On 10/2/15, Juan <juan.g71@gmail.com> wrote:
You know, the first requirement to win an argument is to pick the right side. And statism isn't the right side of the argument.
More like, fatally flawed. Here and there I wonder of possible constitutional clauses (/amendments) which might somehow "balance" the degradation of the state, whilst maintaining it's potential or claimed benefits: - eliminate politician salaries (or at least set them to a maximum of the mean (not median) of government subsistence handouts (now -that- might cause a rapid shift to "a living wage for everyone no exceptions" :) - criminalise campaign donations (like HTTPS, raising the bar?) - do a Switzerland/ Israeli "every child must learn to competently use a machine gun, and every household must possess at least one" - legalise at least all plants, probably all drugs - more?
re : 'division of power' - the incentives for people who have power lead them to COOPERATE to maintain or gain more power, not to 'check' each other's power. ABC of economics.
So how does political anarchy improve on handling this 'problem', or is it not a problem but a reality we must accept?
etc) and build upon them or try implementing them in a more functional way, or... go the "ignore it altogether" route, end up reinventing the wheel, and arriving at a not-all- that-functional variation of it.
So, you are willing to 'cooperate' with the current criminals and justify them while accusing a bunch of anarchist of 'maybe' doing something that goes against their principles?
It is human nature to gather with or cooperate with those who hold power, to the extent that it is in one's self interest - just as you say above about those already holding power cooperating amongst themselves. I don't think any particular political system can solve the problem of the base nature of humans, although I do think some systems may have better prospects for social stability over some period of time - although more fundamentally is the state of consciousness of "we humans" - and educating the next generation to strive for something higher than the pursuit of greed. Re education, I do recommend John Taylor Gatto - I read one book a few years ago and promptly ordered a few more to read, he is that incisive, on topic and speaks from personal experience 'battling the USA education system'. Regards Zenaan