|
|
|
|
|
by danharaj
3952 days ago
|
|
It's probably because people usually grow out of the stage of political awareness where one imagines human beings to be atoms that aren't connected to one another. If you think that 'personal responsibility' or whatever allows you to judge someone as stupid, inferior, or deserving of misery, then you will have a bias that makes you see people as individuals cut off from all social and economic context because it gives you the most leverage to rationalize their misfortunes away. People are all connected and all economic relations are social relations. If you treat everyone without their social context, you're basically saying that every powerful individual or institution can make relations with them a minefield because all that matters is that it's their weaker counterparty's responsibility to avoid all the mines. After all, everyone 'consents' to a 'voluntary' exchange. How could 'voluntary' exchanges be bad??? Your worldview is just a very immature way to rationalize predatory institutions and hostile power structures. Actions cannot be judged as voluntary except in context. The context that people like you and the grandparent tend to take is, at best, one of the law or some insipid moral principles based off of a rancid individualism. |
|
"Minefield"? "Don't spend money you don't have available to spend, otherwise bad things will happen" is a principle that most people are taught as children.
You seem to conflate the ideas of personal responsibility and the idea of deserving whatever gets thrown your way. We can talk about how crappy the idea of overdraft fees are all day long, but at the end of the day, it comes down to "doctor, it hurts when I do this", the response to which is "don't do that, then." The mechanism of the pain might be the result of a bad actor, but it's still your fault for inflicting it in the first place.