The Online Freedom Academy

Posted by helidrvr 10 years, 11 months ago to Education
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For some time now I have been meaning to share this website on Galt's Gulch. I first came across it in 2006 and have used it has become my favorite tool for teaching the NAP.


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  • Posted by khalling 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    There are always people who would use force-and that small group can do alot of damage while everyone
    else is standing around allowing it. There must be remedy.
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  • Posted by Flootus5 10 years, 11 months ago
    Yes, very interesting site. I initially scored a 97. And then did Segment 1. I came across an interesting precept embedded in Question 6.

    #6 So, you have the right to do anything you like with your own life. Are there any limits at all on that power?

    One of the multiple choice answers to that question is:

    Only that I am forbidden to harm someone else.

    If you choose that answer it comes up with:

    No! Who said anything about being forbidden? - Forbidden by whom? And by what right? Restudy Segment 1 please, then try again.

    Interesting. What if you considered it a rational conclusion that it is wrong to harm someone else and recognize that "axiom" (by their usage of that term) as a limit on your "power"? The forbidding we are contemplating here comes from yourself as a logical step in framing a rational morality. And that is wrong?

    Who are these guys?
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  • Posted by Solver 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    It's like the cold turkey pain an addict suffers when a highly addictive drug is suddenly taken away. Why blame the drug when pushers can show the pain a person suffers and blame the lack of the drug.
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  • Posted by 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Not one of these is an example of Anarchy gone awry. They are all, every single one, examples of the chaos that ensues when a failed state collapses on its own corruption.
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  • Posted by khalling 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    the non-aggression principle is an attempted short-cut philosophically. Like all short cuts, one is ignoring important concepts. For instance, you cannot even have this discussion without a firm definition of property rights. If someone picks an apple from what I consider to be my orchard and I try to stop them, but they are nomadic/hunter gatherer, who would be the aggressor? The nomad would clearly think the orchard owner was the aggressor. Ownership of oneself inherently leads to ownership of one's creations. In NAP, You can have two rational individuals argue over a property line, what is the remedy and who initiates the force? You can't say no one because there is a disagreement. There are likely costs.
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  • Posted by khalling 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Germany after WWI, the fall of Rome, Russia in 1917, China WWII...
    note the date on this article posted on moonbattery.com:

    "August 24, 2007

    Venezuela Under Chavez: Totalitarianism Meets Anarchy

    An irony of moonbattery is the close relationship between totalitarianism (ubiqitous government) and anarchy (absence of government), polar opposites that bleed into each other. For example, the sort of unwashed hooligans who stage riots at WTO meetings often refer to themselves as anarchists — yet to the extent they have any coherent ideology, it most closely resembles Stalinism. Another example is the authoritarian regime of Hugo Chavez. The more he tightens his grip on power, the more Venezuela dissolves into anarchy.

    The streets of Venezuela are out of control — and according to the Financial Times, the economy may soon be as well:

    President Hugo Chávez's tightening grip over Venezuela's economy is generating distortions that economists fear could, paradoxically, eventually lead to a loss of control.
    Price controls, currency controls and negative real interest rates are just some of the elements that have contributed to one of the highest rates of inflation in the world and a substantially overvalued exchange rate.
    The economy is ever more dependent on the high price of oil. If that falls, so will Venezuela — into economic chaos.

    If things get bad enough, they could always try freedom. It works for America,"
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  • Posted by 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I couldn't agree more! Early in my life, I was shown the benefits of never taking anything on authority, to question everything and come to my own conclusions by applying logical reasoning to the available facts. I am not here to attack or defend any viewpoint or person. When presented with a proposition I simply seek to follow it to it's logical conclusion. Now in my late 60's I first read (no, devoured) pretty well all of Ayn Rand's writing (fiction & non fiction) some 50 years ago and have been on a path of logical inquiry ever since. While this long journey has lead me to conclude (for now) that non aggression is the only morally sound principle, I am always ready to examine any proposition which is new to me (unlikely after 5 decades, but?) and revise my conclusion if reason leads me there.
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  • Posted by khalling 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    false alternative. collectivist statism is not the system of capitalism
    Anarchy ALWAYS ends in totalitarianism. Why would you promote that?
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  • Posted by $ TomB666 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I do not mean to be unfriendly, but years back when Leonard Peikoff was feuding with David Kelly about taking Objectivism into new areas, Leonard said something to the effect of - Ayn Rand said everything there was to say about Objrectivism and there is no new ground to cover - I apologize for not having his exact words at hand for a quote.

    Also I signed up for one of the tape courses and when I commented on a painting in the office, the organizer of the course said that Rand like this artist and so the painting was good.

    That is the kind of misuse of Rand's name I am referring to and is what I am seeing in some of the comments. I am not in any way defending anarchism and I apologize if that is what you thought I meant.

    I simply want to see people make their own logical arguments.
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  • Posted by 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I have no desire to "defend" anything, only to follow certain lines of reasoning to their logical conclusion and make every effort to avoid logical fallacies in the process.

    In the process I have come to conclude that initiating aggression against others is wrong on principle - no exceptions. Coercing others by proxy under color of "government" is worse - it is the cowardice of bullies and the predation of sociopaths.
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  • Posted by 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    What is flawed here is your understanding of the NAP which you appear to confuse with some utopian idea of angelic non violence. The NAP does not preclude violence used in self-defense or defense of others.

    Anyone who thinks the entire human race will ever reach a single unanimous consensus on any issue through the mechanism of "democracy", "government" or other violent statist means is truly fooling themselves.
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  • -2
    Posted by Maphesdus 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    What's to protect from? People who don't agree with the non-aggression principle, of course. This is one of the fundamental flaws of the NAP: it only works if every single person agrees to follow it. Anyone who thinks the entire human race will ever reach a single unanimous consensus on any issue is fooling themselves.
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  • -2
    Posted by Maphesdus 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Government, at least in the way I define and understand it, is any authoritative body or authority figure which establishes and enforces rules within a given geographical area. I would not define government as inherently having a monopoly on the power to make laws, as there are methods of making the government beholden to its citizens and enabling the citizens to write laws, which can then be either approved or rejected by the rest of the citizen body, acting through the legislature.
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  • Posted by Maphesdus 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I don't accuse Ayn Rand of being an anarchist for opposing collectivist statism, I simply point out that her philosophy inevitably leads to anarchy because it is built on the non-aggression principle, which is inherently anarchistic.
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  • Posted by preimert1 10 years, 11 months ago
    I took the test and initially scored 77.
    Then I went back and answered as I supposed an anarchist would and scored 99. No comment.
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  • Posted by ewv 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    If you were more careful about their equivocations and took them into account you might have scored less than the 77 in the first round. But reading better interpretations into something that combines stealing Ayn Rand's ideas with, and on behalf of, promoting their opposite by giving it the benefit of the doubt is only part of it. We don't have to infer or guess, the site explicitly advocates "doing away with government altogether".
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  • Posted by ewv 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    No one has said that if Ayn Rand said something then it is so as any kind of argument for anything. Going on from that falsehood to the rationalistic extravaganza about bible thumping and the rest of it is a crude strawman. That smear against those who defend Ayn Rand's ideas against anarchism and the simplistic sophistry and floating abstractions of "anarcho capitalism" is no defense of anarchism. Those who don't fully understand the matter are unlikely to do much better from reading this page at all. Suffice it to say that promoting anarchism has nothing to do with Atlas Shrugged or the movie, and anyone can read Ayn Rand's actual views on the nature of government in her own work.
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  • Posted by ewv 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Government is not fiction, legal or otherwise. No one here advocates giving a monopoly on force to sociopaths. Statism and its anarchist twin are a false alternative.
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  • Posted by ewv 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Without the need for aggression for what purpose? People do it all the time in pursuit of immoral and irrational purposes, and they do it without "self limiting". Utopian anarchistic fantasies don't stop it, they help to let it loose on us.
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  • Posted by ewv 10 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    The growth of statism is the opposite of what Ayn Rand advocated. It does not "demolish" her ideas, it confirms them. Claiming to be "independent" and "questioning" is no defense of anarchism.
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  • Posted by $ TomB666 10 years, 11 months ago
    Wow! The logical fallacies in the writing in this thread surprise me. Appealing to Ayn Rand to settle your argument is just a variation of the appeal to authority. As I have heard said, "If Rand said it, it is so" or any variation thereof is a totally bogus way to try to settle the argument. That is what bible thumpers do - appeal to gods word as if that settled anything.

    If you have a point to make it, make it and let it stand on its own merits. Telling me that Rand agrees tells me you are fearful that your argument lacks substance and so you say she agrees with you. Easy to say when she has been dead for many years.
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