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Freedomain with Stefan Molyneux

5746 Violence is NOT the Answer!

Freedomain with Stefan Molyneux

Stefan Molyneux

Economics, Anarchism, Stefan, News & Politics, Atheist, Higher Education, Religion & Spirituality, Stephen, Government, God, Philosophy, Violence, Freedomain, Rogan, Ron, Society & Culture, Radio, Paul, History, Liberalism, Libertarian, Capitalism, Market, Molyneux, Anarchy, Free, Classical, Family, Freedom, State, Joe, Podcast, Atheism, Stephan, Education, Podcasts

4.62.4K Ratings

🗓️ 28 November 2024

⏱️ 53 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

"Does my crush love me? I really need to know."

"Do you think we're living in the most advanced civilization that has ever inhabited Earth?"

"King Crimson was at their peak with Wetton, David Cross and Bruford, but Taylor Swift is a billionaire. STEFAN - have you heard Mozart's newly discovered 'A Very Little Night Music'?"

"What's your opinion of Jordan Peterson's work?"

"Is statism collapsing?"

"Is your book available in hardcover?"

"What's your favorite heavy metal band?"

"is the traditional Catholicism the most based thing on the Earth?"

"What happened to your YouTube channel?"


"Do you think these problems with NAP can be resolved?
"The Non-Aggression Principle (NAP), is a libertarian ethical stance that argues that aggression—defined as the initiation of force or fraud against another person's property or person—is inherently immoral. While the principle has intuitive appeal, it faces significant philosophical, practical, and ethical challenges that undermine its universality and application.
"1. Ambiguity in Defining "Aggression"
"Subjectivity of Aggression: The NAP relies on a clear definition of "aggression," yet many actions can be interpreted as aggressive or non-aggressive depending on perspective. For instance:
"If someone refuses to vaccinate during a pandemic, is that an act of aggression by endangering others' health, or is forcing them to vaccinate aggression?
"Pollution from a factory might harm others, but is it aggression if the harm is indirect and unintended?
"This ambiguity makes it difficult to apply the NAP consistently.
"2. Lack of a Mechanism for Collective Action
"Addressing Collective Problems:
"The NAP is highly individualistic and struggles to address issues that require collective solutions, such as environmental protection, public health, or infrastructure.
"For example:
"Climate change results from aggregate actions that harm others, yet enforcing emissions reductions could be seen as an initiation of force against individuals or corporations.
"Public goods like roads, education, and defense require taxation, which the NAP might label as aggression, leaving no clear path to fund or manage such necessities.
"3. Assumes Absolute Property Rights
"Property Rights Are Not Universally Agreed Upon: The NAP assumes that property rights are fundamental and self-evident, yet property systems are human constructs that vary across cultures and contexts.
"For example:
"Indigenous communities often view land as communal rather than private, making the enforcement of private property rights in such contexts potentially aggressive.
"Historical Injustice: Many property holdings result from historical aggression (e.g., colonization, slavery). The NAP offers no clear guidance on addressing these injustices because enforcing reparations could violate the principle.
"4. Fails to Account for Power Imbalances
"Inequality and Coercion:
"The NAP does not account for systemic power imbalances that can lead to de facto coercion without overt aggression.
"For example:
"A worker "choosing" between starvation and accepting exploitative labor conditions may not face physical aggression, but their choices are constrained by economic coercion.
"Corporate monopolies can dominate markets and restrict freedom without violating the NAP, yet they create conditions of harm or dependency.
"5. Incompatibility with Emergency Situations
"Moral Exceptions: The NAP struggles with situations where initiating force might be morally justified or necessary to prevent greater harm.
"For example:
"Breaking into a cabin to survive in a blizzard technically violates the NAP but might be considered ethically justifiable.
"Preventive action, such as disarming someone threatening violence, could be seen as aggression under the NAP, even if it avoids greater harm.
"6. Over-Simplification of Ethics
"Moral Complexity: Ethical decision-making often involves balancing competing values, such as individual rights, collective welfare, and justice. The NAP reduces morality to a single principle, ignoring the complexity of real-world dilemmas.
"Utilitarian Concerns: Following the NAP rigidly could lead to suboptimal outcomes, such as allowing preventable suffering or harm if addressing it would require "aggression."
"7. Practical Limitations
"Enforcement Dilemmas: Even within a system governed by the NAP, enforcing the principle requires some authority to define and address aggression. For instance:
"Resolving disputes over property boundaries or contractual breaches might involve coercive mechanisms, contradicting the NAP.
"A purely voluntary system lacks a practical means of ensuring compliance or protecting vulnerable individuals from exploitation or harm.
"8. Historical and Theoretical Criticism
"Historical Evidence: Societies that have operated on principles akin to the NAP (e.g., laissez-faire capitalism) have often resulted in significant inequality, exploitation, and harm, suggesting that the principle is insufficient for creating equitable or stable societies.
"Philosophical Counterarguments: Thinkers like Karl Marx or John Rawls argue that focusing solely on individual rights and property ignores the broader social and structural forces that shape human relationships and justice.
"While the Non-Aggression Principle provides a simple and appealing ethical framework, its oversimplification of complex moral and social issues renders it problematic in practice. It fails to account for ambiguous definitions of aggression, systemic power imbalances, collective action needs, and situations where initiating force might prevent greater harm. Ultimately, the NAP's rigid adherence to individual rights and property neglects the interconnected and nuanced realities of human society."


"when next bitcoin roundtable?"

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello, hello, everybody, Stefan Molline, you from Free Domain. Hope you doing well.

0:04.9

Bunch of questions. Good stuff. Thank you so much to Facebook and Freedomain.com.

0:10.6

Wonderful, wonderful, wonderful. All right.

0:11.9

Does my crush love me? I really need to know. Okay, I get that. That's a joke question,

0:15.7

but the reality is, you and I, and everyone under sun and, can only and forever and ever our men ever be loved

0:24.0

for our virtues. If you are virtuous, if you have moral courage, if you speak the truth, if you're

0:29.2

honest, if you're warm-hearted, if you are, if you have integrity and so on, and your partner has

0:34.2

integrity, you will love the virtue in each other. The only thing we can

0:38.2

love is virtue. Everything else is lust and codependency. So if it's a crush, well, a crush and

0:45.4

chemistry, these are just another words for the sin of lust. And that is when you wish to possess the

0:49.9

flesh, regardless of the person who inhabits the flesh. It is using people as meat. It is being a

0:57.1

carnivore of the human soul who ignores the person in order to consume the flesh. All right.

1:04.5

Do you think we're living in the most advanced civilization that has ever inhabited Earth?

1:09.8

Well, depends what you mean by advanced.

1:12.5

Definitions are important. But yes, the idea that there were more advanced civilizations in

1:19.7

the past that left no record whatsoever is incomprehensible to me. We've explored a lot of

1:24.2

the world, and there would have been some signs of a more advanced

1:28.2

civilization.

1:28.8

Like I know, the old thing about halos were actually, you know, spacesuit, helmets, and so on,

1:34.2

but yeah, I don't think so.

1:35.9

Kim King, Crimson was at their peak with blah, blah, blah, but Taylor Swift is a billionaire.

1:41.2

Steph, if you heard Mozart's newly discovered a very little night music, you know, I used to absolutely sit with headphones and listen to music and be transported

...

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