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Living on Rock Island

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William Posted: Tue, Feb 17 2009 9:04 PM

Assuming we are somewhere between 500 BC - 500 AD

1) No empire will allow foreign citizens or immigrant workers into markets unless through slavery.

2) All known good land is occupied by foreign empires or you are completely surrounded by foreigners

3) Your country had one resource in which it survived on (1 edible type of fish or plant I guess), that resource went extinct you can no longer trade with other empires and the people of rock island can no longer be fed properly.

In your opinion is it acceptable to invade other land in these conditions?

"I am not an ego along with other egos, but the sole ego: I am unique. Hence my wants too are unique, and my deeds; in short, everything about me is unique" Max Stirner
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False dilemma: you can always engage in trade. Look at Hong Kong and Singapore.

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you need to re-do this thought-experiment. You have run out of a food source, therefore you have zero ability invade anything

do we get free cheezeburger in socielism?

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Flash replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 6:13 AM

I think I know what you are getting at with the question.
NB. I am only a newbie and am interested in the Austrian ideology but I wouldn't describe myself as an Austrian yet, though I do think many of their ideas hold water.

It is more likely that as the food source runs low, the birth rate falls and the death rate rises until a balance is found. The citizens would first compete amongst themselves for the food. However, given the question 'Do I think it is acceptable to invade another country?', I think that the question is irrelevant, as invasion would be innevitable when the survival of a people is put at risk.

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Flash:

However, given the question 'Do I think it is acceptable to invade another country?', I think that the question is irrelevant, as invasion would be innevitable when the survival of a people is put at risk.

So you think ethical questions are made invalid if they are decided?

The question of whether slavery is unethical is invalid because it exists? The question of whether the purges were unethical is invalid because they happened? The question of whether we should have invaded Iraq is invalid because we did?

The difference between libertarianism and socialism is that libertarians will tolerate the existence of a socialist community, but socialists can't tolerate a libertarian community.

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Flash replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 7:27 AM

We weren't forced into taking slaves through starvation nor we were forced into invading Iraq, there was no threat to our survival in those instances. When your mortality is put at risk, you do what you can to survive. Do you think that if all other routes had failed in the (unrealistic) theoretical scenario, that a civilisation will just give up and starve to death because of ethics?

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Flash replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 10:44 AM

Right, I see the error in my earlier post: "Do you think it's acceptable to invade another country?", this question neglects the matter of survival that was suggested by the OP, which is what I was trying to address.

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i dont understand what you are saying, does a claim to 'survival rights' override all other moral concerns?

its absurd on its face, if your survival allows you to murder people that own the food you need. what of their survival right, to not be killed by you taking their food?

talk of survival rights is nonsense.

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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Stolz25 replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 12:07 PM

nirgrahamUK:

its absurd on its face, if your survival allows you to murder people that own the food you need. what of their survival right, to not be killed by you taking their food?

That's not what they were saying.  They are saying that if your survival depends on it then you aren't going to be worried about whether or not it violates other people's rights, and the point is moot.

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yes, often desperate people are wicked, so what? its hardly moot if wickidness is a key concern. of course by definition of your premise morality doesnt enter into the calculation... i think this is a problem for those that presuppose morality doesnt matter when they face X circumstance. it shows them to be the shallowest of libertarians.

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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Stolz25 replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 12:28 PM

nirgrahamUK:
i think this is a problem for those that presuppose morality doesnt matter when they face X circumstance.

And you are different?  Everyone does this, it's just a matter of degrees.  Suppose you wouldn't kill someone for food if you were going to starve (I'd like to think I wouldn't either), but what about just stealing some food from them if you were going to starve?  If you wouldn't do that, how about if you're going to starve unless you cross someone's corn field to get to food, and they have a no tresspassing sign up in sight?  At some point, you'll violate someone else's rights in order to survive, it's just a question of how important those rights are on your scale.

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there is a paradox, because the question is whether such NAP breaking survial tactics are justified. well justified could mean to the means rationally enable thends decided on then yes. this is quite different from justified, as a moral term. to morally justify a violation of justice is a contradiction.

 

Stolz25:
At some point, you'll violate someone else's rights in order to survive, it's just a question of how important those rights are on your scale.

perhaps , perhaps not, but if it was so, and i was a rights violater, i would be bad, i would not be justified. it would be wrong. a person that claims to be a libertarian that does not agree with this, is misusing libertarian. perhaps you hold that no-one is libertarian in my sense and you might be right. it seems you must hold this if you are to be consistant.

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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Stolz25 replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 12:43 PM

nirgrahamUK:
perhaps , perhaps not, but if it was so, and i was a rights violater, i would be bad, i would not be justified. it would be wrong.

I agree, but whether it was justified wasn't the question I was answering, which is probably the issue. 

Flash:
Do you think that if all other routes had failed in the (unrealistic) theoretical scenario, that a civilisation will just give up and starve to death because of ethics?

This is what I was referring to.

 

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Stolz25:

nirgrahamUK:
i think this is a problem for those that presuppose morality doesnt matter when they face X circumstance.

And you are different?  Everyone does this, it's just a matter of degrees.  Suppose you wouldn't kill someone for food if you were going to starve (I'd like to think I wouldn't either), but what about just stealing some food from them if you were going to starve?  If you wouldn't do that, how about if you're going to starve unless you cross someone's corn field to get to food, and they have a no tresspassing sign up in sight?  At some point, you'll violate someone else's rights in order to survive, it's just a question of how important those rights are on your scale.

Begs the question:

What person would watch you starve? I know I wouldn't let someone starve if I could stop it.

The difference between libertarianism and socialism is that libertarians will tolerate the existence of a socialist community, but socialists can't tolerate a libertarian community.

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Flash replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 12:54 PM

Yes, you would be a rights violator, but if you were in the (bizarre, theoretical) situation described above you would still do it, the situation the OP is enquiring about is 'do or die'. Is is justified? There is no right answer, but you would need to survive. Likewise, anyone being invaded would have a right to protect their property.

Such a situation could only occur when there are not enough resources to support a population and let's face it, the invasion could not occur as (as pointed out earlier) an attack by a starving army could easily be fought off. In fact, so could an army fed exclusively on 'one type of fish'. Smile And what sort of a civilization could settle in such an arid hell-hole as the one described in the first place?

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Flash replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 12:56 PM

Thedesolateone:

Stolz25:

nirgrahamUK:
i think this is a problem for those that presuppose morality doesnt matter when they face X circumstance.

And you are different?  Everyone does this, it's just a matter of degrees.  Suppose you wouldn't kill someone for food if you were going to starve (I'd like to think I wouldn't either), but what about just stealing some food from them if you were going to starve?  If you wouldn't do that, how about if you're going to starve unless you cross someone's corn field to get to food, and they have a no tresspassing sign up in sight?  At some point, you'll violate someone else's rights in order to survive, it's just a question of how important those rights are on your scale.

Begs the question:

What person would watch you starve? I know I wouldn't let someone starve if I could stop it.

Neither would I, but your ability to help depends on whether or not you have the resources to share in the first place.

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Flash:
you would still do it,

evidence?

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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Flash replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 1:05 PM

You're telling me that you would rather starve? If ever (God forbid) there is a 'post-apocalyptic nightmare situation', I hope you are one of my competitors for survivalSmile.

(I think) The idea of the theoretical situation is that you are pushed to the absolute limit, ever heard of 'the will to survive'?

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Flash:
ever heard of 'the will to survive'?

Unlike animals, who are dominated by their instincts, man can die for what he believes to be right. In fact, that's one of the traits exemplifying man from the other members of the animal kingdom. Saying that man must kill, and steal when he is pushed to the limit robs him of his humanity.

Abstract liberty, like other mere abstractions, is not to be found.

          - Edmund Burke

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Stolz25 replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 1:10 PM

All I know for sure is this "Rock Island" place sucks.

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Flash replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 1:10 PM

laminustacitus:

Flash:
ever heard of 'the will to survive'?

Unlike animals, who are dominated by their instincts, man can die for what he believes to be right. In fact, that's one of the traits exemplifying man from the other members of the animal kingdom. Saying that man must kill, and steal when he is pushed to the limit robs him of his humanity.

So what would you do, if put in such a situation?

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what are you going to do 3 weeks 2 days 5 hours and 30seconds from now?

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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Flash replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 1:48 PM

nirgrahamUK:

what are you going to do 3 weeks 2 days 5 hours and 30seconds from now?

In 3 weeks 2 days 5 hours and 30 seconds I will be trying my damndest to avoid answering questions.

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Stolz25 replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 2:00 PM

Flash:
So what would you do, if put in such a situation?

That's impossible to know until you are actually put in such a situation.

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Flash replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 2:02 PM

Stolz25:

Flash:
So what would you do, if put in such a situation?

That's impossible to know until you are actually put in such a situation.

Well I'd like to think I would try my best to survive. It's an entirely unrealistic scenario however.

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Stolz25 replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 2:07 PM

Flash:
Well I'd like to think I would try my best to survive. It's an entirely unrealistic scenario however.

I'd like to think I wouldn't kill someone over food, but who knows?  Maybe I go crazy with starvation after a while?

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Flash replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 2:13 PM

Stolz25:

Flash:
Well I'd like to think I would try my best to survive. It's an entirely unrealistic scenario however.

I'd like to think I wouldn't kill someone over food, but who knows?  Maybe I go crazy with starvation after a while?

None of us here are anywhere near old enough to have lived through really hard times, have you ever even had no shoes? I still maintain that the will to survive is greater than any ideology, but we should try never to be put in a situation where we may find out. Yes, theiving and especially killing for survival is wrong, but given the nightmare-ish circumstances described, it will happen. Nothing can prevent it when the resources of the environment cannot support a population.

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Flash:
So what would you do, if put in such a situation?

Die for my morals.

Abstract liberty, like other mere abstractions, is not to be found.

          - Edmund Burke

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Flash replied on Wed, Feb 18 2009 3:00 PM

laminustacitus:

Flash:
So what would you do, if put in such a situation?

Die for my morals.

Very well, but I'm not sure that this very noble act would be replicated accross the population. Actually, I'm going to have to apologise here as I have mis-read the orginal posters question, he asked whether it would be justified/accepted, my answer is no, but that would not prevent it from happening.

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