teo123 wrote: ↑Sun Jul 22, 2018 2:05 am
I don't quite see why radical anarchism would be crazy. A simple empirical truth is that countries with more government power tend to have higher murder rate.
I highly doubt that. It depends on what type of government we're talking about first of all, and it depends on what types of freedoms are restricted. And secondly, empirical truths require empirical evidence. A few cherry picked examples don't serve as such.
teo123 wrote: ↑Sun Jul 22, 2018 2:05 amFor instance, the government controls almost every part of social and economic lives of people in Venezuela, and Caracas has the highest murder rate of all capital cities in the world.
Venezuela is effectively communist, and given their current situation and scarcity of a lot of basic necessities, but you have to prove that the government that is the problem. Otherwise, you'll have committed a false cause fallacy:
https://yourlogicalfallacyis.com/false-cause
You have to consider the cultural and social climates. Gangs are a serious problem there, and there is a lot of civil unrest.
teo123 wrote: ↑Sun Jul 22, 2018 2:05 amAnd as the governments got less and less powerful over time, the violence has decreased.
I disagree. I think that it's more to do with democratic republic governments taking over, giving the people a larger voice, increase spread of education (which is strongly encouraged by the government), and advances in forensic sciences.
Democratic republic governments aren't inherently weaker, there is just a division of power (executive, legislative, judicial), and checks and balances to ensure no one has more power than initially granted. The Bill of Rights (which wasn't part if the original Constitution) was passed to grant people and the states basic rights that cannot be violated, which only weakens it so much. It is still possible to have a strong government while having crime rates be low. Again, it depends on the interests and purpose of the government. In developed nations, it's to maximize quality of life for the common person. We have laws to ensure that these rights aren't violated, and they aren't just levied on the government (murder, rape).
James Madison wrote:If men were angels, no government would be necessary.
Giving people the most amount of freedom isn't necessarily a good thing. The founders of the United States understood this, and gave the people certain unalienable rights, such as freedom of speech, press, religion, right to fair trial, etc.. They also knew that the general populace wasn't very intelligent, which is why they implemented things like the Electoral College (I disagree with it, and it doesn't really address the problem, considering the worse candidate in 2000 and 2016 due to it, but it does make sense). And it's not like you can't strengthen the government without changing the constitution.
They created a system that put the people first, instead of the government. Now there's still debate as to how to put the people first, but I believe that a strong government would be best for the interests of everybody.
Did you read the
book @brimstoneSalad suggested? I read about 60%, and trying to project what I remember from it.
teo123 wrote: ↑Sun Jul 22, 2018 2:05 amIn the Middle Ages, the knights were bossing everyone around, yet you couldn't safely walk the streets because of the criminals.
That's not exactly right. Do you know what feudalism is? The serfs would work the land and give crops produced to their superiors for protection (the knights were among these). It's like paying taxes; give to the superiors so they can offer things like protection and public utilities.
And again, it's important to factor in the spread of education (there wasn't any for 90% of the population in Europe at that time), and advances in forensic scientists to allow us to find the murderers and punish them (I believe in rehabilitation, but anyways), and they had no such thing back in the day.
teo123 wrote: ↑Sun Jul 22, 2018 2:05 amThe Irish Potato Famine probably wouldn't have happened if there were no laws preventing the Catholics from buying larger amounts of land (on which you can cultivate something other than potato).
True, but that doesn't mean getting rid of strong governments would be the solution. You just have to find
proper government intervention, which is why we have a system of checks and balances. It's flawed, and can lead to corruption, but this system has led to the least amount of corruption than all of the other systems in history.
We need a stronger educated populace in order to get more adept politicians in office, because ultimately, they determine if this system will work or not.
teo123 wrote: ↑Sun Jul 22, 2018 2:05 amThe Great Chinese Famine, again, wouldn't have been so severe (or occured at all) if, along with the poor weather, there hadn't been poor government policies based primarily on pseudoscientific ideas of Lysenkoism.
It was more due to the fact that the blokes who were in charge of the cities were given rewards if they were able to produce strong yields with their given method of farming. Given human nature, they obviously weren't above adding an extra zero or two, and when the people came by to collect the produce that was made, they would take more than how much they should have, leaving the city people to starve.
The system itself would actually have worked fine. The honors system though is kind of a bitch.
teo123 wrote: ↑Sun Jul 22, 2018 2:05 amOf course, then there are genocides such as the Holocaust, also caused by politicians being wrong but powerful.
They were powerful because they promised a nation plagued by an economic downturn a better life, which is why Hitler got into power the way he did.
teo123 wrote: ↑Sun Jul 22, 2018 2:05 amNow, what would happen if there is no government, the only way to really know that is to test it in the real world, and for, as you say, long periods of time.
That'd be pretty difficult to do. You'd need thousands of people where they live to just give up the local, state, and federal government laws and regulations. Or, you can up and move them out on reservations temporarily; just make sure you have their government pensions ready
.
teo123 wrote: ↑Sun Jul 22, 2018 2:05 amBut the fear-mongerings about the terrible things that would happen if there were no government sound a lot like the Pascal's Wager to me.
Did you not learn anything from your other thread? And are you still advocating for making murder legal?