Nortaneous wrote: ↑Sat Oct 30, 2021 6:31 pm
What? Isn't the state supposed to be the one legitimate gang?
Monopoly on legitimate force and all that? If they can't even do that, what's the point of having a state?
I don't think most people would consider that the sole, or even the primary, purpose of the State. Maintaining law and order and having a monopoly on the legitimate use of force are
parts of the State, but I think many would also consider the purpose to be the maintenance of the equitability of society. These may or may not involve the use of force.
It's said that a young woman could travel alone with a purse filled with gold across the entire length of the Mongol Empire and not have problems. If we can't do that, can we get Genghis Khan on the Ouija board and run him for president?
Do we have any evidence of this?
I should perhaps have emphasised the fact that guns are designed ‘in a way which other weapons aren’t’. There is a reason that mass murderers use guns and not swords: you can hurt more people, more harmfully, more quickly with a gun than with a sword.
If the Columbine shooters' bombs had worked, would school bombings have the cultural place school shootings do today? (Bombings were a live option in American culture then, but were primarily associated with political violence.)
Is it to be assumed there is a good-faith reason for asking this question?
If you, a decent and law-abiding person who actually lives in the neighborhood, get a noise ordinance passed, and then it's noon on a Sunday and your kid's having a birthday party, what's to stop the pettiest person on the block from calling the cops on you?
Absolutely nothing! It should be the responsibility of the cops to see this for what it is and take appropriate and proportional action. But I fail to see how this is relevant.
What's the point of putting laws on the books if they aren't going to be enforced?
Nobody's suggesting laws not be enforced (your suggestion appears to be that they are unlikely to be ever enforced, which given that in much of the world laws seem to be, in fact, enforced, is untrue, and that the exception ought to be solveable by imitating places in the world where laws are enforced, which does not require private citizens to possess, much less openly display and issue demands while carrying, objects of lethal violence), the point of contention is by whom (the State or private citizens) and the degree of lethal force it is acceptable to threaten in such a context.
Moose-tache wrote: ↑Fri Oct 29, 2021 6:00 am
I think it's telling that when you try to abolish violent, predatory elites as a class, some people interpret this as "You want everyone to be peasants!" Maybe we can have neither. You know, just... not have a peasant/samurai split in the first place? If you equate the end of formalized social privilege with being "demoted to peasant," then I think that says more about you than about society.
In a class system, there are privileges that are formally restricted to the upper classes. Those privileges can be either extended to everyone or prohibited for [sic] everyone.
In an equitable society, not all privileges can be so generalised. By this logic, the slavery question could have been reasonably solved by making enslavement race-neutral, rather than abolishing the privilege of enslaving people (lest we forget that serfdom was not resolved by people of all classes being able to own serfs, but rather by the abolition of serfdom). In an equitable society, everybody ought to be free of threats of lethal violence by anybody (the State should also not hold power of life and death, but this is another discussion, though best to nip any disingenuous raising of the death penalty as a distraction), so the privilege of threatening lethal violence is abolished because there are compelling reasons to abolish it, as there are compelling reasons to abolish the privilege of owning other human beings.
Moose-tache wrote: ↑Fri Oct 29, 2021 10:20 pm
Oh, one last detail about the "samurai" metaphor. They existed on the public dole. To have stable, formalized elites like that you have to have an official revenue stream. For European aristos, it was rents on huge tracts of farm land. Japan went full "Big Brother Nanny State Pinko" by just collecting the rice directly and meting it out to the names on the samurai list for resale. The American equivalent would be redirecting a large portion of the income tax to direct payments for the rich. Not sure how that's supposed to work with the plan to make everyone an honorary samurai.
Sure, ideally everyone would be an aristocrat and derive income from ownership of land and shares in fully automated enterprises, but full automation isn't practical yet.
So why not actually justify why allowing everybody to threaten everybody else with lethal violence is a good thing, rather than going round in circles and trying to pretend guns are not implements of lethal violence?