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I don't like giving charity

Ex-User (13503)

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when people say systemic, they're just referring to a collection of behaviours and thought-patterns individuals hold

you don't get to handwave things that happen at a systemic level and be like

"it seems like there's a trend where the actions of individuals are seen for what they are instead of institutional"

as if there's some mystical humans who are somehow not human and influenced by the institutions they're raised in, believe in, spend time in, deliberately become part of
I phrased it like that because I suspect there isn't exactly a readily accessible peer-reviewed study to support me. I hesitate to make statements that I can't definitively back up, because it's an integrity thing for me.

Humans are fallible, and human qualities exist independent of institutional boundaries. Pedophilia and the sort are human qualities in this context, not universal by any means, or defining, but I’d expect them to arise in humans independently of institutions. If those statements are true, then if we find differences in the manifestation of indiscretions or the damage they cause between institutions of different structures, they are a result of differences in institutional structure and some structures are clearly enabling. It only follows then, that a change in structure could produce a change in manifestation.

I suspect the loosely organized structures of liberal quakerism and universalism might result in fewer and/or less severe moral indescretions, to the point where there’s no difference between what’s seen in religious vs nonreligious groups or the general populace, or where they even compare favorably. Any of those should compare favorably to strongly hierarchical religious groups. Do you have any evidence that disproves this?
 

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@Hadoblado

That's the thing. You can't assume that official dogma is someone's belief system, because that's not reflected in reality. Individuals routinely choose which parts to believe and which parts apply to them. I'm not just doing this to be slippery in the context of this argument. It’s like the letter of the law vs case law. Despite the text, case law determines what the law actually is, according to someone’s subjective interpretation.

Where is "one true church" in the superceding dogma of The Book? Even if it was there, do you think a majority of Christians have actually read the Bible, or even know of historical events like Nicaea? A huge number hear only what's read during mass, selected by that priest to suit an agenda, and maybe the occasional psalm or something. Some only get it twice a year (:D), on X-mas and Easter, or just check the box for Catholic because their parents baptized them as infants.

If God is defined according to the same book that includes "thou shalt have no other gods before me," that phrase takes on an entirely different meaning; the same in the context of the "one true church." Those boundaries disappear if God is "I am."

Now, why do some believe in an exclusive "one true church?" If humans weren't fallible, they wouldn't be humans. If only they could be rabbits.
 

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Pizza I will define you ... just wait.
Can we get this on video? :D
Do you still claim that the problems with the provision of social services by public and private institutions open new opportunities for transformation for the church/religion?

In what new and better ways small groups of theists (Quakers, Universalists) could fill gaps in a system where conditions are dictated by government and a free market?

BTW We don't hear about abuses in smaller religious organizations so often because it is easier to hide them. Their existence is out of the most people's attention. See sects.
I claim that by wresting control of social services from charities, religious organizations will be forced into a new niche if they want to survive. When I say new, I mean it’s at least new to the typical church, as in, if religion with a primary focus on existential meaning vs superficiality has been done before, it's been a really long time. This might indeed be new to society, not in the sense that it would be pervasive or define society in any way, but in the sense that it would be a new, more specialized component part in the context of existing society, with clearer boundaries. However, I don’t want to pontificate something that’s not conclusive.

Quakerism and Universalism offer unscripted, no-strings-attached opportunities for what I would describe as a meta-awareness of being; shared bonding, experience, and interaction in an existential context, with plenty of opportunities for self-imposed retreat and solitude also, and it appears this is offered within a structure that isn't prone to abuse. Though it's very loose, Q & U differ from sects because there's a shared belief system and a universal expectation of how things operate across all congregations, and Q & U don't have the same hierarchical structure as sects. Where's the charismatic leader? The scapegoat? The anthem? The forced isolation? The anti-intellectualism? The restrictive propaganda? It's pretty much the opposite of cult brainwashing. Structure has nothing to do with size.

Charities will continue to exist because various forces dictate as much, but this isn't necessarily tied into Q & U vs systemic demand within the populace. In the U.S., we have food stamps, but we also have a ton of food charities because some people feel an ethical imperitive, others want a tax break, and otherwise we'd be wasting a lot more food than we already do. Meanwhile, the free market says it makes more sense to pump excess food into 6:1 fcr livestock or a landfill than it does to give it away for human consumption. The "true" free market says "Just nix expiration dates and sell it all. Who cares about disease risk? Let the consumer decide." and the government says "The electorate who gave us power does, and their tolerance for risk is lower than yours."
 

QuickTwist

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*deep breath*

Okay. This is frustrating. I'm posting as a member.

The way you people are acting it's as if nobody should be held accountable for their system of beliefs.

If Catholicism, which Lagomorph decided was a good example, is the first entry on the article when I jam in a precursory search in wikipedia for "one true church", I think I'm being reasonable when I say they are the self-appointed one true church.

I think you're being squirmy worms Squormy wirms.

You might subjectively overturn their self-identity, and say that by proclaiming themselves the sole arbiters of truth that they are just "seeking transcendence" like everyone else. But that's not what they believe. That's your takeaway, and you're free to believe it but you've provided no evidence for it. If the Catholic Church says they are A, and I say they are A, I'm not too interested in unjustified but convenient opinion B.

Even if they were seeking transcendance like everyone else, this doesn't even refute my statement. They can both be true!

"Getting caught up in the specifics of the teachings?". You've got to be kidding. This is a central tenet. "Being too literal"? I'm saying this is both the stated and de facto reality. There will be exceptions, but those aren't the central teachings of Catholicism.

And no, in order to make the above statement I'm not going to get drawn into "defining God" or "defining religion" or anything else. Unless you have a point to make, you're just shifting the burden onto me to answer questions with relevance I am yet to understand.

So either take a position and justify it, or stop filibustering.

*puts mod cap back on*

@Cognisant
There's a bit of a derail, but you've been part of it so I'm assuming you don't mind? If you want anything moved, just ask.

I am not really trying to condone the Catholic Church. My point is bigger than that. My point is that religion, in general, and pretty much any/all religion(s) started, usually with an individual, where the goal was the transformation of the individual into its full potential. You can see this in BOTH Jesus AND the Buddha. They both basically believe that one can become something more.

As far as that goes, religions is largely a perversion of these individuals teachings. Why? Because it becomes more about organizing people than what the individual tried to actually accomplish. Government is also a way to organize people, which was my original point in this thread. The problem isn't religion or the government, but the aspirations to control other people and society as a whole.
 

Hadoblado

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Okay, Lago, but you're choosing for them.

Also, we're talking about systems of belief, not individual belief. Sure, that there is a drift mechanism from the centralised tenets is a decent point, but you can't pretend that when religions are treated as belief system, they don't largely consider themselves mutually exclusive.

It doesn't make it any less a lie just because some people don't believe it.

Also

You always do this reactive 'play' where you reframe things fluidly so that it's hard to say anything concretely because you're constantly redefining everything. Nobody ever gets to react to what you believe.

So when you say that it's not true that religions are mutually exclusive, can you please try to evidence how many people believe both in their religion and someone else's?
How many people do you think genuinely believe that both Catholicism and Islam are correct worldviews?
 

Hadoblado

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@QT
Okay, that's a fine point. I agree to some extent, but think it's impractical. Society is organised for efficiency, we're only where we're at today because of how efficiently we're organised. When you remove those layers of top-down organisation completely, there are going to be difficulties. Maybe that thought is worth it's own thread?
 

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You always do this reactive 'play' where you reframe things fluidly so that it's hard to say anything concretely because you're constantly redefining everything. Nobody ever gets to react to what you believe.
I was actually thinking about making a thread about this, but hesitated because it's an INFJ thing, so there might not be interest in it here. I might edit this out later and make an OP.

This is because of tertiary Ti; puer position; playful use. Two parts:

1) In myself and INFJs in general, we have difficulty finding the right words to describe what we visualize. Like when I first used the word "split" ITT, I visualized, in 3-D, a fracture separating along a horizontal axis, dividing a holarchical bureaucratic Markov tree and redefining its remaining nodes into a more integrated, fluid, and participatory structure. Dafuq do I transmit that to another human? "Split" seemed to fit. This is also why I like definitions and semantics.

2) I'm learning and refining my understanding as I go, testing the assumptive extrapolations of Ni, actively forming my beliefs. I rarely if ever come into or start a discussion knowing something with certainty, or with intent to sway a discussion a certain way. If there are indicators pointing a certain direction, I follow them, when I realize something new, I note it, and when I make a mistake, I integrate it rather than hide it, whether that be through an apology, or a shift, like I did here. My every action here is an act of discovery and exploration, whether for myself or others.

As I've become more aware of my own process over time, my language has changed to more accurately reflect the meta-awareness of my knowledge and intent. You frequently see me using words like "may," "seems," "appears," "if".... and you see me using more disclaimers as well, in recognition of how my words or actions may impact others emotionally.
Okay, Lago, but you're choosing for them.

Also, we're talking about systems of belief, not individual belief. Sure, that there is a drift mechanism from the centralised tenets is a decent point, but you can't pretend that when religions are treated as belief system, they don't largely consider themselves mutually exclusive.

It doesn't make it any less a lie just because some people don't believe it.

So when you say that it's not true that religions are mutually exclusive, can you please try to evidence how many people believe both in their religion and someone else's?
How many people do you think genuinely believe that both Catholicism and Islam are correct worldviews?
I'm not choosing for them. I don't know what they believe, but I know what they could believe, and I know that my lifetime collection of observations doesn't support the idea that the majority believe that particularly contentious part of mainline dogma.

Individuals collectively are...? Who is "they" in "but you can't pretend that when religions are treated as belief system, they don't largely consider themselves mutually exclusive."? I do recognize that examining only the "law" component without the "case law" part, some of them are mutually exclusive (there are like, >4,000 of them, you know). I think the next step is basically applying pascal's wager to believers of mutual exclusivity. If true, superceding scripture would show them to be wrong, at least regarding Christianity, because the churches that spout the one true church stuff were founded on a dogma in the Bible that contradicts that, which is why I brought up intrinsic human fallibility.

I thought the implied lie, initially via Cognisant, was an afterlife, an unknowable thing that's impossible to prove or disprove, and a thing with no clear definition whatsoever that I can ascertain.

There are a few approaches to the remainder. The easiest one: It's not really meaningful to generalize religion as mutually exclusive when, within the same "religion" category, you have competing belief systems like universalism that have dogmas explicitly stating otherwise. In that case it seems more like believers in exclusivity are merely black sheep within a more accepting and open-minded family. And of course there's always multiverse theory where everything is simultaneously true all the time, something something Schrodinger, modal realism, but again, not exactly testable to my knowledge. But hey, it's a possibility, and until it's definitively disproven, it can't be denied as such.

Non-exclusivity doesn't necessarily mean that the entirety of competing beliefs are true. I'd wager that there's a statistically insignificant difference in the amount of variance between the "case law" beliefs of Christians vs Muslims. How one perceives the "other/s" is a factor that shouldn't be neglected when assessing the decision-making process.

I dislike anecdotes, but that's the best that can be offered here. I've spent a decent amount of time interacting with Catholics, asking probably about 300 of them whether they believe non-Catholics should go to hell. >80% have said no. The cool part to me is that the "yes" responses seem to cluster around certain personality types with tertiary or inferior Fi.

Tangential, but there's also a temporal and experiential component, which can only be assessed in terms of "potential"; what potentially might happen, because beliefs aren't static. A similar phenomenon is seen when a husband and wife were raised in different faiths. All of a sudden things change when you love your enemy. We know it happens and there's probably data out there, but it's going to be difficult to nail down when a measure of lifetime occurrance could strongly contradict a snapshot of the population at a point in time, if your interest is in discovering the holistic truth, like mine is.
Meta-awareness in action, lol:
142.jpg
 

Black Rose

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How can Christianity be a lie if "Satan is the father of lies" and Christians are the enemy of Satan. What lie are we talking about again? Is socialism involved? A lie is intentional.
 

Hadoblado

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Reactive play:
You had similar rationalisations about how your type influences what you do when you thought you were ENTP. Ne fit better IMO, because your process is divergent. "But have you thought of this?". I don't believe in MBTI or Jungian archetypes, and this sort of this is a big reason why.

Second point too long to succinctly summarise:
Gah that's way too much. I read it, but you hop around so quickly it's difficult to make out what your central point is and address it.
So we at least agree that believers of mutually exclusive religions are necessarily mostly wrong? Can we agree on that at least?

It's seriously hard to have a conversation with you.
 

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It's not a rationalization, just a reflection of my understanding at that point in time, though I understand how you can see it differently. I'm not going to press you on it, but if you have the interest and the free time, the Beebe model actually makes sense: https://www.intpforum.com/threads/the-beebe-model.27372/

Yeah, we can agree.

I know. I do my best. irl and visual aides would be so much easier.
 

Artsu Tharaz

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The pope is representative of peters line of succession but in east orthodoxies (not really call by that) 11 other disciple of Jesus existed not just Peter. And the line of succession was broken over a thousand years ago making the current pope unrelated to Jesus or peter but only a figurehead not gods one true representative on earth. So I am skeptical they are the "one true church" because 12 should exist as 12 disciples existed. By definition what does "one true church" even mean? There should be just The Church. no titles or anything. I digress.

The idea that Peter, and not the other disciples, is the foundation of the church comes from this verse:

Matthew 16:18 "And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it."

So, Jesus said to Peter that upon him would be built the church.

What do you mean by the succession being broken? Can you point out to me specifically when this was?

Also:
As for an argument potentially against the idea of there being one true church (aside from the fact that, in the time that the events of the New Testament after the crucifixion took place that there were multiple churches, with there being 7 churches of Asia written about in Revelations), look to Daniel:

Daniel 2:43 "And whereas thou sawest iron mixed with miry clay, they shall mingle themselves with the seed of men: but they shall not cleave one to another, even as iron is not mixed with clay. "

This is a reference to the Roman Empire, and its division. I am being rather speculative in supposing that this may mean that there cannot be a unified church.

Animekitty said:
How can Christianity be a lie if "Satan is the father of lies" and Christians are the enemy of Satan. What lie are we talking about again? Is socialism involved? A lie is intentional.

Matthew 23:13 "But woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against men: for ye neither go in yourselves, neither suffer ye them that are entering to go in. "

The religious leaders in the time that Jesus taught were hypocrites; the leaders of today may well often fall under the same category

Mark 13:6 "For many shall come in my name, saying, I am Christ; and shall deceive many. "

This verse has differing interpretations; some say that it refers to people who speak as Christians but are at heart deceiving, as you'll see prominently today, for example many Televangelists who are out for a profit, rather than out to preach the Truth.

On the other hand,

Mark 9:38-40

"38 And John answered him, saying, Master, we saw one casting out devils in thy name, and he followeth not us: and we forbad him, because he followeth not us.

39 But Jesus said, Forbid him not: for there is no man which shall do a miracle in my name, that can lightly speak evil of me.

40 For he that is not against us is on our part."

Though, this states of course that the person performs a miracle. It seems not to state that simply speaking as though a Christian makes it so.
 

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It is depressing to think people prefer to endlessly argue about religion and nobody has any comment at all about cybernetic socialism.
 

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It is depressing to think people prefer to endlessly argue about religion and nobody has any comment at all about cybernetic socialism.
I didn't touch it because you posted it in response to Cog.

I like the targeting of capitalism, so allies in that sense, but on the time scale my thinking typically operates on when examining the future, it seems like the epitome of stagnation. I'd expect novelty-seeking of the populace to be suppressed in a logistic pattern, ultimately shattering the stability of the system into a temporary developmental phase due to failure to integrate its component parts, and their actual vs recognized needs, holistically. Reminds me of The Giver.

I'd expect this to have its best shot atm in Scandinavia, and within a single generation I'd expect competing ideologies to be in a race to contain each other to maintain their existence.
 

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What do you mean by the succession being broken? Can you point out to me specifically when this was?

I read several wiki pages on early, medieval and late popes. A pope must choose who his successor is to keep the line open but several popes died without choosing the next pope and so voting is done by church leadership. Imagine a lineage where biologically the next person is always related to the founding ancestor. Descendency is not a voting matter. Peter needed to choose his successor and so on and so on. By voting this breaks the line of apostolic decent. Their needs to be a consistent line of pope approving the next pope otherwise it is a broken chain.
 

Artsu Tharaz

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What do you mean by the succession being broken? Can you point out to me specifically when this was?

I read several wiki pages on early, medieval and late popes. A pope must choose who his successor is to keep the line open but several popes died without choosing the next pope and so voting is done by church leadership. Imagine a lineage where biologically the next person is always related to the founding ancestor. Descendency is not a voting matter. Peter needed to choose his successor and so on and so on. By voting this breaks the line of apostolic decent. Their needs to be a consistent line of pope approving the next pope otherwise it is a broken chain.

I'm unaware of what you're talking about regarding pope's choosing the next pope. I thought that it was generally the church leadership that chooses the pope? (I admit I am quite unknowledgeable in these matters)
 

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It is depressing to think people prefer to endlessly argue about religion and nobody has any comment at all about cybernetic socialism.

:clap:

Believe it or not, glancing through the posts, I was thinking about a future where technology automates labor and creates a kind of socialism where people can pursue their goals, rather than being a slave to the labors of capitalism. Not sure if that's what you meant though. But I'd really like that. Money is annoying, even more now that I've managed to acquire a large amount of it. People see those with money as having more value and a lot more opportunities to acquire money pop up (least that's what's been happening with me). It's a bit depressing knowing that those with money have the monetary influence to keep those with little money from getting more. I wouldn't mind eliminating the human race and replacing it with some kind of AI or something either...
 

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@Reluctantly I was going to respond by basically explaining how such automation would create a dystopian future by removing any semblance of purpose from the populace, and then I read your last sentence.

Hey Hitler. How you been? :D
 

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@Reluctantly I was going to respond by basically explaining how such automation would create a dystopian future by removing any semblance of purpose from the populace, and then I read your last sentence.

So, question for you

If you had a billion US dollars, do you think your life would have less potential for purpose? You wouldn't have to constantly chase after a buck, which frees up a lot of time to get involved in whatever it is that you find stimulating.

Of course, maybe the majority of the population doesn't have the creativity or intelligence to find things to enthrall their time. I know that Native Americans on reservations, for example, have a lot of problems with drugs and alcohol, and part of that might be from the government subsidies they are given. And rich people often get heavily into drugs and alcohol. But...that's kind of pathetic, isn't it? That's like saying that most people need to be slaves to a job or work in order to have meaning or purpose...in that case, they really should be eliminated.

Hey Hitler. How you been? :D

Good. I've evolved from being racist and hating a few to hating everyone equally. PC age and all.
 

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@Reluctantly I was going to respond by basically explaining how such automation would create a dystopian future by removing any semblance of purpose from the populace, and then I read your last sentence.

So, question for you

If you had a billion US dollars, do you think your life would have less potential for purpose? You wouldn't have to constantly chase after a buck, which frees up a lot of time to get involved in whatever it is that you find stimulating.

Of course, maybe the majority of the population doesn't have the creativity or intelligence to find things to enthrall their time. I know that Native Americans on reservations, for example, have a lot of problems with drugs and alcohol, and part of that might be from the government subsidies they are given. And rich people often get heavily into drugs and alcohol. But...that's kind of pathetic, isn't it? That's like saying that most people need to be slaves to a job or work in order to have meaning or purpose...in that case, they really should be eliminated.

Hey Hitler. How you been? :D

Good. I've evolved from being racist and hating a few to hating everyone equally. PC age and all.
Shit, I didn't see this in my notifications. Sorry.

Just having the money wouldn't change much, but using it to the extent that it restricts agency would be problematic. Purpose is discovered, not doled out or something, and it's discovered experientially. One's intrinsic potential doesn't change, but limiting experience reduces the chances that one's potential will ever be completely fulfilled.

Utopia is akin to hell for me. What opportunity is there to appreciate one's own progress and development? What sense of identity is there? What meaning is there without something negative to contrast one's experience?
 

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It has been so from the outset of the industrial revolution, thousands of relief organizations sprang into existence to relieve the general population from the many ailments of day to day capitalism.
Nowadays this number has continued to grow to a dizzying degree.
Which is only logical, since the root of the manyfold problems that are simply results of this underlying cause is, more often than not, completely ignored.
Charity on a personal and institutional level is good, but it can never be good enough, because it does not address the systemic cause of the problems.
Which in turn means that the results of this condition continue to be reproduced, thus then again resulting in a need for relief. A never ending cycle.
 

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Which is only logical, since the root of the manyfold problems that are simply results of this underlying cause is, more often than not, completely ignored.
Charity on a personal and institutional level is good, but it can never be good enough, because it does not address the systemic cause of the problems.
What is the underlying cause?

Personally I think good governance is a lot like good management and I think a good manager exists to facilitate productivity. As I see it the existence of worker's unions is a failure of governance, managing the relationship between employees and employers falls under the purview of managing a country, worker's unions exist when governments fail to undertake that responsibility. I have the same opinion about private insurance, private healthcare, private education (not that a government should control all aspects of education), even services like telecommunications, everything that affects the ability of a nation's populace to be productive should be a part of that nation's governance strategy.

Ideally a government should provide as many services as possible as competently as possible, not just to ensure the people have access to everything they need but to also lessen the cognitive load of everyday living, which I think would facilitate even greater productivity.

I know this sounds a lot like communism and you're probably getting mental images of forced labour in rice fields but actually I'm thinking about the fact that we're heading towards a post-scarcity fully-automated economy. We're already in a sort of Robotic Renaissance, we're living in a time when more or less anyone can invent something or create something, run a Kickstarter campaign and potentially be the next Elon Musk a few months later.
 

a_ghost_from_your_past

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What is the underlying cause?
Capitalism.
And i think we agree at large.

What i don't see, is the the fully-automated post-scarcity economy.
This was the projected promise of communism in the past as well, that the machines that are *currently* employed to enslave the working masses could as well be employed to liberate them if the change from a capitalist mode of production to a communist *slash* socialist one could be made.
But when you look around these days, there is not even one country in the world left today to attempt to make that change happen.
Maybe the next BIG global economic crisis (not too far around the corner) can generate a momentum to open up a few opportunities, here and there.
From these instances onwards, perhaps a qualitative leap can be made to benefit mankind in a more general sense.
 
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What is the underlying cause?
Capitalism.
And i think we agree at large.
Why is capitalism the cause and not a symptom?

Is capitalism an arbitrary construct, imposed on the world at the whim of a few people?
No, it's a deceivingly complex system that's evolved/emerged over centuries.
Capitalism could be better described as the symptom of the wants and needs of 7 billion people.
It's not perfect, but the only way to replace it is to either provide instant gratification to everyone involved, or otherwise find a perfect method of countering peoples selfishness.
 

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I like socialism.

I don't want to have to contribute towards a gofundme for someone that needs surgery, I want universal healthcare to come out of my taxes.

I don't want to give charity to homeless people on the street, I want there to be social security and homeless shelters and I want that to come out of my taxes.

When I pay for insurance I don't want it to be priced based upon my income level and demographic, I think if insurance is cheapest for the people who need it least and most expensive for the people who need it most then we're missing the whole fucking point, indeed why is private insurance a thing, why isn't insurance a public service?

I don't want public funding going to private hospitals and private schools, if they're not serving everybody they shouldn't be payed for by everybody.

Speaking of services I'm sick of seeing public services getting privatized, it's not more efficient, companies buy the rights for these services so they can make a profit off them, it's called profiteering, it's why the cost goes up and the quality goes down, I also think telecommunications and internet should be public services, not just as a matter of cost but also national security.

Socialism isn't a dirty word.
Where the fuck are you gonna get money for all this? Do bureaucrats shit money?
 

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In general, in order to reduce prices while increasing quality, you need competition. If the strategy is to give one's money to the state and let bureaucrats run the whole show without competition, you will get shit quality and highly inefficient use of your money.

When talking about insurance, obviously if you have a high risk of experiencing an accident, your insurance premium has to be higher. Otherwise the insurer will pay out insurance claims all over the place while not getting enough money back, i.e. someone will have to put money into the system in order to pay for everyone's insurance. Who is that gonna be?
 

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In general, in order to reduce prices while increasing quality, you need competition.
So you support the government regulating cartels and monopolies?
I'm not too well studied on the topic of monopolies in particular. But I definitely don't think the marketplace should be an anarchy – there should obviously be laws to ensure that the game is fair.
 

aiyanah

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i agree giving charity is whack sauce yo, especially now that they want my card details.
when the fuck did that become a thing?

as for socialism, eh, the problem with it is that it's too nice.
every system needs some pushback to keep the people motivated...or else they come up with their own regressive shit.
 

TransientMoment

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Wow, this thread. I'll throw in my .02 before bed.

I think this all boils down to man being man. It doesn't matter what system mankind establishes - be it religion, politics, or economics - it will always fail because even one selfish person in a crowd will spoil it for everyone else.
Capitalism is no different than communism in the long run, but it takes longer to get there. (Notice that most modern capitalist societies gradually shift to socialism and then go bankrupt.) In capitalism, people have stuff and it ends up in the hands of the elite. In communism, the elite have it. See the difference? The former is just getting to the latter. Unless you foster a sharing, caring community, it doesn't matter what system you have. It will fail.
Personally, I think the best system is one in which people share and recognize that they truly don't "own" anything - that "own" is meaningless. But this isn't a system where goods are distributed from some central source like government. Instead, goods are shared because people care about each other. Alas, such a system could never exist in this world. Too many people would game the system. Hence, capitalism is sort of that "best of bad worlds" whereby I at least get to own stuff. Still sucks if I get nothing, but the alternative isn't any better because in socialism or communism, my goods are given to me by... guess who? Another person. Another selfish being.

Religion doesn't get any better because it's led by man. But the ideals are the point. People are *trying* to get better in Christianity. They *want* world peace and kindness to their neighbor. The fact that it's not the exact outcome is just a consequence of dealing with other people. I happen to be very religious - Catholic even - but only because I'm smart enough to not judge the truthfulness of an idea by the character of the people touting it. I would recommend Catholicism, but I'm extremely frustrated with many people in the Catholic Church.

I would also note that most institutions are run by ISTJs and other Guardians (XSXJ types), which makes changing them such a pain. Guardians don't like change. They do things for the insanely stupid reason of "because we've always done things this way". On the one hand, this is a good thing because if they didn't, we'd be following every latest and greatest stupid idea someone else recommended. (And believe me, you wouldn't like the suggestions of the usual "leader" personality types like ENTJ. (Needless to say, Trump (ENTJ) isn't too popular with liberals.)) But on the flip side, Guardians can be so hard to change that when they are doing something stupid, they go to hell hanging onto it and everyone else suffers with them. By the way, Guardians are also your usual government officials, police officers, soldiers, etc, so don't think the government handling charities would be any better.

Like how I tied all that in?

Side note: It is kind of interesting how many INTPs fall into the socialist camp, as if somehow the government could create a utopia. I wonder if this has to do with our architectural nature. "Let me just build a system that works!"
 

a_ghost_from_your_past

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Communism is about collective ownership.
I think you could have spared a lot of digital ink if you were able to grasp that past implementations of communism didn't result in that and therefore every bell and whistle you employ is moot.
Yes, state capitalism isn't communism, we got that already.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_capitalism
 

Rook

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I get where TransientMoment is coming from Re: A community based upon sharing. I've seen it here and there among farmers, willing to aid the neighbour with an implement or letting his cattle graze upon harvested maize at no charge. Such conduct is becoming a rare thing though, the age of practical altruism is past. We have now entered the age of individual morality above communal morality, label altruism above blanket altruism (Im talking as a caucasian, in some parts of planet this untrue, even rural cauc parts)

I don't care bout charity either way, but prefer non-gov charity, that is, I don't want to be taxed for the sake of some poor schmucks. I'm poor enough as it is, but never shall I be seen standing hat in hand infront of .gov.

The lottery system amuses me, where one lucker can win the jackpot and on the whole gambler's funds are used for charitable purposes.

Charity that is personal is becoming rare. Instead of "donating to the charity of our choice" companies can take a more hands-on approach. Directly manage a project. That way they are ensured that their charit moneyz are put to effectual altruistic use. Let the CEO lay a few bricks of the school the company is building. Better PR, if somoene is told "So and so donated to your wellbeing, well they'll forget right quick. But if company personally aids them, that might stick in the mind for longer and make for good visual.

There is a difference ofc between welfare and charity... IMO welfare is... hmmm. Depends on country. I would say welfare is not economically wise in larger countries such as USA, and poorer countries.

Instead of doling out the tax money taken from us sheep, use it to improve infrastruct and ensure higher wages for all. Then at least people have less reason to complain about taxes, though to my amusent I see very little public discourse on taxes in many countries. People are happy to shout and protest about abortions and Russians and transvestites and penguins and muh religion, but tell them that they are daily toiling away for a government that they did not choose to be borne into, well, meh man, 'tis just the way it is.

I can stomach taxes if the benefits are physical and shared by all, but when taxes only feed corruption and are doled out to a certain set of 'underpriviliged' people, I want to go live in a mountain commune.
 

onesteptwostep

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Couldn't help myself from necroing this 2 month old thread. Typing up "Christianity" on this forum is basically a 'post here onestep!' call. :D Anyway...

Okay well let me step on my podium and begin my religion elaboration... religion, heck, let's not even start there.

...the problem here is capitalism and the philosophy that we are consumers first, not human. This is why to many of the people on this forum, religion is some sort of way of fine tuning the consumer for the needs of capitalism, for example, a fine tuning of the mental being or our psychological health so you can be "living to the full" which in itself is an upper room concept which touches on the boundaries of religion itself. But the world we live is of the consumer world, so even if we go to the 'upper room' we come back down to the temporal life of the consumer, basically our worldviews are too cluttered with the indoctrination of the secular. And adding on, we flirt with qusai-religious concepts while we bash religion itself, especially organized religion. The base line is that we are a consumer, and that sometimes we cross the line into our religious aspect of 'human' to somehow quench our spiritual thirst; basically a spiritual curiosity, and because since we only flirt, we come up with other ideological conceptions to try and solve our spiritual needs, which often come off as or actually are, scams or psychological bullshitery.

Spiritual needs are only quenched by spiritual forces, which is what religion is supposed to equip ourselves with. Of course to may of us this may sound like ludicrous, because before we even get into the subject of religion, there's a secular, irreligious, or more plainly an anti-religious worldview that veils religion for what it really is. I don't speak for other world religions such as Judaism, Islam or Buddhism, but for Christianity we squarely look at the spiritual reality of our world and say that it's broken, that it's broken beyond repair (the fall). It's just how our nature is. Other religions state the same thing, and offer an escape from it, that chiefly being Buddhism. The world is an illusion, thus to eliminate desire is the way of escape, or Nirvana. To a Christian we seek to redeem the world through Christ, because Christ has redeemed us. The Creator, Judge and Father came down from the heavens or whatever realm or dimension where God sits so that he may acknowledge our sin-filled reality and the brokenness of the world, to even taste death and to rise from it, so to say that even in death we have a point in life, our existence.

So on some level, the people who bash Christianity from the view of the secular, those who are downtrodden and pessimistic, are in some sense a Christian, because this person knows the world squarely for what is it, that there's no answer, that there's no cure for the meaningless dribble that is existence. What point is there if Death comes along with an eraser and erases everything? The fine line that divides a Christian from an agnostic or an atheist is that to a Christian there is hope, that there is a God. Christians often say God is love, but God is also hope in some sense as well.

Anyway to those who say Christianity is a way of systematic abuse or a way of exploitation, I simply have no reply to your disdain or your anger towards our 'religion'. The only thing I could say is that God is faithful to his people, his creation, and that as a part of humanity he died to redeem those exact qualities which you abhor which you see within Christianity. We know our sins, and because of our awareness of our sins we fall even deeper into despair sometimes.

To finish, we are not so much different- after all, God created us all, is steadfast to us all equally, and equally has given the price for our failures.

In some sense, God is a socialist... a spiritual socialist. He basically shits grace on everyone, to parody the profane ;]
 

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I would say that as an uncertaintist/atheist/agnostic/whateverthefuck a dictionary says my system of being is, that there is still hope, hope more materialistic. On the metaphysical plane hope would become a postulation rather than a certianty of revenant life, as in "this is a matrix" or "we are immortal alien gods, all just dreaming". So I would not say that hope is the defining aspect of christianity, no, rather spiritual certainty, where hope is easier formulated perhaps due to a communal doctrine.

Christianity is both helpful and exploitative, using your terms. I grew up a Calvinistic protestant so I understand where you are coming from in the description of the system. I'm not here to argue religion, many enter the bistro, few are forced to eat a spesific menu item.

As to those who say that " Christianity is a way of systematic abuse or a way of exploitation", their statement is rooted in facts, though it is too stringent.

Christianity is not either or, but both. To say there is no instrinsic human morality within the doctrine is wrong. To say that christianity - more precisely: christians.. have never and do not perpuate abuse and exploitation is also wrong.

One need only look at Charlamaigne and the pagans, the Inquisition and the prosecution of the Heugenots.
Modern day examples include cults and sects that force children to obey rigid standards that they instinctively might not welcome. Not all christians are shite people and vice versa.

Not my flavor of cake, but it seems to do you good. God being a socialist... I grew up rather with the impression of the final arbiter, alpha and omega, not steadfast to all... well we read a lot of old testament and therein the socialist god is hard to find. Rather an immutable force of nature, a curser and forgiver. A persona that is the universe. I wonder if christians whith a stern god are less likely to stray from the sect?

In my experience, the answer is yes, yet modernity is chipping away at the Calvinistic doctrine. Churches are emptying.
 

onesteptwostep

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@Rook

Interesting. What do you think of America's founding father's separation of church and state? I ask myself sometimes, why is the country that created the amendment of the separation of church and state the beacon for Christianity?

Sure there are Christian wars and conflicts that have risen due to Christianity in the past, particularly in Europe, but hasn't Christianity been a force that has propelled civilization as well? I'm not sure what hue of Calvinism you've adhered to, but I'm Reformed myself.. it's a lot more liberal leaning than some of the Calvinism that's around the world. You coming from South Africa I'm sure that color of Christianity was strict and conservative as hell. I've been in several different countries so I know how Christianity can unfold in some of them.. in some countries the cultural outcomes are less than kind- but then again to fight verses the vices within that country or culture, a stern Christian culture to redeem the domestic culture may be needed.
 

Rook

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Dont have an opinion on USA per se, but from a governmental viewpoint it makes sense. If the senate and house were filled with bhuddists, but the genpop protestant...
I like the US constitution though for its ideas back then and think many countries can follow such ideals, closest thing to freedom excepting anarchy.

Growing up USA was not seen as beacon of christianity, rather God, the bible and church were. But in actual terms yes, USA enacts most non-catholic christian heft globally. This I would say is becuase while the gov is not christian, the populace is.

No doubt Christianity has had a large effect on our trudge into modernity, but so too did enlightenment ideals and technological innovation. Our church also Reformed, but Dutch-Reformed, thus reformed upon the original protestant ideals. Many flavours of Christians here, from ZCC christeo-pagans (ancestor worship) to cults idolizing one central pastor, with sexual grooming of girls a thing now and again. Then you have a pastor who sprayed his congregants with insecticide to cleanse evil from them, and the beer church in Joburg where congregants happily imbibe in sermon, as other churches have kicked them out as drunkards. The Anglican church also has a foothold, as illustrated by the famous Desmond Tutu.
 

onesteptwostep

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Many flavours of Christians here, from ZCC christeo-pagans (ancestor worship) to cults idolizing one central pastor, with sexual grooming of girls a thing now and again. Then you have a pastor who sprayed his congregants with insecticide to cleanse evil from them, and the beer church in Joburg where congregants happily imbibe in sermon, as other churches have kicked them out as drunkards.

Yeah, that's just really terrible to hear. There are similar accounts all over the backwards countries in Africa afaik. Not to be condescending to those nationalities or anything, but in some countries the cultural unfolding of Christianity is just down right backwards and full of superstition. Korea also has problems with cults combining shamanism with Christianity, as well as ancestry worship, which do cause problems within the country.

I brought up the US and their constitutional amendment of separation of church and state because I believe it was God's will that they set apart a nation worthy of his people. I'm talking about the Puritans who've come to America to set up Harvard and Yale and the like. I don't want to sound conspiracy-theoristy, but I think it was in God's plan that the pilgrims, who were mostly Reformed-rooted, that came to settle on the land where they wouldn't be persecuted for their beliefs back in Europe. To secularists who don't know the history behind the separation of church and state, interpret it as religion shouldn't intervene in governmental affairs, but it's rather backwards/inverted... that government doesn't intervene in religion. Anyway-

Do Anglicans have to go to a British seminary to become priests there? Or are there domestic theological schools in South Africa? Just curious.
 
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