Good for each, bad for all/bad for all, good for each


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By semillama on Friday, July 2, 2004 - 11:39 am:

    Something that perhaps Spunky and the trolls he sends our way should seriously consider (as well as any strict dogmatic libertarians):

    Good for Each, Bad for All.

    This guy provides a clear and concise argument for why the modern conservative mindset is detrimental to society.


By Spider on Friday, July 2, 2004 - 11:42 am:

    That is an excellent article.


By patrick on Friday, July 2, 2004 - 01:20 pm:

    nice


By Spider on Friday, July 2, 2004 - 02:10 pm:

    BTW, did any of you see the show on MSNBC where Lisa Ling goes to China and investigates the single-child policy / baby-girl killing / flood of Chinese baby girl adoptions in the US?

    Part of me felt like laughing my ass off at all the stupid people who just now are realizing, hey, in a few years, there won't be enough girls for the all the boys to marry, and our families will die off. D'oh!

    Then the show talked about how young girls and women are kidnapped and forced to marry strangers/old men. They interviewed a woman who had fled from her kidnapper husband and had been forced to leave her young son with him. And then it mentioned the boom in prostitution, forced and otherwise. And then I didn't find the situation funny.


By Platypus on Friday, July 2, 2004 - 03:45 pm:

    That was indeed an excellent article.

    Also interesting, and on a different note: has anyone read "Adam's Curse," about the corruption of the Y chromosome? Sykes' theory is that eventually men will become "endangered" because the Y chromosome is very unstable.

    Here's the book blurb, courtesy of amazon

    Male reproductive fragility has been the subject of much highly publicized recent research. Is it possible, asked the New York Times, that men face extinction? Bryan Sykes examines the validity of these shocking reports, focusing on the defining characteristic of men: the Y chromosome in their DNA. Guiding his readers through chapters like "The Blood of Vikings" and "Ribbons of Life," Sykes masterfully blends natural history with scientific fact, elucidating the biology of sexual reproduction, modern genetics, and evolutionary biology. He reveals that, while the Y chromosome makes man's existence possible, it also carries within it the seeds of his destruction. Timely and fascinating, this major work covers a wealth of controversial topics, including whether there is a genetic cause for male greed, aggression, and promiscuity; the possible existence of a male homosexual gene; and what, if anything, can be done to save men from a slow, but certain, extinction.

    Personally I find it kind of ironic that these families are selecting for the genetically weaker sex.


By Platypus on Friday, July 2, 2004 - 03:47 pm:


By Antigone on Friday, July 2, 2004 - 03:51 pm:

    Just because a system is continually heading for destruction does not mean it will be destroyed.


By Antigone on Friday, July 2, 2004 - 04:06 pm:

    From the article:

    "The error of the right resides in its embrace of the principle 'good for each, good for all' as dogma, applied a priori to society and the economy, virtually without exception."

    It is not dogma, it's only a rhetorical tool used when there is political advantage for the right. None of the social conservative ideology relies on "good for each, good for all," and the economic ideology uses it when a policy needs to be sold to the poor. They simply want to shift where the "cost" of behavior is "paid" from the government to corporate and faith based "creditors." (both of which are fundamentally undemocratic entities)


By Antigone on Friday, July 2, 2004 - 04:13 pm:

    M'kay. He hit that by the end of the article.


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