Maybe my view is too optimistic, I'm sure Jesus and Buddha had the same problem.
Wow, you compared yourself to both Jesus and Buddha. Congratulations. Really, I mean it, I thought I had a big ego....
You do realize we get free healthcare, right? Or is that infringing on your right to break your leg and not receive treatment?
You're view of humanity is, IMO, unrealistically optimistic.
"If we all just got along..."
Well of course if we all just got along we would all be happy, but society doesn't work that way. Someone will always be disenfranchised, or at least feel they are, and they, and other people like them, will resort to crime to "balance" the system.
War will always be a reality. Someone will always think someone else wronged them, and sooner or latter guns will go off. Human nature is ugly. We make the best out of the situation G-d gave us. Hopelessly dreaming for a world with no crime, war, or unnecessary death will only depress you as you come closer to the reality of the matter.
Freedom is not absolute, it has to work side-by-side with laws to maintain the balance of security and freedom, not one or the other. Either extreme is dangerous.
Oh I know about free health care, my mom is a nurse and believe you me I know about the waste that occurs of that system. About the constant cut backs that occur while administrators and consultants seat in freshly painted offices with nice new furniture.. meanwhile the cafeteria for the nurses no longer even provides salt and pepper at the tables. I should also mention she's been on a waiting list for surgery for about 2/3 years now and still has no date set for that.
So tell me exactly where free health care is in any way shape or form a substitute for free speech? Tell how this analogy even applies because it's pretty along the same lines as arguing that grapes are better then plums because apples have more seeds. In fact your example is not infringing on my not to choose not to be treated should I choose to do so, it's called "not going to the hospital". Again freedom is personal choice so if someone chooses not to treat a broken leg it is certainly within their rights to do so and they bear the ultimate burden of extending the force of their will.
My dad's a doctor, my grandfather revolutionized eye surgery in Canada. I know all about the pros and cons of national healthcare, it's been a contestant topic of discussion at my dinner table as long as I can remember.
You know, I'm not sure what healthcare has to do with the basic tenants of freedom, but you brought it up, so I thought I'd add my
At least with our current system everyone is covered. The only realistic alternative is privatization, which I admit wouldn't be that bad if done right.
If we're all just a bunch of homicidal apes with no control over our actions then why even debate anything? We have free will and that free will is not freedom in a cage, as such it is completely free. So we either have free will or we don't. If we have it we can choose to work together and collectively better our lots as many people have done on smaller scales and which we could do on a larger scale... or we have a nature, a function of instinct and thus do not have free will and as such should not even be questioning our own actions because that is our instinct. A scorpion doesn't question if it is right or wrong to sting, it just does so out of instinct, so what does it say that we question our actions? Perhaps if we had a little more faith in our ability to get things done and spent a little less time dooming and glooming about how it can never be done. Think of how many things have been impossible... we'll never cross that mountain.. it's impossible... and we got across and came to an ocean which was impossible to cross... we took to the clouds which was also an impossible feat and maybe, just maybe we even made it to the moon {you seem to confuse my willingness to question for blind acceptance of the other side... silly goose}. We said it was impossible for life to live without the light of the sun and found life living at the bottom of the ocean, far from the light of the sun... so do you honestly think we know in this day and age what is actually impossible or possible?
We're more then just "psychotic apes," but that doesn't mean we're still not an aggressive species. We aren't this care bear, smurf-like species that's willing to get together for a big group hug at the end of the day.
We're flawed, that's the bottom line. We're a flawed species. We do the best that we can to live in a civilized world. Still, there's no denying that a large portion of the population would degenerate into anarchy if we have absolute freedom.
So no, it's not as simple as "we either have freedom or we don't."
That's a very simplistic view. Very few times are things so black and white in the world.
You said we should work to collectively better our lots as so many people have done in smaller groups. You go on to say that this type of system can be accomplished on a larger scale (I assume you mean nationally, or even internationally).
Well that's a great ideal, I'll admit, and anyone who doesn't feel some kind of attraction to that goal is heartless, plain and simple. It's a great theory, a great dream.
That's all it is, a dream. What you're describing is Communism, as described by Karl Marx. Well that idea has been tried.
Don't kid yourself, Lenin tried to make that society work as best as he could during the Soviet Union's early days. In fact he came pretty close, during the mid 1920's. What happened though? The system devolved into a totalitarian regime. The same process occurred in China, Yougoslavia, Cuba, and anywhere else a revolutionary socialist regime attempted to implement Communism.
Your suggestion, that we work to collectively better our lots, is simply unattainable. I say that by looking at societies that have chosen to go down that path, in each and every case the end result was the lose of freedoms, not the protection of them.
I admit, communistic societies work on small social groups, like a tribe, village, or even a city. Any larger then that, however, and the system devolves into totalitarianism.
No, the best way to safeguard our freedoms is the liberal democracy, that we see in Japan, the States, here in Canada, and in Western Europe (as well as a growing number of eastern European States).
This system also emphasizes responsibilities, however. We have a responsibility to balance freedoms with law and order. Either one in extreme is dangerous. Essentially we have to work in finding a balance between the two extremes you say are our only choices.
As far as I'm concerned nothing is impossible, so suck it.
Wooo. That was close. This almost evolved into an intelligent discussion.
In a world where an increasing amount of families have both the mom and dad as the primary wage earner, this simply isn't possible. Either mom or dad are at home, but swamped with the combination of office and house work, or a nanny is raising the kid. If it's just mom and dad, many times letting them sit in front of the television is the best way to keep the kids preoccupied while they catch up on whatever work they need to do. As for a nanny, it's a mixed bag. Many times they see television as a simple way of collecting their cheque. Let Jr sit in front of the tv all day, read a few magazines, wait for mom and dad to come home.
You're describing the way you want things to work, I'm describing how they actually work.
Yet more reason to stop trying to defend a system we know not to work and try something new however "impossible" it may seem... This selective interest which you seem to feel is impossible to dispose of to keep a system running has been shrinking back the middle class, the rich get morbidly richer and the poor dreadfully poorer. The cost of living goes up faster then the average wage, does this seem like the results a working system delivers?
No, that describes the flow of a free-market economy. Free-market economies always experience upturns and downturns, and in rare cases surges and depressions. It's a fact of the system. We experienced an upturn in the mid and late 90's, and now we're coming down from that high. I agree it's not perfect, but to barrow a phrase from Winston Churchill, "it's the worst system we have except all the others that have been tried."
Are there room for improvements? Yes. Governments could exercise more control in the economy to make the downturns and (G-d forbid) depressions less severe. In the end though the economy will always follow this pattern, as it has since at least the 1800's.
If you have a perfect, guaranteed never to dip economic plan, please tell. I promise you, I won't be the only one interested.
As for those TV's used to pacify kids, most of them have parental locks, few are ever used. Again this is parents shucking responsibility on two levels. First not actually taking the time to spend with their kids and second not using the tools available. All these parents have so much time to bitch and moan about why someones creation can't be shown on TV but they don't have 5 minutes to set the V-chip or the will power to not give in to kids nagging if they truly feel so strongly that it should not be seen?
You can describe the ways things work all you want, explaining how the horse works never designed the car; talking about the way you want a car to work did.
No, I'm discussing the reality of the situation. If we were both working on inventing the car, I would be the one arguing for a fossil-fuel based system because I understand that's the best way to get the car to work. You would be busy hopelessly pursuing a pipe-dream about an engine that runs on water.
So know they knew about 9/11?
So not only did they fake mankind's greatest scientific accomplishment, but they allowed 3,000+ people die?
Face it, the American government isn't that good at keeping secrets. The X-Files was a great show, but in reality the American, or any anyone else's government is to bogged down with corruption, backstabbing, and minor players looking to make a name fore themselves with "the big leak" for anything on the scale you're suggesting to not only work, but for the lie to be maintained.
Yes, they did allow 3000 people to die. Who wouldn't want 3000 martyrs for the economic crusades? And you're right it's not going to stay secret, so what they do is dub these people "conspiracy theorists" and paint a picture of them as buggy little men hanging out in dark dusty apartments scattered with many papers bobbles and painted in the glow of flickering computer screen muttering on about aliens and big foot and assassinations. That way the average person dismisses what they say out of hand instead of actually considering what they have to say or giving them a fair hearing. Again the world could be so much better if only it's residents thought things through a little more and kept an open mind.
Those "conspiracy theorists" are labelled nuts because they don't have any solid proof. They don't have anything of significant value to prove that the American government knew about 9/11 ahead of time, or that the lunar landings were faked. They're marginalized not because of a government plot to hide the truth, but because they lack any real proof that such cover ups exist. If either the lunar landings being faked or the American government knowing about 9/11 ahead of time were a reality then these "conspiracy theorists" would have blown the lid wide open.
Read
All the President's Men. Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward investigated an alleged conspiracy within the American government (Nixon's involvement in the Watergate break-ins). They proved the reality of this conspiracy because the cover up actually existed. They were able to break the story in short order. Why? Because there was actually something there to investigate. Had Nixon been innocent Bernstein and Woodward would have just been a couple of nuts.
Likewise, if there was any truth to the lunar landings hoax theory or the theory that the US let 9/11 happen despite knowing about it ahead of time, these "conspiracy theorists" would have uncovered some hard facts to back their theories up.
Do you honestly think a government willing to go to war so often, founded on slavery and dedicated to expansion, assimilation and extermination through out the course of it's history and running strong right to the present day honestly gives a shit about 3000 people. To those truly in power those 3000 people weren't important and are worth far more dead then they ever could have been alive, for all the US's talk of freedom and equality and rights it is essentially an oligarchy wearing the guise of a democracy.
No, Russian society was founded on slavery, American society was founded on the principals of freedom, it's founders were just hypocrites who happened to own slaves (except for Benjamin Franklin). There's a huge difference. You just have to look at the big picture, not the big picture through "America Sucks" lenses.
I'm sorry, I can't see the American government allowing 3000 people die in the largest terrorist attack on their soil if they could have stopped it.
"An oligarchy wearing the guise of a democracy"?
That's only as true as you can stretch the meaning of the word, and in this case it's stretched a little to thin.
Again, St. Marx, believe it or not, does not have all the answers, and his theories can't realistically be used to measure the society we live in.
So why would they do it? Does this sound familiar:
After Adolf Hitler had been appointed Reichskanzler on 30 January 1933, the building was set on fire on 27 February 1933, under circumstances still not entirely clear (see Reichstag fire). This proved to be a valuable excuse for the Nazis to suspend most human rights provided for by the 1919 constitution in the Reichstag Fire Decree.
So not only have you compared yourself to Jesus and Buddha, told me to "suck it", but you've also compared Bush to Hitler. Bravo.