by Christopher777 » Tue Apr 06, 2010 7:29 pm
Which applies to a large percentage of the population, but not to all individual human beings.
Which, as I understand this argument, is the point.
There are serial killers who believe it is their right to prey on all those they consider weak.
We, as society, do condemn them and remove them from society, because we say it is wrong.
But, where is the rights of the serial killer?
It's nonsense to say they have rights because they took away the right of an individual to their life, but try explaining that to a serial killer. They won't buy into it.
We can all pretend that these vast minority of the population do not exist, but yet, they do.
Same with rapists. There are far more rapists than there are serial killers, mind.
I'd say social conditioning plays a large part in why we don't do these things.
What about a starving man who refuses to steal food to survive?
It's illogical. This person is acting against his own self-interest in the name of the right to property, enforced by society.
I think we live based on internalized fears. We go through so many years of life as "children" learning to accept all the norms and dictates of our culture. Then we have things like peer groups, the media, churches...
We don't always act in our own self-interests, because it can be very hard for an individual to think in those terms.
If we all thought in our self-interests, we'd never go to war, because no one would agree to risk their life in the name of "god, king, or country". It's illogical, but yet people do it.
I agree that the concept of elightened self-interest is very powerful. I wish everyone did think that way. It would create such a better world, but the facts are that most people do not think that way.
I can work for a boss for this amount of wages, or I can work together with my fellow workers and control my own work and be a boss. Which one is based in self-interest?
But, yet, Capitalism still exists.
Who says what is "preferred" behaviour anyway? That sounds very social.
There are a lot of people who say that homosexuality is not a preferred social behaviour.
Sure, you can say it's an individual's right to do whatever they want in the privacy of their own lives, and I agree, but is there really some set of rules (The Ten Commandments, maybe?) which say what behaviours are "preferred" by society? Or, are these just ideas which you'd hope are preferred behaviours?
What about paedophilia, which is a big issue amongst some individualist anarchists? The arguments for and against are actually both quite compelling even though I dislike the concept. As I was told by a person who supports paedophilia (but is not one himself) it's just my social conditioning. I don't know. Is it? Maybe, maybe not.
Actually, why is rape not in someone's self-interest? It's not in female's self-interest, but the majority of males do not need to worry about rape, so if there's no need to think in someone's head "If I start raping women then someone might start raping me", why wouldn't they see it as male self-interest to rape a woman?
Individuality removes distinctions like "I'm a male, she's a female" it is true, but yet, biological urges will still exist.
It's nice to think that laws don't hold back the majority of people, but there's no way to really test this theory.
Just because every corner doesn't have a cop doesn't mean that we don't think about the legal consequences of going around robbing stores. A majority of "criminals" are caught by the law at some point, even if the cop isn't waiting behind their back to arrest them as soon as they steal something.
I don't think laws stop people from becoming serial killers, no, but I do think they might hold back from violent urges which are natural for humans, or at least some humans.
You may question why I am an anarchist. Well, I am an individualist anarchist in the tradition of Emile Armand, first of all, but secondly, I believe in freedom for every individual as a concept. It doesn't mean I'm a "true believer".
We eliminate the State, Capitalism, or all society it doesn't mean I don't think things might not get much, much worse. I just think the concept of total freedom is better, even if it leads to chaos, rather than living safe bourgeois lives in the comfort of our imaginary "civilization".
-Before anyone asks I mean that our concept of civilization is imaginary, not that civilizations are just figments of our imagination, ok? heh