Kishkumen wrote:I am not exactly sure why it makes sense to attempt to ensure that every person who participates in a community has a certain warm feeling in his or her heart when they cooperate with the system. We cooperate because it is in our mutual interest to cooperate. Our choice is the vote that we cast in the ballot box. We agree to live with the outcome of that voting process, and seek through the ballot box to make the necessary changes to keep the system viable. Part of the deal is that those who break the laws we all implicitly or explicitly agree to live by as citizens are punished for breaking the contract, so to speak.
You're a pyromaniac in a field of strawmen tonight. And, you seem to be confusing me with others in this thread who saw it as an appropriate occasion to express displeasure with forms of government assistance to needy people.
Let's get this exchange back on track. Tarski's original post was about how the Christian crypto-Randian concept of the virtue of charity lacks systemic action, later clarified to mean government programs. My main objection was that I can believe there is no such thing as a non-personal virtue of charity, while particpating in charitible acts, while understanding and appreciating my self-interest in doing so, and still think there is a place for government welfare even though I don't think of welfare as the same thing as charity,
and experience no cognative dissonance in any of this. I don't call government welfare charity, because it is missing features that make it so. The ones I mentioned are:
An option to not participate.
A somehow more direct connection between most of the participants (who merely have money removed from their earnings) and the needy.
This is not to say that welfare programs should be remade to include these features, only that it is hardly an act of charity to be taxed. This is not to say that we should do away with welfare programs or cease to seek desirable outcomes from them, only that it does not enhance my charitibility to engage in social engineering. Things that produce similar or even same outcomes are often not the same thing.
Kishkumen wrote:If it is not contextualized within a framework of the importance of community and its benefits, "compulsion" sounds like Libertarian or Randian nonsense to me. I find both schools of thought to be hopelessly impractical.
We're now straying into the land of off-topic in my opinion, but it looks like this thread has already gone to hell, so here goes.
Having your money separated from you by your goverment without any choice on your part other than to de-camp to the wilderness, or launder it mafia-style, or be violently placed in prison (or worse), is a fact of life for everyone. It can be fairly described as compulsion. That's the context. It's not an opinion; it's all demonstrably true. Just to head of your objection, this is not to say that there is something wrong with the arrangement I've described, only that it really is compulsion, not nonsense. Also, I find acknowledging facts isn't impractical at all.