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Old 08-20-2013, 01:11 AM   #1
detbuch
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Originally Posted by spence View Post
Perhaps it's just the opposite?

Perhaps you mean opposite ends of the same "spectrum?" I know you like to think in terms of spectrums, and contexts, and so forth. So maybe that's what you mean here, otherwise, in the following you seem to be supporting Hayward's dependent class/ruling class relationship.

Certainly there is a small percentage that are really dependent and are more favorable to this dependent state.

Your following comments imply that you think there is more than a small percentage that are really dependent.

But what about the millions of defense contractors who are dependent on the ruling class to fund their jobs?

Yes, when the ruling class expands its size and power and financial resources, it can hire and incorporate greater and greater numbers into the dependent class. And when it can accumulate debt well beyond even its expanded financial resources and beyond that of the private sector, it can pay for enough dependents to subsume the majority of the population into dependence. Are there really millions of contractors? That is scary.

What about the transportation workers who are dependent on the Fed to keep things liquid so they have a reason to move business people around?

Yes, this is the increasingly prevalent type of unconstitutional power that the ruling class has taken from the private sector and local governments and made itself supposedly "indispensable" in areas that could do without it, thereby increasing the number of dependents and the size of its budget and debt.

What about the millions of attorneys who thrive under the chaos of regulatory change?

"Millions of attorneys"? There are about 1.4 million or so, and they don't all thrive under that particular chaos. But is this a defense of the ruling class and its regulatory State? This is the wonderful gift of dependence? Legalistic vampires eating out our substance to make the ruling class work and bond us to it? Yes, their "thriving" is the diversion of money from our pockets into theirs in order to comply with the mandates of the ruling class. As such, they not only thrive under the chaos, they are part of the ruling class. Read Hayward's article carefully and you will see that they and others, media, etc. are included.

Everyone else could be very independent in their own right, but aren't they just as dependent in the end?

Yes, but doesn't it depend on what they are all depending on? Dependence, in various forms, is common to us all. But must it be on a ruling class that makes us a dependent class?

Not to mention the ruling class is pretty dependent on the dependent...

Of course it is. I've said so myself a few times. Especially see my comment on the "controllers" in the thread started by Jim in Ct titled: "Why do liberal universities honor murderers?" The relationship is symbiotic. But that does not change the nature of the relationship between controller and controlled, or ruling class and dependent class. It is one of top down authority opposed to the bottom up system of the Founders.

. . . and everyone else.

No, Everyone Else, not wishing to be dependent on a ruling class is opposed to it. Whatever
"dependence" they have on that class beyond what is constitutionally prescribed is forced. If you mean coercion to be a form of dependence, that is an un-American condition, at least pre-progressive American, and not what Hayward meant by dependence. Symbiosis in this context is cooperative. Coercion is dictatorial. Although some of those co-opted into the dependent class that Hayward defines may have initially been against it, they willingly partake when regulations, penalties, and subsidies make it more palliative than not. The rest of the dependent class had no objections from the start.

Everyone Else doesn't want any part of it.


Perhaps we're all just dependent. It would certainly eliminate two of the variables and establish a more simple context.

-spence
Again, we all depend on something, and the more "independent" we are, the less we depend on others and the more on ourselves.

Hayward's article speaks about an infusion of a Marxist class structure of a lower, middle, and upper class into American politics which is foisted on us as a reality which must be made right by an all-powerful central government . . . but he says the real structure is RULING CLASS, DEPENDENT CLASS, and Everyone Else.

That we all depend on something is a human condition. That we are increasingly dependent on a central power that "marches us [all] in the same direction" is antithetical to freedom.

Last edited by detbuch; 08-20-2013 at 02:11 AM.. Reason: typos
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Old 08-20-2013, 05:34 PM   #2
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Originally Posted by detbuch View Post
Again, we all depend on something, and the more "independent" we are, the less we depend on others and the more on ourselves.

That we all depend on something is a human condition. That we are increasingly dependent on a central power that "marches us [all] in the same direction" is antithetical to freedom.

Perfect !
Just an after thought. It's also human to like "Free Stuff" and the more your dependent on it
the lazier you get and the more you think your entitled to it.

Last edited by justplugit; 08-20-2013 at 05:47 PM.. Reason: addition

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Old 08-21-2013, 01:25 AM   #3
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NO!...it's not human to like "free stuff" because most understand that "stuff" isn't free, the perpetuation of the entitlement culture has just created the illusion and belief it's there for the taking and it's ok to participate...after all...everyone else is ...and conceding that "we all depend on something" as though that statement bears any relationship to an inane statement like "Perhaps we're all just dependent" like millions contractors, transportation workers and attorneys thriving under the chaos of regulatory change is just participating in inane diversion from subject...

human history is a perpetual struggle against dependence on those that foster dependence and use it to improve their own condition usually beginning with phony benevolent promises and ending in violence and misery

equating interdependent relationships that we might willingly enter into with dependent relationships that we may be forced into (for our own good or the good of the state) by a bureaucratic fiat or that employment in that bureaucratic state somehow entitles insulation from the realities of employment in the real world again entertains this stupid notion and deflects from the issue

"free stuff" and the idea that there should be no shame in living through the labor of others is a seed that has been sewn in this society for most of the last century by the "ruling" class, as it is being called....it is intended to weaken the human spirit and create a society that is more malleable to the whims of the "ruling class" which has clearly overspent it's promises...

conceding that "perhaps we're all just dependent" is handing over you life and the lives of your children to the ruling class who have no intention of slowing the growth of their state and is regulation and intrusions....makes me sick


dependence IS antithetical to freedom.....if "Perhaps we're all just dependent" then we are all losing freedom, many of us willingly it seems....this notion that greater dependence on a central government and all of it's wisdom and bread and circus will somehow make us freer people is a false promise...just ask the people of Detroit

Last edited by scottw; 08-21-2013 at 02:06 AM..
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Old 08-21-2013, 11:01 AM   #4
detbuch
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Originally Posted by scottw View Post
NO!...it's not human to like "free stuff" because most understand that "stuff" isn't free, the perpetuation of the entitlement culture has just created the illusion and belief it's there for the taking and it's ok to participate...after all...everyone else is ...and conceding that "we all depend on something" as though that statement bears any relationship to an inane statement like "Perhaps we're all just dependent" like millions contractors, transportation workers and attorneys thriving under the chaos of regulatory change is just participating in inane diversion from subject...

human history is a perpetual struggle against dependence on those that foster dependence and use it to improve their own condition usually beginning with phony benevolent promises and ending in violence and misery

equating interdependent relationships that we might willingly enter into with dependent relationships that we may be forced into (for our own good or the good of the state) by a bureaucratic fiat or that employment in that bureaucratic state somehow entitles insulation from the realities of employment in the real world again entertains this stupid notion and deflects from the issue

"free stuff" and the idea that there should be no shame in living through the labor of others is a seed that has been sewn in this society for most of the last century by the "ruling" class, as it is being called....it is intended to weaken the human spirit and create a society that is more malleable to the whims of the "ruling class" which has clearly overspent it's promises...

conceding that "perhaps we're all just dependent" is handing over you life and the lives of your children to the ruling class who have no intention of slowing the growth of their state and is regulation and intrusions....makes me sick


dependence IS antithetical to freedom.....if "Perhaps we're all just dependent" then we are all losing freedom, many of us willingly it seems....this notion that greater dependence on a central government and all of it's wisdom and bread and circus will somehow make us freer people is a false promise...just ask the people of Detroit
There IS an element of liking free stuff in the human condition. It may be more of an extension of humans liking to GIVE free stuff. There is a good feeling in sharing your stuff with others, and a disappointed feeling if they refuse the gift. So the giving and taking is reciprocal. But there is only satisfaction in giving or taking free stuff if it is voluntary. That is what makes the free stuff truly free. And, even in that "free" association, there is an element of price for the exchange--gratitude by the receiver, love (or duty) by the giver and, perhaps, infinite determinate variables. Perhaps, the most common voluntary free giving is gifts to your children--determined by the price of love.

But if the "giving" is forced, the element of "liking" changes to "hating." And for the receiving, since it comes from no-one in particular to love or appreciate, there is no gratitude. But it does come from a government or bureaucracy, and in our the case from an administrative State, a "benevolent" one which insists that you're entitled to the gift, so there is no need for thanks. Rather, the need is to demand. Of course, the ever-present price, in this case, is a dependent loyalty to that government or bureaucracy that gives you stuff. That loyalty, both ways, to and from the giver and taker, is the string attached to the gift. Rather than a relationship between child and parent nourished by love which teaches the child to grow with values of love and dependence on "your own," it creates a dysfunctional relation between a childlike dependence on a dispassionate and neglectful, rather abusive, government "parent" who treats the child, from a distance, as a token of its power and largesse, and who never teaches its children the value of growing up into a self-dependent and loving adult. It creates a selfish child who expects to be given stuff and who only learns that all you have to do to keep getting it is to keep the givers in power. That element of humanity that breeds the richness of life, its give and take, is transformed into a mean existence of taking without giving in a personal way. It is, as you say, a destruction of the human spirit. It is that sort if dependence which is antithetical to freedom. And, as you say, speaking of dependence in general--on weather conditions for instance, or health, or on self and family, on the stability of the universe and the grace of God--as if it were in the same category as dependence on an all powerful central government deflects from the issue. It is that sort of "equivalence" that blinds us from the truth.

Last edited by detbuch; 08-21-2013 at 11:38 AM..
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Old 08-21-2013, 11:22 AM   #5
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Originally Posted by scottw View Post
NO!...it's not human to like "free stuff" because most understand that "stuff" isn't free,
Have to disagree with you on that statement, Scott. First let me say after working
company conventions for 35 years there wasn't a person attending that wouldn't take a free "give away" even as small as a pen. Banks "give away" toasters to get your business etc. Politicians offer free hot dog and beer picnics to get your vote.
While some understand it's not free most think it is,and in the case of government hand outs think that someone else is paying for it,why not take it.

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