The Atlantic Tells Us About “Good” and “Bad” Liberty
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Order is an emergent property of Chaos.
Chaos is an emergent property of Order.
The idea that that only white people can have freedom, when it is white people who are the primary source of the destruction of that freedom with Leftist shows this is nonsensical.
Yes, the political Left cultivated a culture of slaves for nearly a century. That's actually a bad thing.
Cool, cool, so you've never read a single history book in your life then?
History is literally filled to the brim with not only viscous kings, but in some cases, literal psychopaths who are kings, queens, lords, duchy's, dukes, etc. They normally survive all possible challenges, because no one can hold them to account before opposition murders them.
I would honestly expect better from you, since you've at least read the history of gender.
Literally not where the word tyrant comes from. Tyrants, and their tyranny, is simply when someone (typically some kind of gang or factional leader) takes over a city state.
Plato's Republic, in and of itself, was a tyranny by the fact that his Philosopher Kings would have unchecked power, and are effectively a good description of the environment we have at this very second, with self-anointed intellectualists declaring themselves the unchangeable arbiters of the world.
It is the self-anointed "Better Men" that we should seek to uncompromisingly remove from society, given their utterly unaccountable nature, and the fact that no human suffering can dissuade them from their arrogance.
Your Whig history is silly and cringe. Most people never felt any effect on their lives from the king. Crazy kings mostly terrorized their court, while good kings uplifted the nation.
This is a good demonstration that lolberts and socialists are practically indistinguishable. Both are seeking to liberate the individual from any responsibilities, which is characterized as oppression. Both are progressive diseases that tear at the fabric of society. Go read Hoppe to find some non-cringe libertarianism that bridges to monarchy.
Spez: Here is some Mosca.
-The Ruling Class
You should define what you mean by lolberts, because it's a vague made up epithet for an already vague set of ideas held by a broad spectrum of people. But libertarians - except for the fringe "I just want big government to legalize all drugs and guns and shield me from social responsibility" - are individualists, while socialists are collectivists. They may be Liberals, but they couldn't be indistinguishable unless you ignored that most important dimension.
The collectivist-individualist distinction is far less important than one might imagine, in much the same way as the distinction between capitalism and communism isn't particularly important. Lolberts are any of the non-Hoppians as best exemplified by Reason. Rothbard would have called them modal libertarians.
They primarily act as the deterritorialization force within the progressive dialect because they refuse to acknowledge the reality that power and hierarchy exists. Sovereignty cannot be stripped from the state and given to everybody/nobody. It will always be conserved and go somewhere that will recognizably become the State. Communists literally have the same insane goal of flattening society such that sovereignty is dissolved, but with a slightly different road map to get there.
Assinine beyond words considering how Feudal systems worked. When you had peasants pledging their children's children to their direct lords, who were forced by feudal order to pledge their absolute loyalty to barons, and then to kings; and kings had literally unlimited scope and power to make law by decree; the idea that people just didn't feel the effect of kings is laughably insane. Not to mention the Guild system which was aligned entirely with the monarchy's control over the economy.
The Magna Carta was built as a kind of threat to the power of an English King who was literally imprisoning people at will. Oliver Cromwell fucking banned Christmas and the English made a protest song about it. Being caught with this song's lyrics was a death sentence. Hell, during the Hundred Years War, the English troops burned and pillaged through French villages, murdering with impunity, in order to demonstrate that the French King couldn't protect them, in order to recruit the population into swearing allegiance to the English king. We can also talk about the English Crown's courts that were set up to impose the King's power over the general population in the "Star Chamber".
And all that is from England, which by all respect had one of the least repressive, violent, murderous, and freedom loving of monarchies that I'm aware of. You try any dissent with the French, Austrians, Hungarians, Spanish, or Portuguese; they'll kill your whole family.
That's to say nothing of non-European civilizations of other eras. We can talk of the first Totalitarian state: Ancient Egypt. We can talk about how Caesar's ascent to power relied on manipulating grain and land re-distribution schemes. We can talk about the Spartan king's control over pregnancies by killing daughters with infanticide. We can talk about how Tokugawa in Japan made northern forests sacred in order to secure the wood supply of the country, and regularly executed people seen attempting to cut trees. He also exterminated the Portuguese. And fuck, do I really have to explain why Vlad The Impaler was an absolute autocrat who terrified the absolute bejesus out of everyone in Wallachia at all times? Or are we going to pretend that impaling 300,000 people just doesn't have an impact on anyone. Oh yeah, I forgot the Ottomans. I'm sure the Ottomans and their Janissaries made of stolen subjugated children didn't effect anyone either.
Seriously, where the fuck do you get this idea that a monarch basically doesn't effect his own people? Even by your standard, the concept of the sovereign is that he shouldn't betray his own subjects because he effectively owns them and wants them to improve. It's not true, but that should be your argument. Not that they are unrelated. By the very nature of "having the right to destroy subversion", a King gives himself the unrestrained right to control all aspects of the lives of his subjects.
Daft idiocy. The entire concept of a Liberal Philosophy is that a man is his own sovereign, and therefore his responsibilities are his own mandate to fulfill. Not that he doesn't have them. Your ignorance of Liberalism doesn't mean that it's the same as Leftism, which is inherently anti-Liberal.
And literally no part of that stops anyone from being a violent, bloodthirsty, savage. In fact, all it does is allow the subordinates to make excuse for it, and continue institutionalizing slaughter.
The Feudal Ages repeatedly show both the general population and subordinate barons lamenting the rise of bad kings which no one can do anything to stop for multiple decades at a time. The wrong king gets into power, sorry: but you're just gonna have to deal with arbitrary beheadings for the next 40 years.
The Magna Carta was a threat FROM HIS DIRECT LORDS, not the peasants. It was a drama within the kings court.
This whole screed is silly progressive cope. You'd have to believe that 99%+ of history was just masses of people wallowing in misery without fullfilment for arbitrary reasons. You clearly don't even keep up on current libertarian thought, such as Hoppe who is the intellectual backbone of the Mises caucus which recently took the LP—as ineffectual as the LP is which Rothbard correctly recognized in 1984. While it is unfortunate that you've taken such an absurd position that leaves you unable to fend off trannies and pedos, it also makes you unable to threaten any other power, so your cringe opinions can be safely ignored.
Yeah, and the peasants had less of an ability to resist the will of the king than the fucking Barons did. Hell, most of the Magna Carta was about taxes and tribute, and who do you think the Barons were getting their money from to pay those taxes?
It is utter idiocy that you think that kings literally can't effect their subjects when the very purpose of a king is to protect them. Who fills his armies with levies? Who fills his ships with grain? Who's paying the taxes? Who's paying the tribute? Who's paying the Guilds? Why is the King's face on all the coins that peasants use for trade?
It must be fucking magical since the King doesn't effect his subjects.
This is as stupid as saying, "No no, presidents don't effect the economy. Donald Trump ending of restrictions, regulations, and lowering of taxes had nothing to do with the economic growth we saw. Absolutely nothing. Also, you can't blame inflation on Joe Biden."
So you couldn't deal with the facts I just laid out to you, so you attacked a strawman.
Except I have, and the opposition is to Democracy as a concept, not the acceptance of absolute monarchy. Libertarian Absolute Monarchies aren't a thing, and never have been.
It's cute that you think that, despite every proper libertarian and AnCap subversion having to be attacked with unrelenting government force.