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PLAYER57832 wrote:The basis of a lot of right wing rhetoric today is "it's my money, so I should get to decide!".
How is this idea that people who have more money are more intelligent, more deserving and should be listened to more than others fundamentally different from the old idea that being born to a particular family gives you more right to decide things, makes you more intelligent, a better judge of right and wrong than others?




















thegreekdog wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:The basis of a lot of right wing rhetoric today is "it's my money, so I should get to decide!".
How is this idea that people who have more money are more intelligent, more deserving and should be listened to more than others fundamentally different from the old idea that being born to a particular family gives you more right to decide things, makes you more intelligent, a better judge of right and wrong than others?
Get to decide what, exactly?
thegreekdog wrote:And how is that the basis of right wing rhetoric?
thegreekdog wrote:And how is that the basis of any rhetoric today (as opposed to any other time throughout history)?
















PLAYER57832 wrote:
What they get to put their money toward. government services, social services, even insurance.

patches70 wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:
What they get to put their money toward. government services, social services, even insurance.
Shouldn't you be able to decide what you put your own money toward in life? If not you deciding what to do with your own money, then who should decide for you?
















PLAYER57832 wrote:thegreekdog wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:The basis of a lot of right wing rhetoric today is "it's my money, so I should get to decide!".
How is this idea that people who have more money are more intelligent, more deserving and should be listened to more than others fundamentally different from the old idea that being born to a particular family gives you more right to decide things, makes you more intelligent, a better judge of right and wrong than others?
Get to decide what, exactly?
What they get to put their money toward. government services, social services, even insurance.thegreekdog wrote:And how is that the basis of right wing rhetoric?
Because this bit of "its our money, we should decide" seems to be consistantly the argument.thegreekdog wrote:And how is that the basis of any rhetoric today (as opposed to any other time throughout history)?
Well, read any of your posts.. or Nightstrikes? You both pretty firmly agree on this point, though you cite Liberaterianism and Night strike tends to cite other things.




















PLAYER57832 wrote:patches70 wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:
What they get to put their money toward. government services, social services, even insurance.
Shouldn't you be able to decide what you put your own money toward in life? If not you deciding what to do with your own money, then who should decide for you?
Why? Why does getting lucky in the stock market mean you get to decide if my neighbors can marry or my water is clean or if I can use birth control or not?
(and I intentionally picked some diverse topics.. if you see it OK in some cases, but not others, explain).




















the carpet man wrote:you appear to have a very fragile understanding of the term 'divine right', if you think it compares to anything in usa politics






the carpet man wrote:you appear to have a very fragile understanding of the term 'divine right', if you think it compares to anything in usa politics
















thegreekdog wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:patches70 wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:
What they get to put their money toward. government services, social services, even insurance.
Shouldn't you be able to decide what you put your own money toward in life? If not you deciding what to do with your own money, then who should decide for you?
Why? Why does getting lucky in the stock market mean you get to decide if my neighbors can marry or my water is clean or if I can use birth control or not?
(and I intentionally picked some diverse topics.. if you see it OK in some cases, but not others, explain).
Why does you having a job determine whether I get a big screen TV or not?
























































thegreekdog wrote:
"Using the rhetoric today" - Throughout the history of the United States a basis for the country, and part of the basis for democracies (at least in my opinion) was that people were entitled to keep what they earn or use it in a way that they wished to use it. So, being able to do what you want with your own money (or the fruits of your own labor) is not a concept that is new to "today." The alternative is that the powerful get to take your money and use it for their own ends without actually having to generate the wealth themselves (think, for example, feudalism).
thegreekdog wrote:
In terms of this being the basis of right wing argument, I don't think it's limited to right wing or left wing.
thegreekdog wrote: No one wants to give their own money to causes they do not wish to support. That seems pretty simple to me.
thegreekdog wrote: For example, a union boss may not give his money to a Republican candidate for president. A corporate executive may decide not to give his money to a Democrat candidate for president. At an even more basic level, I may choose to buy a car manufactured in Japan instead of a car manufactured in the United States. If my purchase of a Japanese car means that someone in the United States suffers, should I be required to purchase an American car? An argument I suspect someone else will use (a different right-leaning poster than me) is that the left wing consistently talks about giving up others peoples' money for their causes (instead of using their own). It's been pointed out numerous times to Warren Buffett and Barack Obama that they could pay taxes in excess of what they owe, yet they choose not to. Why? That's not my argument, but it's an argument.
thegreekdog wrote: Finally, it appears that your concern is that people (to you just conservatives, apparently) don't want to give their money to causes they don't support and that's wrong in your mind.
thegreekdog wrote: I'm not even sure how to convince you that you're being completely ridiculous, except to give you a ridiculous example: I need condoms/alcohol/cigarettes/a big screen TV/a radio/a car; therefore, I expect you to send me a check for $5,000 (or whatever those things cost) as soon as possible. Thank you.
Nope, I intentionally wanted to get away from those specifics and into the basis for WHY those things and othersthegreekdog wrote: If you want to limit your discussion to what gets covered by insurance or certain government services, let's talk about that.
thegreekdog wrote: But to suggest "how I use money is my business" is like divine right is ridiculous.
thegreekdog wrote: Nevermind that I don't think you understand what "diving right" means.
















The Bison King wrote:I think what he's doing is comparing the feudal nobility to present day political elite. The main difference is that the noble were rich because they were nobles. Now a days the elite are the elite because they are rich. So really the one thing that's stayed the same is that those with money always get to decide for those with out money.




































thegreekdog wrote: This is just... I don't even really know what to say here. I guess you should join a communal farm or something.
Oh... I have an idea. Feel free to come over to my farm and work my land. I'll let you sleep in one of my huts and you can eat just enough so you can live and take care of your children (although if you have more than two, we'll have to take them from you). Whatever "excess" food you produce, you give to me. I use the food to buy myself gold and things. Then, if you do anything I don't like, I just kill you. Let's do that. I'll see you in a day or so. Also, I'll be taking your car, any of your other personal possessions, and your house.
thegreekdog wrote:Oh... also, I'm not defining divine right for you. I'm tired of defining things for you and then arguing about my definitions.

































BigBallinStalin wrote:Whoa, wat.
Is player arguing in favor of feudalism???
















the carpet man wrote:divine right was the belief that a king or queen was chosen by god, and ruled with god's consent.



PLAYER57832 wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Whoa, wat.
Is player arguing in favor of feudalism???
No and not communism, either. In fact, I am not really arguing any particular point

















PLAYER57832 wrote:The Bison King wrote:I think what he's doing is comparing the feudal nobility to present day political elite. The main difference is that the noble were rich because they were nobles. Now a days the elite are the elite because they are rich. So really the one thing that's stayed the same is that those with money always get to decide for those with out money.
Yes, (I am a "she", by-the-way.. lol) except my point is why is our system more OK than the older one?

















The Bison King wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:The Bison King wrote:I think what he's doing is comparing the feudal nobility to present day political elite. The main difference is that the noble were rich because they were nobles. Now a days the elite are the elite because they are rich. So really the one thing that's stayed the same is that those with money always get to decide for those with out money.
Yes, (I am a "she", by-the-way.. lol) except my point is why is our system more OK than the older one?
I knew that but I forget easily. Please understand that when I'm on the internet I'm predisposed to assume that everyone Is either a young single guy, or an old married guy who hates and ignores his family.
I guess it's more ok because... um, well really it's pretty much the same. There's less inbreeding now, I guess that's a plus.
















Symmetry wrote:the carpet man wrote:divine right was the belief that a king or queen was chosen by god, and ruled with god's consent.
Not entirely, much of it was based on lineage and patriarchy. And those are still powerful forces today.
the carpet man wrote:divine right was the belief that a king or queen was chosen by god, and ruled with god's consent.
















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