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Originally Posted by
Laughing Man
Caught up in romanticizing the past? You think that the 1940's presented greater leisure time then today. Do you have any evidence to support this assertion?
From being alive then and seeing how one person could support a family of 3 while working minimum wage.
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If that is your mind set of a utopia then you would not even know where to begin because you cannot quantify what is "good" and "not good" for millions of people or even a group of people. You can't add up qualitative differences so you're pretty much screwed to the point of not even being able to imagine what a utopia would be like.
I CAN decide what is good for everybody, and that is what I act on. I don't do anything that harms anybody. And you can also.
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Then you don't understand what anarchy means. Don't worry, it is common for anarcho-socialist types to get caught up in this problem. You don't want authority but you want a council of individuals deciding everything for everyone....that sounds like authority.
I do understand anarchy, and have lived in anarchistic societies. The council is open to the whole community and anybody can take part in the process of self-governing (which is the definition of anarchy). Anybody who doesn't show up forfeits their right to be a part of decision making.
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Peasants is a term from Feudalism. Do you mean to say that Capitalism needs workers? If so then can you establish what constitutes a "worker class?"
Please don't argue semantics. Peasants = worker class.
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Philosophizing is toil. Some people don't even consider it leisure.
Well at least they know where they are going to sleep tonight and where their next meals are coming from. If the REAL needs aren't met, philosophy is a luxury.
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I think you over romanticize the past again. Did the chief engage in labor in all societies? The elders? Many tribal societies engaged in oral tradition which could include religious myths but these religious myths might not have passed into this generation because they are oral traditions.
I don't understand your point. I think you are trying to counter point everything I post without having a clear argument. Yes, the chiefs in Indian society also worked to ensure the survival of their people, or else they wouldn't be chief....duh. The elders didn't have to work if it wasn't needed because they already did their work helping the more recent generations possible to survive.
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Yes yes, it was the Iroquois' who stoked the fires of democracy. I mean let us disregard that democracy was created in France. It was actually from the people that many considered savages.
????? France was inspired by the USA to have a revolution and become democratic.
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Yes, outliving 40 is certainly a sacrifice to our happiness. Being able to specialize in a field of study which interests us and is allowed by the division of labor is certainly cutting into our happiness. You have this naive Rosseauian concept of the natural man as if he is lounging by the lake side, picking berries from the tree he is under.
The American Indians generally lived into their 60s. Yes, people can and do live as if lounging by the lakeside and picking berries from bushes and trees, and some hunting to provide enough protein. You call it naive, but it is the reality. I live this way.
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Waste is a natural product of expended energy.
But in nature nothing is wasted.
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Well you probably see so few people because they are all dead because a tribal society cannot sustain a mass populace or an advanced economy/division of labor. You wouldn't have doctors or scientists or teachers. You would have Joe the pecan picker and Mary the cow milker. If people all enjoy the same rights then by what ability does a council dictate to another where they can build? What if I wish to build on the watershed? By what right does the council stop me from doing such thing?
That is why a mass populace is unsustainable. The ecosystem of the planet cannot support it. Our population started increasing exponentially since +- 150 years ago and you see where it has got us? And we are all teachers. And yes, tribal societies have doctors. Modern Anarchistic societies also have doctors. There are anarchist doctors in our midst, but you have to live in an anarchistic society to meet them.
If you build your house in somebody's watershed, the people have the right to remove you because they are the majority and their survival depends on it. Your survival depends on them. What right? The right of the living! If you go into a restaurant and start shooting people, what right do they have to tackle you and take your gun and beat the crap out of you? The right of the living to stay alive. This is an inalienable right. Please don't waste my time with stupid questions. What right do you have to fight back against unwarranted aggression? It is not the council who will stop you, it your friends and family who will tie you to a tree until you see the error of your ways if you keep asking such stupid questions. I have tied someone to a tree before who abused freedom and raped an innocent woman until he saw the error of what he done. He was tied to that tree for over a week until the council decided to untie him. The woman who was raped was in the council, and so were many women. We didn't untie him until we ALL decided it was time. What RIGHT do YOU have to go against your community and build your house in the watershed? I don't think you know the consequences of building in a watershed. Don't you know that all the drinking water necessary for survival comes from a watershed and living in the watershed pollutes the water? Don't you know that most epidemics in the past have been from polluted water? Don't you know that all watersheds in America at least, and probable Europe and most communities across Asia all protect their watersheds and forbid people living there? What right does modern society have to enforce this? The same right that a tribal society does. Duh, this is not a philosophical political issue, this is common sense survival. Please think for yourself and stop trying to assert your intelligence by coming up with half-hearted arguments that aren't thought through. It seems that you like argument for argument's sake.
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Well you are presenting the same principle that a fascist would present.
"We know what is best for this person in terms of their position amongst the majority"
You can change the wording but its still the same principle.
Some people deserve and need to live under fascist rule. Until people can be responsible for themselves, fascism will be an unfortunate necessity. If you don't like fascism, then be responsible for yourself. Obviously you don't have any children.
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If it is a place which harms people then let those people seek restitution against the perpetrator. If someone pours bleach onto my lawn and kills my grass, that doesn't afford me the right to kick him off his/her land.
your response does not apply to my statement. The land does not belong to us, we belong to the land.
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Right this minute only elites are benefiting from the internet, sitting here having a ridiculous discussion about our richness. I mean Steve Jobs doesn't work...he philosophizes and the money rolls in, from out of nowhere. You ever wonder why there are such a small niche of people in actual tribal living? It is because they cannot sustain large populations on primitive surroundings. New York City can't all go out berry picking for subsistence. Small populations usually mean an undeveloped division of labor. The larger a population, the more diverse a division of labor usually is. You may want to read more into the Inuits also. There seems to be a correlation with them and a higher rate of suicide. It's probably because they are so extremely happy.
I don't know who Steve Jobs is. I know what happens to the people who are living tribally: they get killed so the greedy can exploit their land. We don't need large populations of people for a Utopia. We don't need to cover the Earth with people. Small populations mean everybody shares in the labor because survival is more of an immediate concern. The Inuits have roughly the same rate of suicide as anybody from the northern latitudes. A little higher perhaps because their land and their ways of living off of the land were taken from them. Toothache was the highest cause of suicide until recently, what is your point?