Re: Inequality much worse than most think
What does equality under the law mean? The classic case these days is marriage laws . Gays for example are free to marry the opposite sex just like everyone else so what's the issue? I also need to take an eye test to drive. Is that a form of discrimination? Could it be? What if statistics show that any less than 20/20 shows a .00001 increased risk in fender benders? Is 20/20 only drivers "equal".
Don't want someone with 90 cents to cross a bridge, equally apply a $1 fee. Don't like kids then make a law that houses are 1000 squire feet and no more and change the zoning for the park, ya know, "equally". Know someone you don't like who drinks, vote for the Mayor who would make the town dry. Equality under the law is abstract squid ink, and it can be used to oppress. In fact that is exactly what taxes on labor is, masquerading as equal while in fact favoring the wealthy.
I am also not sure what could be so unclear. The US was founded on such things as the Scottish Enlightenment like Locke, and Smith. The oppressive force was not very ambiguous. It was the system of legally enforced privileges. It was a labor theory of ownership which certainly clashed with the concept of a wilderness of royal lands, albeit with land owners being treated "equally" under the law.
Originally posted by DSpencer
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Don't want someone with 90 cents to cross a bridge, equally apply a $1 fee. Don't like kids then make a law that houses are 1000 squire feet and no more and change the zoning for the park, ya know, "equally". Know someone you don't like who drinks, vote for the Mayor who would make the town dry. Equality under the law is abstract squid ink, and it can be used to oppress. In fact that is exactly what taxes on labor is, masquerading as equal while in fact favoring the wealthy.
I am also not sure what could be so unclear. The US was founded on such things as the Scottish Enlightenment like Locke, and Smith. The oppressive force was not very ambiguous. It was the system of legally enforced privileges. It was a labor theory of ownership which certainly clashed with the concept of a wilderness of royal lands, albeit with land owners being treated "equally" under the law.
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