[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[TOUGH QUESTIONS] State or individual - which should be master? - Zerowedgie
- Subject: [TOUGH QUESTIONS] State or individual - which should be master? - Zerowedgie
- From: zen at freedbms.net (Zenaan Harkness)
- Date: Mon, 23 Jul 2018 12:03:18 +1000
So this is perhaps a tough question for folks round here :D
Well, at least for the statists.
This question - which should be master, individual or state, is posed
as a dichotomy, as though it's one or the other.
Any anarchist worth his salt is firmly on the side of the individual,
and so in these quarters a statist stands out like Brennan
photographing Hillary giving Obama a golden shower. (Ugh, damn!
Strike that thought alreadyâ?¼)
Thankfully Zerowedgie firmly observes the third aspect of the trinity
in this realm - the middle ground:
STATE MIDDLE INDIVIDUAL
â?? Plato Alexander Aristotle
Republic â??The Greatâ??
â?? Maoists Confucian Taoists
In the face of this thought, that which arose for me personally a few
years ago as "an alternative noun/label for anarchy" namely "direct
democracy" appears now to be the middle ground - that balance
between:
â?? the very real potential chaos of anarchy, and
â?? the very real potential crystalline death of most of that which
makes life worth living, in the extreme conformity and death of
the individual, when the state is taken to its limit.
Notwithstanding the (correct as it is) appearance of direct democracy
as a form of individualism, direct democracy also be a recognition of
both the tribal nature of individuals and the consequent inherent
need for us to communicate in respect of our apparent disagreements
and possibly find resolutions, thus:
â?? the state direct democracy anarchy/ism
Perhaps it might be useful to consider the 'problems' at the extreme:
- Can we say that the particular absolute authority and power which
is inherent and existent within the individual, ought or must
NOT EVER
be (involuntarily or voluntarily for that matter) surrendered to
the authority and power of the family, tribe or "state" etc?
- Can we say that the particular absolute authority and power which
is inherent and existent within the individual, ought or must
ALWAYS
be (involuntarily or voluntarily for that matter) surrendered to
the authority and power of the family, tribe or "state" etc?
Dichotomies eh?
Perhaps the middle ground, the third principle forming the reality of
this particular trinity, could be useful after all?
State Or Individual?
https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-07-22/state-or-individual