How much individual freedom is possible?
Posted by coaldigger 7 years, 8 months ago to Ask the Gulch
When you consider the whole earth, are we as free as we have ever been and considering everyone, as free as possible at this point in time. In every country, there are many people that are unprepared to be free, some that can never be free enough and everything in between. What will it take to achieve complete individual freedom and how many generations?
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But you don't have to eradicate (meaning intellectually, not by force) Christianity, just remove it from dominant influence of its false premises. Not everyone in a society has to be Objectivist to establish and maintain a dominantly free political system. The Enlightenment emphasized reason and individualism, largely rejecting the mystic mentality of religion, but did not eradicate it. Nor did it provide a rational ethics of egoism even though that was implicit in the principle of a right to one's own life, liberty, property and pursuit of one's own happiness. It lead to a political philosophy of freedom and limited government power, but couldn't hold it against the onslaught of explicit altruism and collectivist ethics. More is required than the Enlightenment provided, but it doesn't have to be everyone Objectivist.
There are, or at least used to be, many American secularized Christians with mixed ideas who would not fight limited government, but they cannot institute one as long as they take the premises of mysticism and altruism seriously, and could not defend it based on the essential supernaturalism, mysticism and sacrifice at the root of Christianity and pushed throughout the Dark and Middle Ages. And reversion to Bible-thumping is a bad sign.
I was consistent, despite your word manipulation (as usual). The choice of using the colloquialism of not "going away any time soon" was properly used. Such premises won't go away in our lifetimes; beyond that, it doesn't matter.
Some individuals around Ayn Rand sometimes behaved rudely; they were not a "cult". Spreading better ideas is not proselytizing for a religion.
Ayn Rand did not "cancel subscriptions" for asking "improper questions". Belligerent, rude and snide attackers were rejected for what they were and ignored. We still see some of these personal antagonists against Ayn Rand as a handful of malcontents lingering around a half century later. It isn't what this forum is for.
The return of Jesus Christ. Man cannot live peacefully and productively with his neighbor... impossible! Nothing wrong with HOPING, though.
Many of you will, naturally, object to my invocation of Religion here, but honestly, I don't see any reason the two can't co-exist... His return, and 'peace on earth' (that is what we're talking about), are not mutually exclusive. "If a man won't work, neither should he eat"... that's biblical! And man, as his heart now stands, will never except such rule... forget the rule of Jesus Christ (man would have no choice with God as ruler), Man cannot and will not accept the "Good of the Many," when he won't even accept the Good of the One.
Peace
I think society has gotten fairer, but I'm actually talking about freedom: the right to make money in a mutual exchange, keep that money for your use, use the money to travel where you want to. I'm saying in many ways society is much freer, even in the areas of keeping your money and traveling without harassment by the authorities. We obviously have a long way to go yet though.
You could go West back then. I long for a West. When I am flying over a remote region like Greenland or the Rockies, it stands out how the vast majority of the Earth is undeveloped. But it's all under the control of nation states. Even with how small the world as become, it looks vast, and I wonder how many people are living in tiny communities or nomadic tribes off the grid.
It wasn't a threat but it was already-existing lack of liberty, free markets, and property rights. For most of human history people were ruled by tribes and after agriculture by divine right of kings. I don't expect them to have nailed it in the first century they tried to build a real democratic republic based on theory. I'm similarly not surprised we haven't nailed it today.
I do not at all understand the idea of slavery not being a threat to liberty. Slavery is the opposite of liberty.
I would certainly never say everything is better now. We send a third of our income (nearly half for some people) to the gov't. Today's surveillance and restriction on guns and drugs would have been unthinkable 100 years ago.
OTOH, the same person who is free to follow her dreams and go work on autonomous drones or whatever it is might not have been allowed to follow her dream in 1900, just on account of her physical appearance. That's huge. If she can't get into the meetings because of her skin color, and most people agree because of her sex she should be a teacher until she finds a husband, she'd probably do anything to get to a place where work on transatlantic voice telegraph but half to give up a third of what she makes.
We don't have to choose between the two time periods, and I suppose since there's no time machine choosing isn't even an option. I want that hypothetical person 100 years from now to be working on her ultra-light strong-but-not-brittle material in Tycho Crater where the whole nano-fiber ecosystem is springing up thanks to the low-G environment and non-intrusive Lunar gov't. That sounds insane, but today's world would sound insane to the 1900s would-be-engineer housewife living in a country with the same GDP as Argentina, where trains and telegraph are high tech, and where it goes without saying she's a second-class citizen.
With reason as the bedrock.
Bravo!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ++++++++++++++++++++'s
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