Hi,
Pattern-chaser
LuckyR wrote: ↑March 20th, 2023, 6:57 pm
If you don't want to put rulebreakers in prison, what do you want to do with them?
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑March 21st, 2023, 11:28 am
If possible, we would surely wish to persuade them not to break the rules any more?
Scott wrote: ↑March 21st, 2023, 12:21 pm
I say this with friendly politeness, you will never persuade me (or anyone like me) to obey such rules.
Many times, when shamers, shoulders, or aggressively violent utilitarians start issuing their controlling commandments, if anything it only persuades me to do the opposite. For example, I probably wouldn't have smoked marijuana as often as I did if it wasn't illegal. There's a reason Cuban cigars are my favorite to smoke, and that is the reason.
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑March 22nd, 2023, 9:04 am
Context: I/you/we live in a country, a nation. We live there together, often quite closely together.
I don't agree with that context/premise.
If two people (e.g. you and I) live together in a household, apartment complex, or even a small town, then we would live together closely. For instance, I live in Manchester, CT. There's about 50,000 people here. If you lived here, in Manchester, then you could say we live relatively closely together, although it wouldn't be nearly as close as we would be if lived in the same apartment building. And living in the same apartment building wouldn't be nearly as close as living together in the same apartment as actual roommates.
If we live together in the same state (e.g. Connecticut or England), but not the same town, then I think it's incorrect to say we live together anything close to closely.
If we merely live in the same federation of states (e.g. the USA or the EU), or under the jurisdiction of the UN, then I think it becomes even more ludicrous and misleading to say we live together closely.
I don't go into a restaurant with a "no shirts, no shoes, no service" policy without a shirt on. Likewise, I don't go into a "no shirts allows" restaurant with a shirt on. That would be trespassing among other things. As I wrote in my most recent topic about
dangerous violent moral busybodies:
Scott wrote: ↑March 22nd, 2023, 11:50 am
They distract themselves from their own messy backyard by trespassing on everyone else's, and demanding all yards be the exact same. But one man's clean is another man's dirty, and one man's trash is another man's treasure.
A world that is held to one control freak's version of clean treasure is a world that has much less beautiful treasure.
Peaceful diversity-appreciating freedom begets wealth, prosperity, and complex mutually beneficial order. When we live and let live, people most tend to live in the way that is best for them. And, insofar as they don't, the live-and-let-liver lets them. If they choose to have a messy trashy backyard, let them. Clean your own backyard, first. Then realize that yours is never perfectly clean, and there is always more cleaning to do, and thus realize that "first" means "always and only". Never trespass.
To truly and fully follow the principle of live and let live, never trespass.
Not for the greater good. Not for anything.
Be peaceful. Be loving. Fully and unconditionally accept what you cannot control. Or, in other words, proverbially, clean your own backyard, and never ever trespass.
[Read full post]
Although, an older topic I wrote about a similar subject is one I wrote in 2010 (13 years ago):
Can a roommate, condo community or town infringe freedom?
If I suddenly went nuts and went around shirtlessly trespassing in restaurants that don't allow shirtless people, I think it would be more than reasonable for me to be forcefully committed in Manchester Memorial Hospital, the place I was born, which is a about a 5 minute walk from my house. If it wasn't me doing the violent shirtless home invasions or the violent shirtless restaurant-trespassing, I'd probably help use defensive force to stop and incapacitate the crazy violent invader/trespasser and bring them to the hospital where they would be restrained. Again, the hospital is only a 5 minute walk from where I live. We wouldn't even need a car to bring this hypothetical crazy violent person there. There's not very many of them, though. Not locally. Most violent people seem to be smart enough to do it from afar, with hired hands. Rarely, the mob boss will come himself all the way to your house to break in and kill you. For those who would travel far to commit non-defensive violence against you, once they have to look you in the eyes sometimes they give it up for whatever reason, be it fear, compassion, or something else. While it made them quite rich, there's reasons the European monarchies were so much crueler to the people living in America and Africa than they were to the ones living
closer, particularly in terms of who they enslaved and raped.
Or imprisoned.
***
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑March 22nd, 2023, 9:04 amIf a citizen, any citizen, refuses to "obey such rules", they are subject to a penalty, a punishment.
Indeed, that's why there are, in fact, many pacifists in prison right now as you and I chat. Indeed, that's why Martin Luther King himself was arrested 29 times.
We agree very much about all that.
It's definitely what happens. A lot.
If you want a society with such rules (i.e.
macro-criminalization of consensual crimes), your society will need prisons. You will need to use violence against pacifists, and other proud shameless peaceful rule-breakers like me.
You will also almost certainly need paid government agents to commit legal murders.
It seems impossible to have something like nationwide alcohol prohibition or a nationwide war on drugs like marijuana without having government agents legally murder people.
You can't really have large-scale state-sponsored non-defensive violence without legal murder. If your non-defensively violent government agents will only kick and punch but not kill, they won't get your job done. You can't have a huge Orwellian government without prisons and murder.
There is no way the European monarchies could have done imperialism and colonialism without legal murder. You got to do legal murder and imprisonment to make it work, at least at that scale.
Even Jesus got legally murdered. It's like big government statism 101.
You don't have to murder all the proud shameless rule-breakers like me. But you gotta murder some. The big government aggressively violent statism cannot work otherwise.
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑March 22nd, 2023, 9:04 am
It is difficult to see why or how this might be wrong?
In the above sentence, I'm not sure what you mean by the word "this" or the word "wrong". If you don't mind, please define both and/or re-phrase the question, so that I can hopefully understand its meaning.
Thank you,
Scott