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Libertarian Dilemmas
#1
Libertarian Dilemmas
Libertarianism assumes an absolute right to property and an absolute right to self. The things you own you own completely and no one else is to touch, use, or take those things without your consent. Your body is your own too and no has the right to touch, use, or take it either without your consent.

What if your neighbor owns a nuclear bomb. Presently it's not harming anyone. But it does have a giant red button that if pushed would ignite the bomb destroying everything nearby. The neighbor promises never to push it but perhaps the neighbor might hit the bottom accidentally. Would it be wrong under libertarianism to forcefully take away the bomb because it poses a risk?

What if somebody does not like seeing your house? They think your house is ugly and they don't like to think about it. Them seeing your house puts a thought in their mind that they don't like. Are you violating their right to self? Something of yours is affecting their body (specifically their brain) in a way they don't like.

If your 8 year kid does not like living with you (perhaps he doesn't like the cereal you buy), would it be violating his right to self to deny him leaving the house? If not, why so?

How does something become one's property? Say you have a future space explorer arriving at an uninhabited planet? Is the whole planet automatically his? Is it just the part he stepped on? If he settled on the planet and then somebody else settled on it on the other side of the planet, are they violating his property?

And say that this planet has non intelligent life (imagine earth without humans), is he taking property away from the animals? Do animals not have a right to property? Why not?

And can we legitimately own animals? We just scooped them up from the wild and put them in zoos. We bulldoze their rain forests. Why aren't these violations of the two principles of libertarianism?
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"The lord doesn't work in mysterious ways, but in ways that are indistinguishable from his nonexistence."
-- George Yorgo Veenhuyzen quoted by John W. Loftus in The End of Christianity (p. 103).
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#2
RE: Libertarian Dilemmas
Really, I think that you're putting too much thought into the ideology of a passive and easily crushed bunch of people.
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#3
RE: Libertarian Dilemmas
(January 31, 2014 at 9:14 pm)Tea Earl Grey Hot Wrote: Libertarianism assumes an absolute right to property and an absolute right to self. The things you own you own completely and no one else is to touch, use, or take those things without your consent. Your body is your own too and no has the right to touch, use, or take it either without your consent.

These are good, well thought out,intelligent questions. I am NOT a libertarian but I have sympathy with it, Ill try and answer the questions as if I were a libertarian


Quote:What if your neighbor owns a nuclear bomb. Presently it's not harming anyone. But it does have a giant red button that if pushed would ignite the bomb destroying everything nearby. The neighbor promises never to push it but perhaps the neighbor might hit the bottom accidentally. Would it be wrong under libertarianism to forcefully take away the bomb because it poses a risk?

Excellent question. My Answer is that I just don't know. I would be in favour of removing the bomb

Quote:What if somebody does not like seeing your house? They think your house is ugly and they don't like to think about it. Them seeing your house puts a thought in their mind that they don't like. Are you violating their right to self? Something of yours is affecting their body (specifically their brain) in a way they don't like.


Simple one. We don't have the right NOT to be offended. Building something ugly is not a crime. The remedy might be for the person to purchase a right from the landowner to have a veto over the style of any building

Quote:If your 8 year kid does not like living with you (perhaps he doesn't like the cereal you buy), would it be violating his right to self to deny him leaving the house? If not, why so?

I think a Libertarian would give a child the right to seek an alternative guardian. An Ancap certainly would

Quote:How does something become one's property? Say you have a future space explorer arriving at an uninhabited planet? Is the whole planet automatically his? Is it just the part he stepped on? If he settled on the planet and then somebody else settled on it on the other side of the planet, are they violating his property?

The principle appears to be that the property becomes yours when you mix work with the land.

Quote:And say that this planet has non intelligent life (imagine earth without humans), is he taking property away from the animals? Do animals not have a right to property? Why not?

Again the mixing work with land princpal renders this question less important

Quote:And can we legitimately own animals? We just scooped them up from the wild and put them in zoos. We bulldoze their rain forests. Why aren't these violations of the two principles of libertarianism?

I know that most libertarians would say that Animals do not have such rights but there is a minority of libertarians who claim that Animals are beneficiaries of the non aggression principal as well. I ,personally, agree with this.
Some may call them junk, I call them treasures.
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#4
RE: Libertarian Dilemmas
(January 31, 2014 at 9:14 pm)Tea Earl Grey Hot Wrote: What if your neighbor owns a nuclear bomb. Presently it's not harming anyone. But it does have a giant red button that if pushed would ignite the bomb destroying everything nearby. The neighbor promises never to push it but perhaps the neighbor might hit the bottom accidentally. Would it be wrong under libertarianism to forcefully take away the bomb because it poses a risk?
I'd say most Libertarians would object to people owning such a weapon. The difference between guns and these kind of bombs is that you can aim a gun, and it's allowed in a Libertarian society as a way of defending yourself. You can't aim a nuke in the same way. However you use it, you're going to harm people who weren't violating your rights, either by the original blast, or by the fallout.

Quote:What if somebody does not like seeing your house? They think your house is ugly and they don't like to think about it. Them seeing your house puts a thought in their mind that they don't like. Are you violating their right to self? Something of yours is affecting their body (specifically their brain) in a way they don't like.
Quite simply, no. Nothing in Libertarianism is about protecting people from thing they "don't like". Freedom of expression means you can express yourself in any way you want, as long as you aren't harming other people by doing it. You aren't forcing someone to look at your house after all.

Quote:If your 8 year kid does not like living with you (perhaps he doesn't like the cereal you buy), would it be violating his right to self to deny him leaving the house? If not, why so?
The concept of guardianship is understood in Libertarianism. Children have some rights, but whilst they are dependent on their parents (which an 8 year old would be) they have to abide by the parents' rules. If the parent was legitimately harming their child, then they are violating the child's rights, but simply buying breakfast cereal the child doesn't like is not going to be considered harm.

Quote:How does something become one's property? Say you have a future space explorer arriving at an uninhabited planet? Is the whole planet automatically his? Is it just the part he stepped on? If he settled on the planet and then somebody else settled on it on the other side of the planet, are they violating his property?
I don't think there are any Libertarian "laws" concerning this kind of thing, mainly because Libertarianism only really came about when land on Earth was all "claimed", and the possibility of legitimately claiming extra-terrestrial territory isn't really possible at this point in time.

However I think it would likely work by how much the claimant could actually manage. If he lands, and immediately hires people to guard the planet, or allows people to rent land all over the planet, then he could legitimately say he was managing the entire thing. The likelihood of this happening to one person are quite remote though, due to the fact that usually it takes hundreds, if not thousands of people to pull off one manned space mission. No private person has ever fully funded a mission to another planet, and I doubt they will in the foreseeable future.

Quote:And say that this planet has non intelligent life (imagine earth without humans), is he taking property away from the animals? Do animals not have a right to property? Why not?
Libertarian laws (as with most human laws) don't apply to animals because animals are usually designated as lesser species due to their largely inferior intellectual capability.

If you think about it, it works the same way with us. If an advanced species invades the Earth, we're hardly going to cite them for violating our laws.

Quote:And can we legitimately own animals? We just scooped them up from the wild and put them in zoos. We bulldoze their rain forests. Why aren't these violations of the two principles of libertarianism?
Again, because animals don't have the same rights as humans. If an animal had the ability to express it's own rights, we may accept them. For now, as rights are a human concept, they are applied by humans the way humans see fit. Some animals have rights because we have the ability to empathize with them. There is a movement to make murder laws apply to chimps and gorillas, which is something I would support.

In the case of pets, for the most part, even though the pets are "owned", they have better lives than they would in the wild. Partly because of the absence of predators, but also (in the case of domesticated pets) because over time, some pets have become so reliant on human owners that without them, they would be unable to survive for too long in the wild.
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#5
RE: Libertarian Dilemmas
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hWiBt-pqp0E
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#6
RE: Libertarian Dilemmas
Mr. Hot,
Only the sith deal in absolutes.

As far as the Libertarian party is concerned they have some ideas that I like but they tend to be extreme in their absolute ideas.
I was born and raised as a republicunt. I am currently discusted with them. The dumbocrats are as bad or worse in a lot of cases. I don't see how society can function with pure libertarianism.
There are currently are no political parties that are worth a crap. I hate to vote anymore.
This country needs the right blend of this and that but nobody is going to do it. There has to be balance in all things but it is not going to happen.
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#7
RE: Libertarian Dilemmas
TEGH, I think you are putting to much though into a ideology that can be summed us as "get off my lawn".
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#8
RE: Libertarian Dilemmas
Quote:The principle appears to be that the property becomes yours when you mix work with the land.

Absolutely incorrect.



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#9
RE: Libertarian Dilemmas
(February 18, 2014 at 9:57 pm)EgoRaptor Wrote: TEGH, I think you are putting to much though into a ideology that can be summed us as "get off my lawn".

Cranky
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#10
RE: Libertarian Dilemmas
(February 18, 2014 at 10:06 pm)Minimalist Wrote:
Quote:The principle appears to be that the property becomes yours when you mix work with the land.

Absolutely incorrect..

Since when do you know anything about Libertarianism? Not once have you exhibited any independent or creative thought about anything? You seem ignorant of any concept (your constant misuse of terms like 'invisible hand' rather proves that' and are only capable of shouting from stage left in the most absurdly predicatable fashion. You never deviate from immature leftism and have no complexity in your viewpoint whatsoever.
Some may call them junk, I call them treasures.
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