Ondrej wrote:In that thread I was really kicking myself for talking too much. I should have left it at "where is the line? How much can the government take from people before it is theft?" But I went and added "who get's to decide?" so you didn't address the real concern. Certainly the politicians in the "people's" republic of North Korea insist that the people are in agreement with the present rule. And maybe many of them are. But surely we can recognize that at some level of authoritarianism it is no longer a good thing. Or maybe, as long as the dictator is "good" and "benevolent" we will agree with more and more authoritarian rule because they agree with our sensibilities. Which is where propaganda enters the scene. If you can convince everyone that you are good and benevolent then you can act in authoritarian ways and garner praise.
Ondrej wrote:I do think there are certain moral questions we do want the government to weigh in on despite that capitalism might [I assume you meant 'not'] permit it. However, I'm very tepid on this front because I don't see any clear lines where we can say this is too far. If there is no clear stopping point for the government then nothing prevents a continuous erosion of people's freedom and a continuous accumulation of power and control by the government. Would it be worth allowing brothels if it means we can prevent North Korean style authoritarian rule? Probably so. Does this mean brothels are morally good? No. It means preserving our freedom to choose is more valuable than coercing others to behave in ways that we would like.
I can't find the other bit I'm looking for. You said somewhere that if we want to see the consequences of a policy we have to look at the cases where it is applied with the purest consistency in order to see where it leads. North Korea is the clearest and purest example of anti-capitalistic politics. This means that North Korea is where every nation is headed if it does not adhere to capitalist/libertarian principles. Or at least, maybe not every nation will end up like that, but to the extent that it redistributes wealth, it is contaminated with the same poison and is less healthy as a result.Barney wrote:it does trouble me that the debate so often forces people to extremes: anything less than pure capitalism is a step in the direction of socialism, and that makes you a socialist! To which I answer: look at all the countries of Western Europe, and also Canada, Australia, New Zealand. They have never been socialist, yet they are far less capitalist than America.
So really the question is: can we draw the line somewhere so we are not 100% capitalist and yet not contaminated with the evil that led to North Korea? And because it seems quite hard to draw that line in any scientifically clear and unambiguous way, we are so afraid of becoming like North Korea that we think it best not to dare draw that line. Best to stick to pure capitalism which is the only way to be sure we'll never become like North Korea.
I think this argument is a bit naive, but I understand that it comes from a desire to live in the purest way possible. Jesus said "Be perfect, as your heavenly father is perfect" (Matthew 5:48) and so we should strive for the most perfect politics, just as we strive for perfection in every other area of life. If we have identified North Korea as the purest evil, then any compromise in that direction is a compromise in the direction of evil. Ergo, the only way to avoid evil is to be its opposite: capitalist.
I'm going to digress for a minute but I hope the relevance is perceived.
The Morality of Balance
Aristotle taught that virtue is the balance between two bad extremes.
- Courage is the mean between cowardice and recklessness.
- Moderation is the mean between starvation and gluttony.
- The person who handles finances well is standing in the mean between being a miser and being a spendthrift.
- Your house can be too messy, but it can also be too clean to the point where you are obsessed with keeping it clean.
- You can exercise too little and become sedentary, but you can also exercise too much to the exclusion of other important areas of life.
That is why it doesn't trouble me if I can't "draw the line" to avoid North Korea with any scientific precision. Running a nation is immensely complex and I wouldn't expect to understand everything it entails, or to have a blueprint for exactly how much welfare should be given, etc. I trust that, if I pursue the truth wholeheartedly, I my instincts will get closer to the perfect balance, perhaps before my reason and ability to articulate.
The main difference, then, is that I see North Korea as one extreme to avoid, but you see it as the only extreme to avoid, which is why you have gone to the other extreme. Note that libertarianism (of the type that calls all taxation theft) is comparable in many ways to the other extreme in america - that of the far-left and its identity politics. Both are moral ideologies that nobody has ever held in history or around the world until quite recently; both are held primarily only by white Westerners; and both find their roots in one Christian principle that has been separated from the other principles that balanced it and taken to its furthest logical extreme.