I think it is quite funny how liberalism started as a project initiated by the emerging commercial classes for the purpose of restricting the power of king and church and gaining more power for themselves.
The result is that we now seem to have rule by corporations. And as their power increases, the power of the people decreases. With modern methods of mass surveillance, manipulation, and control, it isn't easy to see a way out of it .... — Apollodorus
Yes. But liberalism is based on a Darwinian outlook, not a religious one. I mean Jesus was very anti-rich-people. — frank
Probably the one with the access to the nuclear codes and military — Maw
The state has the ultimate choice in controlling anything. They can choose to be guided by the corporations, — Down The Rabbit Hole
If states did not grant companies patent rights, property rights, bailouts, international law defense mechanisms and so on, these very companies could not do what they do. — Manuel
Given the above, it's with some reluctance that I would argue that it's the church, in the sense of dogma, that is the most powerful of forces in today's world. — Xtrix
If forced to choose one institution, which would you choose as the most powerful in the world today? — Xtrix
The state has the ultimate choice in controlling anything. They can choose to be guided by the corporations, but they can also choose to tax the corporations to help the poor and vulnerable in society, as Jeremy Corbyn believes in, and presumably Bernie Sanders on the other side of the pond. — Down The Rabbit Hole
No, they can’t. That’s like saying the Pope can choose not to be Catholic. It’s possible, I suppose — but the point is that he wouldn’t be Pope if that were the case.
The government consists of people who make decisions. They’re almost all capitalists themselves. They wouldn’t be where they are without first internalizing certain beliefs. It’s no longer a choice. Maybe at some point you have the choice to believe what you’re taught, but it’s simply not so easy— any more than choosing a different religion. — Xtrix
The state has the greatest potential for control, and will use it to satisfy its desires. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Obviously, the state's main desire is to keep itself in power. — Apollodorus
So, the question is, which group's desires and to what extent? — Apollodorus
Given the above, it's with some reluctance that I would argue that it's the church, in the sense of dogma, that is the most powerful of forces in today's world.
— Xtrix
You have to be kidding. Or perhaps you've never visited Australia. The Church has about as much influence here as, I don't know, the Boy Scouts — Wayfarer
Obviously, the state's main desire is to keep itself in power. But this is precisely why it must take other groups' desires into consideration. So, the question is, which group's desires and to what extent? — Apollodorus
Studies have shown that the 0.1% get nearly everything they want, and the population’s desires have almost no effect on policy. — Xtrix
The state has the ultimate choice in controlling anything. They can choose to be guided by the corporations, but they can also choose to tax the corporations to help the poor and vulnerable in society, as Jeremy Corbyn believes in, and presumably Bernie Sanders on the other side of the pond.
The state can get away with evils you or I or a corporation or a church cannot. They can plunder your wealth, skim off every purchase, break into your home, steal your property, and imprison you. The lesser evils, the everyday slights, denials, red tapes, wage garnishing, ticket-giving, are just facts of life now. — NOS4A2
Even if Jesus Christ took power, none of those evils would dissipate. — NOS4A2
Corporations are largely private enterprises. You or I could start one and direct it to do good, but no statist seems interested in even trying. — NOS4A2
Even if all political careerists vying for positions of state power had the right principles, the motives of the state, it’s machinery, and its functions remain: the exploitation of the people, the confiscation of their wealth and power, and the regulation of their activity. To its core, the state is little more than a grand scheme of forced labor. — NOS4A2
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