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  #41  
Old 05-12-2007, 08:19 PM
ShakeZula06 ShakeZula06 is offline
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Default Re: Coercion, how I see it

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I should also mention most libertarians don't object to blackmail, which is pretty much the definition of coercive.

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lol, no it isn't.
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  #42  
Old 05-12-2007, 08:22 PM
nietzreznor nietzreznor is offline
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Default Re: Coercion, how I see it

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Just my two cents. I think either both cases are coercive or neither are. Either you accept capitalism and government or you reject both.

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I tend to reject both, but I think you are using a very loose defintion of 'capitalism'.

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Capitalism is a system by which there is a market for labor power.

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So do you think, on a free market, no one should be able to work for anyone else?
I agree and sympathize with some of the points you make in this post, but I fully support someone's right to live as they see fit, including 'selling their labor' if they so choose. On a free market, however, I see no reason to beleive that such transactions would be inherently coercive, since there would be full right of unionization, far less consolidation in industries, more competition, and less concentrated wealth.
If free markets don't lead to "work for employer X or starve" situations, then it is hard to see why "have sex with me or be fired" scenarios would be truly coercive, since the woman really would have other available options.
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  #43  
Old 05-12-2007, 08:27 PM
lehighguy lehighguy is offline
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Default Re: Coercion, how I see it

She can likely go to the factory across the street, or in the next town over, where the manager doesn't molest employees. This doesn't require her to sell her home, or leave her family, or travel halfway around the world and learn a new language in a strange culture. A bad government does require those things.
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  #44  
Old 05-12-2007, 08:29 PM
ShakeZula06 ShakeZula06 is offline
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Default Re: Coercion, how I see it

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Imposition of a negative is not the same as the withdrawal of a positive!


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being coerced by nature != being coerced by a moral agent.

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/thread
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  #45  
Old 05-12-2007, 10:24 PM
SNOWBALL SNOWBALL is offline
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Default Re: Coercion, how I see it

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In other words, STFU or GTFO.

I'm done with this line of discussion. It's ridiculous. If it were true it would justify anything that any government does. Jews don't like getting exterminated? STFO or GTFO.


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What the hell? You are really a piece of work. I'm saying it's all coercive, not that none of it is. What I'm trying to show is you can't say one situation is while the other isn't.


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Borodog knows this. He's just being dishonest.
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  #46  
Old 05-13-2007, 01:05 AM
samsonite2100 samsonite2100 is offline
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Default Re: Coercion, how I see it

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The man is free to quit his job, but he is subject to the inherent coerciveness of his own human nature. That doesn't, however, mean that his boss is the coercing agent; his personal needs are.


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This seems like a strange argument to me. By the same logic, say my friend is in bad gambling debt and comes to me (his rich friend) for help. I offer to pay off his debt, with the stipulation that he pays me back tenfold what I loan him. Basically, he would be my indentured servant for life. But this isn't me being exploitative or coercive, it's him being coerced by his own need not to be killed and dumped in the East River.

This seems clearly untrue--it's obviously exploitative, and is coercive by the OP dictionary definition.

"the use of express or implied threats of violence or reprisal or other intimidating behavior that puts a person in immediate fear of the consequences in order to compel that person to act against his or her will"

In my example, I'm using a situational threat from a third party to get someone to act against his will. It's less direct than the loan shark threatening to murder him, but it's still coercive.

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You make a pretty convincing case as to why people should not incur debts when they do not have the money available to pay that debt off. I encourage you to continue to spread the word at your leisure. I support your efforts to educating people about why gambling with money one can not afford to loose is generally something to be avoided.

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That's great but you didn't address his comment. If everyone was a genius that never did dumb things that would be great, but that's not reality.

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He does not sound like this persons 'friend' to me. His little comment puts up one possible scenario, like a false dichotomy. I do not feel any obligation to respond when he is attempting to box in a discussion in such a manner.

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You seemed to feel obligated to respond to my "little" comment, just in a wholly useless way.

And how is taking issue with HMK's ridiculous "there is no coercion/exploitation in the free market" position boxing in discussion? To make it clearer, I'm saying that if party A is forced by party B (party B can be nature or a loanshark or whatever) to go to party C, and party C takes irresponsible advantage of the situation, then at the very least it's exploitation, if not actively coercive.

How about addressing what I wrote instead of taking the standard AC tack of exasperated eye-rolling? I really don't know why you guys objected so strenuously to the "AC ghetto thread" so-called--it's obviously such agony posting about this stuff, I don't know why you bother.
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  #47  
Old 05-13-2007, 01:08 AM
tomdemaine tomdemaine is offline
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Default Re: Coercion, how I see it

Hi,

If people had to start taking full responsibility for bad choices many many many fewer bad choices would be made.
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  #48  
Old 05-13-2007, 01:44 AM
plzleenowhammy plzleenowhammy is offline
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Default Re: Coercion, how I see it

The point is not to find some place where people can be free but for people to be free wherever they are.
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  #49  
Old 05-13-2007, 02:16 AM
valtaherra valtaherra is offline
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Default Re: Coercion, how I see it

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Actually the point of that was to show both situations are coercive, by showing the claims of government are analagous to that of a capitalist. It was certainly not to justify government.


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You are comparing government - as in an entire social institution, a comprehensive, no exceptions, all-encompassing mechanism of coercion - to one individual in one hypothetical instance. This is the flaw in your analogy.

One boss might fire a hot chick if she doesn't blow him. This might happen in AC-land. Then again, it has and might continue to happen in the statist' dream world, our current reality. There might be repercussions in either one. Then again, the boss might get away with it in either one.

You have failed to demonstrate how bosses demanding sex-or-else is endemic of anarcho-capitalism, or government for that matter.
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  #50  
Old 05-13-2007, 02:34 AM
valtaherra valtaherra is offline
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Default Re: Coercion, how I see it



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We have two classes, and it is clear that in most cases those who sell labor power need the buyers more than vice versa. It is one thing to be a lawyer or a physician, but your average factory or farm worker doesn't have the privelege of market power. Thus the employer is able to act in a way that I consider coercive and essentially "get away with it."

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Your troubling conclusions stem from the following:

1) You incorrectly divide "us" into two classes, capital-owning labor buyers and capital-less labor sellers. In truth, there are capital-less labor buyers and capital-owning labor sellers, as well as capital-owning do-nothingers and capital-less do-nothingers.

2) You imply that capital-owning labor buyers owe something to capital-less labor sellers, put another way, that CL-LS's are entitled to something owed to them by CO-LB's. At least that's what I understand when you say employer's act in a way "you consider coercive" and "get away with it". However, you do not define or justify this entitlement. Whatever this entitlement is though, it cannot possibly be natural, and so it can only be your subjectively determined, arbitrarily defined entitlement.

3) You fail to understand capitalism as a continuous development of the division and specialization of labor, and the continuous increase in the productivity of labor. Inherent within capitalism is the continuous increase in laborer market power.
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