Kshartle wrote:
moda0306 wrote:
Democracy is the most immoral form of government?
Wow.
Says who? Coercion is coercion... And many people have a lot of fondness and feelings of legitimacy for their dictator governments. At least with a democracy you can be relatively sure that you can vote with your feet and won't be detained without due process or drafted.
I'm not saying democracy is perfect, but at least with tyranny of the majority you have the burden of proving to 51% of the population that what you're doing is a good idea.
It breeds immorality.
You must be joking about the detained comment and drafted.
You do not need to prove anything to 51%....just 51% of voters. Furthermore, since humans tend to believe what they want, the people who get elected are LIARS. The ones who tell the truth lose the election.
Yeah, some people identify with their dictator, sure. It's nothing like the democracy though where you're told "it's the will of the people, social contract blah blah other nonsense".
Democracy is the evolution of human farm management. Let the livestock think they are free and have a say. It's a suggestion box for the slaves and capturing of their minds by letting them participate in the tyranny.
*Edit* - these are subjective opinions guys. I don't have stats to prove that democracy breeds immorality. I do have my observation that when my fellow "citizens" perceive a problem they think we need a law to solve it or a redistribution scheme or another politician. In a dictatorship I think people more correctly realize they need less violence and more freedom to solve the problems.
Not kidding... I feel safer in a democracy from being drafted or put in jail without due process than in a dictatorship. These are the largest threats to my personal freedom.
Ah yes... 51% of voters... people ages 0-17 not apply I guess. Sorry for that gross misstatement

.
Do you trul think that our most immoral form of governments in history have been democratic? "Social Contract" language isn't any more ridiculous than "divine right" language. It may lull people in a bit, but maybe it does so because it is (gasp) a more reasonable form of government than dictatorships.
Further, if you have the right to leave, I see little intrusion. For the entirety of both of our lives we've lived under the "tyranny" of the United States. There was never a day when I should have felt that any "property" I acquired in this country wasn't subject to some degree of tax or regulation by the government. Same for you. So you know what your options are, yet you choose to stay. My theory is because 1) the U.S. is a pretty great place to be, and 2) there aren't any thriving "free societies" out there because that system isn't compatible with scarcity and human nature. But for some reason you've decided to stay here, attempt to acquire property under terms you know will exist (taxes and regulation), and then claim to be stolen from by everyone else when those terms are followed-through on.
Eventually people are going to feel bad for you. Maybe the problem isn't democracy, but your unwillingness to take ownership of your life and remove yourself from a system of government that you don't now nor never have agreed with. It'd be one thing if the United States had invaded land you thought to be your own and set up a government you didn't agree to, but you were born here, and every contract you've ever entered into, or any piece of "property" you've ever taken ownership of, you knew was going to be subject to reguations or taxes.
I don't mean to make things personal, but eventually we have to establish who is trying to change the game on who. We have to realize who is not really taking the term "self-ownership" seriously. The government's rules, regulations, welfare and taxes were here before you as a result of what MOST people viewed as their legitimate role within a region. If you don't like the rules of that region, you had every opportunity to move, and maybe it's YOU trying to impose YOUR definitions of who should hold power of property on unwilling neighbors rather than just accept the fact that none of us truly "own" what we deem to be our property 100%, and if we think we do, we are the fools, not those that understand the system as it is and engaged others accordingly.
So I almost have to wonder who is "dumber" in our electorate:
1) A relatively clueless guy who views government as probably legitimate, but, more importantly, realizes he can only control himself and strategizes his decisions in life accordingly around current and potential government intrusion.
2) A stalwart defender of individual sovereignty and (their interpretation of) legitimate property rights, who thinks his government is illegitimate, and has been before he was born, but has repeatedly engaged in taxed/regulated transaction after transaction, and has complained the whole time that he has been stolen from. He has the full right to leave with most, if not all of his net worth in tact, but he doesn't. He continues to earn X, only to have 30% of X taken from him by government, which he knew he was getting into, and complains that he was stolen from.
The second guy might technically be more correct in his moral position, but is he really more intelligent?
Fool me once, shame on you... fool me twice, shame on me... you know?
"Men did not make the earth. It is the value of the improvements only, and not the earth itself, that is individual property. Every proprietor owes to the community a ground rent for the land which he holds."
- Thomas Paine