WickedFire Congress: Bomb Syria or Not?

Do you authorize Barack Obama to bomb Syria?


  • Total voters
    140
  • Poll closed .
Just by being a citizen in a representative democracy you are authorising the representatives to act on your behalf.

It doesn't matter if you voted or not - if you voted you explicitly participated, and if you didn't, you said in effect, I'm happy for other citizens to make the decision on my behalf or I'm happy for the status quo to continue. There's no way to have completely clean hands as long as you remain a citizen.

What if they voted for Hitler and I didn't?
 


What if they voted for Hitler and I didn't?

You've got the choice of renouncing your citizenship and going elsewhere. If you stay, you are acquiescing. Most people who lose elections acquiesce on basis that their opponents arn't "Hitler" - but if they are, why stay passive?

There's no way to completely avoid responsibility while remaining a citizen. Either get out or stay and fight to lobby representatives or overturn what you hate. All of life is one great big fight anyway.
 
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O4k80kqM3X4]I LOVE Watching MIC Presstitutes Get SMACKED DOWN By A Real Journalist :) - YouTube[/ame]
 
There is a lot to unpack here

Just by being a citizen
There are no such thing as a citizen. It is a nonsense concept.

in a representative democracy you are authorising the representatives to act on your behalf.
1. I haven't explicitly authorized anyone, to do anything, on my behalf.

2. The representatives can only act on my behalf, in the domain in which I exist. In other words, I can't authorize them to act in Somalia. Or in Syria. I can't authorize them to act in outer space. I certainly can't authorize them to act on any other human being, in this country or outside this country.

It doesn't matter if you voted or not
This I can agree with, ostensibly for different reasons.

and if you didn't, you said in effect, I'm happy for other citizens to make the decision on my behalf or I'm happy for the status quo to continue
No. I never said that. I never implied that.

Go into a court to dispute a contract or any legal agreement and tell the court that the other party gave implicit consent to all sorts of things that weren't in the contract.

The only way to get out of it is to go live in some atol in the Pacific which hasn't been claimed by any country or buy a boat and float out in international waters - seasteading I believe it's called, at which point you arn't part of any nation.
Do you not see how fundamentally unfair it is to expect people with ethics and conscience to have to exile themselves from society?

It might make you feel superior to act like it's all a waste of time
It is for many of us, an enormous waste of time.

but that conceit is in reality simply a way of getting others to make the decision for you.
Friend, if you haven't realized other people make most of your decisions for you, then I am afraid you've been asleep at the wheel.

There is no way of avoiding responsibility unless you dump your citizenship and go live on a boat in international waters (and even then you'd need to pay for a flag of convenience).
It's not a matter of responsibility. It is a matter of ethics. There is no moral or ethical justification for invading anyone, anytime. There is no moral or ethical justification for stealing people's wealth in the form of taxes.

I get that you're a true believer in the system. Where were you when Iraq was being invaded? When Afghanistan was being invaded? Are the blood of those hundreds of thousands of innocent people on your hands, because you did (or as you rationalize, did not) vote?
 
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I get that you're a true believer in the system. Where were you when Iraq was being invaded? When Afghanistan was being invaded? Are the blood of those hundreds of thousands of innocent people on your hands, because you did (or as you rationalize, did not) vote?

I lobbied my MP against Iraq - successfully, because he voted No in the Iraq debate. Unfortunately not enough other people did the same thing because their MPs voted Yes and the motion was carried.

Still, I haven't given up - lobbied again this time. My MP voted No, but yay, loads of other MPs got lobbied too and the Syria motion got the thumbs down.

The bombing of Syria was supposed to happen this weekend just ended. It hasn't, and mainstream media are carrying stories like this:

Can the U.S. Attack Syria Without its British Ally? | TIME.com

and Obama decided he didn't want to go ahead alone and has asked Congress.

Now we need people on the other side of the Atlantic to stop making abstract arguments about how it's all pointless and lobby hard against the war from your end. This stuff gets stopped only with massive teamwork - if individuals sit on their hands and do nothing, the people at the top think you are acquiescing in all their misdeeds by default. It's a crap system but it's the one we have to work within for now.
 
There are no such thing as a citizen. It is a nonsense concept.

Sure there is. You pay taxes and receive services and protection in return. You are a citizen. Just because you don't like the idea of something doesn't mean it doesn't exist.

1. I haven't explicitly authorized anyone, to do anything, on my behalf.

You have at the very least implied consent, and implied consent is a very real thing in contract law. By participating in the system (not renouncing, paying taxes, utilizing federal services, driving on public roads, enjoying the defensive protections of the military, etc) you have implied consent. Again, "implied consent" is an actual thing in contract law.

2. The representatives can only act on my behalf, in the domain in which I exist. In other words, I can't authorize them to act in Somalia. Or in Syria. I can't authorize them to act in outer space. I certainly can't authorize them to act on any other human being, in this country or outside this country.

Why not? Is there a legal reason you can't grant that authorization (hint: there isn't), or is it moral? If moral, where do you draw your morals from and why would your moral beliefs trump the law to which you have consented to your entire life? The fact that you have consented against your morals indicates you place a higher importance on the law than on your morals, so why should any court (or anyone for that matter) not do the same?

Go into a court to dispute a contract or any legal agreement and tell the court that the other party gave implicit consent to all sorts of things that weren't in the contract.

It happens hundreds of times every day in courts across the US, Canada, and many other countries. Implied consent carries very real standing in most jurisdictions, and can take on many forms.

Do you not see how fundamentally unfair it is to expect people with ethics and conscience to have to exile themselves from society?

That does suck, we can agree there. But you can't utilize the services of your community (through services provided by taxation) and not expect to contribute anything in return, can you? Wouldn't that mean you're essentially stealing from your community?

It's not a matter of responsibility. It is a matter of ethics. There is no moral or ethical justification for invading anyone, anytime. There is no moral or ethical justification for stealing people's wealth in the form of taxes.

You may believe that your moral standing is superior but that doesn't mean it is, or that everyone is bound to follow your moral or ethical beliefs.

I happen to agree for the most part, and I see the State for what it is, but I think your approach is flawed.
 
Now we need people on the other side of the Atlantic to stop making abstract arguments about how it's all pointless and lobby hard against the war from your end.
It's not an abstract argument. You get a vote to go your way, and you confuse that with causality from the fact you're politically active.

I'm not going to tell you how to spend your time, or for that matter, I was probably wrong to confront your delusions, but at the end of the day, your government will happily put a black bag over your head and disappear you if that's what convenient for their purposes.
 
This is true.

However, the enforceability of that implied consent - at least in the context of contract law - can only be argued in the absence of duress. ;)
I presumed this is obvious but apparently it was not. Thanks for pointing it out Jake.
 
When trying to make an argument against G, realize he is arguing the disease and you are arguing the symptom. A lot of the counter arguments made don't really apply to what he is saying.
 
I presumed this is obvious but apparently it was not. Thanks for pointing it out Jake.

In UG's defense, U.S. law is so frighteningly arbitrary that even notions like duress can find itself on the chopping block. It's sobering to think that, up until the 70s, guys used to be able to successfully argue implied consent in marriage after raping their wives.

Needless to say, when the Supremes start ruling based on a mythical "social contract" that negates the foundation of contract law (explicit consent), things get scary very quickly. Suddenly, folks are forced to pay taxes, buy certain products and services (health care), and pay for wars. All for the greater good, of course.

At that point, everything is up for grabs.
 
If I say it is ok for Obama to do something, does that make it ok?
It probably makes it ok with you.

I can understand authorizing Obama to do something to my life or my property, but the idea that I could authorize Obama to do something to someone I have never met, seems, alien to me.
That's because you don't know what's it's like controlling puppet presidents.
 
F1JRisF.jpg
 
When trying to make an argument against G, realize he is arguing the disease and you are arguing the symptom. A lot of the counter arguments made don't really apply to what he is saying.
Thanks.

People either get it or they don't. The ones who get it, usually get it quickly (Jake, cziffra, many others here). The ones who don't probably won't.

You gotta pick the fights you can win, and it's important to me to be happy, not mired in endless political activism, glued to the TV and internet news sites, obsessing over every little thing every government everywhere does.

There is (in my opinion) one fundamental truth to all of this. Government is a reflection of the people. If you want to improve government, improve the people.

Now we see the scale of the task ahead of people who wish to change the world. You've got to improve the human race.

Maybe we need to start with improving ourselves first.

Enjoy your McNuggets.
 
Thanks.

People either get it or they don't. The ones who get it, usually get it quickly (Jake, cziffra, many others here). The ones who don't probably won't.

You gotta pick the fights you can win, and it's important to me to be happy, not mired in endless political activism, glued to the TV and internet news sites, obsessing over every little thing every government everywhere does.

There is (in my opinion) one fundamental truth to all of this. Government is a reflection of the people. If you want to improve government, improve the people.

Now we see the scale of the task ahead of people who wish to change the world. You've got to improve the human race.

Maybe we need to start with improving ourselves first.

Enjoy your McNuggets.

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFDND9SRJbs]Genius: "The Public Sucks." Look in the mirror voters. - YouTube[/ame]
 
post #27, ladies & gentlemen, is a perfect example of why guerilla has UG (and several other WF sharps) on ignore. if you can't beat 'em, ignore 'em.
 
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