| | Leo,
================ What is a "license"? It's permission to do or not do something. Can a license be voluntary? Well, that would defeat the purpose of the dang thing. Even if you managed justify a voluntary license and registration, government would still have regulations for their issuance. ================
There are 2 things going on here:
1) the personal freedom to make your own choices 2) the level of punishment received for the "kind" of choices you've made -- WHEN your choice harms another
Licensing wouldn't be required for driving, it would be required for not getting the book (and restitutive, and possible retributive, fines) thrown at you. We should be free to make our own decisions. We shouldn't be free from the consequences OF our decisions (it's the only way we'll learn).
So, a license is not a "permission" -- it's a rational choice (like insuring valuable things is).
====================== Why would police chase a drag-racer unless drag-racing is illegal? ======================
They wouldn't. When you brought it up, you brought it up as a hypothetical. So don't blame me for answering you -- and sticking to the fundamental issue behind this hypothetical.
====================== Since all roads are privately owned, police would need permission to travel, unless of course government regulations forced private property owners to allow the supposed "official" traffic. ======================
There are more ways to skin this cat -- than unilateral regulation. An agreed-to contract, for instance, between the land owner and the police force. Show me a man who wouldn't want the police to drive up his road to save him from a lynch-mob -- merely because of the "principle" of the thing.
Folks who own big things in a free society (like roads) are ipso facto, rational. In order to gain the kind of value they did, they had to be a kind of person.
====================== First, there is no "public" if all property is privately owned. ======================
The "public" is merely the sum of the individuals. One thing that would still be public, in an Objectivist society, is the air we breathe.
====================== Now you admit that government must regulate a human activity. The act of traveling freely without interference by government is an individual right. So, regulation of that right must be justified as "for the greater good". And, when prosecuting the "crime" of "traveling without passport or visa" who is the victim? ======================
You are taking the individual right to travel freely, and pulling it out of the context that justifies it's instantiation on earth (ie. making it a floating abstraction). In order to protect the exercise of individual rights, there need be a society ordered along a principle of objective justice, individual rights, and a transparent rule of law.
If you don't have (or protect) this society, this seedbed for the human exercise of individual rights, then you undermine what makes the exercise of rights possible in the first place (ie. you will court with gang-warfare; gangs coming from everywhere, to take advantage of the don't-ask/don't-tell, totally-anonymous border crossings.
====================== This decision could allow terrorist groups to prepare attacks which would compromise national defense. It's unlikely that that would be allowed. ======================
Anonymous border crossing (see directly above) would be a far greater threat than the allowance of CITIZENS to play with volatile compounds -- on their own property -- ever would be. You're making faulty assumptions.
How can you sit there and blame me for putting folks in danger, by allowing them to do what they want, on their property -- when you would allow for something (anonymous border crossing) that is even more dangerous; because of the anonymity factor?
If Joe Blow is testing dynamite on his land, then there'll be evidence linking these explosions to his identity. But if anonymous folks cross into the country -- they won't have an explicit identity (ie. they won't be easily found, or held responsible for their criminal actions -- should they choose criminal action).
====================== Many people would not stand by while children worked long hours at hard labor for little pay. Great harm could be done to children during their formative years if allowed to work under harsh conditions. Government would surely need to regulate the conditions under which children could be employed. ======================
Wait a minute. Aren't you the guy arguing for anarchy here (ie. no central government)? And, if there is an objective path to take here (would that all rational folks would agree to) -- then what WOULD BE wrong with putting this into law?
====================== Even though this will place all government "officials" at risk? Do you realize how easy it is for a low flying plane to drop a bomb or two? This would also compromise national safety and therefore require government regulations (license, no fly zones etc). ======================
Oops. I forgot these sensitive areas (flying over the White House, etc). Yeah, there'd be these no-fly zones, but only in objectively correct places to have them.
====================== Even walking into courts, police stations, schools, banks, legislative buildings etc? Not likely. You would meet with considerable opposition to your decision to "Let 'em carry". ======================
Just like above, there'd be places you couldn't carry guns into (courts, police stations, etc). And there's good reason for that restriction of the exercise of personal freedom.
====================== Again you admit that regulatory law is required to protect citizens from "possible" harm, even though one can impersonate police without harming anyone in the process. ======================
Well, obviously, you couldn't (shouldn't) lock someone up for dressing up as a cop on Halloween! I'm talking about the harm done to others -- harm that required cop-impersonation. eg. "Say, ma'am, I pulled you over -- in this dark, secluded area -- because you were speeding ..."
====================== Another exception to your claim that no regulations will be advocated by Objectivists. ======================
My claim was to have no economic regulation, this theft of military secrets (to sell them off) -- is not properly a part of the economy. You're dropping the context of what I said.
Ed
(Edited by Ed Thompson on 8/04, 9:17am)
(Edited by Ed Thompson on 8/04, 9:20am)
(Edited by Ed Thompson on 8/04, 9:21am)
(Edited by Ed Thompson on 8/04, 9:22am)
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