Făkünamę wrote:Seth wrote:Please morally and ethically justify the collectivist idea that the labor and property of the individual are not his to dispose of as he pleases, but rather his labor and property are the property of the collective and subject to the collective's direction and disposal.
The answer really depends on where you start; both by definitions and existing social construct. Morality and ethics are both highly subjective. We'd have to agree on a defined battlefield to engage or just dismiss the position of the other - after all, I don't particularly want to adopt your morals and ethics to debate the issue.
Yes, it doesn't surprise me that you would be unwilling to adopt reason and logic in order to debate the issue, since Marxism has no moral or ethical foundation and defies both reason and logic.
Since that's never happened in the.. 7 or 8 years I've been around the same boards as you now I'll just point out that if you already live in a 'collective' society, as you do Seth, then you have already benefited from the labour and property of the collective and thus have an obligation to, at the very least, repay your fair share up to the point where you cease benefiting from the 'abrogated' labour and property of your fellow Americans.
There you go again confusing the moral and ethical obligation to pay for what you use with wealth redistributionism. It sure would be a good start if you would quit throwing up strawmen and red herrings right off the bat.
When you stop benefiting, your ethical obligation to contribute your share will cease. But there is a catch. Take the funding of public schools for example: you will always benefit from paying taxes that are used, in part, to fund education as an educated populace is a safer, more efficient, and mutually beneficially advancing populace.
Well, that's at least a semblance of a rational argument, although it's entirely irrelevant to the issue under discussion.
You may argue that a society where you pay for services only you, or your family, directly use would serve everyone better, or at least be more free, but you've locked yourself in an catch-22 by asking for ethical justification of obligation in a system already in place where you have already received benefits and continue to do so.
But that's not what I argue, so once again you are serving up herring on straw.
So I ask you to please morally and/or ethically justify a cessation of ethical obligation inherent in the current collectivist political system in which you, and much of the first world, live.
Lame evasion. Do try to keep your arguments somewhere in the same galaxy as the point under discussion, which has nothing to do with one's moral and ethical obligation to pay one's fair share of the costs of amenities available to or used by one as a member of a community.
Please pay attention.

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"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
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