment value. To watch them being corralled and silenced once and for all by the very authorities they so faithfully served as so many fluffers in a giant low-rent global porn production, would prove most satisfying; especially the part with the cattle cars. I'd like to see just one more cattle car episode, only this time hosting those who actually deserve such rewards. Not very charitable of me, but why should my largesse extend to those who contributed so devotedly and with such dedication to the theft of my freedoms? I could watch such people literally burn alive and feel nothing but a sense of justice in the event.

We've seen it far too many times already. Soviet Russia, Pol Pot's Cambodia, Mao's China, Vietnam Nam, North Korea. The "compassionate" collective turns into the conform or die collective, at which point, a large percentage of them do die. We see it in the streets today with the violence of the "peaceful" and "inclusive" left, who are in reality are neither peaceful or inclusive.

seapilot
03-29-2017, 12:39 PM
Here I always thought Aggressive Collectivism is evil. Good thing there are highly educated professors at UC Berkeley to straighten that out.

osan
03-29-2017, 12:50 PM
There are not many hits on Google for the term "aggressive individualism", but not surprisingly, it does appear to be used in articles on feminism, Afrocentrism, LGBTQ, etc.

For example, the following article on a feminist site by someone who feels that the American "myth" of rugged individualism conflicts with her native culture.

Wow... those people are demented in a spectacular way.

I have a theory about feminists and so on: their mother's dropped them on their heads as infants.

ETA: These people ought to be beaten verily. Why? Because.

If they don't need reasons of better validity, then neither do I.

timosman
03-29-2017, 12:58 PM
I didn't know companies had to file 'diversity reports'. Thanks.

The government money come with all kinds of strings attached.

otherone
03-29-2017, 01:05 PM
The government money come with all kinds of strings attached.

You mean taxpayer money? From those aggressive individuals who work their asses off to put food on their (and parasite's) tables?

jllundqu
03-29-2017, 01:36 PM
http://www.snopes.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/takes-a-village-quote.jpg

http://www.floppingaces.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/ClintonBorg.jpg

http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/article/2016/mar/23/hillary-clinton-quotes-Internet-complete/


"The above-displayed message was not uttered by Hillary Clinton and was not published in the 2005 book Rewriting History by Dick Morris," according to Snopes. "We found no record of the quote in any major publication. In fact, the first mention of this quote came in October 2015, more than a decade after Morris' book was published, on a Tumblr page dedicated to generating fake Hillary Clinton quotes."

Fake quote. Just sayin

Athan
03-29-2017, 01:37 PM
Lesbotus of Borg.

YEEEESH...

You just need that borg drone of hillary to have a tactical dildo.

otherone
03-29-2017, 01:50 PM
http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/article/2016/mar/23/hillary-clinton-quotes-Internet-complete/



Fake quote. Just sayin

I am not going to comment on what I did or did not say back in the late '90s.
-Hillary Clinton

jllundqu
03-29-2017, 01:52 PM
"I ain't down with that slavery shit. Bitches hate slavery."

--Thomas Jefferson

Iowa
03-29-2017, 03:50 PM
http://www.snopes.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/takes-a-village-quote.jpg

http://www.floppingaces.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/ClintonBorg.jpg



That pig is disgusting, but I didn't know she was that blatant. It shouldn't surprise me though. They just say it and these disgusting people buy it. Makes me sick.

Anti Federalist
03-29-2017, 04:08 PM
Wow... those people are demented in a spectacular way.

I have a theory about feminists and so on: their mother's dropped them on their heads as infants.

ETA: These people ought to be beaten verily. Why? Because.

If they don't need reasons of better validity, then neither do I.

We fight, and preserve this unique culture of individual freedom and independence.

Or we die, drowned in a human wave of wretched refuse from around the globe than can not, will not comprehend.

What's it gonna be?

Ender
03-29-2017, 04:33 PM
We fight, and preserve this unique culture of individual freedom and independence.

Or we die, drowned in a human wave of wretched refuse from around the globe than can not, will not comprehend.

What's it gonna be?

William Wallace.

Swordsmyth
03-29-2017, 05:40 PM
The only surprising thing there is that the issue came to fore so late. I'd have thunk it would have reared its genetically misshapen head five or more years earlier as the Age Of Obama took to bloom, what with all the yenta-like emphasis on bitterness, envy, and the hatred that is the product of such parentage.



Nothing new there, save the level of directness of expression. Prior, the calls of "burn the witch!" against individualists had been shrouded in a fog of the tacit, always hinting in some manner reminiscent of a weakly-scented fart. Apparently, that is no longer the case. "They're" coming out, guns blazing. After all, what have they to lose in the wake of the apparent shellacking they took, this past election? I suspect for many of the ilk, their very mortal existences on this earth seem threatened, what with all this talk of efficiency, shrinking government, and so forth. Forget that none of it is likely to become real; the merest toehold by which their shrieks may be claimed valid is all that is required precisely because shrieking is all that such people do. They are shrieking. They define it. They are made of it, which leads me to wonder what will happen to them should the day of ultimate victory arrive for Themme. On that, the frabjous day, shall the shriekers not only have become unnecessary, but dangerous to Theire victory and the new status quo? Once the city is taken and secured, are those men with all those guns not become something of a potential threat, left idle and with no further purpose to which one might apply them, given the severe limitations of their utility?

I have to admit that there is a morbid little corner of me that would like to see that day, if for no other reason than to witness Themme turning on the useful idiots upon whom they so heavily relied to do most of the heavy lifting in the building of the Final Empire. The looks of astonishment by those imbecile "progressive" lapdogs and other stooges who today make so many strident noises about "social injustice" etc., would have to be truly impressive in pure entertainment value. To watch them being corralled and silenced once and for all by the very authorities they so faithfully served as so many fluffers in a giant low-rent global porn production, would prove most satisfying; especially the part with the cattle cars. I'd like to see just one more cattle car episode, only this time hosting those who actually deserve such rewards. Not very charitable of me, but why should my largesse extend to those who contributed so devotedly and with such dedication to the theft of my freedoms? I could watch such people literally burn alive and feel nothing but a sense of justice in the event.

Gettin' old... and really mean. Don't care a whit about it, either. :)

I am not yet old and am already this mean, I suspect you already were at my age too.

Swordsmyth
03-29-2017, 05:46 PM
Wow... those people are demented in a spectacular way.

I have a theory about feminists and so on: their mother's dropped them on their heads as infants.

ETA: These people ought to be beaten verily. Why? Because.

If they don't need reasons of better validity, then neither do I.


Their particular malady comes from never being disciplined, so your solution though better left to GOD, is nevertheless quite on target.

otherone
03-29-2017, 06:20 PM
Wow... those people are demented in a spectacular way.

I have a theory about feminists and so on: their mother's dropped them on their heads as infants.

ETA: These people ought to be beaten verily. Why? Because.

If they don't need reasons of better validity, then neither do I.

There is an entire generation who have been taught that they are "special", not from what they've achieved, but because they exist.
"Rugged Individualism" teaches children that THEY control their destiny. This is the role of the father...to teach their children to take control of their lives.
This is in opposition to the current, "I'm a precious snowflake victim" mentality.

Brian4Liberty
03-29-2017, 07:59 PM
Wow... those people are demented in a spectacular way.

I have a theory about feminists and so on: their mother's dropped them on their heads as infants.

ETA: These people ought to be beaten verily. Why? Because.

If they don't need reasons of better validity, then neither do I.

She gives a reason for it:


Conversely, our family was Buddhist, and we were taught to be peaceful. In addition, my parents came from Vietnam and escaped from the country when it was in turmoil, so they were more concerned with my survival than they were of teaching me about pride.

But these ideas clashed with “American exceptionalism,” something I didn’t learn until several years later.

"Clashed". It's a cultural clash, and your culture is bad, is incompatible, and must be eliminated.

Granted, her logic is pretty convoluted. She mentions being "peaceful" as her value, yet somehow that value conflates and blooms into all kinds of other things. Somehow being peaceful is the opposite of being individualistic. And compassion and empathy are the opposite of being individualistic. And pride is also mutually exclusive with peace, empathy and compassion.

osan
03-29-2017, 08:42 PM
She gives a reason for it:



"Clashed". It's a cultural clash, and your culture is bad, is incompatible, and must be eliminated.

Granted, her logic is pretty convoluted. She mentions being "peaceful" as her value, yet somehow that value conflates and blooms into all kinds of other things. Somehow being peaceful is the opposite of being individualistic. And compassion and empathy are the opposite of being individualistic. And pride is also mutually exclusive with peace, empathy and compassion.

As I wrote before, mama dropped her on her head.

Also recall I mentioned VALID reasons. This nonsense fails to make that cut. And if you can't think clearly enough to speak as if you were not an imbecile, then perhaps it is best you hold your noise.

Origanalist
03-29-2017, 08:48 PM
There is an entire generation who have been taught that they are "special", not from what they've achieved, but because they exist.
"Rugged Individualism" teaches children that THEY control their destiny. This is the role of the father...to teach their children to take control of their lives.
This is in opposition to the current, "I'm a precious snowflake victim" mentality.

You are promoting the eeeeeeevil patriarchy.

timosman
03-29-2017, 08:53 PM
You mean taxpayer money? From those aggressive individuals who work their asses off to put food on their (and parasite's) tables?

This way it is better for you. Trust me.:rolleyes:

otherone
03-29-2017, 08:56 PM
This way it is better for you. Trust me.:rolleyes:

From Doctor Zhivago,: It is better this way, Comrade."

timosman
03-29-2017, 08:58 PM
From Doctor Zhivago,: It is better this way, Comrade."

I am glad you are getting it. This way I won't have to tell you what happened to those who didn't. :cool:

otherone
03-29-2017, 09:01 PM
I am glad you are getting it. This way I won't have to tell you what happened to those who didn't. :cool:

Thanks, dood. I'd wager I'm decades ahead of you.

timosman
03-29-2017, 10:51 PM
Thanks, dood. I'd wager I'm decades ahead of you.

Do not scare me!;)

Brian4Liberty
05-01-2017, 09:37 PM
And The Pope chimes in...

Pope Francis Is WAY OFF on Libertarianism (http://www.ronpaullibertyreport.com/archives/pope-francis-is-way-off-on-libertarianism)
By Chris Rossini - 5/1/2017


Sadly, the current Pope doesn't appear to have an affinity for individual liberty and voluntary interactions between individuals. In fact, his understanding of libertarianism is sorely lacking. Libertarianism is rooted in the idea that no one (and no group) may aggressively use violence against anyone else. Violent force is for defending oneself only.

​Where to begin with the Pope's latest statements?

Somehow, Pope Francis sees American universities as bastions of libertarianism.

Tom DiLorenzo at LewRockwell.com takes that myth apart:


Pope Francis recently delivered another mean-spirited, hateful diatribe about the “grave risks associated with the invasion of . . . libertarian individualism at high strata of culture and in university education.”

This is exactly the opposite of reality regarding university education: University education has been almost completely taken over by the pope’s fellow leftists whose true “religion” is cultural Marxism, or left-wing political correctness. He must be the only person on the planet who thinks universities are hotbeds of libertarianism.

The Pope also believes that even more regulations should be applied to the financial markets. In other words, the Pope erroneously believes that government force can be used for the betterment of society.

It cannot.

Ryan McMaken of The Mises Institute dispels this mistaken idea:


The Pope has also repeatedly suggested that he believes financial markets are essentially unregulated and that many of the the world's regimes are laissez-faire minimalist states. Obviously, such claims can easily be shown to be empirically false. The financial sector is one of the most heavily regulated worldwide, and the governments in the richest countries in the world — the United States included — spend approximately one-fifth of total GDP on government welfare programs alone. Indeed, when it comes to government spending on health care — not private spending, mind you — the United States — that supposed bastion of "free-market" thinking — is the fourth highest in the world.

If the Pope really wanted to stick it to Wall Street, he'd call for the abolition of all government regulations. The Pope would call for Wall Street to compete in a free market. After all, the free market is the harshest regulator in the world. It plays no favorites and shows no mercy to anyone.

Wall Street would fight against such an idea to the death!

Wall Street firms (and every other major corporation) welcome "government regulations".

"Regulators" can be bought and controlled. That's so much easier than competing in a free market.

There are so many government regulations that hardly anyone can keep up. Even the government itself must pick and choose which regulations it's going to enforce.

Creating more regulations does nothing except hurt small business and entrepreneurs who don't have the money to hire an army of lawyers to decipher them all.

Government regulations are the best friend of big business.

Finally, the Pope goes full collectivist on us.

Tom DiLorenzo again:


In his latest attack on free societies the pope denounced libertarianism as a “selfish ideal” and a “fallacious paradigm that minimizes the common good.” Libertarianism teaches that “only the individual gives value to things,” ... He then repeated every collectivist’s mantra that “the libertarian individual denies the value of the common good.” For good measure, he also threw in the standard leftist line that freedom supposedly causes the “marginalization of the more vulnerable majority.”

To say that libertarianism is a "selfish ideal" is rather odd, since it means no aggressive violence against others. Libertarianism means "live and let live".

​The ideal of libertarianism is "I keep my hands off of you and your property, and you keep your hands off of me and my property."

Allow anyone to use aggressive violence and society must necessary fall apart. Make aggressive force "legal" and you merely expedite the process.

Finally, only individuals have the ability to value since only individuals think. We value things subjectively. One person may value (A) with every fiber of his being, while another hates (A) and a third person can care less either way.

Hundreds of millions (literally) have died at the hands of dictators who murdered for the "common good".

Live and let live...and hands off.

Peace.

Libertarianism isn't complicated, and it surely is not to be feared (unless of course you have a lust for power).

With all the free literature available on the ideas of liberty and voluntaryism, one hopes the Pope Francis someday finds his way to some of it.
...
http://www.ronpaullibertyreport.com/archives/pope-francis-is-way-off-on-libertarianism

Dr.No.
05-02-2017, 12:05 AM
I do think there is this underlying issue where just because people choose to participate in something, it is supposed to be good or OK. Like, if I criticize you for smoking drugs or something, it is considered some kind of violation because you are an individual living your life how you want to live it, and are therefore beyond reproach. Or suggesting just because an app like Uber or AirBnB exists, ridesharing and home-sharing aren't exactly positive social developments.

timosman
05-02-2017, 01:09 AM
Crab mentality - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crab_mentality

Suzanimal
05-12-2017, 05:43 PM
And The Pope chimes in...

Pope Francis Is WAY OFF on Libertarianism (http://www.ronpaullibertyreport.com/archives/pope-francis-is-way-off-on-libertarianism)
By Chris Rossini - 5/1/2017

The Pope and Libertarians: My Response

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gT3GBcY3QKY

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gT3GBcY3QKY

nobody's_hero
05-13-2017, 06:39 AM
I've never once seen a female taxi cab driver. Don't know why they singled-out Uber, probably because they don't like to see capitalism work.

I mean, it tears them up inside to see a loosely-regulated industry thrive.

r3volution 3.0
05-13-2017, 01:30 PM
Pope Francis recently delivered another mean-spirited, hateful diatribe about the “grave risks associated with the invasion of . . . libertarian individualism at high strata of culture and in university education.” ...This is exactly the opposite of reality regarding university education: University education has been almost completely taken over by the pope’s fellow leftists whose true “religion” is cultural Marxism, or left-wing political correctness. He must be the only person on the planet who thinks universities are hotbeds of libertarianism. ...The Pope has also repeatedly suggested that he believes financial markets are essentially unregulated and that many of the the world's regimes are laissez-faire minimalist states. Obviously, such claims can easily be shown to be empirically false.

The Red Pope knows it's false.

The left has always pretended to be the underdog, and always will, even if they're utterly dominant (which they are).

Leftism is fundamentally revolutionary, always seeking to destroy something; it requires enemies.

And if all its enemies have been destroyed? ...it invents new ones.

See, if it ever acknowledged its own victory, it would have no one left to blame for the world's problems.

Brian4Liberty
08-08-2017, 09:17 PM
Google Memo bump.

timosman
08-08-2017, 09:20 PM
I didn't know companies had to file 'diversity reports'. Thanks.

Your tax dollars at work.

oyarde
08-08-2017, 09:26 PM
I am a Great American Patriot and have set an example by creating my own Liberty . In order to do that , a little aggressive individualism is helpful.

nikcers
08-08-2017, 09:31 PM
Seems like some sort of marketing campaign. With the new pay scaling Uber is basically a pyramid scheme. They will do anything and everything to get more drivers out there, I bet they even do a bunch of press about how they were changing their ways or some shit.

Brian4Liberty
09-27-2017, 11:29 AM
We fight, and preserve this unique culture of individual freedom and independence.

The battle now is between radical collectivism vs. individualism. Thus, the "libertarian" is ridiculed on all sides by those who want to form collectives. The neoconservatives want their war collective, and the left want their socialist-communist collective. And those sides are by no means opposing (at their roots they are the same). They are working together. And their common enemy is anyone who supports individualism.

acptulsa
09-27-2017, 11:46 AM
There is an entire generation who have been taught that they are "special", not from what they've achieved, but because they exist.
"Rugged Individualism" teaches children that THEY control their destiny. This is the role of the father...to teach their children to take control of their lives.
This is in opposition to the current, "I'm a precious snowflake victim" mentality.

Well, one thing is certain. If you want everyone to have equal opportunity to be a victim, democracy is the way to go.

If you don't believe me, just ask Socrates. Or anyone else who was ever lynched by a mob.

Anti Federalist
09-27-2017, 11:50 AM
The battle now is between radical collectivism vs. individualism. Thus, the "libertarian" is ridiculed on all sides by those who want to form collectives. The neoconservatives want their war collective, and the left want their socialist-communist collective. And those sides are by no means opposing (at their roots they are the same). They are working together. And their common enemy is anyone who supports individualism.

Yes, this.

PierzStyx
09-27-2017, 11:52 AM
Lesbotus of Borg.

YEEEESH...

Lolliary of Borg

jllundqu
09-27-2017, 11:55 AM
It would appear that I suffer from two distinct afflictions:

Toxic Masculinity

and

Aggressive Individualism


Yeah.... I like the sound of that. :cool:

PierzStyx
09-27-2017, 11:55 AM
The battle now is between radical collectivism vs. individualism. Thus, the "libertarian" is ridiculed on all sides by those who want to form collectives. The neoconservatives want their war collective, and the left want their socialist-communist collective. And those sides are by no means opposing (at their roots they are the same). They are working together. And their common enemy is anyone who supports individualism.

There is a term for this: Nationalism. Those who place their national identity ahead of the doctrines of Liberty are just falling into the same trap. On here you constantly hear people cavalierly talk about globalism v. nationalism and defend nationalism as if it were somehow better than globalism. Yet, as you note, at their core they are the exact same things. They are not opposing ideologies, they are complementing ones. And they work together to crush those who support individualism.

Raginfridus
09-27-2017, 12:25 PM
There is a term for this: Nationalism. Those who place their national identity ahead of the doctrines of Liberty are just falling into the same trap. On here you constantly hear people cavalierly talk about globalism v. nationalism and defend nationalism as if it were somehow better than globalism. Yet, as you note, at their core they are the exact same things. They are not opposing ideologies, they are complementing ones. And they work together to crush those who support individualism.Where do the Statists fit in?

Raginfridus
09-27-2017, 02:01 PM
Funny how in this world of Nation-States, the free & mighty USA allows us to opt out of the mythical American Nation, but we can't opt out of the State:

http://time.com/money/4298634/expat-expatriate-taxes-us-myths/

Wherever we might expatriate, be certain that if anything "bad" happens in our neighborhood, the USG will leverage our presence to take control of the entire region, with our names and faces slurred across the MSM to stoke pathetic pleas for action - whatever that would look like.

We Murkans have no nation to speak of, those died as a result of the Civil War amendments, but we do have a State; and that leash might be slack, but its still a leash.

PierzStyx
09-27-2017, 02:12 PM
Where do the Statists fit in?

Its statists all the way down.

Raginfridus
09-27-2017, 02:20 PM
Its statists all the way down.What is a State?

osan
09-27-2017, 04:04 PM
What is a State?

Lessee if this helps:

http://freedomisobvious.blogspot.com/2010/03/state.html


The "State"

--> --> Today's entry shall focus upon “the state”. But as has been the habit thus far, let us first consult the dictionary for the relevant definitions of the term. These from a contemporary online source:
state: - noun
1. a politically unified people occupying a definite territory; nation.
2. (sometimes initial capital letterfile:///C:/DOCUME%7E1/OSAN%7E1.COC/LOCALS%7E1/Temp/msohtml1/01/clip_image002.gif) any of the bodies politic which together make up a federal union, as in the United States of America.
3. the body politic as organized for civil rule and government (distinguished from church).


And perhaps more significantly, from the Samuel Johnson dictionary of 1785:

8. Civil power, not ecclesiastical


9. A republick ; a government not monarchical.
"They feared nothing from a state so narrow in compass of land, and so weak, that the strength of their armies has ever been made up of foreign troops.C


16. The principal persons in the government


17. Joined with another word, it signifies publick.
a."I am no courtier, nor versed in state affairs: my life hath rather been contemplative than active" - Bacon
b."Council! What’s that? A pack of bearded slaves, the scavengers that sweep state nuisances and are the greatest."
c."I am accused of reflecting upon great states-folks." - Swift


For completeness sake, let us include definitions of “republick” and “publick” from the same 1785 dictionary:


Republick - noun
1. Commonwealth. State in which the power is lodged in more than one.
2. Common interest; the publick.


Publick – noun
1.The general body of mankind or of a state or nation; the people.



Notice that in every definition the term “state” refers to either an abstract concept or to individual people. In not a single case does “state” refer to anything that stands on its own or with a reality apart from that of individual human beings. As we shall see, this point holds a singular and central significance regarding the truth about “the state” and should be understood and borne in mind by all people interested in freedom and personal liberty.

Given the preceding definitions, it shall be the goal to demonstrate that current notions of “the state,” as commonly held by people and employed by those wielding political power, is a pure, yet very dangerous fiction that has been foisted upon the people and has served mainly to diminish personal freedom and the prosperity of the individual, his communities, and the nation as a whole. No doubt some readers will already be looking askance at the very notion of labeling “the state” in such a manner, but as Voltaire once observed:

“It is difficult to free fools from the chains they revere.”


It may have served better to use the term “the ignorant” in place of “fools”, but delicacy was not always Voltaire's strong suit,. In any event, if one is to accept a condition of existence imposed upon them by others whose moral authority to do so is questionable or absent, it should at least be done with a proper recognition of that which is being accepted, why, what the results are, and by whom or what it is being asked, or more likely, imposed.

There is also the quote attributed to Frederic Bastiat, who keenly observed:

“The state is the great fictitious entity by which everyone seeks to live at the expense of everyone else.”

Such sage observations, once substantially common opinion, have largely fallen away from the awareness of the great body of those we call “the people”. We shall come to see why in short order.

Freedom and servitude are not the same things; they are in fact diametric opposites and should never be confused. This is where Voltaire's acerbically couched observation reveals one of the saddest truths about human behavior: people will often accept a “dog” as a “fish” and deadly poison as vital sustenance at the command of any perceived authority for the sake of fooling themselves into believing something which, were they not to accept it, would by reason dictate their refusal. Rebellion against even the most absurd demands of “the state” is generally regarded as too frightening or inconvenient to undertake. The attendant conflict of conscience is usually too much for individuals to tolerate, causing them to respond by receding into various states of self imposed deception, which serve as lubricants and cushions, enabling them to accept that which would otherwise be clearly unacceptable, were truth and reason allowed to run their course.

Cowardice and lassitude are not, however, the sole causes for accepting a situation that might otherwise be resisted. Good old fashioned ignorance, often instituted through the instrument of misinformation and miseducation, is perhaps the most common basis. It can hardly be claimed that the American people are mainly cowards or lazy. Quite the contrary, they are on the whole very courageous and industrious people, as well as warm, kind, friendly, and generous; all these almost to a fault in many cases. And yet, most Americans live in a state of servile bondage imposed upon them by “the state”. Not only do these people accept such artificially imposed circumstance, many of them revere it, to use Voltaire's characterization, and would defend those who have imposed it upon them even unto their own destruction to preserve that to which they have acceded and to which huge emotional and psychological investments have often been made.

When considered from a distance, such seemingly absurd behavior quickly leads one to ask, “why?” Why would a person or population, any person or population, accept conditions imposed upon them that were in any way detrimental to their personal welfare, happiness, and general quality of life by their peers? One answer, as noted in the previous paragraph, is cowardice and lassitude, but as stated above, the more common cause is ignorance or miseducation, often the product of intentional acts of deception by those in whose interest it stands to ensure a compliant populace. If one does not know that their water is laced with poison, what reason do they have not to drink it down eagerly when they thirst?

This leads the honest man to the need for a close and careful examination of the causes of such misapprehensions of truth, which are great in number and would require many large volumes to address sufficiently. The purpose here, however, is to focus on one of the centrally significant instruments of misinformation used by the culprits who would ultimately see to the subjugation of every human being on the planet while labeling it far less unattractively.

In order to set the scene properly, we must first make explicit a tidbit of truth that many people sense only tacitly:

The interests of those exercising political power are most often in conflict with those over whom the power is exercised.


Such conflicts are not always diametric. The interests in question, in fact, most often lay at some minimally opposing angle to each other such that the collision between them is perceived by the governed as insufficiently significant to warrant exerting effort against it save, perhaps, some initial complaining, after which the point is usually ceded to the governors. This is most carefully orchestrated so as not to arouse the strong and possibly violent dissent of the governed. At the very least, in America it is arranged and executed in order to best guarantee reelection to office for as many cycles as possible.

Equally significant, such action is not necessarily the product of deep, dark conspiracies where the explicit intention is to subjugate and destroy. Rather, it is most likely the product of those well-intentioned persons who are so steadfast in their certainty that what they know is best for all, that they are therefore morally authorized to force their designs of universal salvation, order, and progress upon the people, usually exempting themselves at the same time. Furthermore, they do so with the material ability at their disposal, as well as the willingness to destroy those who pose credible opposition to them.

Bearing in mind this conflict of interest between those governing and the governed, the demand and expectation that people do as the rulers command, no matter how absurd, comes under some scrutiny particularly when labels such as “governor” and “governed” are used, which connote no inherent differences between the classes, save arbitrarily defined relative positioning that connotes no inherent authority of the one over the other. Even relatively uninterested people understand that “governors” are human beings just as they are, sensing no inherent station of superior moral authority. Average people understand that there is no well-reasoned basis for one standing above another with regard to the authority to command people, especially where violations of the latter's civil rights are in question. This truth poses very real practical problems to those who wish to rule without the inconveniences of notions such as equality, civil rights, due process, and limitations on their power. Such problems require eminently practical solutions and the ruling elite have devised one that, as we shall soon see, works fabulously well for them.

In ages past, the solution to the highly inconvenient notion of personal “equality” (a staple concept in tribal life, by the way) was to sell the masses on the notion of a “divine” ruler. The notion of the divinity of a human as separate and superior to all others incorporates as part of its very fabric the idea that such a person is inherently superior to the others and thereby entitled to what practically amounts to unlimited authority. Such persons were magically endowed with characteristics above and beyond that of all other men so as to confer to them superior rights and thereby the absolute and unquestionable authority to command and dispose.

This concept worked well enough for thousands of years whereby the lives of countless persons were corralled and most often delivered into the hands of misery and destruction in accord with the whims of a select few. History abundantly illustrates that the stewardship of the interests of the governed has most often been carried forward in eminently questionable fashion, judging by the overwhelming body of examples of the caprice and crimes of small numbers of people whose tenures as “divine” rulers produced, as a rule, endless bloodshed, poverty, suffering, and general misery for those over whom they exercised power.

A major hitch for the ruling classes came with the Renaissance, which may be argued to have inevitably led to the “discovery” of the scientific method, which in turn paved the way for technological advances in thought, method, and material, which further began to expose the “divine right of kings” for the utter fraud that it is. Later, the “Enlightenment” saw quantum advances in human thought, further exposing the fraud of divine rule under which countless people had suffered and ignominiously died for thousands of years.

Initially, rulers attempted to retain their deep investment in the institutions of divine rule through threats and applications of force in the face of the ironclad results of proper science, but in time it became clear that the tide was turning away from their favor and the futility of their efforts became apparent. The rulers slowly began to realize that another approach was required if their hegemony was to be preserved. To what better solution could they have arrived than to co-opt the very science that threatened their positions and make it work for them rather than against? This is precisely what was done and one of the single greatest advances in despotic rule came as the result of this adaptive shift: the concept of “the state”.

Though morally neutral in character, the notion of “the state” lends itself at least equally well to the establishment and maintenance of tyranny as it does to free living. The neutrality of the concept, having been altered in a subtle and fundamental way, enabled it to be used so as to most fully serve the purposes of despotic rule. This key shift came when the concept was (largely tacitly) imbued with the characteristic of a material reality of its own. One may have to think about that awhile and with some care before its significance becomes apparent. The truth about “the state” is that it exists in one place and manner only, as a concept within the confines of the human brain. That is it. There is absolutely no other reality to its existence.
One may be tempted to protest, pointing to a city such as Washington DCand proclaim that “the state” holds abundant material reality. Yet those people would be sadly and gravely mistaken in that they misidentify buildings, equipment, badges, titles, and words written on paper, etc. as “the state” rather than as nothing more than a collection of material items, ideas, and agreements gathered together and employed as instruments for the purposes of discharging certain functions of governance.

“What is the difference?” one may ask. The difference is fundamental because in accepting an implicit, unsubstantiated assertion of the material reality of “the state”, one then positions themselves only a fraction of a step away from accepting other equally false and even more absurd and dangerous characteristics as part and parcel of it. For example, people speak of “states rights” as if “the state” were a person imbued by birth with civil rights. “States” are ideas with no inherent material reality. How can an idea have rights? It would be sooner acceptable that one's kitchen sink had rights, for at least one can reach out and touch it. Yet people have been taught to accept the insubstantial reality of “the state”, albeit tacitly, as a living entity possessing not only a material existence separate and apart from the people, but also opinions, feelings, interests, plans, possessions, and most significantly, rights just as do individual human beings. But who can touch “the state”? Upon what can a man lay his hands and say “this is the state” and not be in absolute, wholesale error?

To anyone in disagreement, the challenge may be made: demonstrate the absolute material reality of “the state” such that it is placed before the world for all behold and lay hands upon. Demonstrate the existence of “the state” as separate and apart from the people whose very existences convey that of “the state” to succeeding generations. Demonstrate the seat of the so-called “interests, desires, and the rights of “the state”. Demonstrate where “the state” exists unto itself apart from the existence of the very individuals who make up “the people”. Is it not the apex of irony that those whose very existence lends “the state” its only claim to exist are the ones against whom its power and authority are turned to the erosion and destruction of their rights, freedoms, prosperity and even their lives? Anyone demonstrating a separate and standalone reality of “the state” will be the first to have done so in the history of humankind.

If reason and truth have thus far failed to convince, then try a thought experiment where one waves his magic wand and for some period of time, perhaps 1day, every human being on the planet, save the waver, disappears as if they had never existed. Where, then, shall he find “the state”? Nowhere. Why? Because “the state” never existed in the first place, save as an idea that provided the conceptual framework upon which a set of behavioral conventions was hung, and according to which people would comport themselves pursuant to notions deemed beneficial to each and every individual living under its duly constituted authority. And be clear that such granted power and authority can only be considered as “duly constituted” when every it serves every individual citizen equally and only while fully respecting and demurring to their inherent rights.

In a free society, the set of conventions we call “the state” is granted but the smallest handful of narrowly specified powers pursuant to the legitimate roles they are to fulfill in service to all the citizens. Those roles of universal benefit to the people include the guarantee and enforcement of respect for individual civil rights (http://www.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=4532988853130799753&postID=3536827063857418131#_edn1) the administration of justice, the promotion of the general welfare[ii] (http://www.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=4532988853130799753&postID=3536827063857418131#_edn2), the common defense, and the enforcement of contracts. Beyond this small set there is precious little else that could be offered in the way of “services” that would in fact serve every citizen or to which anyone could reasonably claim entitlement. Therefore, one is by virtue of their inborn rights and the attendant status as an equal with their fellow citizens, [I]entitled to have their rights guaranteed and protected by one means or another. We have chosen law and a duly constituted authority of “the state” to so guarantee and protect those rights. One is not, however, entitled to having “the state” provide them with a yacht, should the citizen desire one. The citizen is, however, entitled to acquire that yacht as the legitimate application of his talents and abilities will allow, without interference from any third party. Our nation is rife with interference by “the state” in the private affairs of the citizens and it must be stopped if our freedoms mean anything to us.

Let it be understood that nearly all “state” enforcement power ultimately boils down to the ability to take the lives of citizens with impunity. This fact cannot be overstated and it should be considered carefully until it is fully understood. For those not seeing it, consider any trivial situation where an individual wholly refuses to cooperate the state. The example of a parking ticket may prove illuminating. A citizen is issued a parking ticket, which he refuses to pay for some reason. Eventually a bench warrant is issued and he is arrested during a traffic stop. The citizen’s continued refusal to “cooperate” will ultimately result in the application of physical force. Further refusal will see an escalation in violence that, if continued, ultimately results in the death of the citizen. Death for a parking ticket? That is the universal logical conclusion underlying the position of the authority of “the state”, and in no case will that citizen's death have been about the parking ticket, which is an incidental triviality. The citizen will have been murdered by a "government" goon squad under the imprimatur of "the state" because he refused to obey even the most trivial command. The message there is clear: thou shalt not disobey the state lest thy destruction be visited upon thee.

In the 1936 science fiction classic “Things To Come”, the character known as “The Boss” openly reveals the fraudulent, corrupt, and violent sham-nature of “the state” as commonly practiced around the world. When pressing Dr. Harding after his refusal to cooperate in the manufacture of fuel and poison gas for the “air force”, The Boss lays it out on the table most unequivocally when he says:

“The Combatant State is your father and your mother, your only protector, the totality of your interests. No discipline can be stern enoughfor the man who denies that by word or deed.”

Later in the same scene he declares:

“You are conscripted. You are under my orders now and under no others in the world. I am the master here! I am the State.”

--> In another exchange, this time with the protagonist, John Cabal, The Boss asks:

“What Government are you under?”




To which Cabal responds:


“Common sense. Call us Airmen if you like. We just run ourselves.”


--> --> That last bit about “just run ourselves” is the single greatest affront and outrage any man could commit in the eyes of “the state”, for it suggests the position of central importance they occupy may be something less than people believe it to be. That, of course, cannot be tolerated in any way or measure, necessitating that the notion and all others even remotely like it be eliminated from the thoughts of the people such that in their minds they constitute cardinal sacrilege and heresy. The one thing above all others of which the state [I]must convince everyone is that without it, they are lost.

-->And so we see the truth about “the state” as commonly practiced - the grandest shell game ever contrived and set into motion - that it is nothing more than a person or mob acting under the charade of a mere word, whose purported authority renders them immune from accountability for their actions regardless of whether they are moral or corrupt and whose envelope of powers is almost universally expandable to allow for the wholesale violation of human rights. The only reason this turns out to be the case is because enough people buy into the lie of the material “state”, possessing morally superior authority over its very creators. Those who give life to “the state”on the presumption that it will serve their best interests at all times consent to its operation even when it involves their own destruction, that of their progeny, and of posterity in general. There is absolutely no reasoned justification that any “state” should be empowered to rob, beat, imprison, persecute, murder, or otherwise violate the rights of “its” citizens. There is no rational basis for the agents of such crimes not to be held accountable as criminals, whether those who issued the orders, or those who participated in their execution.
Yet, so many people either believe that the crimes of “the state” are morally acceptable, necessary expedients to some “greater good”, or simply unavoidable. Such belief can only be characterized as the apex of folly and insanity, as well as intellectual dishonesty and lassitude, particularly for those people who claim to believe in the concept of equality among people. For them, it is so much more the flight from truth and reason, so much more violent a contradiction in, and a nonsequitur of, logic and justice to claim the belief while idly accepting the crimes of a select few who flash the imprimatur of “the state” while lifting the peoples’ wallets, cutting their throats, or throwing them into prison cells. If we are all equal, then on what morally legitimate and properly reasoned basis does one arbitrarily-constituted group of individuals come together and impose restrictions and mandates that violate the rights of others, employing violence to force compliance? Equality and the violation of natural rights cannot coexist in even the smallest measure. Something has to give, and most often it is human rights that do so.

Another example of how the concept of “the state” is falsely bestowed with human characteristics may be drawn from legislative bodies, the courts, and prosecutors' offices who so often speak of the “interests”, and most absurdly the “dignity” and “rights”(!) of “the state” as if it worked in an office and went home at night to its wife and children. Preposterous! The only material reality even remotely related to “the state” is the collection commonly called “the people”. If anything materially existing could be called “the state”, it is each and every individual person, just as we are “the government”, another entity whose material reality has been falsely forwarded by those in power and accepted by an electorate largely ignorant on, or otherwise disinterested in the point. We are the closest thing to material reality that “the state” shall ever possess and “we” do not exist as a mono-bloc, sentient entity, but only as a collection of individual persons who have come freely together to act in common in certain narrowly defined and strictly limited ways while always retaining our rights to dissolve those associations and covenants with equal freedom. Not a single one of us may claim the moral right to violate the rights of our fellows, yet that is precisely what we do when we allow "the state" to act as such an instrument of violation and denial. Consider carefully, then, where that leaves the guilt laying.

As long as one believes that “the state” actually exists separately and in material reality, possessing human, or rather superhuman characteristics entitling it to govern at its pleasure rather than our own and most often according to whim rather than within the limits of powers granted it by individual human beings and pursuant to respect for the natural law, there is little possibility of being able to limit “the state”, much less fundamentally alter its conceptual structure, far less still to dissolve it. That group of people claiming to represent “the state” will always respond with chicanery and violence to protect, maintain, and if possible expand their powers to rule.

What we have demonstrated here is that “the state” is in no way real beyond its status as a concept. References by individuals to “the state”, specifically its human-like or even superhuman qualities, characteristics, and most ridiculously its “rights” as cited by those in positions of power and others to justify the violation and denial of individual rights, are without exception made in grave error. We now see that as a concept, “the state” provides nothing more than a framework within which people go about their daily lives. This framework is important to free living, but it is not materially real and therefore carries with it no moral authority to deny or disparage the natural rights of men. The framework and its trappings, in order to be just and morally legitimate, must fully respect and defer to the rights of the individual in all ways and cases; anything other than this is corrupt by definition. The conventions of “the state” are supposed to provide us with behavioral guidelines pursuant to the ostensible goal of coexistence while remaining free to live our individual lives according to the dictates of our consciences, even when our choices are potentially self-destructive and stupid.

In other words, the purpose of accepting and complying with these conventions is to serve the individual citizen and not to rule him, especially in violation and denial of his rights as a freeman. “The state” derives its limited powers from the consent of the individual persons that comprise the body of “the people” and as such cannot legitimately exercise powers beyond those limits. Yet “the state” routinely assumes and exercises power far beyond its grant. “The state” continually trespasses upon the private property of the inalienable rights of the individual with ever greater claims of entitlement to act. People, in the main, sit idly by and allow ever deepening incursions onto the property of their individual civil rights, effectively ceding those rights to those who have no authority to trespass upon them. This is due in large part to the misguided acceptance of the bald-faced and wholly absurd lie that “the state” is an actual entity possessing superhuman characteristics including rights that entitle it to engage in all manner of arbitrary and immoral acts.

It will better serve the people of the United States if they acquire truthful knowledge about “the state” as we have begun uncovering it here. Develop and cultivate the mental habit of always bearing the truth in mind and never accepting or otherwise falling for the implied assertion that “the state” possesses a separate reality that stands on its own, apart from humanity; apart from you.

It will further help the cause of personal freedom to openly challenge all the tacitly assumed characteristics of “the state”, especially those that imply sentient qualities such as “dignity”, “interests”, and especially “rights”. Challenge law makers, administrators, and so-called “enforcers” at every level and opportunity and apply your own power of force to compel them to explain themselves when you see their actions to be unjust and in violation of rights and of reason. Force them to demonstrate how law and their actions comport themselves in full and uncompromising compliance with the natural rights of men and, secondarily, the Constitution, accepting no “double-speak” responses.

Cultivate your own powers of reason and hone them with others of a similar mind, developing your views and arguments such that the opinions, arguments, and justifications of those who would and do violate inborn rights embarrassingly dissipate before the world’s eyes when placed under the withering lights of truth and reason. Be upon them relentlessly until either such time as they comply with what is morally correct, resign their offices, or unwisely go on the offensive against you; but never allow them even the slightest quarter to avoid you, ignore you, or serve up to you anything but well reasoned whole-truth in their responses to your rightful demands, for it is you whom they serve and not the other way around.

As dangerous as coming under the ire of “the state” may seem, there is safety in numbers and no matter how hubris-filled a given agency or agent may be or how willing they may be to bring you to harm, they will by no means be able to harm large bodies of citizens without incurring a significant risk of harm to themselves. People must learn and cultivate new habits to actively, smartly, courageously, fiercely, and tirelessly hold all government personnel and their agents fully and strictly accountable for their actions and opinions in discharging their duties of service to “the people”. Such actions and opinions must fully accord with, respect, defer, and demur to the Natural Rights of men, which is the centrally prime element of legitimacy to which any person donning the mantle of government may lay claim
--> to legitimacy in their discharge of office.
Make their offensive behavior a risk-laden proposition for them, fraught with danger and high cost. If they are willing to apply unjust and possibly even lethal force in the violation of yours or your neighbor’s inborn rights, you must be ready to respond accordingly and without hesitation, equivocation, quarter, or mercy, for such people commit or threaten acts of war against the rights of man and this must never be tolerated in the least measure.

Raise up the interests of your neighbors’ rights equally with your own, because to idly suffer the violation of one man’s natural rights and liberties is to give tacit assent to have one's own violated. You need not agree with what your neighbor does, but you should be very interested in his right to do it. S. G. Tallentyre summed up Voltaire’s attitude on this very point:

“I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.”

Voltaire well understood that where rights are concerned, your fellows’ interests are indeed your own and yours, theirs. Bear in mind that the violation of any right for any reason is always arbitrary no matter how the targets are chosen and justified, and no matter how “reasonable” they may seem on the surface. Given this, when one accepts the violation of anyone’s rights for any reason whatsoever, he opens the door for the destruction of his own. This is a truth that cannot be escaped and it will be wise for all people to carefully consider it.

Call all government personnel to account for their actions and reject all justifications that assert “the state” and “the law” empower them to act criminally in violation of human rights. Corner them such that they are unable to retreat into those false defenses and force the light of truth and reason upon them before the eyes of the widest community possible, exposing their crimes for all to witness. Demand this accountability of all government employees from the local dog catcher all the way up the ladder to the President of the United States. Demand it with the authority of the employer over the employee, the citizen over the civil servant, and be prepared to take necessary material action against those who evade, avoid, or ignore the moral and lawful mandate of Natural Law.

Finally, be aware that the lies about “the state” as being materially real and possessing the attributes of a living and sentient being are similarly posited with respect to other conceptual entities including “government”, “the law”, and “society”. For example, how often does one hear “society has the right to…”? Like “the state”, “society” possesses no rights whatsoever, nor does “government”, nor “the law”. “Society” is nothing more than a word labeling a collection of individual human beings living in some proximity to each other and perhaps holding some agreed-upon association with each other. It has no rights, fears, desires, interests, plans, possessions, mind, opinions, soul, or authority as such. It only has its members, and those only by the consent of each individual.

Until the day comes that people disabuse themselves of these brazenly asserted and dangerously false notions, they will continue to accept the ever mounting assaults upon their rights. Unless this circumstance changes, the day will come when one's ability to exercise his in-born rights shall have been extinguished from the earth in favor of the assumed and arbitrary powers of a small group of other, merely mortal human beings as they disparage the rest, all the while hiding like the Great Oz behind the curtain of that fiction we call “the state”.

(http://www.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=4532988853130799753&postID=3536827063857418131#_ednref1) The only kind there are.



[ii] (http://www.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=4532988853130799753&postID=3536827063857418131#_ednref2) Not [I]provision of

Raginfridus
09-27-2017, 04:25 PM
"Though morally neutral in character, the notion of “the state” lends itself at least equally well to the establishment and maintenance of tyranny as it does to free living. The neutrality of the concept, having been altered in a subtle and fundamental way, enabled it to be used so as to most fully serve the purposes of despotic rule. This key shift came when the concept was (largely tacitly) imbued with the characteristic of a material reality of its own. One may have to think about that awhile and with some care before its significance becomes apparent. The truth about “the state” is that it exists in one place and manner only, as a concept within the confines of the human brain. That is it. There is absolutely no other reality to its existence.
One may be tempted to protest, pointing to a city such as Washington DCand proclaim that “the state” holds abundant material reality. Yet those people would be sadly and gravely mistaken in that they misidentify buildings, equipment, badges, titles, and words written on paper, etc. as “the state” rather than as nothing more than a collection of material items, ideas, and agreements gathered together and employed as instruments for the purposes of discharging certain functions of governance."