teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2017 10:49 am
Let's for the sake of argument say that you are right, that human beings are evil by nature. So, you want a government that's made of people who are naturally evil. How does that make any sense? Power corrupts, it doesn't make people better.
I'm not saying people are evil by nature, people are tribal. Government creates larger tribes and stability within those. We need to move toward a global tribe so we can stop fighting among ourselves, and use those systems to settle internal disputes peacefully.
Republic government with elected offices and checks and balances in power is the most stable and least corruptible form we've found so far.
Democracy only works as well as people are educated, though.
Dividing power and keeping politicians accountable seems to reduce corruption.
But I'm talking about jury based politics, or "deliberative democracy" which uses random people who aren't held in positions of power. It helps solve the problem of ignorance in democracy by highly informing a few random people about an issue and then letting them vote on it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deliberative_democracy
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2017 10:49 am
And that's so obviously wrong. Primitive tribes aren't even remotely all xenophobic. There are such tribes which don't even have words for weapons and wars.
Back to your old flat-earth ways I see. Well, I tried.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2017 10:49 am
Human beings are by nature altruistic. Selfishness is a learned behaviour. If it's not, how it is that neither Proto-Indo-European nor Proto-Semitic nor Proto-Uralic have words related to private ownership?
That's bullshit. Where are you getting this?
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2017 10:49 am
First of all, governments have killed way more people than murders have.
False.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2017 10:49 am
The Holocaust, the Mao's Great Famine...
Yes, even taking into account those deaths.
Read this:
https://www.amazon.com/Better-Angels-Our-Nature-Violence/dp/0143122010
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2017 10:49 am
These couldn't have happened without a government.
Genocide is a daily occurrence without government.
You've gone off the wagon again. I don't have the patience to do this with you TWICE.
Read Pinker's book. If you have more questions after that I can answer them. You spat out the Flat-Earth Kool-Aid just to drink the Anarchist Kool-Aid.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2017 10:49 am
Secondly, is there any actual evidence that making murders illegal actually makes them happen less often?
Courts help them happen less often. Without a third party to intervene, each family takes vengeance on the other in an endless feud. It's not so much about the murderer, it's about the retribution. Think Capulet and Montague.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2017 10:49 am
I mean, if murder is illegal, murders are put in a place not in which they rehabilitate from what they have done, but from which they return with even greater psychological problems (which made them murder in the first place).
The prison system has issues, but it's insane to conclude that murder should be legal because of those issues.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2017 10:49 am
What if it's that every concievable law, no matter how reasonable it seems at first, harms the society in the long run?
Then you need to provide evidence of that.
It's the person who wants to CHANGE society who needs evidence, both people wanting NEW laws, and people wanting to remove old ones.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2017 10:49 am
What do you think would happen if female genital mutilation wasn't illegal? Now it's done in a dark alley with a rusty knife with no anaesthesia, and causes great psychological trauma. If it wasn't illegal, maybe it would be done by a medical professional with proper anaesthesia, and would in fact make the girls who undergo it happier (since spirituality is correlated with happiness more than sexual pleasure is). What if that's the right way of thinking about laws?
Just provide evidence of it. You're running based on wild speculation just like you did with flat-earth.
MAYBE, but maybe not. There are certain medical and cultural cases where this may be true (it's more credible than the argument that murder should be legal) but you still have to provide evidence.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2017 10:49 am
public education
And countries with public education tend to have lower literacy. Around 40% of the USA population is illiterate.
You're just regurgitating anti-government propaganda now. 40% of the adult U.S. population is not illiterate. It's around 14%, 21% in addition to that just read
poorly.
The U.S. public education system is quite poor, because it relies on local property taxes and in poor areas it does not serve the students well. Other countries with better public education systems (better funded) have far better literacy rates. There are structural problems with implementation of some public education, but it's still an essential service, it just need to be improved.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2017 10:49 am
oversight for industries to prevent pollution
Which causes monopolies by harming the small buisnesses more than the large ones.
No, monopolies are outlawed. That's another important government function.
Biological pollution resulted in plagues, and soot and other air pollution resulted in mass deaths through lung disease before the modern equivalents of the EPA. China is suffering those effects now and is working hard to stop air pollution in cities because of the massive death toll it has.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2017 10:49 am
particularly in medicine, the FDA and equivalents are essential
Maybe not. There are studies that show that FDA kills more people than it saves by delaying life-saving medicines to get on the market.
More bullshit.
The FDA prevents dangerous medications from getting on the market that do nothing (unless people like Sanders have their ways). The pre-FDA era was one predominated by snake oil.
People die due to delays, but without the FDA most would die anyway because they would never find the right medication to begin with if it weren't for that oversight which improves the signal to noise ratio for actual medication. You can't look at biased assessments of the "harm" without weighing it against benefits.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2017 10:49 am
you don't want people in your society who have nothing to lose
Liberty is more important than money. If you have liberty, the money comes.
This is what's called dogma.
teo123 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2017 10:49 am
During the Great Chinese Famine, people had money, but they weren't free to produce and buy food.
That's a problem too, but having liberty doesn't magically create prosperity.
You're trying to take me on a Gish gallop here, and I don't have time for this bullshit. Every claim you spout without evidence takes me longer to debunk, and I'm not playing this game.
If you're going to make another claim, or argue ANY of these points, you need to supply credible evidence.