Christianity

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Age
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Re: Christianity

Post by Age »

henry quirk wrote: Sat Oct 15, 2022 9:41 pm
Harbal wrote: Sat Oct 15, 2022 8:23 pmWhat you call natural rights are only rights that you grant to yourself
Nope. Each man, every man, any where, any when, is free and has a natural, inalienable right to his, and no other's, life, liberty, and property.

That includes you.
But WHO DECIDES who OWNS 'what'?

WHAT is 'it', EXACTLY, that gave 'you' the so-called 'right' to OWN or even HAVE what 'you' SAY and CLAIM is 'yours', now?

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henry quirk wrote: Sat Oct 15, 2022 9:41 pm
if you ever find yourself in a position where those rights are unenforceable they won't be worth very much, will they?
Oh, they're everything, whether I successfully defend them or not, whether you choose to ignore them or disbelieve them.

You do know what inalienable means, yeah? What natural rights are?
What do those things mean from your perspective?

Also, you do NOT YET appear to be understanding what was just being POINTED OUT to you here.

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henry quirk wrote: Sat Oct 15, 2022 9:41 pm
It seems to me that the concept of rights only makes sense in the context of some authority that grants them and protects them on your behalf. Without that, you have no more right to be free than a farm animal does.
Nope. Even in the absence of authority I am mine...and you are yours.
LOL "henry quirk". 'you' are being COMPLETED BLINDED here, again, by your OWN BELIEFS.
henry quirk wrote: Sat Oct 15, 2022 9:41 pm But, let's stop. If you see yourself as akin to a farm animal, that's no skin offa my nose. I think better and more of you, but you are yours to denigrate or reduce as you like.
'you', "henry quirk", are nothing more than a farm animal, and a slave, in relation to 'your' OWNER, and 'your' SLAVER.

And what is really funny and amusing to WATCH and OBSERVE here is that 'you' are NO more smarter NOR anyore wiser than a farm animal in relation to how you are also just as CAPTURED as a they are and in regards to how you are BEING USED, as a SLAVE.
Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harry Baird »

Team hq here when it comes to natural rights. I have an only slightly different way of arriving at and defending them, and as a consequence of (arriving at and defending) morality in general (and no, that arrival and defence doesn't rely on God). Again, though, I did that to death with Immanuel Can in my first spate of posting here, and have no interest in revisiting the topic other than to offer a few words of support for hq.

Where hq and I differ is that I am comfortable with the idea that when large groups of people get together and organise themselves, they freely choose to trade part of their property in the form of taxation on their income, and part of their freedom by agreeing to follow the rule of law, for the greater freedom and opportunity inherent in the services provided for by that taxation (many of which would probably not exist without it), and for the greater safety and harmony (a type of freedom) that enforceable laws provide. Roughly speaking, anyway.

As far as I understand hq, he does not consider himself to have freely make such a choice, and thus considers that his property rights and freedoms are being infringed upon by being - as he sees it - forced to pay taxes against his will, and forced to obey a whole heap of extraneous laws. I hope though that he'll correct me if I'm misrepresenting him on this.
Gary Childress
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Re: Christianity

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henry quirk wrote: Sat Oct 15, 2022 9:41 pm Nope. Even in the absence of authority I am mine...and you are yours.
Well (back to Christianity), according to the Bible, we're "God's children" and (like a good slave master) God supposedly doesn't like it when we commit "adultery." We can think we are "ours" all we want but if we truly act that way, we'll supposedly go to hell. The "wages of sin is death" according to Romans 6:23. I mean, are we really free if God is watching us in the bedroom to make sure we're sticking to the "missionary position" and not doing anything inordinately fun?
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Harry Baird wrote: Sat Oct 15, 2022 3:13 pm I don't expect to be treated with kid gloves, dude. Bring everything to light.
No kid gloves, Harry...just trying to remain kind. I've never seen any point in becoming hostile to the person if he/she doesn't happen to agree with you, and it's not polite to call out every mistake a person may make. It's kind of hostile.
Fine, but that simply raises the question: does the author consider the existence natural rights, at least insofar as they relate to justice, to be "problematic", especially to the point that they are "illegitimate", or, at least, in need of a "legitimation" that he cannot provide?
Well, if you're interested in legitimation as it pertains to "rights," in particular, you could start with somebody like Jeremy Bentham (who called them all "nonsense") or G.E. Moore (the "right" and "good" controversy) or Dworkin again ("rights as trumps"). But that's an old debate in philosophy, and one that, like "justice" remains unresolved on any secular legitimative basis. But that's a different controversy, inasmuch as "rights" pertains to all kinds of things other than "justice." We have enough on our plates, just trying to find out what "justice" actually entails in practice, without opening up the even broader category of things for which "rights" have been variously claimed -- speech, movement, commerce, health care, education, living wage, equality, and whatnot.

Bracketing all that is a much simpler question: "am I getting what I deserve"? Because if one is, then there is no "injustice" being implicated at all.

And that raises two related questions: firstly, "what is it 'I deserve'," and secondly, "who promised me I 'deserved' it?"'

Both have to be answered before any allegation that there has been "injustice" in a case can be believed.
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Oct 15, 2022 2:38 pm
Is it loving to condemn a person to an eternity of a hell which is, in your own words, "considerably worse than most people can even imagine"?
Is it loving to allow evil to exist forever?
So, basically: nope, you're still not ready to simply and directly answer the question.
The question is wrongly formed. It's formed as if:

a) we all already know what you mean by "justice," when we don't; and

b) it assumes that "love" is the only necesssary quality to be involved in the issue, as if evil did not also require redress of some kind. One cannot answer an ill-formed question on its own ill-formed terms without thereby also participating in the asker's mental error.

I dispute both a) and b), and cannot simply swallow those errors whole, no matter how fervently you insist I do. I have no power to read your mind, so I cannot say which of the various conceptions of "justice" you think you are owed, and why, and cannot possibly concede to you that evil must not be judged, or fathom how you imagine that "love" is the only quality God has and should have. These are simply errors too big to pass by.
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Oct 15, 2022 2:38 pm But you have one more problem, too: and you're avoiding it so strenuously you've never addressed it even once, though this is the third or fourth time I've asked it.

On your worldview, who promised you "justice"?
Dude, you haven't asked me that question, not even once
Actually, I have.

Remember how many times I've asked you how Evolutionism, or Materialism, or Physicalism, or whatever metaphysic you accept grants you an expectation of "justice"? Or what "god" (if AJ is right) you believe in, whether Zeus, Odin, Moloch, Baal or Frankengod? I continue to look for some power, some authority, some agency that can stand behind your expectation that the would will work out to be "just." For you seem to continue to suppose you're owed some sort of outcome you suppose you haven't yet gotten. However...
Nobody "promised" me justice.

There it is. Thank you.

According to your worldview, you say, "nobody" ever promised you "justice." Consequently, there can have been no "injustice" in this world or the next, since none was ever promised you.

Now, I don't personally believe that: but if "nobody" promised you any "justice," then why are you speaking as if some outcome is missing or improper, in your observation? There are "no guarantees," as you say: moreover, there is no justification in your expectation of what neither the world itself nor any god you believe exists has promised you would ever have.
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FlashDangerpants
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Re: Christianity

Post by FlashDangerpants »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 1:27 pm
Nobody "promised" me justice.

There it is. Thank you.

According to your worldview, you say, "nobody" ever promised you "justice." Consequently, there can have been no "injustice" in this world or the next, since none was ever promised you.
Lol. Who promised you rhinoceros, oxygen, and groin itch?

You get so enthusiastic for such fucking shit arguments.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

FlashDangerpants wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 1:33 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 1:27 pm
Nobody "promised" me justice.

There it is. Thank you.

According to your worldview, you say, "nobody" ever promised you "justice." Consequently, there can have been no "injustice" in this world or the next, since none was ever promised you.
Lol. Who promised you rhinoceros, oxygen, and groin itch?
Do you think you were entitled to a rhino, oxygen and groin itch? Will you object that God should have given you a rhino, but didn't? Because Harry's saying, "God is unjust." But there's no expectation of it, in his worldview, any more than of a rhino.

Sorry...you just missed the relevance. It wasn't that the relevance wasn't there.
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FlashDangerpants
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Re: Christianity

Post by FlashDangerpants »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 1:48 pm
FlashDangerpants wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 1:33 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 1:27 pm
There it is. Thank you.

According to your worldview, you say, "nobody" ever promised you "justice." Consequently, there can have been no "injustice" in this world or the next, since none was ever promised you.
Lol. Who promised you rhinoceros, oxygen, and groin itch?
Do you think you were entitled to a rhino, oxygen and groin itch? Will you object that God should have given you a rhino, but didn't? Because Harry's saying, "God is unjust." But there's no expectation of it, in his worldview, any more than of a rhino.

Sorry...you just missed the relevance. It wasn't that the relevance wasn't there.
I dont' see where you established that justice is a concept that depends upon this promise?
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harry Baird »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 1:27 pm We have enough on our plates, just trying to find out what "justice" actually entails in practice
Nope, because one thing is for sure: it certainly doesn't entail eternal, unimaginable torment as punishment for finite transgressions. You continue to avoid explicitly affirming that you think it does, but your belief system commits you to that affirmation. I get how damning it would be to explicitly acknowledge as much, so I understand why you do all you can to duck, dodge, and weave around it.
Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 1:27 pm
So, basically: nope, you're still not ready to simply and directly answer the question.
The question is wrongly formed.
I get it: to avoid explicitly acknowledging the incoherent horror of your fundamental beliefs, you have to resort to saying things like that. Maybe, though, in time, you'll reflect a little, and the reality of what you've been led to believe will sink in.
Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 1:27 pm According to your worldview, you say, "nobody" ever promised you "justice." Consequently, there can have been no "injustice" in this world or the next, since none was ever promised you.
Surely, you're ashamed to present such a massive non sequitur, but, no, you don't appear to be.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

FlashDangerpants wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 1:58 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 1:48 pm
FlashDangerpants wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 1:33 pm
Lol. Who promised you rhinoceros, oxygen, and groin itch?
Do you think you were entitled to a rhino, oxygen and groin itch? Will you object that God should have given you a rhino, but didn't? Because Harry's saying, "God is unjust." But there's no expectation of it, in his worldview, any more than of a rhino.

Sorry...you just missed the relevance. It wasn't that the relevance wasn't there.
I dont' see where you established that justice is a concept that depends upon this promise?
What "promise"? Harry's point is that NOBODY ever promised you "justice."

But if there is nobody who ever promised you anything different from anything you're getting already, then there is no such thing as "injustice." You're not "due" anything more. You're not "lacking" anything. You haven't been "ripped off," or "mistreated," or "denied" something that you deserved and were owed.

Life's just nasty, then, possibly, or maybe it's kind; but it's never "unjust." It is whatever it is. "Suck it up, Buttercup" is all the universe has to 'say' about that. You live, you die, you get sick, you stay healthy, you get eternal bliss or eternal perdition -- none of it is "injustice" if nobody's promised you anything different than whatever it is you get.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Harry Baird wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 2:10 pm ... it certainly doesn't entail eternal, unimaginable torment as punishment for finite transgressions.
Who says?

You say "nobody" promised you anything different. So any basis for complaint is gone.

But as it is, you don't know (and the Bible would deny) that "transgressions" are the whole problem, and that their implications are "finite" at all. :shock:

So all you have there is a variance of opinion between you and the Bible, with you also admitting that "nobody" ever told you you had a right to expect anything more.
Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 1:27 pm The question is wrongly formed.
I get it:
I can see you don't.
Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 1:27 pm According to your worldview, you say, "nobody" ever promised you "justice." Consequently, there can have been no "injustice" in this world or the next, since none was ever promised you.
Surely, you're ashamed to present such a massive non sequitur, but, no, you don't appear to be.
A "massive non sequitur," you insist? It should be easy to refute, then. Tell me who promised you "justice"? Did the aether? Did the universe itself? Was it Thor or Vishnu? But if it's "nobody," you've got no complaint. You can't say, "I was ripped off, because what I was never promised to have, I did not get."

No injustice, then.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

henry quirk wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 2:16 am
promethean75 wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 12:31 amwell actually that's what I'm aksing you. where's the beef and what are these mysterious 'rights'?
Every man, no matter when or where, knows he is his own. No man, no matter when or where, believes he is meant to be property or a commodity. A man may resign himself to servitude when it appears there are no other options, but he never accepts it. With all the variety in cultures, in societies, in manners of governance, in convention, with all the insurmountable differences between men and groups of men, it's striking the one intuition all men share, no exceptions, is this deep-in-the-bones sense I am mine.
It seem to me that every creature within the natural world *believes* something similar. If a creature, let's say a prairie dog, did not have this sense of sovereignty, which is the same as self-protection, he would have no ambition, no drive, to preserve himself. But within the natural system there is no animal that has any sort of *right to himself*. Take as an example the huge prairie dog colonies that once existed on the Great Plains. Some were enormous and they supported an entire ecological system and those predators that fed off of them.

Image

The prairie dog, naturally, *believed* in his sovereignty, his independent *right* to exist, but the real truth is that a greater power ruled over him. He had no choice in the matter. He was forced to sacrifice himself so that an entire system could exist and flourish. That prairie dog therefore was the *property* of the natural system, not of himself, and he was most certainly a *commodity*. His very flesh was needed for the others in the system to exist.

My view is that HQ realizes all of this. That is, that no living being in fact has any *right* to himself. But this knowledge, this realization, is intolerable to him. So he seems to concoct an enormous defense, which is simply a romanticized assertion that "Every man, no matter when or where, knows he is his own" which is then elaborated sentimentally. The core is that it is sentimental, not 'rational'.

And his *right* must be defended with a shotgun.

It is only and exclusively within a human community and social system where *rights* are defined. True, all human cultures define them and there are surely similarities between different cultures (thus ethical systems can be compared). But these systems of definitions of rights are uniquely human. Though there might be evidence of proto-ethical systems among chimpanzees and apes.

That a given (high-spirited) man *never accepts* the fact that he is a servant, in one way or another, in one degree or another, to a larger community, and this larger community is subservient to laws and rules that we normally term *our human condition* or the *condition* of existence, does nothing at all to alter the facts. Other men, in other situations, certainly accept *the way things are* and in truth participate in the 'agreement' that defines types and levels of servitude. In fact our social system, our civilization(s), are just such systems.

There is simply no man that does not exist within some level of *system*. From the most crude (when man was a hunter-gatherer in a small tribe of isolated humans) to the most sophisticated. And there is no man who can genuinely say "I am my own".

So the fact remains that even in an ideal society where social systems have been devised that allow a given man a relative degree of security of his self, his family, and his belongings the declaration of sovereignty is a comforting illusion. The social system of laws and regulations, with the real possibility of enforcement of those who violate legals rights, provides and secures those rights. But in no sense does the surrounding natural world. In fact the surrounding world not only does not care but the term *care* has no meaning: it simply does. So a tornado can wipe out the most ideal society. Or drought and famine. Or an asteroid.

Now, a comment or two about Harry's position.

First, I live in a terribly unequal and categorically unfair society. So every day I witness the terrible result when a culture has been established according to what I can call *unfair principles*. I can walk just a mile or two from where I live and step into communities of such poverty and disadvantage which Harry (and I assume most who write here) could not conceive of and possibly have no (or very little) direct experience of.

He is a member of a society grounded in civilized principles. (These originated in an imperialistic society but that, of course, is another issue altogether.) There now, men really do have *rights* and there really is an enforcement system which, when compared to the lack of one here, makes it seem astonishing and ideal. But those rights are defined by those who comprise that society. They are granted by the social system and defended by the same system. But they in no sense (that I can see) can be thought of as 'naturally given'. They only exist within that community of persons, within a governed system, and by the general consent of those who comprise and *believe in* the system.

One could say, but it would be a romantic declaration, that "God has granted rights". Or, as I have often tried to assert, that the notion of rights exists 'metaphysically' and has to be first understood, then captured and defined, and then enforced within human culture. The first picture is 'crude' and immature in my view. There is no 'god' who ever intervenes at any moment to protect the *rights* of any human creature. Only a human creature could conceive of such rights and defend them (or not, as the case may be). The second picture, though it will be dismissed by people like Dubious (who represents a particular stance which is anti-metaphysical), seems to me more mature. And I equate Harry's idealistic position with that of a realization of and an insistence on obeisance and conformity to 'higher principles' that are conceived of by human beings.

There is one core thing that Immanuel Can wants to assert when he speak of god and what god will do to those who do not, or will not, obey. He wishes to assert that there is no other place or process where our values originated except in the Hebrew context. He asserts that *god along gave them* and, ultimately, that god will enforce his laws. Not here of course, but there in a terrible after-world. (Though there is of course the eschatological view that the Earth, now imperfect and 'ruined', will at a future point be restored when the Prince of Peace has returned).

He will not give up the notion of ultimate and eternal punishment for those who disobey, or who do not profess a request for forgiveness for all they have ever done and who then are absolved completely for their *evil* actions, because he feels that to do so would weaken one of the main pillars on which the system is built.

But the fact genuinely seems to be that, even when a given religious system (Christianity for example) does collapse that what does remain is what can be conceived of and believed in as 'metaphysical' to this cruel natural world in which we live.
Last edited by Alexis Jacobi on Sun Oct 16, 2022 2:26 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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henry quirk
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Re: Christianity

Post by henry quirk »

Harry Baird wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 3:03 amTeam hq here when it comes to natural rights.
👍

*
Where hq and I differ is that I am comfortable with the idea that when large groups of people get together and organise themselves, they freely choose to trade part of their property in the form of taxation on their income, and part of their freedom by agreeing to follow the rule of law, for the greater freedom and opportunity inherent in the services provided for by that taxation (many of which would probably not exist without it), and for the greater safety and harmony (a type of freedom) that enforceable laws provide. Roughly speaking, anyway.
We don't differ at all. Consent, informed & freely given, in context, is everything. Of course, what can be given can also be withdrawn. And, of course, I'm talkin' about bonafide, individual consent, not an assumed mass consent.

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As far as I understand hq, he does not consider himself to have freely make such a choice, and thus considers that his property rights and freedoms are being infringed upon by being - as he sees it - forced to pay taxes against his will, and forced to obey a whole heap of extraneous laws. I hope though that he'll correct me if I'm misrepresenting him on this.
You're close enough...I won't nit pick.
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henry quirk
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Re: Christianity

Post by henry quirk »

Gary Childress wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 7:55 am
henry quirk wrote: Sat Oct 15, 2022 9:41 pm Nope. Even in the absence of authority I am mine...and you are yours.
Well (back to Christianity), according to the Bible, we're "God's children" and (like a good slave master) God supposedly doesn't like it when we commit "adultery." We can think we are "ours" all we want but if we truly act that way, we'll supposedly go to hell. The "wages of sin is death" according to Romans 6:23. I mean, are we really free if God is watching us in the bedroom to make sure we're sticking to the "missionary position" and not doing anything inordinately fun?
You'll have to consult a Christian on that. Me, I'm a deist.
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Re: Christianity

Post by FlashDangerpants »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 2:11 pm
FlashDangerpants wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 1:58 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 1:48 pm
Do you think you were entitled to a rhino, oxygen and groin itch? Will you object that God should have given you a rhino, but didn't? Because Harry's saying, "God is unjust." But there's no expectation of it, in his worldview, any more than of a rhino.

Sorry...you just missed the relevance. It wasn't that the relevance wasn't there.
I dont' see where you established that justice is a concept that depends upon this promise?
What "promise"? Harry's point is that NOBODY ever promised you "justice."

But if there is nobody who ever promised you anything different from anything you're getting already, then there is no such thing as "injustice." You're not "due" anything more. You're not "lacking" anything. You haven't been "ripped off," or "mistreated," or "denied" something that you deserved and were owed.

Life's just nasty, then, possibly, or maybe it's kind; but it's never "unjust." It is whatever it is. "Suck it up, Buttercup" is all the universe has to 'say' about that. You live, you die, you get sick, you stay healthy, you get eternal bliss or eternal perdition -- none of it is "injustice" if nobody's promised you anything different than whatever it is you get.
FDP and Harry appear to agree that there is no particular need for any higher power to promise anything for us to meaningfuly use concpets like justice and apply them to the world around us, just as we can use the word blue to discusss the sky without needing God to promise blueness.

And what is the argument by which you establish that justice is so special that it needs this arbitrary supernatural element?
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Harry wrote: Where hq and I differ is that I am comfortable with the idea that when large groups of people get together and organise themselves, they freely choose to trade part of their property in the form of taxation on their income, and part of their freedom by agreeing to follow the rule of law, for the greater freedom and opportunity inherent in the services provided for by that taxation (many of which would probably not exist without it), and for the greater safety and harmony (a type of freedom) that enforceable laws provide. Roughly speaking, anyway.
Henry wrote: We don't differ at all. Consent, informed & freely given, in context, is everything. Of course, what can be given can also be withdrawn.
Those who are born in to a given system -- such as Harry and Henry and all of us -- do not give our assent. The system into which we are born has defined that everyone born into it will give assent -- or be punished. Like children who grow up in a household where parents, and the surrounding culture, defines rules and ethics, the child does not really have a choice, nor does the citizen.

Though it is certainly true that in the course of events factions develop that challenge the status quo.

But the larger point is that all of us are born into general human systems. Of one sort or another. And these define the rules for us a priori.
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