You said that already. You were supposed to explain how one implies the other.You posted it, you implied it. Those are your words.
Are you really that use to people just going along with your nonsense?
You said that already. You were supposed to explain how one implies the other.You posted it, you implied it. Those are your words.
You said that already. You were supposed to explain how one implies the other.
Are you really that use to people just going along with your nonsense?
Because I don't understand your reasoning.If I already said that, than why should I explain your interpretation.
Because I don't understand your reasoning.
Please explain.
What is your definition of liberty?
You should think about wealth as the value of those things above their cost. If someone pays $200 for a barrel of oil that is only going for $100, then they have a negative wealth amount until the price gets above the $200 they paid for it.What is wealth?
As I define wealth, it is natural resources, labor (manual), and technology (equipment and know how).
The government is a political arrangement, backed by force.What is the government?
The government is a political arrangement, backed by violent force, used by the rulers (those in charge of this political arrangement) to coerce the rest of the population to do what they want.
I agree with all of what you said, but I will include the effect of that list. It also allows a person to break the norms of history and not be a savage leech on others around him. For the first time in human history people could choose to be around others based on their mutual economic self-interest, and the use of force is unnecessary and contradictory to the purest idea of wealth.What does wealth allow you to do?
It allows you to survive, to learn, and to maintain and improve your lifestyle.
I mention earlier how my beliefs leans towards the consent of the government.How does the government survive?
It appropriates (or steals) the wealth from the rest of the population for use and disposal by the rulers of the government.
I loosely agree with this enough to not add anything.Does the government create wealth?
It cannot create wealth, because before a government can exist, the wealth must already exist for the government to survive. Once a government is in existence, it simply uses the threat of violence (or violence itself) to take the wealth from everyone else for its own use and disposal.
Therefore, government cannot, never has, and never will create wealth.
All government does is reallocate wealth for political advantage and to disrupt the natural distribution of wealth.
Then again, I do not believe anyone creates wealth other than the people involved in either exploiting the resource, developing a technology, creating a product, or having the skill to design, build, maintain, or repair it.
Governments and corporations do not create wealth... the individual does.
You should think about wealth as the value of those things above their cost. If someone pays $200 for a barrel of oil that is only going for $100, then they have a negative wealth amount until the price gets above the $200 they paid for it.
I think it is an important distinction because the capital isn't a value in itself, but instead it should only be worth the productive activity you can squeeze out of it.
The government is a political arrangement, backed by force.
I edited it a bit, but I think this is a purer definition. What the government does with that force is a reflection of the people governed.
The current values of the country supports immoral coercive force, but that isn't the natural state of government. The natural state of government is to be the primary user of force by the consent of the governed.
We as a nation could choose to support an exclusively moral application of force, and if we did, that government wouldn't be more unnatural or natural than the present government.
By your definition, if we got a moral government tomorrow, then it would be the corrupt version because it doesn't follow the defined path of death and destruction.
Evil doesn't have to be the default of government. It has been that way for all of written history, by choice.
I agree with all of what you said, but I will include the effect of that list. It also allows a person to break the norms of history and not be a savage leech on others around him. For the first time in human history people could choose to be around others based on their mutual economic self-interest, and the use of force is unnecessary and contradictory to the purest idea of wealth.
I mention earlier how my beliefs leans towards the consent of the government.
Our current electorate endorses the theft currently in progress, but it doesn't have to be that way.
I loosely agree with this enough to not add anything.
Consider Charles and David Koch. Their company, Koch Industries, has relied on $88 million worth of government handouts. Yet, as the major financiers of the anti-government right, the Kochs are still billed as libertarian free-market activists.

Not just "libertarians" but "arch conservatives" who back politicians as they cut food stamps and cut and keep people off Medicaid, all the while making sure their media outlets tell us about people who may have lost their policies under "Obamacare".
When I lived in Vancouver the power and water companies were owned by a government corporation called BC Hydro. The province had a massive hydro electric dam and a surplus of drinking water. The government made sure that all of the residents had access to power and water at cut market rates before they could sell it to other markets.
To put it in perspective, when I lived in a large studio apartment with electric heat I paid $50 a month for my power and water. In the summer time I paid about $20 a month.
When I moved to California I was shocked on how much PG&E and t EBMUD charged for utilities. In a month I paid more for water alone than I paid for all my other utilities combined back home. Then there was the natural gas explosion in San Bruno that destroyed several homes, the ENRON scandal. All things that NEVER would have happened back home. The system is set up to avoid problems like that.
Keep talking openly about how great it is when a governmental entity did this and you will be secretly accused of being a DPRK agent. A van will show up outside your house and a team of people will enter your house and car surreptitiously. They will drop covert surveillance when you leave. There is no room for debate or discussion about anything you are talking about in the U.S.
The U.S. has become a clown show that would never support something like this. I have my own problems which is frustrating when a failed system of surveillance and terror is an impediment to your growth, progress, and innovation. It did not use to be like this; however, all great empires diminish internally such as the USSR until they collapse. The only solution is to leave.
When I lived in Vancouver the power and water companies were owned by a government corporation called BC Hydro. The province had a massive hydro electric dam and a surplus of drinking water. The government made sure that all of the residents had access to power and water at cut market rates before they could sell it to other markets.
To put it in perspective, when I lived in a large studio apartment with electric heat I paid $50 a month for my power and water. In the summer time I paid about $20 a month.
When I moved to California I was shocked on how much PG&E and t EBMUD charged for utilities. In a month I paid more for water alone than I paid for all my other utilities combined back home. Then there was the natural gas explosion in San Bruno that destroyed several homes, the ENRON scandal. All things that NEVER would have happened back home. The system is set up to avoid problems like that.
source: http://newdeal.feri.org/tva/tva10.htm
Rural Electrification
Although nearly 90 percent of urban dwellers had electricity by the 1930s, only ten percent of rural dwellers did. Private utility companies, who supplied electric power to most of the nation's consumers, argued that it was too expensive to string electric lines to isolated rural farmsteads. Anyway, they said, most farmers, were too poor to be able to afford electricity.
The Roosevelt Administration believed that if private enterprise could not supply electric power to the people, then it was the duty of the government to do so. Most of the court cases involving TVA during the 1930s concerned the government's involvement in the public utilities industry.
In 1935 the Rural Electric Administration (REA) was created to bring electricity to rural areas like the Tennessee Valley. In his 1935 article "Electrifying the Countryside," Morris Cooke, the head of the REA, stated thatIn addition to paying for the energy he used, the farmer was expected to advance to the power company most or all of the costs of construction. Since utility company ideas as to what constituted sound rural lines have been rather fancy, such costs were prohibitive for most farmers. [ footnote]
Many groups opposed the federal government's involvement in developing and distributing electric power, especially utility companies, who believed that the government was unfairly competing with private enterprise (See the Statement of John Battle ). Some members of Congress who didn't think the government should interfere with the economy, believed that TVA was a dangerous program that would bring the nation a step closer to socialism. Other people thought that farmers simply did not have the skills needed to manage local electric companies.
By 1939 the REA had helped to establish 417 rural electric cooperatives, which served 288,000 households. The actions of the REA encouraged private utilities to electrify the countryside as well. By 1939 rural households with electricity had risen to 25 percent. The enthusiasm that greeted the introduction of electric power can be seen in the remarks of Rose Scearce.
When farmers did receive electric power their purchase of electric appliances helped to increase sales for local merchants. Farmers required more energy than city dwellers, which helped to offset the extra cost involved in bringing power lines to the country.
TVA set up the Electric Home and Farm Authority to help farmers purchase major electric appliances. The EHFA made arrangements with appliance makers to supply electric ranges, refrigerators and water heaters at reasonable prices. These appliances were sold at local power companies and electric cooperatives. A farmer could purchase appliances here with loans offered by the EHFA, who offered low-cost financing.
Rural electrification was based on the belief that affordable electricity would improve the standard of living and the economic competitiveness of the family farm. But electric power alone was not enough to stop the transformation of America's farm communities. Rural electrification did not halt the continuing migration of rural people from the country to the city. Nor did it stop the decline in the total number of family farms.