chewybrian wrote: ↑August 25th, 2021, 5:39 am
Leontiskos wrote: ↑August 24th, 2021, 9:20 pm
Everyone agrees that it is fair to pay for what one receives, and thus taxes are fundamentally fair. Arguments about progressive versus flat tax rates are often also arguments over what is fair and just.
But when you say that everyone should get a house you are no longer appealing to fairness or justice. In that case you are instead establishing a principle based on need or charity.
I don't see that a line is crossed. It's all about deciding what is fair. It seems you have no problem paying taxes to fund a fire station. In a sense, this could be said to be unfair to someone who prefers to keep the tax money and take the risk of losing their house in a fire.
I’ve claimed that you are misunderstanding the fundamental distinction between justice and charity and conflating the two. Justice regards relations between persons. If someone harms another then justice establishes a debt. If someone receives benefits without paying taxes then an injustice is occurring. The kind of harm that justice is concerned with is interpersonal harm.
Your new claim is that it is unfair that someone could lose their house to a fire. Perhaps, but this is very much a subjective question. It is not a matter of justice unless the fire was arson. When you say it is unfair you are attempting to claim that it is unjust, for you are trying to respond to my justice/charity distinction. But this is an equivocation. It is not unjust, for it does not concern relations with other human beings. The clearer description would be to call it unfortunate. Your basic argument is that we ought to collectively pay to reverse or prevent unfortunate events. That is, we ought to be forced to enter into insurance policies. Again, this claim is based on charity, not justice.
Insurance policies are rather straightforward. One can enter into an agreement whereby one pays to insure themselves against some risk. The mechanism is called “risk distribution,” and risk is distributed between all of the different participants.
Someone who has entered into an insurance contract is protected against the specified unfortunate events, and this is based on justice. If I have fire insurance then I am able to make claims in justice when my house catches on fire. This is because the insurance contract establishes an interpersonal relation between the insurance company and myself, so if my house catches on fire the insurance company will owe me certain things based on our contract. If I didn’t buy fire insurance then none of this is true, for mother nature does not owe me anything.
Your claim that some forms of insurance should be obligatory is not a justice claim. There is nothing in the nature of insurance that makes it obligatory. I have no obligations to other persons which would force me to enter into an insurance contract. Indeed, insurance is an intrinsically cooperative endeavor, so it doesn’t even make sense to say that it is obligatory.
Of course there is a tribal mentality whereby one helps others who have encountered misfortune, and this is based on charity, but also perhaps on the implicit assumption of reciprocation. I don’t have any problem with charity, but it is different from justice.
chewybrian wrote: ↑August 25th, 2021, 5:39 amBut, we decide that the risk of fire is rather random.
Some people decide that, and if they think it is a significant risk they will buy fire insurance.
chewybrian wrote: ↑August 25th, 2021, 5:39 amIt could happen to anyone, so we should protect everyone.
First, this isn’t an argument. Second, you say, “we should protect.” An insurance policy is just us protecting ourselves. There isn’t a money tree that protects everyone. You have surely been equivocating between an insurance policy and forced charity. An insurance policy has an established funding mechanism. Forced charity is premised on the hope that the people you are taking from have enough money to pay. Insurance policies do not involve coercion (theft), but forced charity does. Forcing people to enter into an insurance contract, on the other hand, is a slightly different from of coercion, but is coercion nonetheless.
chewybrian wrote: ↑August 25th, 2021, 5:39 amWhen someone is homeless, though, you (evidently) presume that this is a reflection of poor character and that they are a victim of their own laziness.
“Evidently”? What evidence do you have for this? Why do you feel the need to erect strawmen? Why not just read the words I write and respond to them? Why impute all these bad motives?
I’m sure you know that conservatives are more charitable than liberals. I myself have done quite a bit of volunteer work in three major U.S. cities regarding homelessness and housing projects. These assumptions of yours are not only strange, but also false.
chewybrian wrote: ↑August 25th, 2021, 5:39 amI know I am drifting around a bit, but this is a complex issue. It is not a simple thing to make the case that it is just or fair to provide housing for people. You have to step back and examine the world from a different perspective to see that it could or should be so. In other words, your logic is sound, but it means nothing unless I accept the implicit assertions that underlie it. If I make a different assertion at the bottom of the pyramid, as I did above, then the logic that stacks on that assertion leads to different conclusions about what is fair.
No, you’re merely claiming that unfortunate things are unfair and therefore should be paid for. Whether or not a natural disaster can be called unfair, it certainly isn’t unjust. Again, such claims are not justice claims and are not as strong as justice claims, and this needs to be recognized. If the house was destroyed because of arson then there is a justice claim. If not, there is not. Conflating justice and charity is simply a logical error (as is conflating justice and forced entry into an insurance contract).
chewybrian wrote: ↑August 25th, 2021, 5:39 amWe have the means...
This is proof that your arguments are not appeals to justice, but to something else like charity. That “we have the means” has no bearing on justice and injustice.
If you think it is unfortunate that Joe’s house has burned down then by all means donate or start a GoFundMe. You will probably get a lot of help, and the majority will come from conservatives. But don’t force people to pay for the house. There’s nothing right about that.