Comments

  • The philosophy of anarchy
    Violence is for hypocrites and animals. When one resorts to violence when other options are open to them, they shouldn't protest when others use those same means against them, and that's exactly what violence invites. Violence breeds more violence - the cycle of abuse.
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    The children will be located wherever the most powerful bully forces them, and they'll have access to whatever drinking source the most powerful bully allows them access to.Isaac

    Sounds like an awful circumstance to have children in. Anyone so foolish shouldn't be surprised when things go to hell in a handbasket, nor should they be under the impression that questionable decisions on their part would justify their use of violence.

    So in ruffian controlled territory, families ought to just up sticks and move?Isaac

    They certainly could. Or they could stay and protest - they are being wronged after all. They shouldn't resort to violence.
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    Shall I have children in a place where food is scarce, and then justify my violence towards the people around me because my poor children will starve if I won't?
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    Who in their right mind would have children at all in a place with only one drinking source?

    And in a place where drinking-source-polluting ruffians roam about, no less?
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    Who in their right mind would have a million children in a place with only one drinking source?
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    I've just argued that government is inherently a violent instrument, so there is no such thing as "great government" as far as I am concerned.

    Protecting people against direct physical violence is a noble goal. If government was to limit itself to that task and that task alone I could consider it a grey area.

    Anything else does not warrant violence.
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    Because I don't like being made complicit in rapacious institutions.
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    So?Isaac

    If people want to continue to construct and contribute to rapacious institutions then so be it. The extent of my action will be to avoid them, and protest if forcibly made complicit.Tzeentch
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    People have their freedom restricted either way.Isaac

    The difference is that you and I wouldn't be complicit in it.

    Even if we all agree anarchy was morally superior, how do we suppose the world remains in anarchy?Marchesk

    That's not my problem. If people want to continue to construct and contribute to rapacious institutions then so be it. The extent of my action will be to avoid them, and protest if forcibly made complicit.
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    It's not ideal that such violence-supported impositions are needed, but its being non-ideal is irrelevant unless there's a better alternative.Isaac

    The goal of violence is to control people against their will. What you're asking me is whether I can give you a better tool than violence to control people against their will.

    My response would be, don't try to control people against their will.
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    Therefore, I assume you will fly the anarchist banner.Bitter Crank

    To be clear, I don't fly any banners nor am I campaigning for the abolition of states.

    I'm just discussing an idea.

    Now, you also express antipathy to this idea of the "social contract". A lot of people dislike the term. Fine -- one can get alone without using that term.Bitter Crank

    Obviously I have no problem with people consensually interacting and voluntarily committing to mutual obligations, preferably also without violence playing a role.

    And that's exactly the problem I have with states and how it relates to anarchy: the role of violence and the lack of consensuality.
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    There are states which fail to meet my expectations: quite a few states, really. Burma, Afghanistan, Russia, China, North Korea, Mexico, El Salvador, Ethiopia, and Somalia, for example. Not a complete list at all. At any given time in history, most states have managed to meet your expectations of violence and exploitation including the United States and the various nations in the European community.Bitter Crank

    This is exactly the problem I have with the idea of the social contract.

    A contract suggests that when either side breaches the terms, some form of termination can take place.

    In practice, the citizen has no such option. If the state breaches the contract, they can flee, or through some large, arduous political or bureaucratic process try to change things, if that is even possible at all.

    In pratice, there is no social contract by which the state is bound.


    Furthermore, states can move into extreme directions at the drop of a hat. During the Vietnam War the United States government forced its citizens to participate in conducting a de facto genocide against the inhabitants of a third-world country. (And it has repeated similar things since then)

    Was this a breach of the social contract? If so, where could US citizens have gone with their grievances?

    Short answer: nowhere. They could comply or be met with the state's violence. Even if they weren't shipped off to Vietnam, they were forcibly made complicit in the ordeal through methods like taxation.


    The social contract is nothing but a fancy term to describe the same ties that bound serfs to their feudal landowners in the Middle Ages (you give me grain, I give you safety, or else), and it is every bit as one-sided.

    It's a pacifier, but that only becomes apparent once one finds themselves on the receiving end of the state's injustice.

    The root of the problem is not in the existence of states per se. It is in the perverse behavior of those who wield power.Bitter Crank

    States function through laws. Laws function through the threat and application of violence.

    The state itself is a perverse instrument, so is it any wonder that perverse individuals are drawn to wielding its power?


    The fact that you call the people in power and their behavior perverse suggests you see the same problem I do, but if you wish to change a system you cannot do so while abiding by the very same paradigm of violence.
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    Your vision of family (at least as you have projected it here) expects violence and ruthless exploitation. It isn't that ruthlessly exploitative families never have existed.Bitter Crank

    I invited you to envision a family. It should be obvious that I do not believe all families are exploitative. However, if a family were to operate in the way a state operates, we would unmistakenly recognize them as exploitative, and that's the double standard I am trying to lay bare.

    What I am asking you is, what makes the actions of a state acceptable, when they're so obviously not in other situations?

    Families are generally nurturing and loving.Bitter Crank

    Yes they are, and states are not.

    This further begs the question.

    The social contract (which is, granted, not a signed document. and nobody thinks it is) yields mutual support and benefit. That's how a functioning society works.

    The social contract of mutually beneficial behavior would exist in an anarchist society as much as, maybe more than, it does in a hierarchical society. Our human ability to mirror other people's needs, desires, pains, etc. long preceded civil society.
    Bitter Crank

    This did not answer my question - what if the individual is not benefited but instead exploited or abused by the "social contract"?

    Should they still abide by it? If they wish not to, is the state correct to say "If you don't like it here, you can just flee the country"?

    No. Without a functioning social contract, you have chaos, and all you can do is try to stay alive.Bitter Crank

    How do we determine whether a social contract functions?

    How many people may feel like they are being exploited / abused before the contract is considered defunct?
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    Societies have an implied social contracts which bind citizens to treating each other more or less civilly (and most of the time, the contract is honored). There are mutual obligations which are understood. The law, however, is not an IMPLIED social contract -- it is explicit. We understand that if we violate the law, there may well be quite unpleasant consequences. Prison is one of the possible consequences.Bitter Crank

    The problem with social contracts is that I was never asked to sign one. The dependency is first created without ever offering an opt-out, and then the demands are stacked high.

    Again, I invite you to envision a family, this time one in which a depedency is created and then ruthlessly exploited. The excuse the parents give is "If my child doesn't like it here, they can just leave." - completely foregoing the fact that they worked to create that dependency in the first place, and then justifying their use of violence against their child on that basis!

    I have great problems accepting that line of reasoning, and it still strikes me as obviously abusive. I have yet to be told why societies function differently in such a way that this would be justified.

    Besides, what if the social contract is obviously defunct? Do I still have to abide by its rules?

    Is a religious fundamentalist country justified in stoning to death women for adultery because, after all, that was the social contract she supposedly signed and if they didn't like it they were free to flee the country?

    The main reason we seem to justify the "social contract" in western countries is because we like its terms, but this is the same as the religious fundamentalist defending their social contract because they like religious fundamentalism being the basis of their society.
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    Imprisonment is coercive, certainly, but coercion is not the same as violence (beatings, torture, execution etc.).Bitter Crank

    Force and coercive measures are not inherently violent.Bitter Crank

    The two are linked. How do you get someone into prison that does not wish to go there? With violence, or with threats of violence. Those two are in my eyes of the same moral quality.

    Nothing in our justice system makes sense without violence to back it up - the threat of violence is always there. If it wasn't, it wouldn't work. That's why the moment the justice system's capability to intervene is in question things like rioting, looting and anarchy start taking over in a heartbeat.
    That's why I consider the entire system to be predicated on violence.

    Prison I find to be comparable to torture, even if it would be a "mild" form of torture, if such a thing exists at all.

    Violence or nothing is a false binary. Societies use coercion (fines, for instance) to enforce rules. Leave your car on the street after a snow storm, and it might get towed away--a coercive measure people find quite aversive. Coercion yes, but the streets cannot be cleared of snow if people don't move their cars out of the way.Bitter Crank

    We go back to the head figure of the family, who now states "my household cannot function properly without violence and threats of violence" - would you consider this acceptable? I wouldn't.

    I don't see why it would be acceptable in one instance, but not in the other. It seems like a double standard to me.
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    I'd call that domestic abuse, and awful parenting.
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    Governments have violence as the last resort, but have several options before the beating and shooting begin.Bitter Crank

    What would you call a household where everybody does what the head figure wants out of fear of getting beaten?

    And what would your reaction be if the head figure excused themselves by saying the beatings are only a last resort for when the fear of being beaten isn't sufficient to force obedience?
  • The philosophy of anarchy
    To understand the anarchist's basic problem one must understand that government has only one tool in its toolkit and that is violence.

    Why should A get to threaten B with violence to do X?
  • Ukraine Crisis
    I wasn't aware that the missile actually killed two people.

    It seems unlikely that a stray modern air defense missile hits something it wasn't supposed to and also kills two people, across the border of a neutral country no less. Unlikely in terms of statistical probability, but also due to the fact that the S-300 system makes missiles self-destruct when they miss their targets.

    It's not impossible, but also not a conclusion I would accept without serious evidence.
  • Ukraine Crisis
    You've got Zelensky negotiating from a position of power.frank

    What do you mean?

    That Zelensky is making demands to start negotiations?

    I don't see why that would be anything strange. As many as theorized, there's a good possibility Russia has reached its strategic goals (land access to Crimea) and if that is the case, they are likely looking to end the conflict sooner rather than later. Giving up Kherson may very well be the price.
  • Ukraine Crisis
    It's just far fetched that the Russians would divest themselves of their assets prior to official negotiations.frank

    Perhaps giving up Kherson, the potential springboard for future offensive operations towards Odessa, was a prerequisite to starting those negotiations.

    I don't know.frank

    Well, then we have ourselves a mystery, and all I'm doing is trying to make sense of it, while accounting for those things that seem to make little sense.

    I have nothing to correct, and your representation of my view is fair.
  • Ukraine Crisis
    They didn't. They were forced to give it up.frank

    Yes, yes. The logistical situation and all that - the common military response would be to reduce the amount of troops occupying Kherson to a managable level without announcement, leaving only tripwire forces and artillery scouts, etc. to make the enemy guess and pay with indirect fires should they advance - urban areas are perfect for that.

    Giving up ground for free with loud announcement is not a typical military action, regardless of what position these troops found themselves in, which is why it is likely the town was abandoned under loud announcement for other reasons - a deal potentially, which is given some credit due to Zelensky talking about "the end of the war" shortly after the retreat from Kherson, even though there's no reason to assume that the retreat from Kherson in any way signaled a retreat from the occupied territories.

    I hope you'll agree that a complete collapse of the Russian lines is not in the cards any time soon, so why would he be saying this, if there wasn't some deal made?

    That is not what Tzeentch is saying though.Olivier5

    Indulge us - what do you think I'm saying? :lol:
  • Ukraine Crisis
    He cannot imagine (or admit) that the Russians are forced to leave KhersonOlivier5

    I cannot imagine that Russia would give up Kherson freely, and loudly announce it, since it goes against any principle of two nations being at war.

    You have a tendency in misinterpret my posts, and falsely give them a "pro-Russian" twist, so you can then discredit them on the basis of being "pro-Russian" - everything to avoid having to deal with the logic of the argument.
  • Ukraine Crisis
    I'm not here to prove anything to you. Take a hike.
  • Ukraine Crisis
    However unjust it might be, Russia is going to get what it wants, and the only variable is how much of Ukraine will be destroyed in the process.Tzeentch

    "Careful reading of the passage is essential for proper understanding and answering correctly."
  • Ukraine Crisis
    Just calling out your bullshit for what it is. :kiss:
  • Ukraine Crisis
    Your accusations of partisanship at my address have spanned the entirety of this 400-page long thread, so I'm not sure what you were expecting.

    If you're going to be man enough to dish it out, be prepared to receive.
  • Ukraine Crisis
    Nice self-criticism.Olivier5

    I've never been hostile to anyone in this thread, but keep trying.

    And yes, yours is exactly the behavior I am talking about.
  • Ukraine Crisis
    There are those who are obviously emotionally invested in the idea of a powerful Russia, as a force of nature.frank

    You're just proving my point here, buddy. :clap:
  • Ukraine Crisis
    The issue in this thread is indicative of the times we live in.

    Adhering to the "right" ideology, cheerleading for the "right" side, parroting the "right" narrative is all more important than acknowledging realities, even when the cost is prolonged war, human lives, etc.

    That's why the more moderate voices in this thread are instantly met with hostility and branded as partisan, Russia sympathizers, etc. - because we do not adhere to the "right" narrative, and refuse to parrot its mantras.

    The slightest hint of non-adherence is enough to invite hostility, because the cheerleaders realise how flimsy their views really are, and that they do not weather criticism very well.
  • Ukraine Crisis
    Let us reconvene in a month, and see how that particular prediction panned out.Olivier5

    Dejavu...

    Do you remember:

    The Russian lines haven't collapsed, Putin hasn't been overthrown. The Russian economy hasn't collapsed, etc. etc.

    All the propaganda nonsense that has been repeated ad nauseum and never happened.

    Your accusations of partisanship at my address is projection of the highest degree. You're parroting western propaganda, and wish to frame every happening as a defeat for Russia. That's why you're so defensive when someone voices a different opinion.

    Sorry to give you a dose of reality every once in a while. Cozy delusions don't serve anyone.
  • Ukraine Crisis
    Of course you do. It's just that your rose-tinted glasses are Russian made, and so are your 'good guys'.Olivier5

    Accusations of partisanship is all you have left?

    Got any more copium for us? :rofl:
  • Ukraine Crisis
    Xi nixed the nuclear option.frank

    Such a statement is meaningless, because Russia isn't seriously considering the use of nuclear weapons yet. If, after further escalation / mobilization by Russia NATO chooses to intervene with boots on the ground, nuclear weapons use will definitely be on the table, and what China thinks of it won't play a role anymore at that point.

    Tzeentch is unable to imagine a world where brutal dictators don't win.Olivier5

    I just don't look at the world with rose-tinted glasses where the "good guys" always win. That's not how the world works, and no amount of cheerleading and/or copium in this thread is going to change that.
  • Ukraine Crisis
    It's unlikely Kherson has large strategic value to the Russians, since for Russia this war is about securing land access to Crimea, and Kherson is located on the west bank of the Dnieper.
  • Ukraine Crisis
    What makes you think so?neomac

    Russia is escalating this war however much it needs, and will continue to do so up until the point of nuclear war. There's no country in the West that is willing to go that far in their support of Ukraine.

    However unjust it might be, Russia is going to get what it wants, and the only variable is how much of Ukraine will be destroyed in the process.
  • Ukraine Crisis
    No, you don't give up territory for free, and especially not with a loud announcement. You make the enemy bleed for every inch, and you use that illusion that you are still defending the territory against your enemy to make them pay the maximum price.

    This would have never been done under regular war-time circumstances, which is why I suspect things have changed, likely deals have been made.
  • Ukraine Crisis
    What is odd?ssu

    "The odd" is that you don't give up ground for free when at war. Period.
  • Ukraine Crisis
    By what judgement you made this idea that Russia gave a "guarantee"?ssu

    By my own judgement. The way the Russians left Kherson is odd, so I sought a reasonable explanation.

    The United States pressured Ukraine into showing willingness for negotiations. Russia left Kherson in a way that is not typical for two nations at war. Now Zelensky is talking about the end of the war.

    I would not be surprised if the deal has already been struck.

    The Ukrainians had made it impossible for Russia to supply over the Dniepr a huge force as it's dependence on rail lines made this totally obvious.ssu

    Nothing stopped the Russians from reducing the force occupying Kherson, allowing it to be supplied while also imposing a cost on Ukraine for taking it. They chose not to, and that is not typical for two nations at war.

    Prior to the midterm elections. Now the situation doesn't look so bad for the Democrats though.neomac

    Ukraine stands nothing to gain from prolonged conflict with Russia, regardless of who controls the United States. It's losing, and it is going to lose more.That might be an unpopular opinion, but Ukraine's current position is the best it's ever going to be, and it will only deteriorate from here, regardless of whether the United States profit from continued conflict.

    Russia probably wants out of this conflict sooner rather than later aswell. It's not making any more attempts at conquering more territory.

    A good recipe for peace, wouldn't you say?
  • Ukraine Crisis
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2022/11/14/kherson-zelensky-atrocities-ukraine-war/

    As I said:

    Likely the deal has already been struck.

    The United States pressured Ukraine to show willingness to negotiate a few weeks ago.

    Then Russia gives up Kherson as a form of 'guarantee' that no offensives for Odessa or Transnistria will take place.

    Russia is probably well-prepared to defend against any Ukrainian offensives (apparently several defensive lines have been created), thus this situation with Kherson in Ukrainian hands is a stable state of affairs for both sides.

    My guess is some form of peace talks are going to take place soon.
  • Ukraine Crisis
    Likely the deal has already been struck.

    The United States pressured Ukraine to show willingness to negotiate a few weeks ago.

    Then Russia gives up Kherson as a form of 'guarantee' that no offensives for Odessa or Transnistria will take place.

    Russia is probably well-prepared to defend against any Ukrainian offensives (apparently several defensive lines have been created), thus this situation with Kherson in Ukrainian hands is a stable state of affairs for both sides.

    My guess is some form of peace talks are going to take place soon.