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The Heavy Legacies of Our Past (Read 32238 times)
freediver
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Re: The Heavy Legacies of Our Past
Reply #150 - May 13th, 2016 at 2:09pm
 
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I can't possibly concede this point, FD. All you've proposed is erections, which you then said, according to Acemoglu, is not even the main issue. Instead, it's "inclusiveness".


Elections do mean poltical inclusiveness. He uses inclusiveness instead to stop idiots citing pretend elections (like some of the tinpot dictatorships have) as a criticism of his thoery. The elections put the Roman Republic way out in front the Caliphate. That is why I do not need to "jot down a few points" on the differences. One is enough.

Quote:
If we take Acemoglu's argument seriously, it is quite possible for a theocracy/monarchy to be more socially and politically inclusive than a republic.


If that is what you intend to argue, it is up to you to argue it.

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What your argument lacks is any form of detail beyond glib slogans like "elections" and "theocracy", when you're relying on a theorist who deliberately avoids such terms.


He deliberately avoids such terms to avoid your sort of idiocy.

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You are now deliberately evading the details of the caliphate.


No I am not. You cited one word - shura. I gave you a paragraph in response. You are clutching at straws an demanding I do your thinking for you.

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Political inclusion is economic inclusion.


No it isn't. That is why there are two different terms. Acemoglu argues that there is a causal relationship between them, but that does not make them the same thing.

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The other factor your argument ignores is security. The selling point of empires, beyond their expansion (or because of it), was to protect populations from invaders. Besieged people accept political exclusion to have their lives and livelihoods protected. You ignore this, I think, because you see things from a secure, modern Australian perspective. You ignore the fact that most of the world is still prepared to swap freedoms for security, and we could add economic security.


I am not ignoring it. My argument is not about why people give up political rights. It is about the consequence of doing so. If people give up economic and political rights for economic security, they are giving up their wealth, not securing it.

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This is because their social and political DNA is rooted in war and political instability.


This is an invention of nationalism. In the more distant past, people saw wars as something that happened between noblemen that had very little effect on them. They got treated the same way regardless. They were the herd that the hunters faught over. Mass conscription is a more recent phenomena, only possible with industrialisation (and a good dose of nationalism).

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During Muhammed's time, security concerns were not manufactured. Muhammed and his followers were under siege. You could argue that the Koran is about this very point - how to achieve foreign and domestic security; in both the ways of war and in the metaphysical sense.


They were under siege because their livelihood was based on raiding Meccan caravans and slaughtering Jews. Muhammed deliberately wound the Jews up. He was looking for a fight, just like a modern tyrant looking for a war to detract from his own inadequacies.
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Karnal
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Re: The Heavy Legacies of Our Past
Reply #151 - May 13th, 2016 at 2:47pm
 
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You are clutching at straws an demanding I do your thinking for you.


No, FD, I'm suggesting you back up your argument. You're free to propose ludicrous statements like this, when you know how much Iran, North Korea and Saddam's Iraq rely/ed on erections:

Quote:
Elections do mean poltical inclusiveness
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Re: The Heavy Legacies of Our Past
Reply #152 - May 13th, 2016 at 2:55pm
 
So 8000 words isn't enough?

Are you still confused about the relationship between elections and political inclusiveness?
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Karnal
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Re: The Heavy Legacies of Our Past
Reply #153 - May 13th, 2016 at 5:16pm
 
freediver wrote on May 13th, 2016 at 2:55pm:
So 8000 words isn't enough?

Are you still confused about the relationship between elections and political inclusiveness?


I most certainly am, FD. I can't possibly understand, for example, how Iraq couldn't have been the next South Korea under Saddam and his erections, but they can now after Uncle went in to shoot the place up.

Inclusiveness, is it?

Are you suggesting your word count explains the legal and political mechanisms within Muhammed's caliphate and compares them with those of the Roman republic?  Is 8000 a lucky number? Does 8000 hypnotize readers into believing a few quick platitudes and glibly phrased clichés?

I'm curious. I'm keen to know more. I'd also like to know about power in the caliphate. What was it that made, in your argument, the Roman republic more inclusive?

You've already said erections. I've countered your erections with a Shura. It's even-Steven right now.

Now why don't you get stuck into the caliphate and justify those 8000 words?
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Karnal
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Re: The Heavy Legacies of Our Past
Reply #154 - May 13th, 2016 at 5:35pm
 
freediver wrote on May 13th, 2016 at 2:09pm:
Quote:
[quote]This is because their social and political DNA is rooted in war and political instability.


This is an invention of nationalism. In the more distant past, people saw wars as something that happened between noblemen that had very little effect on them. They got treated the same way regardless. They were the herd that the hunters faught over. Mass conscription is a more recent phenomena, only possible with industrialisation (and a good dose of nationalism).


No, FD, in the distant past, people saw wars as causing their invasion, rape, pillage, torture, killing, and if anyone was left alive, their enslavement.

And if they were on the winning side, they got to do this to others. Their payment was in war booty, or what were called "the spoils of war".

The invention of nationalism happened after the invention of nations - a phenomenon that occurred only recently, in the 19th century. The rise of the nation state was also about security. It was believed that once the borders were agreed, the constitutions written and the treaties signed, war would be no more. The warmongers would simply take their bat and ball and go home. Not cricket.

Alas, WWI saw an end to that idea. Nations just decided to join forces against others - an easy mistake to make. The rise of the nation state also saw the introduction of a system of alliances that made avoiding war almost impossible once one state lit the fuse.

If you think people in the past saw wars as just a distant tiff between noblemen, you're missing a vital part of the world's unconsciousness today. The latent memory of war is alive and well - in our speech and ideology, if not our very cells. The subject is the source of most Western philosophy, from Plato to Thomas Moore to Karl Marx. When Marx was asked the cryptic philosophical question, what is?, he answered with a quick, one-word answer: struggle.

It is a jolly world, no?
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« Last Edit: May 13th, 2016 at 5:44pm by Karnal »  
 
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Frank
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Re: The Heavy Legacies of Our Past
Reply #155 - May 13th, 2016 at 8:11pm
 
Karnal wrote on May 13th, 2016 at 5:35pm:
When Marx was asked the cryptic philosophical question, what is?, he answered with a quick, one-word answer: struggle.



It's just NOT class struggle, which was his monomaniacal slant.

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Karnal
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Re: The Heavy Legacies of Our Past
Reply #156 - May 13th, 2016 at 9:17pm
 
Frank wrote on May 13th, 2016 at 8:11pm:
Karnal wrote on May 13th, 2016 at 5:35pm:
When Marx was asked the cryptic philosophical question, what is?, he answered with a quick, one-word answer: struggle.



It's just NOT class struggle, which was his monomaniacal slant.



Marx’s slant was most certainly not monomaniacal, Frank. It was dialectic.

His argument was that the struggle between two opposing forces drives history; the struggle between empires, classes and competing economic superstructures.

It’s fairly hard to argue the historical momentum from the French revolution on was not about class struggle. It’s impossible to argue that the Roman republic and its classes of patricians, plebians and slaves was not driven by class struggle too.

I propose a new argument. The rise of modern.racism - the proposed banning, killing and nuking of the tinted races - is all about class struggle too.  All we’ve done in the developed world is outsource our plebian and slave classes.

Cunning, no? After all, the people who manufacture most of our goods have little political, and almost no economic inclusiveness.

All FD can say about this is, yes but maybe one day they will.

Yes indeed. Maybe one day they will.
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« Last Edit: May 13th, 2016 at 9:27pm by Karnal »  
 
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freediver
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Re: The Heavy Legacies of Our Past
Reply #157 - May 14th, 2016 at 7:41am
 
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I most certainly am, FD. I can't possibly understand, for example, how Iraq couldn't have been the next South Korea under Saddam and his erections, but they can now after Uncle went in to shoot the place up.


Do you not see any difference between the elections under Saddam and under the new regime?

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I'm curious. I'm keen to know more. I'd also like to know about power in the caliphate. What was it that made, in your argument, the Roman republic more inclusive?


The elections.

Quote:
You've already said erections. I've countered your erections with a Shura. It's even-Steven right now.


Do you consider a dictatorship in which the dictator talks to people to be just as inclusive as a democracy? Does your argument hinge on not being able to tell the difference between pre and post Saddam Iraq?

Quote:
All FD can say about this is, yes but maybe one day they will.


Our purchases are fueling it. The reason China for example is making so many of our goods is because of the increasing inclusiveness of their economy. The enourmous market available to poorer nations is making the choices they face starker than before. There are plenty of even poorer places we don't buy things from, and this is ultimately due to them being less inclusive.
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Re: The Heavy Legacies of Our Past
Reply #158 - May 14th, 2016 at 9:57am
 
freediver wrote on May 14th, 2016 at 7:41am:
Do you consider a dictatorship in which the dictator talks to people to be just as inclusive as a democracy?


The Roman Republic was a democracy was it?

No it wasn't. Good, now we all agree on that, perhaps you can actually answer K's question - how is the Roman Republic's non-democratic system of elections more "inclusive" than the Caliphate's non-democratic system of shura (consultation)?
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Outlawing the enemy's uniform - hijab, islamic beard - is not depriving one's own people of their freedoms.
 
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Karnal
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Re: The Heavy Legacies of Our Past
Reply #159 - May 14th, 2016 at 11:51am
 
freediver wrote on May 14th, 2016 at 7:41am:
Quote:
I most certainly am, FD. I can't possibly understand, for example, how Iraq couldn't have been the next South Korea under Saddam and his erections, but they can now after Uncle went in to shoot the place up.


Do you not see any difference between the elections under Saddam and under the new regime?

Quote:
I'm curious. I'm keen to know more. I'd also like to know about power in the caliphate. What was it that made, in your argument, the Roman republic more inclusive?


The elections.

Quote:
You've already said erections. I've countered your erections with a Shura. It's even-Steven right now.


Do you consider a dictatorship in which the dictator talks to people to be just as inclusive as a democracy? Does your argument hinge on not being able to tell the difference between pre and post Saddam Iraq?

Quote:
All FD can say about this is, yes but maybe one day they will.


Our purchases are fueling it. The reason China for example is making so many of our goods is because of the increasing inclusiveness of their economy. The enourmous market available to poorer nations is making the choices they face starker than before. There are plenty of even poorer places we don't buy things from, and this is ultimately due to them being less inclusive.


How about Bangladesh, FD? They now make most of our clothes.

Are they inclusive! Why or why not?
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Karnal
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Re: The Heavy Legacies of Our Past
Reply #160 - May 14th, 2016 at 11:53am
 
polite_gandalf wrote on May 14th, 2016 at 9:57am:
freediver wrote on May 14th, 2016 at 7:41am:
Do you consider a dictatorship in which the dictator talks to people to be just as inclusive as a democracy?


The Roman Republic was a democracy was it?

No it wasn't. Good, now we all agree on that, perhaps you can actually answer K's question - how is the Roman Republic's non-democratic system of elections more "inclusive" than the Caliphate's non-democratic system of shura (consultation)?


FD won’t day, G. He’s converted to Islam.

He’s evading.
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freediver
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Re: The Heavy Legacies of Our Past
Reply #161 - May 14th, 2016 at 2:16pm
 
polite_gandalf wrote on May 14th, 2016 at 9:57am:
freediver wrote on May 14th, 2016 at 7:41am:
Do you consider a dictatorship in which the dictator talks to people to be just as inclusive as a democracy?


The Roman Republic was a democracy was it?

No it wasn't. Good, now we all agree on that, perhaps you can actually answer K's question - how is the Roman Republic's non-democratic system of elections more "inclusive" than the Caliphate's non-democratic system of shura (consultation)?


It was more politically inclusive. To answer your next question, because it had elections. It did not have to have universal suffrage to be more inclusive, because it was competing against far more backwards systems. There were far more people having a say in Rome than it would be possible to acieve through 'shura.' Shura is basically window dressing on dictatorship.
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Frank
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Re: The Heavy Legacies of Our Past
Reply #162 - May 14th, 2016 at 2:38pm
 
Karnal wrote on May 13th, 2016 at 9:17pm:
Frank wrote on May 13th, 2016 at 8:11pm:
Karnal wrote on May 13th, 2016 at 5:35pm:
When Marx was asked the cryptic philosophical question, what is?, he answered with a quick, one-word answer: struggle.



It's just NOT class struggle, which was his monomaniacal slant.



Marx’s slant was most certainly not monomaniacal, Frank. It was dialectic.

His argument was that the struggle between two opposing forces drives history; the struggle between empires, classes and competing economic superstructures.

It’s fairly hard to argue the historical momentum from the French revolution on was not about class struggle. It’s impossible to argue that the Roman republic and its classes of patricians, plebians and slaves was not driven by class struggle too. 



It was monomaniacal alright, a bit like Mohammed's revelations: they both thought that their ideas were the final answer and solution to all the troubles that went before them. Marx though that the class struggle will end with the triumph of the proletariat whose dictatorship will eventually lead to such enlightenment that there will be no classes and therefore class struggle and no dialectics becuase the opposites will have been dissolved (that's what communism is meant to be). Like all final prophets, he believed he was onto the end of history.




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Karnal
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Re: The Heavy Legacies of Our Past
Reply #163 - May 14th, 2016 at 5:31pm
 
Frank wrote on May 14th, 2016 at 2:38pm:
Karnal wrote on May 13th, 2016 at 9:17pm:
Frank wrote on May 13th, 2016 at 8:11pm:
Karnal wrote on May 13th, 2016 at 5:35pm:
When Marx was asked the cryptic philosophical question, what is?, he answered with a quick, one-word answer: struggle.



It's just NOT class struggle, which was his monomaniacal slant.



Marx’s slant was most certainly not monomaniacal, Frank. It was dialectic.

His argument was that the struggle between two opposing forces drives history; the struggle between empires, classes and competing economic superstructures.

It’s fairly hard to argue the historical momentum from the French revolution on was not about class struggle. It’s impossible to argue that the Roman republic and its classes of patricians, plebians and slaves was not driven by class struggle too. 



It was monomaniacal alright, a bit like Mohammed's revelations: they both thought that their ideas were the final answer and solution to all the troubles that went before them. Marx though that the class struggle will end with the triumph of the proletariat whose dictatorship will eventually lead to such enlightenment that there will be no classes and therefore class struggle and no dialectics becuase the opposites will have been dissolved (that's what communism is meant to be). Like all final prophets, he believed he was onto the end of history.



Many do, Frank. Like Hegel, FD thinks liberal democracy is the end of history. His argument about inclusiveness is all about the inevitable transition towards what he calls democracy; or erections.

If the Muselman doesn't get there first. FD, you see, believes that Western liberal democracy is the default global political model, and in many ways, he's right. Western liberal democracy is the political model of our current stage of capitalism, which is the global economic superstructure.

This superstructure is led by the US, so it's no surprise where the world gets its political model from. When Mother ruled the show, the world got its colonial model from her. When Rome ran the shop - you get the idea.

For FD, the Muselman wants to take away the US's Freeeeedom by beheading decent white people and establishing a global caliphate. Cunning, no? All Muselmen, from the fake-reformist G to the sinister and evasive Abu and Falah, want to interfere with history's telos, which is erections.

FD's article comes down to two things: theocracy and erections, the caliphate and the Roman empire.

Clash of civilisations, innit: Thesis, antithesis, synthesis. FD, you see, is a Hegelian.

It is a jolly world, no?
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« Last Edit: May 14th, 2016 at 5:38pm by Karnal »  
 
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Karnal
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Re: The Heavy Legacies of Our Past
Reply #164 - May 14th, 2016 at 5:44pm
 
freediver wrote on May 14th, 2016 at 2:16pm:
polite_gandalf wrote on May 14th, 2016 at 9:57am:
freediver wrote on May 14th, 2016 at 7:41am:
Do you consider a dictatorship in which the dictator talks to people to be just as inclusive as a democracy?


The Roman Republic was a democracy was it?

No it wasn't. Good, now we all agree on that, perhaps you can actually answer K's question - how is the Roman Republic's non-democratic system of elections more "inclusive" than the Caliphate's non-democratic system of shura (consultation)?


It was more politically inclusive.


How? You've written 8000 words about the Roman empire and Arab inbreeding, but you won't write anything about the very point you're making.

Should we Google taqiyya?
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