Theme: Property

  • Why Haven’t Western Countries Signed The International Convention On The Protection Of The Rights Of All Migrant Workers & Members Of Their Families?

    All human rights are reducible to property rights, because all rights that can be brought into existence are reducible to property rights.  The International charter of human rights consists, in all but the last three line items, of statements of private property rights.  The last three, are not rights but ‘ambitions’ and were reluctantly admitted to the charter at the time under pressure of the then-communist governments.  These last three are not human rights but political obligations that developed countries use to hold undeveloped political authorities accountable for their acitons.

    This accountability is part of the post-war consensus, enforced by the United States as a world policeman,  that granted all states rights to respect for their borders if they obeyed human rights.  (Which Russia recently violated, destroying the postwar consensus.)

    The proposed charter is a license for the theft of property from high trust western polities by peoples of low trust cultures who are themselves unable to create high trust polities.  As such it cannot be considered a ‘right’ but instead a luxury good, or perhaps a license for limited theft.

    The rapid abandonment of socialism and communism and the worldwide adoption of capitalism have eliminated the privileged status of Western peoples because of the artificial shortage of labor.  Now that this shortage has been eliminated, western cultures no longer have labor advantages, and only have institutional advantages. As such increasing the immigration, power, or privileges of expensive underclasses is no longer affordable.

    https://www.quora.com/Why-havent-western-countries-signed-the-International-Convention-on-the-Protection-of-the-Rights-of-All-Migrant-Workers-Members-of-Their-Families

  • Ivan, First, I want to thank you for an intelligent and lucid argument that demo

    Ivan,

    First, I want to thank you for an intelligent and lucid argument that demonstrates thorough knowledge of the Austro (misesian) libertarian (rothbardian) cosmopolitan reactionary wing’s arguments. Cogent arguments are unfortunately, rare. It was a joy to hear it.

    We are just trying our first videos, and I suspect that we will stumble a bit, until we get more comfortable. But at least we will experiment and learn what works and doesn’t. Personally, I think despite roman’s attempts to control me, I still managed to put too much depth into the arguments, and not enough simplicity. But we will see. I tend to be able to compress complex ideas with time, and so it will take time.

    Regarding your comments, I think there are two points that I want to get across:

    1) That it is irrelevant what authors mean, or intend. We are not interpreting scripture and divining the mind of god. We are not trying to understand what those authors believe. Or what we should believe. That is the purpose of religions, not sciences. The question instead, is, if we desire a polity living a state of liberty, then what informal and formal institutions are necessary to form and perpetuate such a polity? What actions are necessary? And, as such, how successfully can an author’s ideas be implemented as informal and formal institutions? Intention and justification are not properties of consequence. Consequences are produced by actions independent of intention or justification.

    2) That I am confident understand these authors quite clearly, and that the strategic purpose of the A-L program as cosmopolitan and continental reactionary literature is identical in proposition and structure to Marxism as a verbal pseudoscience, Freudianism as a verbal pseudoscience, Cantorial sets as a verbal pseudoscience, and Postmodern and Frankfurt school arguments as verbal pseudosciences. Just why these authors all created similar pseudosciences by the saturation of the intellectual economy with elaborate nonsense that is very time consuming to defeat, is hard to judge. However, it works, and the technique is the same in each case: loading and framing, purposeful misuse of terms terminology by casting it platonically, followed by overloading the argumentative ecology.

    For example, operationalists never argue that we cannot know anything other than empirically and neither do empiricists. It is that we cannot tell the difference between the imaginary and observed content of a theory if it is not expressed operationally. In fact, don’t you find it kind of curious why a philosophy of human action would not be argued operationally, since after all, all human actions whether physically demonstrated or rationally cognitive are in fact, open to description, and reproduction? Furthermore, if you relay operational definitions of your actions and observations then I can reproduce them without the addition of external content (loading, or imagining, or error). Operationalism doesn’t tell me that that your theory is true. It tells me that your testimony regarding your actions and observations are true. It tells me you speak honestly and truthfully, and that you have not conducted deception of yourself or others.

    Marx built an elaborate philosophy based upon the false attribution of value – the consequence of which was included in the assumption.Mises built an elaborate philosophical framework whose conclusions are contained in his assumptions of individual action rather than cooperation. It is a work of justification – persuasion, not a work of description. Rothbard built an elaborate philosophy against the use of violence – the consequence of which are included in the assumption – a justification of non violence and the license of deception. But value is not determined by contribution, and instead, is determined by exchange. Polities must first establish cooperation to evolve an economy, And human cooperation is not determined by violence but by a prohibition on free riding (or the imposition of costs) which is necessary for all species who cooperate. Morality – positive assertions – de facto, of necessity, independent of judgement, must and do, enumerate rules that perpetuate a prohibition on free riding – the negative given the family structure common in the polity. Adorno filtered his data to produce his preferred conclusions – he lied. Freud created an elaborate system of projection out of psychologizing, which itself originated in hermeneutic interpretation of scriptures. He wanted a conclusion and he justified it. Humans are easily victimized by Overloading – that is why religions ‘work’, and why the Flynn effect appears – environmental saturation. If you get enough people around you who say the same thing it becomes believable to the many, no matter how ridiculous it is. All of these authors created elaborate pseudosciences ‘lies’ to justify their preferred conclusions.

    I don’t believe I misinterpret either Mises or Rothbard. Just the opposite. I see them not as honest proponents of facts, but as less than honest advocates desperately trying to produce ideological compositions to defeat their opponents on one hand and advance their interests the other. Mises attempts to destroy our ability to construct commons – which is the reason that the west has advanced more rapidly than competing civilizations. Socialism is in fact an approach to the commons, but it will not work for reasons Mises articulated. However, destroying the commons to destroy Socialism is merely suicidal. Rothbard attempts to destroy our emphasis on truth telling by advocating against violence – truth and trust are the reason that we can produce the complex commons that leave europa as a vast open air museum. Rothbard wants to preserve deception as reconcilable by market forces – by which it demonstrably is not reconcilable. So you may see these two authors as positive advocates, but they aren’t. They are no different from the socialists (or the neo-cons for that matter). “They try to do a little good by doing a great deal of bad.”

    And I think I am more than gracious when I say that Mises merely failed to produce operationalism, and had he, much of his argument would have been morally persuasive. When I could just as easily make the case, that he was just another verbose proponent of another pseudoscience producing propaganda to overload vulnerable audiences. The reason being that economic science if we call it that, does in fact, require empirical measures because there are phenomenon we have discovered, that we can observe in the data that were not deducible from rational choice theory. However, once we identify that data, if we cannot explain that observation as the result of a sequence of human actions, we cannot claim to have determined its cause. The physical sciences are not bound by the same limits as economics, because we do not believe we can know (perhaps ever) first causes in physical science. However, in human actions, we can know first causes because we can understand each others marginally indifferent incentives. As such, while we can describe all economic phenomenon as human actions, we can also describe all physical science as the actions and instruments necessary to make truthful observations.

    You seem like a bright fellow, so it may take a bit of work to grok all of this, but at some point it will become obvious that understanding Rothbard or Mises and their intentions is irrelevant. It is whether their statesmen are true or not, and whether they correspond with reality when expressed as human actions. And whether the EXTERNALITIES PRODUCED BY THEIR ARGUMENTS are beneficial or harmful. Because that is, after all, the question we are asking: how do we obtain liberty.

    Instead, I think what you might find, as I was surprised to, that their intentions have little to do with their statements whatsoever. And instead, are merely elaborate empty verbal justifications to perpetuate existing preferences – just as the postmoderns have done. Nothing more. Pedantic in intent, if elaborate in execution.

    Hayek was right. The 20th century will be remembered as a new era mysticism created by empty verbal pseudoscientists. And Mises and ROthbard, while adding a little good content to the argument, are members of the pseudoscientific movement.

    Now, criticizing something is not the same as constructing an alternative.

    And I have spent my time constructing the alternative – which it turns out, westerners have been doing for millennia. But that is another matter for another time.

    Thanks again for your cogent thoughts.

    Curt Doolittle

    Kiev


    Source date (UTC): 2014-08-09 14:48:00 UTC

  • “SHOW ME” : A NICE TERM FOR “AN EXISTENCE PROOF” (more important than is obvious

    “SHOW ME” : A NICE TERM FOR “AN EXISTENCE PROOF”

    (more important than is obvious)

    1 – Show me the money. (Contract) Money as information.

    2 – Show me the property. (Morality) Property as information.

    3 – Show me the energy (Physics) Energy as information.

    4 – Show me the information. (Logic) Decidability as determined by information.

    The problem with apriorism is its analogistic: argument by syllogism. The problem with analytic philosophy: argument by sets. The virtue of operational philosophy: argument by information.

    ***Show me the information***

    (Getting very close on this one now. I can’t make it ring true for everyone yet, but I am getting pretty close. It will come to me.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-31 04:58:00 UTC

  • PROPERTARIANISM: DECIDABILITY VIA CALCULABILITY If moral a proposition can be ex

    PROPERTARIANISM: DECIDABILITY VIA CALCULABILITY

    If moral a proposition can be expressed in propertarian terms, the matter is metaphysically extant, and free of loading. It is also rationally decidable.

    This is an incredibly cool thing if you’re a philosopher. 🙂


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-31 04:17:00 UTC

  • CURIOUS THOUGHT: What Happens If We?……. So, lets say that tomorrow, all prop

    CURIOUS THOUGHT: What Happens If We?…….

    So, lets say that tomorrow, all property rights violations by corporations were immediately open to suit by any individual, albeit under loser-pays. What difference would there really be?

    I am not sure that there would be much really.

    Now, lets say one month later, all special privileges for all businesses and collective bargaining groups disappeared: all barriers to competition etc. How would the world be any different?

    I think that there would be a bit of difference.

    Now, lets say that one month later, all consumer credit (not producer credit) was provided directly from the treasury, at minimum interest, to individuals by credit card, bypassing the banks.

    I think there would be a lot of difference. Mostly because the financial system would be cut out of the distribution of liquidity.

    Now,let’s say, that one month later, instead of lowering interest rates, the treasury just distributed money directly to those consumer credit cards. What would change?

    I think the change would be radical. And most of it for the good.

    Particularly since no one would tolerate a single immigrant who was a non producer.

    Interesting.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-29 13:41:00 UTC

  • MISES AS ADVOCATE FOR FREE RIDING, THEFT AND HATRED OF MAN (worth repeating) (so

    MISES AS ADVOCATE FOR FREE RIDING, THEFT AND HATRED OF MAN

    (worth repeating) (so harsh, so true)

    Mises, like many of his contemporaries, correctly intuited that something was wrong with the direction if economic inquiry, but he, even less so than his peers in math and science, was unsuccessful in identifying it. And instead resorted, like freud, cantor, marx, to elaborate verbal pseudoscientific argument, unsupported by empirical evidence, to justify his preconceptions of how economics ought to work if it worked for the benefit of investors rather than the benefit of the commons (everyone).

    Mises constructs a model whereby we pay absolutely nothing for the maintenance of the commons. He applies the ethic of the ghetto. The commons is taken for granted – unpaid for and uncared for. And if there is a commons, he wants us to free-ride upon it, rather than pay for it. Which makes sense if you’re a culture of migratory pastoralists, but not if you’re a culture of landed agrarians and industrialists who treat the land and the commons as sanctified.

    In other words, Human Action is a justification of free riding on the commons. It’s a justification for immorality. A justification for theft. By a man who is either ignorant of, or hateful of, mankind so much that he would devote this amount of work to yet another pseudoscientific act of deception. Not on the scale of Marx or Freud, but only because he had a smaller market for his ideas.

    Yes, the state bureaucracy is predatory, but that does not mean we abandon all commons’, it means we abandon the bureaucracy.

    This is the correct interpretation of Mises: as an advocate for investors who used pseudoscience to justify his preconceptions.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-29 02:13:00 UTC

  • EVOLUTION OF AN IDEA IS DIFFERENT FROM USE OF AN IDEA Just because we evolved li

    EVOLUTION OF AN IDEA IS DIFFERENT FROM USE OF AN IDEA

    Just because we evolved like this:

    Trust->Property->Common-Law->Prosperity

    Doesn’t mean we cant re-evolve like this:

    Property->Common-law->Trust->Prosperity

    Propertarianism


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-29 01:58:00 UTC

  • If I am correct, then there are no moral arguments usable in politics any longer

    If I am correct, then there are no moral arguments usable in politics any longer – only propertarian descriptions of wants and offers. No new laws, only contracts.

    The lying and framing and loading is done.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-28 12:46:00 UTC

  • NOBILITY —“If you had any knowledge of the noble things of life, you would ref

    NOBILITY

    —“If you had any knowledge of the noble things of life, you would refrain from coveting others’ possessions; but for me to die for Greece is better than to be the sole ruler over the people of my race.”—Leonidas

    The purpose of aristocracy is for all, to deny any and all, power and authority over any and all.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-28 09:48:00 UTC

  • Propertarianism Leads Us To Contractual Government

    [W]ith private property rights, universal standing, the common (polycentric) law, shareholder dividends (what we think of as direct redistribution, but is constructed as a dividend), what policy is there for us to advocate? If we can’t justify stealing from one another by force of law then what can we try to do, without majority rule? Well, a lot of commons, a lot of contracts, but no thefts. Propertarianism leads us to contractual government. We separate the law, from our contracts. Our law remains constant but we construct voluntary contracts for whatever we need to. Contracts expire, have terms and conditions, and laws do not.