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by matheusmoreira
884 days ago
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> What about terrorism, though? What about the principles the US was founded upon, though? Will you maintain those principles even though terrorists are flying aircraft into your buildings? Or will you break and start stripping your citizens of their rights, surveilling them without warrant in a desperate bid to stop future terrorists? The US made its choice. The price of freedom is high and paid in blood. They no longer want to pay it. The consequences will come. > I ask these questions in earnest. I hold that these questions are ultimately irrelevant. It seems like these terrorists won either way. America was destroyed, even if only spiritually. Principles it once stood for, stand no more. |
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This is my point. If a constrained surveillance apparatus could have stopped 9/11, we could have prevented all the negative consequences of 9/11, including the growth of the surveillance apparatus itself.
The system that you are advocating for (pre-9/11 lack of surveillance) led to the event (9/11) that destroyed what it is you're advocating for.
This is a flaw I see in the libertarian worldview. There's an under-appreciation of unpredictable spillover consequences. In my view, sometimes rights and freedoms need to be violated in order to protect those rights and freedoms. It's not that I want violations of freedoms, it's that I see it as a pragmatic necessary evil sometimes.
Let's think through the causality step by step. When a terrorist attack happens, people are shocked and angry. Clear-thinkers like yourself have no input into the decision making during this time because you're a small political minority. Nationalism and security paranoia dominate decision making. Then we get the Iraq War and all the other stuff.
This is a funny discussion because you're probably a libertarian and I also consider myself a (left-)libertarian (or at least strong anti-authoritarian). But I'm one of those "paradox of tolerance" guys who wants to protect liberal democracy from some of the failure modes that emerge from the complex social system that democracy is embedded in. That means: keeping inflation low, ensuring housing costs are reasonable, eliminating sectarian violence (terrorism and hate crimes), keeping institutions robust and low corruption, quality public education, making sure people feel physically safe and socially respected, racial equality/harmony (equality of opportunity and no racism).