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Old Hoosier Apologizes to Libertarians
Thread from yesterday ^ | 3-26 | TOH

Posted on 03/26/2002 7:30:11 AM PST by The Old Hoosier

Yesterday, I got into an argument with some libertarians. I promised to humiliate myself if they could answer the following question:

If I want to sell myself into slavery in order to pay off debts, why should the government be able to prevent me? Why should I not have every right to enter into an indissoluble contract surrendering my freedom--temporarily or permanently--to someone else in exchange for some consideration?

I hereby admit that I was wrong, because ThomasJefferson agreed that the government should have no power to prohibit voluntary slavery--a step that I did not think any of them would want to take. I hereby eat crow. (Tpaine and Eagle Eye still haven't given direct answers, but I'll mention it here when they do, and eat more crow.)

The relevant part of the long argument we had is here. TJ agrees to voluntary slavery at 374.


TOPICS: Free Republic; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: indenturedservitude; libertarian; sasu
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To: Roscoe
All well and good, but wrong is wrong no matter WHO does it or who says it's OK... and no amount of barbra striesand can make involuntary servitude anything but wrong. Just as no Roe v Wade can make abortion tolerable, no BS from the Supremes can make conscription tolerable.

BTW, you never HAVE answered: Did YOU serve in the military or is it just your alligator mouth showing up your rabbit a$$ again?

241 posted on 03/28/2002 11:40:18 AM PST by dcwusmc
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To: dcwusmc
Fascinating. Libertarians oppose military conscription, mischaracterizing it as slavery, while simultaneously championing the legalization of slavery under the guise of contract.

What a worthless theology.

242 posted on 03/28/2002 11:45:40 AM PST by Roscoe
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To: The Old Hoosier
There's no problem according to contract theory with voluntarily entering the contract, voluntarily following it, or, get this, voluntarily breaking it. That's right. Contract theory is not punitive and promotes efficiency, so the question is, if you decide, voluntarily again, to breach your contract, what is the damage to the other side? And with the court and government enforce it? It sounds to me like in your example you might well owe fifty-thousand plus interest back, but not necessarily more.
243 posted on 03/28/2002 11:52:36 AM PST by Johassen
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To: Roscoe
Fascinating. I don't recall that I have promoted slavery here. I condemned conscription as involuntary servitude, which it clearly is, no matter that the STATE is the one doing it (I guess fedgov as massa is OK with you?).

I did ask you a direct question which you avoided again: Did you serve in the armed forces or are you just some statist jerkoff that likes to force OTHERS into servitude so YOU don't have to go?

244 posted on 03/28/2002 12:03:31 PM PST by dcwusmc
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To: dcwusmc
I don't recall that I have promoted slavery here.

Congratulations on your exceptional conduct.

245 posted on 03/28/2002 12:19:10 PM PST by Roscoe
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To: dcwusmc
Well, I agree with everything you said, except the draft. Draft for military service really isn't involuntary servitude (except the Crotch; that ought to be completely voluntary, like it used to be). You retain all the rights of American citizenship, except that you can be ordered to place your life in harm's way.

Military service is one of the responsibilities of being a citizen of any nation group, part of the implied compact. You live in great groups for security and protection anyway. Somebody has to fight, and the only way to keep that equatable is to give the governing body the say in acquiring soldiers in time of war.

Whether the feminists like it or not, this is a male responsibility. The matching female responsibility toward security and pretection of the nation is to bear and raise up children to become good citizens. Way I see it, anyhow.

Semper Fi '64 - '68

246 posted on 03/28/2002 12:21:07 PM PST by William Terrell
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To: Roscoe
That wasn't what I was doing. What I was defending was contracts. But you knew that.
247 posted on 03/28/2002 12:43:45 PM PST by MadameAxe
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To: MadameAxe
What I was defending was contracts.

Slavery contracts.

248 posted on 03/28/2002 1:35:56 PM PST by Roscoe
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To: Roscoe
Fascinating. Libertarians oppose military conscription, mischaracterizing it as slavery, while simultaneously championing the legalization of slavery under the guise of contract.

A fanatics fantasy.
What a worthless twit you are roscoe.

249 posted on 03/28/2002 3:46:44 PM PST by tpaine
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To: Roscoe
OK, now no distractions:

HAVE YOU SERVED IN THE ARMED FORCES or are you still just blowing smoke???

250 posted on 03/28/2002 6:13:20 PM PST by dcwusmc
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To: William Terrell
As a rule, you see it correctly, my friend. I hold the opinion that the draft IS involuntary servitude by its nature. Whether or not we should use it is yet open to question, although it has been well said that any society that cannot attract enough VOLUNTEERS to save it during wartime is likely not WORTH saving. Witness WWII, where they had the draft but most folks volunteered or called their draft board and asked to be called up... No shortage of volunteers!!!

I went to Parris Island in '67 and got to the SE Asian Wargames in '69... did you get to participate?

Semper fi!

251 posted on 03/28/2002 6:19:16 PM PST by dcwusmc
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To: William Terrell
Hi, I thankfully have no clue about your ass and have no desire to find out. I do NOT live in San Francisco. It is so bad there I hear that if you drop your wallet, rather than bending over to pick it up, you kick it to a safe city! LOL

On the issue of the Constitution, I agree it gives it's power to the Congress, Senate and all that. I also agree that in many cases the way it is interpreted seems to suggests that the Courts are all full of Yoga Masters!
But the main area that you don't like that I think is a true fact is that if they didn't interpret the Constitution with current law, you'd have to go with adding on amendments. If you do that you would have a Constitution with amendments that would make it look like the tax code law books (LARGE LOADED AND CONFUSING)! In future years I could see where you would easily have more than 13,000 amendments if the current system didn't exist.
That in my opinion would reduce the original Constitution to just a nice old piece of history as originally written. And NONE of those in Congress wanted that, so we have what we have. (FROM WHAT I HAVE READ SO FAR)!

If you don't like the current way of doing it you would get the 13,000 amendment method. That would be far more out of control and was why the current way won out from what I read. I am a logical guy and it makes sense to me over the alternatives.

Can you come up with a third way that would work better without being sarcastic for real? Right now we have two choices:
#1 current system.
#2 thousands of amendments (confusing).
#3 your sincere heart felt better ideas?

You have to realize there is no way to just go back to the original without amendments because we simply do no live in the 1700s any more. The idea of amendments up the kazoo just isn't efficient. I don't work for the Government at all, but I can't think of an easy answer to this.

PS: Please next time leave your ass out this and use your gray matter upstairs.

Best wishes to you and may you and your family have a wonderful Easter. God Bless!

252 posted on 03/28/2002 6:44:53 PM PST by A CA Guy
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To: dcwusmc
for 222 & 223!

So you would have preferred that instead of the way we do stuff in this country now you would have rather had a couple of thousand amendments added to the Constitution.

Fine, a large majority did not agree with you and thought the best way to keep the reverence of the original and yet deal with today was to do what they do now.

Without getting flippant about it, please think about it and give your preferred method for dealing with the Constitution as we move into the future of our tomorrows.

I'm not being sarcastic when I say you would have to be dreaming if you think they would just go with your interpretation of the original and let every SIN run wild in the name of freedom. If they could not use their laws as they do now they would simply patch new amendments before they end their current method. IMO

Happy Easter to you and your family David.
God Bess You All In This Holiday Season and every other day as well.

253 posted on 03/28/2002 7:02:12 PM PST by A CA Guy
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To: dcwusmc
Black's says "The condition of one who is compelled by force, coercion, or imprisonment, and against his will, to labor for another, whether he is paid or not."

The draftee would be laboring for the good of himself, his family and nation, not for the personal gratification of another individual. Service for men is a duty. I'll definitely grant you that a nation that doesn't inspire volunteers has a questionable right to exist. But once you get caught up in the protection racket of a nation of people, the only way out of being impressed to defend it seems to be to leave it. Philosophically, that is.

Was in jungles until late '67. Got out in '68. Grunt.

254 posted on 03/28/2002 7:29:25 PM PST by William Terrell
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To: Roscoe
As people have told you till they're blue in the face, slavery... involuntary. Contracts... voluntary. One can't equal the other, by definition. Unless, that is, you want to start redefining what is, is.

Gotta go. I'm sure, however, that somebody, somewhere, is breathlessly awaiting your next authoritative sound bite denouncing the eeeeeevil Libertarians.

255 posted on 03/28/2002 8:10:18 PM PST by MadameAxe
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To: tpaine
Some self-professed libertarians are clueless about the beliefs they think they've embraced.
256 posted on 03/28/2002 11:26:39 PM PST by Roscoe
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To: MadameAxe
As people have told you till they're blue in the face, slavery... involuntary.

Indentured servitude was a form of slavery entered into by an initially voluntary act, blue faces not withstanding.

257 posted on 03/28/2002 11:29:49 PM PST by Roscoe
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To: A CA Guy
You are an absolute liberal whore with your "living Constitution" crapola. The reason they want to interpret the Constitution out of existence is for exactly the reasons you like it... namely that the Constitution is a set of CHAINS ON GOVERNMENT, not on the people... and LIBERAL WHORES CAN'T STAND A FREE PEOPLE. Get thee to DU where all your other whorish buds hang out and stop trying to impede the restoration of the Constitution as the Supreme Law of the Land, where it LIMITS GOVERNMENT INTERFERENCE IN PEOPLE'S LIVES... By about a dozen orders of magnitude compared to what your ilk have foisted on us.
258 posted on 03/29/2002 2:40:54 AM PST by dcwusmc
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To: A CA Guy
On the issue of the Constitution, I agree it gives it's power to the Congress, Senate and all that.

The Constitution created Congress. Without the Constitution there would be no Congress. And all that.

But the main area that you don't like that I think is a true fact is that if they didn't interpret the Constitution with current law, you'd have to go with adding on amendments.

The Constitution controls the law that can be passed. If the interpretation of a law is not consistant with the Constitution, it's unconstitutional.

If you do that you would have a Constitution with amendments that would make it look like the tax code law books (LARGE LOADED AND CONFUSING)! In future years I could see where you would easily have more than 13,000 amendments if the current system didn't exist.

Methinks you joust with phantoms. In 180 years there have been 26 amendments made, and 10 of them were made in one swoop, so you could really say that 16 amendments have been made in 180 years. To give you the benefit of the doubt, we'll use the 26 instead of the 16. That means that it would take 90,000 years to get to 13,000 amendments.

I have to admit I don't understand most of what you said. We have a Constitution at the federal level and one each at the state level. These constitutions limit the making, execution of and judging the application of, laws. Since the people of the nation brought the government that exercises these powers into being, only they, not the government creature they created, can change it.

The government can propose changes, but the people (within the states) must ratify. The only alternate way of changing any constitution would be to have government officials do it, therby enabling created creatures the power to alter their own creation.

Please clarify what you want. I haven't been able to make it out. What I've read is incoherent. Are you saying that the Supreme Court, another creature created by the people, should make de facto changes to the Constitution? So that it can change with the "times"?

If that is your remedy, I would say that the Constitution and constitutions are to govern the behavior of people who administrate the laws in America. The "changes" in the "times" are only measured by technology social theories. People and their behavior has not changed no matter what the advances in technology or social theory.

259 posted on 03/29/2002 5:32:06 AM PST by William Terrell
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To: Roscoe
Indentured servitude was a form of slavery entered into by an initially voluntary act

If they voluntarily agreed to be an indentured servant for a certain amount of money, for a certain amount of time, but then were not let go, that would be fraud, because the indenturer didn't live up to his end of the contract.

It's hard for me to imagine how awful people's lives must have been back then that they would do such a thing as sell themselves into servitude, but they must have thought it a better deal than whatever would have happened to them (or perhaps, their families) otherwise. They're the ultimate example of people trading liberty for security.

260 posted on 03/29/2002 5:40:58 AM PST by MadameAxe
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