Well that's tricky. I could be, or if I am able to defend my "possession", it then becomes ownership.
Ownership is the notion of "mine and thine" it isn't dependent upon defence if there is a mutual understanding.
Sovereignty. People have claimed sovereignty over the US. These people are able to defend this sovereignty, therefore they keep it.
If all sovereignty is based on violence as you assert, then isn't it implicit that consent has no value?
Some people just like to think the laws put in place after taking ownership of this land were good and "just" laws.
What if people think they were bad?
Especially compared to the laws put into place by other nations.
American law is based on British common law.
Stop posting shit like this as if I or others here are not directing the conversation towards your question. You haven't liked any of the answers, but don't act like we're dodging the question.
I don't think you're dodging it. I think judges dodge it when asked in court.
I don't think there is a good answer, and so we're going to spend a lot of time talking about off topic stuff.
The fundamental issue here, is that many people cannot distinguish between a fact and an opinion. I am playing along with a lot of opinions, but really, I just came for the facts.
Because you have no authority. No one consents to your laws and you do not have the power to force them to.
Well I didn't consent to the masters' laws, so we have to assume they rule me by force. I agree. The system is based on violence.
The authority of the law is derived by consent or force. Who says a law has to be "just" to be a law?
No one is saying that. I think it's just very important to make clear that the law is based on violence and has nothing to do with justice. Now we're on the same page.
Certain laws could be unjust while others are just. I doubt anyone is saying all laws are just. They are probably saying "having law is just".
Not sure I understand the distinction.
Off Topic:
If you are actually interested in communicating in a way which gets people to question their beliefs and change their minds, you need to enact less ego.
You don't understand what I am doing then. Whenever I have talked about marketing, I have tried to point out that the 98% that don't convert, are probably not your clients anyway. 100% conversion rates are a pipe dream, and instead it may be wiser to focus on taking 2% conversion to 2.5% conversion.
I am using the people I argue with to make points, which people will read here for some time, and those arguments made by you and by me, will affect and alter their outlook. In my case, I am not trying to get them to like me, or to agree with me. I simply want to point out the gun in the room. Once they know it is there, or they have heard it suggested as being there, they can't stop incorporating that the system is based on violence and arbitrary authority into their world view, even if it is subconsciously.
I would rather live in an anarchist world where everyone hates me than a statist world where everyone loves me for never questioning their delusions. I stopped being worried about trivial shit like popularity a long time ago.
Also the perception of ego that comes across in text isn't the best representation of me. If you've talked to me or come to one of my webinars, I'm a pretty chill dude. But when we're discussing ideas, it's important to paint bright lines. To take strong stances and argue with conviction.
If you don't believe and try to understand at a relatively high level that which you're arguing, then it's probably better not to argue at all, but maybe to listen. I do my share of listening around people who are much smarter, much wiser and much more knowledgeable than me on tons of topics.
This topic however, I feel I have put in the time, the effort, the research etc to speak about it at a level as high as almost anyone. There are lots of things I am a dumbass about, but this is not one of them.
That said, I am also a pretty terrible communicator, and struggle to articulate my ideas into words which are easily understood.
I posted once, in one of the bitcoin threads simply stating the arguments pointed against bitcoin were rather weak. I can say this without it meaning I support or oppose bitcoin. Just as I can sit here and argue with you about why the law "applies" to you without it meaning I support statism or oppose it. You assume too much.
Actually, you were really hostile with me in that thread, which is why I ignored your posts. I am fairly certain I have the facts about Bitcoin on my side, and it will turn out the way I think it will turn out.
I don't oppose Bitcoin any more than I oppose a thunderstorm when I am out in a t-shirt. Again, people overreact emotionally to topics and then get angry at me. Which is also why I can't afford to be worried about popularity when I make my posts. If I was concerned with upsetting people, I'd never be able to post a word of what I believe to be the truth (facts).
You keep on conflating what we should be doing with what the current system is.
That's what any discussion about ethics and morals has to be about. The current system 300 years ago was slavery. Some men spoke out about it. It changed.
The system 200 years ago for women was atrocious. Some men and women spoke out about it. It changed.
The guys who sit on the sideline and say "this is the system, this is how it is" never change anything. They aren't contributors to human progress.
Constantly flipping back and forth between what we should do and what the reality of the current system is.
I don't care what the reality of the current system is unless we're discussing facts. You and I got to a place with facts. We agree the current system is based on violence. Cool.
That's what I was hoping to achieve.
Now knowing that the cop in the OP video was acting with the force of violence against a bunch of young douchebags who had not committed violence against anyone, why are people still taking that man's position?
It's an interesting question I think.
So which is it? Are you asking "should the laws be applicable to me?" or are you asking "are the laws applicable to me?".
The latter, but I don't think you grasp the distinction.
If you are asking "are", address the above. If you are asking "should", then meh, I don't think we should get into that discussion when we're already 5 pages deep in.
I have consistently and persistently asked for facts, proof that the law is applicable to me, the same way you could prove I signed a contract, or agreed to get married, or engaged in a market transaction with you.
What you have proven (and to a great degree I agree with) is that anyone who can exert more violence over me than I can use to defend myself, is the law and can make laws that "affect" me. I guess implicit in this is that I won't fight back even with less force. That I will always acquiesce to more force than I can bring to defend myself, which I am not sure is what many people do. There are a lot of people in Afghanistan who won't accept the law of the USG. There were a lot of those people in Vietnam too.
At the end of the day, no one has provided any evidence that these laws work on consent and that's because they don't.
I really don't want to keep this wall of text stuff going. Let's try to really cut down the discussion either after your next post or before it. It can't be fun for anyone else to see this stuff on their screen.