Belinda wrote: ↑Wed Apr 13, 2022 11:16 am
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 8:10 pm
Belinda wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 7:51 pmToo many cooks spoil the broth. That means there have to be agreed rules so people cooperate, even when they are sharing a bathroom or a kitchen sink.
Sure, but do you need a ruler or just a dispassionate arbiter?
I would argue, have argued, it's not a ruler or legislators we need but, where there can be no solution, only arbiters.
Rulers, aside from the whole
power corrupts thing, are one-size-fits-all types. Arbitration concerns itself only with the matter at hand, with determination applicable only to the matter, and the players, at hand.
Me: I'd much rather take my case to the court of last resort and know, win or lose, the ruling applies only to me and my opponent. Takin' my problem to my local legislator can lead to legislation applicable to all, which is kinda overkill.
Your discussion of arbitration strikes a chord with me, so I agree with that arbitration is best.
*Democracy happens to be the best mechanism for arbitration.
If 'arbitration' is practical solutions to practical problems and has no time for religions and ideologies I support arbitration.
*Democracy isn't arbitration. It's nuthin' more than the majority directin' the minority. In a democracy of 1 million -- 600,000 wolves and 400,000 sheep -- the outcome of a vote on what to have for dinner results in? Population reduction.
Democracy is no better when moderated by the addition of
representatives and
legislators. The power of the majority has simply been transferred to a few who then call the shots for everyone.
Arbitration, as I say, works when you and I contend over a matter, can not resolve it on our own, and take our individual claims to the court of last resort. It's
our problem, not the greater populations's. Why should they be burdened with it? Why shouid they have a say in it?
Here's an example...
Bubba and me, we've gone back & forth and round & round about bazookas. I say I have the right to property, any property I can fairly transact for or create for myself. Bubba sez bazookas are too dangerous for folks to have. This is an insoluble problem for us. Neither will budge.
Arbitration means we take our problem to the court of last resort. We make our claims. Whatever the ruling, it's applicable to bubba and me alone. If Joe and Stan, down the road, find themselves in a similar bind -- Joe has a revolver, Stan sez revolvers are too dangerous for folks to own -- they can take their problem to the court for resolution. And, again, no matter the ruling, it applies to them and only them. The dispute between bubba and me can stand as
precedent, but ought not be taken as the one-size-fits-all solution to every dispute over firearms.
Of course for arbitration to work there needs to be a principle undergirdin' it; a common ethic applicable to all.
I suggest a simple codification of what everyone already knows can suffice...
A person belongs to himself; his life, liberty, and property are his; his life, liberty, and property are only forfeit, in part or whole, when he knowingly, willingly, without just cause, deprives another, in part or whole, of life, liberty, or property.
Now, yeah, it's
easier to apply a one-size-fits-all solution, but it is
right? All disputes are founded in some way in one person's claim against another, and all involve life, liberty, and/or property. The harder but right solution is to address contention as the individual matter it is, one important to those
in the courtroom and perhaps unimportant to those outside it.
I can, and should (considering the thread), relate all this to the potentially apocalyptic kerfluffe between Russia and Ukraine (and it is applicable), but I'll let you digest this post first and see how it sits with you (or anyone).