I can't answer that, because I'm not sad.@Keith Martin, what makes you sad?
I thought your response was somewhat sad, because it reflected a fatalistic insistence on offering only a very limited set of options.
I can't answer that, because I'm not sad.@Keith Martin, what makes you sad?
They are a lot of potential solutions. And many of their do offer chance to improve our lives.I can't answer that, because I'm not sad.
I thought your response was somewhat sad, because it reflected a fatalistic insistence on offering only a very limited set of options.
Excellent example. From my perspective, the only solution is to remove government entirely from the health care system. In the 70s, 80s, and 90s, the Atlanta GA newspapers ran every-five-years-or-so exposés on the CDC -- each time demonstrating that the allopathic health care systems in America use the CDC as a garbage dump for Peter-Principled medical doctors -- but, while doing this has historically removed incompetent doctors from providing direct care, it also produced a system in which national policies are predominantly being made by individuals with no competency.For example, COVID has proven FDA is corrupt to the core. So purge FDA and put new honest men. Not enough. How to stop corruption again?
I agree that we don't want to fight the same battles periodically, but, I'm sorry, necessitous vigilance is strictly a given, so your "change must be permanent" formulation is flawed logic -- change can be monumentally valuable without being permanent. However, removing government regulation can make reversibility significantly more unlikely, which argues for something along the lines of ethical anarchy or libertarianism (significant overlap between the two).Thing is, I don't want to fight same battles again after 20-30 years, so change must be permanent and not easily reversible.
Well, the honest, pragmatic, practical answer is that neither it nor anything else can be protected against its removal or abuse, because laziness and apathy will always gravitate toward centralized Big Government solutions.Your hierarchy solution is rather good. But how will your idea be protected against it's removal or abuse?
Excellent example. From my perspective, the only solution is to remove government entirely from the health care system. In the 70s, 80s, and 90s, the Atlanta GA newspapers ran every-five-years-or-so exposés on the CDC -- each time demonstrating that the allopathic health care systems in America use the CDC as a garbage dump for Peter-Principled medical doctors -- but, while doing this has historically removed incompetent doctors from providing direct care, it also produced a system in which national policies are predominantly being made by individuals with no competency.
America -- and the world -- was hoodwinked over 100 years ago into establishing allopathy as the supposedly only true, legitimate branch of medicine. Since that time, Big Medicine and Big Pharma have captured every relevant government agency, subverting every aspect of health care in a way that maximizes their profits while disregarding what is best for citizens, all the while taking credit for every medical advance as if humanity was on its own incapable of producing those advances. If one looks at the cornerstones of hospitals built prior to 100 years ago (many still around), one will discover that many began as naturopathic hospitals or osteopathic hospitals or homeopathic hospitals or preventive medicine clinics -- even ayurvedic hospitals here and there. All were successfully propagandized as being 'quacks' while allopathy convinced federal, state and local governments to define allopathy as the only legitimate branch of medicine.
Prior to that, individuals were free to make their own assessments of where to seek health care. Getting drugs and getting cut (surgery) are pushed as the only legitimate approaches to health care. What is now known as "the medical model" is actually the allopathic model, which creates perpetual clients through a system of simply taking people from states of sickness only to states of temporarily-just-barely-not-being-sick. No incentive exists to produce lasting health. The result is maximized rates of diabetes/dementia and heart disease, as well as the number-one related problem of obesity, especially among women (in the past 100 years, men have gained .5 inches in height and 10 pounds in weight, but women have gained 1 inch in height and 65 pounds in weight -- almost 90% of women are overweight, 70% are obese, and 30% are morbidly obese [their average life span is under 60 years]).
This is what government regulation has produced. The incestuous marriage between government bureaucracy and Big Medicine/Big Pharma did that.
Nothing is permanent in human history. But we can make things permanent as possible.I agree that we don't want to fight the same battles periodically, but, I'm sorry, necessitous vigilance is strictly a given, so your "change must be permanent" formulation is flawed logic -- change can be monumentally valuable without being permanent. However, removing government regulation can make reversibility significantly more unlikely, which argues for something along the lines of ethical anarchy or libertarianism (significant overlap between the two).
Not for changes in wrong direction.I would further argue that the presence of potential reversibility is actually a benefit rather than a deficit, because it discourages complacency.
Only vices favor Big Government. Virtues are opposite. For example, self-reliance is greater with smaller government.Well, the honest, pragmatic, practical answer is that neither it nor anything else can be protected against its removal or abuse, because laziness and apathy will always gravitate toward centralized Big Government solutions.
What is the ideal political system, and where has it been successfully implemented?Ideal political system is too expensive to move in wrong direction and very cheap to move in right direction.
At civilization level Medieval Christendom. I have to warn that most evils associated with medieval time aren't from medieval, but later. Witch burning is example.What is the ideal political system, and where has it been successfully implemented?
How about the Almighty State Church, the Inquisition, and capital punishment for laity having a COPY of Scripture?At civilization level Medieval Christendom. I have to warn that most evils associated with medieval time aren't from medieval, but later. Witch burning is example.
I think that Moses did pretty well also.Re: 'Ideal' political system:
How about the Almighty State Church, the Inquisition, and capital punishment for laity having a COPY of Scripture?
Seems to me it's a different Big Brother, but the same spirit.
Personally, I think I'd suggest David was about as close as we ever got.
Yeah, but Moses was never intended to be permanent. They were 'in the wilderness,' YHVH was literally among them, and talking first-person to the anointed leader, and they didn't even have to farm for a living.I think that Moses did pretty well also.
This got me thinking a little.But only to show it to her female friends -- it's a combination of approval-seeking and competition. Not tjust . . .
. . . but someone wants me more than you.
Acquiring and displaying these items has little to do with exhibiting pride for her man, because she can much better demonstrate such pride through backing his vision and portraying loyalty and respectful cooperation (aka submission). Why bankrupt a man -- and her own family finances -- in advance if one just wants to display one's pride?
Ergo 1 Tim 2:9. An obscenely huge diamond on an engagement ring, the source of the decision to select that stone being pride and vanity, is the spirit and meaning of the letter re: immodesty.This got me thinking a little.
In Rome it was forbidden for man to show of his wealth on his clothes. Ban didn't apply to wife.
So put as much as possible on wife.
Spanish Inquisition killed 20-30 people yearly. Torture was applied to less than 3% and most were subjected just one. Pretty light.Re: 'Ideal' political system:
How about the Almighty State Church, the Inquisition, and capital punishment for laity having a COPY of Scripture?
Seems to me it's a different Big Brother, but the same spirit.
Personally, I think I'd suggest David was about as close as we ever got.
One advantage of this system though was that war was a professional affair between very small professional armies. The peasantry were not expected to fight, in fact the nobility actively distrusted them to because they might turn against them. That meant that war was a much smaller affair and fewer people died. The peasants would then find they had a new king and pay tax to the new guy, life largely continuing as it had. Politics didn't matter as much to most people.It wasn't perfect system. With military aristocracy as ruling class, they are definitetly too much warlike. On other hand there was real effort put into arbitrage.
Taxes didn't exist for centuries.The peasants would then find they had a new king and pay tax to the new guy, life largely continuing as it had. Politics didn't matter as much to most people.
Yes they did, especially in medieval Europe, they were just called something different. Rent, for instance - the land was owned by the lord and the peasants rented it off him for a portion of their produce. Labour also - they'd be required to work a certain number of days for the lord. These are both taxes, or at least a portion of them is tax.Taxes didn't exist for centuries.
Hello.....Yes they did, especially in medieval Europe, they were just called something different. Rent, for instance - the land was owned by the lord and the peasants rented it off him for a portion of their produce. Labour also - they'd be required to work a certain number of days for the lord. These are both taxes, or at least a portion of them is tax.
There was always possibility to move to city. If you stay there long enough, you were free. Usually one year and day.@MemeFan, when you are a serf who is legally bound to your lord's land and is forbidden to leave, as was the case in feudal europe, rent is not voluntary. That coercion blurs the line between tax and rent.
Really, it's just like property taxes. Legally, where we live, all land in the entire country actually belongs to the Crown. When you "own" land, you actually own a right to use that land in perpetuity provided you keep paying your property taxes. If you stop paying the tax, eventually your land will be seized and sold at auction to recoup the taxes. That's really not that much different to leasing the land from the Crown.
There were always asshole willing to use force and invent new BS rules.These things are not black and white.
I don't know that you could give a hard-and-fast answer to that. The relationship between a man and a woman is a complex thing. A man should be "husbanding" or "shepherding" his wife towards improvement. Sometimes tough love is the right approach (refusing to do something), sometimes, (I'm struggling for the right word here) "normal" love is the right approach (doing things she appreciates). Sometimes pushing and sometimes pulling. What is right in a particular set of circumstances to best move a specific woman towards godly behaviour is something that an individual husband would need to determine.Should godly men refuse to perform Partial Husband chores for women who are unwilling to function as godly women within the general structure of scriptural morals and prescriptions?
Or should men who recognize the world needs repair focus on challenging the Ruling Class while men continue to perform as Partial Husbands so women can continue to believe themselves to be independent?