Talya wrote:
Technology is an extension of humanity. It's part of our evolution. We can breathe underwater because we take our oxygen with us, we can fly because we strap on wings and take the controls and do it. Anyway, I counter that utilitarianism is the only thing that solves the "impossible" (quotes yours, then.)
That's irrelevant. Consider your original proposition. You said freedom is both a combination of legal and "actual" ability with regards to economic mobility and wealth. What is keeping a person from $10,000 a year from being "free" in this sense? There isn't anything unless you conced to the idea that not having something means you lack freedom. Am I less free than person who can buy an Aston Martin DB9? Is that person less free than someone who can afford a private jet? Are humans not free at all because we haven't been to another planet?
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Ideologies avoid the impossible because it doesn't fit their outlook.
Only idealogies in the realm of physical science or mathematics.
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The pure Libertarian ideology hates any social programs because it's impossible for them to work.
It's not impossible for them to work. Libertarnianism often coincides with Laissez-Faire economics, Austrian school economics, but that's not why it "hates" them. Libertarianism is based in personal responsibility, freedom implemented through Rule of Law (though that part isn't exclusive). Through the lens of Western Society, this perspective is often interwined with those schools of Economic thought, but they need not the association.
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And yet the evidence shows otherwise, they've made the "impossible" for a libertarian possible because they tried it and found a way.
Libertarianism is not a school of economic thought. And even so, Hayek nor Mises nor Hazlitt would say monetarist system will not work. They only said that they fail to optimize the allocation of resources to their most effecient uses. Even the Consitution doesn't forbid States from doing things centrally within the state.
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An example, Canada has top tier healthcare in the entire world, competitive with any country, and often better. Despite alarmists with false statements from so-called canadians who were paid off to advertise the problems here, there really aren't many. The system works and works wonderfully, at very little cost to the taxpayer. I've seen it, i live in it, it's great, and despite my general libertarian approach to economics, I would not trade it away, because it has made us healthier and more prosperous than we would otherwise.
Can you substantiate this?
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Utilitarianism allows for any tactic or strategy, so long as it works.
And that's its main problem. Mathematics is based on fundamental axioms and then laws and defintions and finally models for a reason. Utilitarnism never questions the basis, only the results. Its what makes revolutionary changes impossible, and it encourages stagnation.
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Ideologues are forced to pidgeonhole themselves into a philosophy which will never work, as by their nature ideologies are absolute and all of them will have holes in them.
They aren't "forced" to do anything. Nor are they absolute.