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by piekvorst
80 days ago
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It's far from minor. To ban physical force from social relationships,
people need an institution charged with the task of protecting their
rights. People's rights can only be violated by physical force. To
prevent this, the government's only solution is to hold a legal
monopoly on the use of physical force. If this vested power remains unchecked and unlimited, the government
will violate the rights of its own citizens. That's why we should
limit its power to retaliatory use. Standardization is a very valuable asset, I don't deny that. But: 1. Standardization is not limited to forced standardization; 2. It's better to live in a world not fully standardized than to
accept the premise that it's right to violate rights for a good cause.
The "good cause" shifts the question from "should rights be violated?"
to "what kind of violation do you want?" Once we accept that, we lose
to totalitarianism. A man who says "let's violate a tiny fraction of
rights" would lose to a man who declares "let's violate rights of
thousands." |
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How do you account for the right to clean water and sanitation [0] without state infrastructure, just as an example?
It feels like you care a lot about violence and force, at the expense of (imo) more important issues societies face.
[0] https://www.unwater.org/water-facts/human-rights-water-and-s...