Pretty epic anarchist rant by Doug Stanhope.
Doug Stanhope - Liberty - YouTube
h/t lewrockwell.com Blog
Baked in this are two presumptions.Some people start making $100 a day online and start believing they are morally superior to society, laws, government, and everyone else and start calling themselves an anarchist.
There is no such thing as a social contract. What is a moral obligation?Where does anarchy stand, fundamentally, on social contracts and moral obligations?
Where does anarchy stand, fundamentally, on social contracts and moral obligations?
I see a lot of emotive assertions. The "Governments exist to eat babies and punch your grandma" sort of thing.
But is this a reasoned argument? Before you tell me that governments are necessarily evil, you must show me the reasoning behind this conclusion.
I watched one video (First one in JaredLV's post)thinking I would get a good explanation, and all I got was anti-government smearing.
Please recommend me something rational.
There is no such thing as a social contract. What is a moral obligation?
Who said that?Wait, so there's no social contract or moral obligation, yet Israel is morally wrong and/or violating some kind of social contract?
Can you prove that? If so, please do.Help me out here. You have to believe in social contracts and moral obligations in order to make any moral judgement.
Who said that?
Also, you didn't answer my question. What is a moral obligation?
Also, from the other thread, "What is Israel?"
Can you prove that? If so, please do.
The term “morality” can be used either
descriptively to refer to some codes of conduct put forward by a society or,
some other group, such as a religion, or
accepted by an individual for her own behavior or
normatively to refer to a code of conduct that, given specified conditions, would be put forward by all rational persons.
country SW Asia bordering on the Mediterranean;
Ok, we'll do this slowly.Moral judgements are grounded in moral codes.
Moral judgements have no grounding without moral codes.
Therefore the existence of moral judgements is contingent on the existence of moral codes.
Ok, we'll do this slowly.
What is a moral code?
And what is a moral obligation?
I am deadly serious about actually breaking this language down into concepts we both understand clearly.
Where do they come from?Moral codes are any set of propositions that determine moral right or wrong. Such as "it is wrong to kill babies".
Where do they come from?
If we don't know specifically where morality comes from, how can it create an obligation?
See, before we talk about contract or obligations, something integral to those discussions is explicit consent.
I never signed a social contract. If you say I was born into one, when have contracts ever allowed anyone bind their predecessors?
When did my ancestors ever explicitly consent to a social contract?
As far as a moral obligation, that's tricky too. How did I become morally obligated? Where did I agree to such an arrangement?
What are the terms of the contract or obligation?
These are the sorts of questions an anarchist asks. He can't (in good faith) adopt positions because "that's what everyone thinks" or "that's what everyone has always done".
Also, for the record, let's presume God exists. He doesn't set the standard for morality, because God gave man free will (to decide moral behavior for himself.).
Did anyone actually watch this video, or buy his book?
If you didn't, you're missing out.
This presumes politics and social contract theory. I am asking you to explain those premises first.This is a question about the state of nature.
What ethical obligations do we have now? Where did they come from?After casting off the burden of nationhood and going back to nature, what ethical obligations do we have left?
I don't think you've yet proven that a social contract is a sensible notion. But, let's check this assertion about moral codes.We could escape social contracts.But not moral codes.
That's not the question though. How can I obligate myself?Say you lived in the jungle and you came across a young child being brutally abused, and about to be killed by his own father,
Would you feel a moral obligation to help? Would it be rational?
That's an opinion. I am looking for the facts you base your opinion on.I think so. I think morality travels with you no matter what situation you are in.