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HimmlerWasRight88 on scored.co
1 month ago1 point(+0/-0/+1Score on mirror)1 child
> Government is a necessary evil (preferable to pure "might makes right" anarchy)
Government is *us*. Government is the expression of society and our long term interests. You hate the government because the current government is in the hands of an hostile tribe, but the government is not evil per se.
The government is the only thing that will allow us White people to fight together as a unit. Rejecting the government means suicide because then we'd all be individuals who can't fight together.
> The Founding Fathers and
The Founding Fathers? No, they certainly didn't all acknowledge this. Jefferson was the most extreme liberal but even he recognized that the government needs to provide education.
Other than that, America was funded and it has always been a fascist state with heavy government intervention in the economy.
The myth that America was funded with anti-government ideas is a Jewish lie. The only American movement that was against the government is the neocons, which is a Jewish movement of the last few decades.
> every other great philosophical/political mind in history acknowledges this.
Hahah, what?
Name one!
This idea originates from a Frenchman who thought children could be generated by random encounters in the jungle and then abandoned his own child and went on to inspire Karl Marx.
>Jefferson was the most extreme liberal but even he recognized that the government needs to provide education... [etc.]
You're refuting something I didn't say. I said:
> if society is to become anything greater than the sum of its parts, **we have to figure out how to get along**. The Founding Fathers and every other great philosophical/political mind in history acknowledges this
I was saying the Founding Fathers, et. al., acknowledge the need for government. It's a very stupid thing to think government isn't needed; I wouldn't say that (at least, not since I hit puberty).
I mean I began by saying government is necessary. I called it a necessary *evil* because any self-sufficient person is will likely find himself constrained and imposed upon by government. Maybe "evil" is the wrong word - "inconvenience" is probably better. There is, theoretically, righteous & just government and righteous law, but I don't think Man is capable of bringing it to birth.
>Hahah, what? Name one!
Socrates, Plato & Aristotle come to mind, and then you can think of all the people they influenced (St. Thomas Aquinas, St. Augustine, John Locke, *The Founding Fathers*, etc.), but it becomes an *a priori* assumption once those foundational philosophies are established.
Government is *us*. Government is the expression of society and our long term interests. You hate the government because the current government is in the hands of an hostile tribe, but the government is not evil per se.
The government is the only thing that will allow us White people to fight together as a unit. Rejecting the government means suicide because then we'd all be individuals who can't fight together.
> The Founding Fathers and
The Founding Fathers? No, they certainly didn't all acknowledge this. Jefferson was the most extreme liberal but even he recognized that the government needs to provide education.
Other than that, America was funded and it has always been a fascist state with heavy government intervention in the economy.
The myth that America was funded with anti-government ideas is a Jewish lie. The only American movement that was against the government is the neocons, which is a Jewish movement of the last few decades.
> every other great philosophical/political mind in history acknowledges this.
Hahah, what?
Name one!
This idea originates from a Frenchman who thought children could be generated by random encounters in the jungle and then abandoned his own child and went on to inspire Karl Marx.
You're refuting something I didn't say. I said:
> if society is to become anything greater than the sum of its parts, **we have to figure out how to get along**. The Founding Fathers and every other great philosophical/political mind in history acknowledges this
I was saying the Founding Fathers, et. al., acknowledge the need for government. It's a very stupid thing to think government isn't needed; I wouldn't say that (at least, not since I hit puberty).
I mean I began by saying government is necessary. I called it a necessary *evil* because any self-sufficient person is will likely find himself constrained and imposed upon by government. Maybe "evil" is the wrong word - "inconvenience" is probably better. There is, theoretically, righteous & just government and righteous law, but I don't think Man is capable of bringing it to birth.
>Hahah, what? Name one!
Socrates, Plato & Aristotle come to mind, and then you can think of all the people they influenced (St. Thomas Aquinas, St. Augustine, John Locke, *The Founding Fathers*, etc.), but it becomes an *a priori* assumption once those foundational philosophies are established.