Re: Internet Ethics and a Search for Community.
The way I look at this is that morality is contextual. For example, it is moral to be honest, and immoral to lie. But if someone were to break into my home, threaten me at gunpoint and demand to know the location of someone or something of value to me, it would not be immoral to lie.
Aren't rules different from morals? It seems to me that morality and principles have to come first; after that, community rules are OK, as long as they don't violate my morals or principles (which includes being able to leave the group if I choose not to follow them).
Statist collectivism is certainly the most egregious form. It seems to me that the problems with communities happen when force or fraud start to be involved, when the "freedom to associate" is no longer "free," or when members of one group start to think of themselves as superior to other groups. For example, racism is a long-standing issue related to collectivism. Religion is another. Class warfare is another.
Even in a non-state form, when people begin to feel that membership in some group is more important than their own life or liberty, things tend to move rapidly toward some form of gang warfare: groups fighting each other. The state need not be involved, although it's easy for it to get swept up in the passion of the times.
(*) I generally very much enjoy Stefan Molyneux's work. Even though I don't 100% agree with him, he makes some very good, thought-provoking arguments.
Originally posted by ThePythonicCow
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Originally posted by ThePythonicCow
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Originally posted by ThePythonicCow
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Even in a non-state form, when people begin to feel that membership in some group is more important than their own life or liberty, things tend to move rapidly toward some form of gang warfare: groups fighting each other. The state need not be involved, although it's easy for it to get swept up in the passion of the times.
(*) I generally very much enjoy Stefan Molyneux's work. Even though I don't 100% agree with him, he makes some very good, thought-provoking arguments.
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