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Forums - Politics Discussion - Freedom or security?

Everyone acts differently when they know they're being watched.

That said, I wholeheartedly side with Freedom. I could go into more detail but I won't here.



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Mummelmann said:
Nuvendil said:

This kind of bifurcation of complex discussions is exactly what has caused intellectual discussion and philosophy among common people this generation to grind to a freaking halt. Are you a mysoginist or a feminist? Are you a hyper liberal or a hyper conservative? Do you want to take all guns away or do you have an abram in your basement? Are you an authoritarian yes man or a total freedom near-anarchist? And don't try to explain a middle ground or how extremes are almost always the worst options in complex situations because then your an indecisive coward who is unwilling to fight for freedom or order, depending on who you are talking to.

As for the Apple vs FBI debate, there IS no debate if both parties involved would get their heads out of their asses and use common sense. If incriminating documents were in a vault with an incinerator wired to the door to destroy evidence when the lock is picked or door is forced, you wouldn't just try to open it and hope for the best. You would find a specialist or preferably the designer to get it open for you. That's literally all this is. The smart phone is the vault, the "erase everything if you get the code wrong" is the incinerator. If the FBI would treat it as such and Apple would comply like what a normal, rational individual would there wouldn't *be* a debate. But no, even at the highest levels people have to make drama and get in pissing contests over simple issues.

The top bit; wow, just wow. Spoken as if you tore it out of my brain, I had this exact conversation at work today. I live in Sweden, the land without nuances and I feel like that every single day here, everything is polarized and either or and almost no one accepts middle ground suggestions.

Great post.

The most tragic irony - though for me it provokes a chuckle more than a sigh - is that in this current society that pays lip service relativism and a lack of moral and philosophical objective truths has more black-and-white argumentation and stagnation than there was at the opening of the 20th century, a far more objectivist society as far as underlying worldview goes.  That's right, a worldview about blithely accepting all ways of thinking equally has in fact bred more harsh bifurcation than we've seen in centuries.

But then is it that shocking?  True debate, true discussion comes from a pursuit of higher understanding, truth, a step forward.  You can't take a step forward with no destination.  Aristotle, Plato, Marcus Aurelius, St Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, René Descartes, Kant, Kierkegaard, Leibniz, all the great minds longed for understanding.  If there's no actual truth, nothing to really understand, what is there to pursue?  To drive true discussion and debate?  Nothing.  By throwing out a real truth or understanding to achieve, relativism throws out all incentive to pursue intellectual discussion.  Which isn't surprising; happened the last several times this kind of worldview rose up. Instead it devolves into the most crass, go-nowhere form of argumentation:  the "in it to win it" mindset that only cares about winning and not learning a thing.  A society that nonchalantly shrugs its shoulders in regard to whether there are objective truths is one that opens itself to being led along by shills, politicians, and "activists" (read "leeches") that will happily use extremes and bifurcation to stir up outrage and fanatical support.  

But that's enough railing on postmodern society for one thread.



Fei-Hung said:
Freedom easily. I know people who have basic level security clearance for jobs they have in banking, interfaith, politics and when applying for these jobs you have to declare everything you do:

Browsing habits, relationships, general habits, your friend circle, sexual habits etc. Not only do you have to declare it, they then check everything too.

The reality is most of us have already have lost our freedom. The difference is we haven't done anything to piss anyone off to use that information against us.


An employer asking a (potential or otherwise) employee about this in Norway would be illegal as fuck.



Ideally a balance, but if we're talking about the recent gobbling up of personal data, I think the balance is shifting too much towards security.
I feel like there should be some legal regulation of what info you're allowed to ask for when signing up for stuff.
Like you need to prove you actually need to know this or that piece of personal info about somebody in order for your product or service to operate correctly otherwise you don't get to make it a requirement of signing up.



Freedom. With that, people would be able to choose exactly what they trade for it. With some things, security is the better choice for everyone but it's situational with which choice is better. When governments get too much power or control over people's lives, they'll abuse that control and bad shit tends to happen.



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VGPolyglot said:
Dark_Lord_2008 said:
Since 9/11 freedom for citizens have been eroded as the Government boosts security to keep us all safe. The loss of freedom is the price citizens are willing to pay for more security. Economic freedom in America is still thriving and Capitalism has not changed since the election of Obama. Loss of individual freedom is ok, but the loss of economic freedom is bad. The loss of economic freedom results in higher taxes and more government control and on the road towards Communism.

Capitalism is what rids people of freedom. There are millions of Americans who work at low wage jobs who have no hope of their future improving while a small minority reap the rewards. When we talk about security, we mean safety from violence. However, job insecurity leads to depression and hopelessness, and people become more desperate, leading to violence and crime (the very thing that "security" claims to prevent).

VGP is right and therefore i say: The more freedom people have, the less desperation there will be, ergo less crime in the streets. This show how much corporations have brainwashed people's education.....

They don't believe you can create a better system then US Capitalisme because people fear everything that isn't 100% pure capitalisme.. Just the thought of creating a system that helps people's life in general will trigger the old: You a commie? You hate America? You wanna end Democracy...Even though Democracy is starting to loose it's value due fortsatt capitalisme.... When a corporation invest in a president, you can forget peace and life-quality 



 

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Nuvendil said:
Mummelmann said:

The top bit; wow, just wow. Spoken as if you tore it out of my brain, I had this exact conversation at work today. I live in Sweden, the land without nuances and I feel like that every single day here, everything is polarized and either or and almost no one accepts middle ground suggestions.

Great post.

The most tragic irony - though for me it provokes a chuckle more than a sigh - is that in this current society that pays lip service relativism and a lack of moral and philosophical objective truths has more black-and-white argumentation and stagnation than there was at the opening of the 20th century, a far more objectivist society as far as underlying worldview goes.  That's right, a worldview about blithely accepting all ways of thinking equally has in fact bred more harsh bifurcation than we've seen in centuries.

But then is it that shocking?  True debate, true discussion comes from a pursuit of higher understanding, truth, a step forward.  You can't take a step forward with no destination.  Aristotle, Plato, Marcus Aurelius, St Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, René Descartes, Kant, Kierkegaard, Leibniz, all the great minds longed for understanding.  If there's no actual truth, nothing to really understand, what is there to pursue?  To drive true discussion and debate?  Nothing.  By throwing out a real truth or understanding to achieve, relativism throws out all incentive to pursue intellectual discussion.  Which isn't surprising; happened the last several times this kind of worldview rose up. Instead it devolves into the most crass, go-nowhere form of argumentation:  the "in it to win it" mindset that only cares about winning and not learning a thing.  A society that nonchalantly shrugs its shoulders in regard to whether there are objective truths is one that opens itself to being led along by shills, politicians, and "activists" (read "leeches") that will happily use extremes and bifurcation to stir up outrage and fanatical support.  

But that's enough railing on postmodern society for one thread.

I'm not sure if this is criticism against my post, but if it is- I wasn't intending to make this black-white.

 

It was a thread I quickly put together... ;D  

 

In regards to your posts, I can't make much of a response to. They're written beautifully, and are in line with the common thoughts of many people in society today.



 

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

12/22/2016- Made a bet with Ganoncrotch that the first 6 months of 2017 will be worse than 2016. A poll will be made to determine the winner. Loser has to take a picture of them imitating their profile picture.

hershel_layton said:
Nuvendil said:

The most tragic irony - though for me it provokes a chuckle more than a sigh - is that in this current society that pays lip service relativism and a lack of moral and philosophical objective truths has more black-and-white argumentation and stagnation than there was at the opening of the 20th century, a far more objectivist society as far as underlying worldview goes.  That's right, a worldview about blithely accepting all ways of thinking equally has in fact bred more harsh bifurcation than we've seen in centuries.

But then is it that shocking?  True debate, true discussion comes from a pursuit of higher understanding, truth, a step forward.  You can't take a step forward with no destination.  Aristotle, Plato, Marcus Aurelius, St Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, René Descartes, Kant, Kierkegaard, Leibniz, all the great minds longed for understanding.  If there's no actual truth, nothing to really understand, what is there to pursue?  To drive true discussion and debate?  Nothing.  By throwing out a real truth or understanding to achieve, relativism throws out all incentive to pursue intellectual discussion.  Which isn't surprising; happened the last several times this kind of worldview rose up. Instead it devolves into the most crass, go-nowhere form of argumentation:  the "in it to win it" mindset that only cares about winning and not learning a thing.  A society that nonchalantly shrugs its shoulders in regard to whether there are objective truths is one that opens itself to being led along by shills, politicians, and "activists" (read "leeches") that will happily use extremes and bifurcation to stir up outrage and fanatical support.  

But that's enough railing on postmodern society for one thread.

I'm not sure if this is criticism against my post, but if it is- I wasn't intending to make this black-white.

 

It was a thread I quickly put together... ;D  

 

In regards to your posts, I can't make much of a response to. They're written beautifully, and are in line with the common thoughts of many people in society today.

I was more just ruminating on the irony of the current society :P

I know you weren't trying to start something.  It's just that yes or no questions about a complex issue like reach of government power is something that always makes me itch.

I mean, let me just ask you:  what *objective* advantage is there in a Democratic Republic - or any representative government - vs an Absolute Monarchy?  I know this will boil some people's blood, but the answer is none.  On paper, the monarchy is superior in every way.  A good King will guide his country well with faster decision implementation and more efficient decision making and will execute far swifter and more sure justice.  Even the best democratic republic wouldn't compare since bureaucracy would ensure it all ran slower and with less precision. 

So why don't we have Monarchies everywhere?  Because we recognize that we are flawed.  And that flawed humanity needs structure but we are the ones who have to *staff* that governing body.  And thus it is statistically inevitable that a bad king will come along and everything will go to crap.  Which brings me to America and similar setups.  Look, our government setup might not be perfect, it might fluctuate.  But what we do have is a complex set up of hierarchy, jurisdictions, limitations, checks, and internal rules and a constitution that as clearly as possible defines the rights of the people.  And for all the hate it gets, after decades of lobbying and corruption brewhaha, the country is still far from a big coorporation's paradise distopia that some describe it as.  Big companies regularly get bent over barrels and forced to pay millions in lawsuit settlements, they constantly get whipped into line with regulations and fines, and the coorporate taxes here are exceptionally high.  It clearly works better than most give it credit for.  I think part of the problem that fuels this endless condemnation and constantly swinging argument is the fact people just refer to all governments and their members as "the Government," like some kind of alien species that seeks to rule the world.  Governments are made up of people, there's good and bad in them just like all groups of people.  When you look at it that way, a lot of things become self evident. 

As for the specific question of "security vs freedom,"  you cannot have practical freedom without security.  You can have it on paper, but your options will in fact be limited considerably by having to fend for yourself.  As in all things, you need checks and balances.  Governments need to have structured forces and authority to pursue and punish those who violate the rights of others.  Cause let's face it, community justice is usually sucky and innacurate (wild west lynch mobs anyone?).  But simultaneously it must be balanced by defined boundaries.  You give too much power to the government, it will inevitably get out of hand.  You give too little and your rights will be trampled on by your fellows. 



Nuvendil said:
hershel_layton said:

I'm not sure if this is criticism against my post, but if it is- I wasn't intending to make this black-white.

 

It was a thread I quickly put together... ;D  

 

In regards to your posts, I can't make much of a response to. They're written beautifully, and are in line with the common thoughts of many people in society today.

I was more just ruminating on the irony of the current society :P

I know you weren't trying to start something.  It's just that yes or no questions about a complex issue like reach of government power is something that always makes me itch.

I mean, let me just ask you:  what *objective* advantage is there in a Democratic Republic - or any representative government - vs an Absolute Monarchy?  I know this will boil some people's blood, but the answer is none.  On paper, the monarchy is superior in every way.  A good King will guide his country well with faster decision implementation and more efficient decision making and will execute far swifter and more sure justice.  Even the best democratic republic wouldn't compare since bureaucracy would ensure it all ran slower and with less precision. 

So why don't we have Monarchies everywhere?  Because we recognize that we are flawed.  And that flawed humanity needs structure but we are the ones who have to *staff* that governing body.  And thus it is statistically inevitable that a bad king will come along and everything will go to crap.  Which brings me to America and similar setups.  Look, our government setup might not be perfect, it might fluctuate.  But what we do have is a complex set up of hierarchy, jurisdictions, limitations, checks, and internal rules and a constitution that as clearly as possible defines the rights of the people.  And for all the hate it gets, after decades of lobbying and corruption brewhaha, the country is still far from a big coorporation's paradise distopia that some describe it as.  Big companies regularly get bent over barrels and forced to pay millions in lawsuit settlements, they constantly get whipped into line with regulations and fines, and the coorporate taxes here are exceptionally high.  It clearly works better than most give it credit for.  I think part of the problem that fuels this endless condemnation and constantly swinging argument is the fact people just refer to all governments and their members as "the Government," like some kind of alien species that seeks to rule the world.  Governments are made up of people, there's good and bad in them just like all groups of people.  When you look at it that way, a lot of things become self evident. 

As for the specific question of "security vs freedom,"  you cannot have practical freedom without security.  You can have it on paper, but your options will in fact be limited considerably by having to fend for yourself.  As in all things, you need checks and balances.  Governments need to have structured forces and authority to pursue and punish those who violate the rights of others.  Cause let's face it, community justice is usually sucky and innacurate (wild west lynch mobs anyone?).  But simultaneously it must be balanced by defined boundaries.  You give too much power to the government, it will inevitably get out of hand.  You give too little and your rights will be trampled on by your fellows. 

The bolded reminds me quite a lot about communism. On paper, it's perfect. However, it's usually executed horribly.

 

As for the government, I've always realized that being 'good' wasn't necessarily their goal in mind. Unless the secret goal of the government is to kill us all, I've realized that a complex system will prevent us from becoming maniacs(look at countries with horrible governments; I wonder how that's going for them).

 

Whether the government is 'good' or 'bad' is irrelevant nowadays. Unless they do something immoral(e.g vietnam war secretly bombing) that's unnecessary and damaging, I realize there's only one purpose for it- to keep humans in control.

 

Religion was basically the first step to controlling us humans. Look at it. Rules, checks and balances, leaders, and punishments. All of them creating a way of life for the people following these rules.



 

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

12/22/2016- Made a bet with Ganoncrotch that the first 6 months of 2017 will be worse than 2016. A poll will be made to determine the winner. Loser has to take a picture of them imitating their profile picture.

Mummelmann said:
Nuvendil said:

This kind of bifurcation of complex discussions is exactly what has caused intellectual discussion and philosophy among common people this generation to grind to a freaking halt. Are you a mysoginist or a feminist? Are you a hyper liberal or a hyper conservative? Do you want to take all guns away or do you have an abram in your basement? Are you an authoritarian yes man or a total freedom near-anarchist? And don't try to explain a middle ground or how extremes are almost always the worst options in complex situations because then your an indecisive coward who is unwilling to fight for freedom or order, depending on who you are talking to.

As for the Apple vs FBI debate, there IS no debate if both parties involved would get their heads out of their asses and use common sense. If incriminating documents were in a vault with an incinerator wired to the door to destroy evidence when the lock is picked or door is forced, you wouldn't just try to open it and hope for the best. You would find a specialist or preferably the designer to get it open for you. That's literally all this is. The smart phone is the vault, the "erase everything if you get the code wrong" is the incinerator. If the FBI would treat it as such and Apple would comply like what a normal, rational individual would there wouldn't *be* a debate. But no, even at the highest levels people have to make drama and get in pissing contests over simple issues.

The top bit; wow, just wow. Spoken as if you tore it out of my brain, I had this exact conversation at work today. I live in Sweden, the land without nuances and I feel like that every single day here, everything is polarized and either or and almost no one accepts middle ground suggestions.

Great post.

It's the same around here. It's because everything is made politics today.

Basically it's a tactic that's used by the red-green movement: you start with an offensive to get your opponent defensive. Your argument is morally/sentimentally the only option, which usually opposes an option based on values/freedom/resposibility - but only in the said context, i.e one-eyed view - and only the extremes exists. Should pedestrians be run over or should cars be banned. All the middle ground suggestions are based on your personal values, and personal values can't be the option because that way you can't drive your agenda.



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