run, rend pawl, run!

CC Dobbs

Well-Known Member
I know, they're icky. I dressed up as a Somalian one year for Halloween and I felt creepy and hungry the whole night.

Messiah
 

ElfoodStampo

Well-Known Member
you keep saying you believe in equality under the law then you rail against civil rights, which gave blacks freedom from discrimination under the law.

why not just admit that you are racist so i can't use your racism against you?
The fact you think blacks need freedom from discrimination makes you a racist. We all need freedom from discrimination.
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
nope, YOU said that, not me.

i stated a historical fact, you tried to twist it into what it was not.

you just gave us a hint as to what you believe.
Why do you hate others so much? You are so full of the dark side that If you were in the Star Wars movie you would be the creepy creature that does sexual favors for Jabba The Hutt.

 

Rob Roy

Well-Known Member
how are you gonna arbitrate or mediate a dispute when no law exists to define where the fraudster's rights end and your rights begin?
That's another good question. You're on a roll Ace.

The basis of a valid arbitration system already exists. People make and use agreements all the time when conducting business, these things are called contracts. They wouldn't be uni-lateral contracts, like the kind the coercive government uses, they would be the kind that are actually valid, wherein all parties agreed to the terms from the onset.

I'm going to recommend a book to you, which does not answer all of the questions you may have and it is a bit dated (written over 40 years ago) but it provides an excellent framework for understanding how a peaceful society could function without all the coercive government bull shit. I know you will probably never read it, because you already know everything, so I'm not really recommending it to you personally, it's more for those with real intellectual curiosity. Have a great day....stinky.

The Market For Liberty - Linda and Morris Tannehill
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
there it is.

in rob roy's world, a new contract must be drafted and signed every time he buys some batteries for his smoke alarms, every time he pumps a gallon of gas, and every time he goes to macaroni grill to get some breadsticks.

otherwise, he will have no recourse when the fraudster sells him empty batteries cleverly repackaged, he will have no recourse when he pays for a gallon of gas and gets 3/4 of a gallon, and no recourse when his "breadsticks" turn out to be wadded up newspaper.

what a fucking utopia.

i'll stick to the somewhat imperfect real world with its framework of consumer protections and government regulations assuring my purchases and transactions are governed by a uniform force of law.
 

Rob Roy

Well-Known Member
there it is.

in rob roy's world, a new contract must be drafted and signed every time he buys some batteries for his smoke alarms, every time he pumps a gallon of gas, and every time he goes to macaroni grill to get some breadsticks.

otherwise, he will have no recourse when the fraudster sells him empty batteries cleverly repackaged, he will have no recourse when he pays for a gallon of gas and gets 3/4 of a gallon, and no recourse when his "breadsticks" turn out to be wadded up newspaper.

what a fucking utopia.

i'll stick to the somewhat imperfect real world with its framework of consumer protections and government regulations assuring my purchases and transactions are governed by a uniform force of law.




You asked how disputes could be resolved.....not how agreements could be made. They are two separate things....dipshit.


It's kind of funny that you think by telling one person what he or she must do with their own private property and body you are somehow doing something good. Which other things do you think you have the right to make people that are not aggressing against anyone do?


Actually a kind of "contract" is agreed to every time you buy something, even if there is no formal negotiation. If there is a price tag on it, when you bring it to the counter there is a built in assumption that if you give the clerk that amount of money, he/she will give you the item.

There is always recourse if a person commits fraud, it just means you could use an independent arbitrator, rather than one with no interest in producing a just outcome. Your understanding of economics borders on the nothing. (channeling Doer)
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
Actually a kind of "contract" is agreed to every time you buy something, even if there is no formal negotiation. If there is a price tag on it, when you bring it to the counter there is a built in assumption that if you give the clerk that amount of money, he/she will give you the item.
and then caveat emptor bites you in the ass and you have no legal recourse.

great utopia, retard.
 

NLXSK1

Well-Known Member
That's another good question. You're on a roll Ace.

The basis of a valid arbitration system already exists. People make and use agreements all the time when conducting business, these things are called contracts. They wouldn't be uni-lateral contracts, like the kind the coercive government uses, they would be the kind that are actually valid, wherein all parties agreed to the terms from the onset.

I'm going to recommend a book to you, which does not answer all of the questions you may have and it is a bit dated (written over 40 years ago) but it provides an excellent framework for understanding how a peaceful society could function without all the coercive government bull shit. I know you will probably never read it, because you already know everything, so I'm not really recommending it to you personally, it's more for those with real intellectual curiosity. Have a great day....stinky.

The Market For Liberty - Linda and Morris Tannehill
What is the point of a contract if there is no arbiter?

If there is no judicial system there cannot be a crime nor a penalty for violation of said contract. There is no binding force to the document.

Why even sign one?
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
What is the point of a contract if there is no arbiter?

If there is no judicial system there cannot be a crime nor a penalty for violation of said contract. There is no binding force to the document.

Why even sign one?
the house were buying has central air.

i'm gonna turn it off and put in a window swamp cooler instead and enjoy the savings.

just wanted to let you know.
 

NLXSK1

Well-Known Member
the house were buying has central air.

i'm gonna turn it off and put in a window swamp cooler instead and enjoy the savings.

just wanted to let you know.

Well, you shit on the floor of places that have working plumbing so this doesnt surprise me at all..

Pro - Redneck - Tip... You can buy a 9.99 dollar fan at walmart and hang a wet towel in front of it and you have a home made swamp cooler... If you want to super charge it, put a block of ice in front. You go boyee!!!! I can hear the banjo's from here...
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
Well, you shit on the floor of places that have working plumbing so this doesnt surprise me at all..

Pro - Redneck - Tip... You can buy a 9.99 dollar fan at walmart and hang a wet towel in front of it and you have a home made swamp cooler... If you want to super charge it, put a block of ice in front. You go boyee!!!! I can hear the banjo's from here...
what do you have against energy efficient cooling systems?
 
Top