Constitutional Philosophy: Jon Roland, Q&A 2, 2012/11/17
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Jun 5, 2025
Q&A for preceding Lecture 2 Preceding lecture http://youtu.be/nVvPQ5q9IYA Q&A 1: http://youtu.be/FumfosBDxg
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okay all right questions if I understood you
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correctly and if you could speak sort of speak up because I've gotten complaints about people not being able to hear on
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the video okay well I'll do my best uh if I understood you correctly two things
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one incompetence in your scheme of things is a capital offense no not
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exactly the concept of nonu juries is a basis in
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due process or disabling the exercise of
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Rights there's one kind that is exists
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by default which is minority you don't have to go to court to get a child declared to be nonu
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jurist uh he just considered that by default when he reaches the age of 18
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now used to be 21 if he's still incompetent you can go to court
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and get him declared incompetent of a guardian appointed so you're extending
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his minority perhaps on the other hand if he's
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unusually mature you can get the court to remove
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his disability as a minority that goes the other direction that was done for me
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when I was 13 years old state law then allowed someone as
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young as 13 to have his legal disabilities of minority removed which
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made me an adult for all purposes except
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voting although it's a little hard to explain to a bartender when I asked for drink
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what I what I thought I read in in your slide which talked about the potential loss of life and one of the reasons was
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incompetence well that was a concise expression I got to try to
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keep it in one line so it doesn't run off the The Edge but basically due
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process can be used to disable rights
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for any of number of reasons it can be incompetence it can be
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crime or it can be for defense but obviously you're not going to disable
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the same rights for each of those things each has
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its own appropriate disablements the other part is if
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everyone as I understand your position is given the opportunity
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to interpret uh the laws for himself or herself and act accordingly how do you
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avoid Anarchy through education and
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discussion we as a society need to make sure that we all know the law and can
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agree on what it means can agree and if we and if we don't then we had better
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amend it to clarify it until we to reach
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agreement same way with laws and for sporting events if a law in for Bic
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basketball or football or any other sport is ambiguous on some
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point then the Umpire may make a call to resolve the issue without having a
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rule but there he's not bound or anyone else is bound to make the same decision
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the same way on a future occasion unless the sporting League sits down and says
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okay for this situation here's the new
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rule and I don't think we want a situation where umpires get to rewrite
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the rules Larry yes so I had well there were
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at least five different things I wanted to respond to but I'll take the top one uh a question about these prerogative
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rits because they had some very intriguing features um anyone can file
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one um uh you must respond to them um
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the burden of proof of of responding um is is on you not on the the person
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filing um from a different domain from the domain of um computer programming and
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network Theory um I know that that any kind of message that must be
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acknowledged according to the protocol can be abused for a denial of service
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attack yes so the way this works is um 1
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million people out of a country of 300 million object strongly to a particular
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official or to a particular Rule and then a million um prerogative rits are
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filed and all of them must be responded to within 3 days y the law cannot demand the impossible
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so how do we resolve this contradiction well first of
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all that that believe it or not people have thought about that I did and the obvious thing is
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that once one RIT is filed and it's answered you simply
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create a public record of that answer and put it
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online now it's available for anybody to look ahead and if anybody wants to file
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another one the system just refers them well that's already been demanded and
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here's the response so if you have a a modern Communication System the system it it's
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it manageable in principle now what you're doing there is you're
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Shifting the demand for resources off the respondent and onto the justice
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system but that's doable you might crash the judiciary's computers but you're not
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necessarily going to crash the the the
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official so I have a question just from the first slide which I as I recall you
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said laws are such that we consent to them what if somebody doesn't consent is
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that law applicable to that person well it could be if you acques you have a tendency to
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lose rights if you don't protest in or object
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in a timely manner just like in court there there's a time to raise an
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objection and if you don't raise it you lose
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it um joh this let me got little ladies first
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here in the many fashion of sending
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signatures to suggest secession of States I have heard that the White House
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has received I heard a million I heard 750,000
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signatures from all 50 states and at what point when the populace is
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sovereign does something that could become a disintegration of the Union which
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imperils everyone's security be handled as the sovereign's
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command is that a majority of the people demanding the White House that the president make a
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decision well about does 2 dangerous thought work 220 million people who can
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in principle vote when we get to 100
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million we have a
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problem um this little bitty book here has
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XXVI amendments to the Constitution the Texas Constitution on
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the other hand is quite large quite a bit larger and requires a larger book and therefore I would think in
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Texas Star decisis is not as necessary
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um you made the statement or one of your slides said story decisis is incompatible with a written
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Constitution when you have a relatively brief document like this full of
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ambiguity and in need of interpretation is not story decises a very useful tool by
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that I mean any judge can be uh passed over for
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elevation have you know if they make poor decisions or use poor precedents and presumably they would want to use
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precedents from a higher Court which in theory could be reviewed by a higher
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court and even the Supreme Court and upheld and therefore be used as a
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precedent which I guess you could say is one kind of
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shortcut is that not a useful tool for a limited Constitution well of course it
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is useful the problem is what happens when the president is
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wrong right now if a lawyer goes to court and tries to challenge a
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president as wrong perhaps in in an effort to begin a
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line of argument that he can appeal all the way up to the Supreme Court in order
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to get the Supreme Court to re reverse its own president he may find that that trial
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court not only dismisses it as frivolous but sanctions him tens of thousands of
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dollars in fines for even raising the
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argument now that's a problem that's a problem at the very
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least every President should be challengeable and that challenge should
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be preserved on a for appeal and there should be no page limits on challenge as
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a president it shouldn't detract from one's main
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argument but these are mechanical questions of our existing system and they they don't not reflect our
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constitution per se they don't reflect current practice
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right but of course I'm rate these one of the reasons why this is a about
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constitutional philosophy is it's to raise questions about what we should be doing in this
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field now obviously I have opinions shouldn't be you be that should
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be very clear I'm not trying to BR
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to say that if you disagree with me you're wrong but by all means disagree
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but be prepared to defend your argument and at least think about what
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I'm saying because I think what I'm trying to do is to raise serious issues
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that everyone should seriously deliberate about if he is a to be a
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conscientious citizen of this country these These are philosophic
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issues they're deep philosophic issues they're not just over some uh nebulous
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issue like the meaning of life they're over practical things like
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what should I do today you know should I go to court should I file this lawsuit should I
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testify what should I say you know should I stand up and
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oppose this what this official is doing should I vote for him or against him you
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know these are all practical real world decisions for which philosophy provides
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a needed
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guide um do you have well I know why a lot of these like Civic duties about
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militia juries and and their loss of power has occurred as far as what happened in the history but I'm very
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curious about in the late 1800 you said the the right of private prosecutor to bring the case uh to and eventually just
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cease pretty much all together what are the do you have any idea what the forces are behind that what CA that sure the
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public prosecutors and the judges most of which are former public
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prosecutors okay you know it's it becomes a an establishment a crony
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Arrangement do you know what they did at the time do you know I mean do you know specifics about this person in this place did this or yeah but it would take
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too long to go into all the det details it was a kind of a creeping
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process I have a a brief on the subject on my website in fact if you go to the
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homepage you'll see private prosecutions you'll see a pmic and then
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a brief so you get it from two different approaches and you'll find the cases the
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Precedence everything you need right there I just I want to point out by the way that was one of my first briefs that
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was not written in my own case I I just want to point out as a modern-day example of you know the
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system that we came from that we uh revolted against the the British system their current practice over there is uh
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all lawyers um once in a while you become a prosecutor like they they bring them in and then the private ones go
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back out in private practice eventually but they they trade off between the two roles which I think is wise
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policy yep and uh I would be inclined to randomize the process much
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more to put everybody every lawyer in practice in a jurisdiction on a in a
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queue where you occasionally might be called upon to either take a pro bono
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case or prosecute a case or defend a case so you had to be able to be ready
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to do any of those things okay L I'll give you another turn
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but um yeah I may I go to the slide where uh this is actually stated that
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nature forbids consenting to the loss of in alienable rights it was pretty near the beginning
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yep
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I pass it where was it there we go okay so the there's a lot
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that this might forbid I mean you know slavery debt bondage um perhaps selling
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your right to vote M okay so what is it about a right that makes
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it inalienable and I think what I'm most trying to unpack here um is the word
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nature um because um it seems to me that
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people um might in extreme circumstances be quite willing or maybe in the case of
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selling your vote in not so extreme circumstances be willing to sell certain rights and I know that some theorists
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have questioned the concept of inalienable rights yes
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well of course I'm following Lo and this was Lock's position MH as it
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was the position of almost all of our Founders so that sets a doctrinal
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foundation but what did he mean by inal enal rights
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well Jeff Jefferson style them life liberty in the pursuit of
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advence but what they really talking about is the rights that arise from
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nature society and the state that precede the establishment of
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government which is the fourth stage and each has its own Constitution
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although the first three have in general Unwritten constitutions especially the
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first so depending a right is more fundamental the further back you
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go and the argument for discussion of
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the social contract is that even within the social contract when people gather together to
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form a society and pull their so sovereignty they are not delegating all
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authority to the common decision-making body of that Society because they don't
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have the authority themselves to do that but um in some cases um the uh the
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right that I might choose to to alienate that is to to Grant to someone else that
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someone else isn't the society it's it might be another private party um you
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know an old example might be a contract of indentured servitude which gets dangerously close to slavery but but um
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might also be re read as an exceptionally harsh employment contract um you know where do you where
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do you draw the line and and how does nature forbid that well it might not
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provided that the contract provides enforcable protections for for the
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servant and in general it did the the common law for indentured
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servitude provided the servant could go to court and challenge the contract on
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on on breach maybe not not wasn't being paid enough or was having to work too long or
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he got beaten or any number of things now slave in general couldn't do
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that so entered servitude contracts were
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contracts that could be challenged in in court and often were well I'm bothered by the same thing
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that Larry is I think in that
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um as as students of philosophy we kind of see everything as agreement and when
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and when you put the word agreement in you sort of imply arbitrary whereas nature God you know
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higher authorities than agreement and arbitrariness seem to that certain
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things are inevitable and um and and I don't I
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don't get that I don't I don't see any natural rights any rights that come from nature
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well for example it would be an inalienable
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right not to be in two places at the same
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time that's not a that's AAL yeah but that's that arises from the
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law of nature that's an objective law I'm not so sure see that well but I'm using an
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extreme example and from that we can move forward because from from physical laws
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then we get into laws that arise out of say human nature but human nature in
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general you see the kinds of things that human beings are naturally going to tend
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to do under most circumstances despite the
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efforts of anybody to make them to do otherwise have to be recognized as
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something that in general you do not want to try to infringe on in a legal
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system you don't want to have for example parents eating their
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babies well In some cultures that might actually work out well for them I feel like women in ancient ancient cultures
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were subjugated in certain ways that were natural for that time so I feel like they're um they're being forced to
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be employed in certain ways against their will we now say well if natural
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law says that we wouldn't want to be entered into slavery and various things that might have been the natural law for
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the time so what by what metrics do you distinguish is true well of course the
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obviously different people at different times are going to have different theories about what natural law is I
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think that's what we're trying to say after all we have natural law and our
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theories about natural law similarly we have the constitution of society and our
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theory about the constitution of society we have our theory of mind
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what's in the other guy's mind and our theory about what's in his mind I think
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we follow that I think everybody's trying to say what are natural laws what we would not submit to as an otherwise
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free person today is not what's natural in maybe 17th
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century well actually probably pretty close maybe not to the 5th Century
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but by the 17th or 18th century things were beginning to move closer to our
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time and that's what gives us the Heritage we have and we consider it
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Universal in the sense that we now think that people today exposed to of all
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these ideas whatever their theories might have been in the culture that
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existed earlier are probably now going to accept as a theory that they want to
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follow wouldn't it be clear instead of referring to natural law or natural rights just to refer to moral law and
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moral rights seems to me as a littleit around but I think it may it
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may actually locate where the true Authority comes from that that's binding on people I think it resides maybe not
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in nature but in conscience course that just makes it more abstract and we're
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trying to do here is to De abstrac ify this discussion to the extent where we
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can to make decisions easier yeah but I but I think that the word the word um
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speaking of morals rather than natural law avoids a confusion and the confusion
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is between law that governs some
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societies versus the metaphorical laws that govern nature and I speak of
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natural I speak of physical law as as metaphorical because um
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we have legislators and unless you're a deist nature
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doesn't me wait wait bullet point two I can make sense
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of bullet if I eliminate the word nature and construct or construe the words a
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little differently forget about nature it seems to me that the sense of what that is is about is that we should that
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there's a possibility that if you consent a to the ability of an a state
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government of a government of a state to deprive you of a right then there's a possibility of coer in that and that you
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want to eliminate that situation so there we we we set aside a certain set of rights that we say even if you decide
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to consent to give up these to give up the right to not be um to not let have
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the state do something to you like take your life even if you give up that you can't give up that right we want to
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prevent that because of the possib coercion but to say that you know I mean
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life is one of those things which is considered to be an an an an alienable right but on the other hand there are
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people who take the cchan route when they're in serious pain and and authorize other people to help them
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commit suicide I don't see a way in which adding the word nature into that
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sentence helps me to understand what the intent of the point is well I don't think we're going to
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resolve all that today it might be grounds for another
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another few lectures let's get C little sh here go back to what you were talking about and
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simplify let's uncomplicate this for a moment and Define natural and Define law
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in the way an anthropologist does nature is fundamental Universal having nothing
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to do with human beings it's out there it is the essential unchangeable basic
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proof and then if we want to take that look at your definition of law command
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to be obeyed those Universal fundamental absolute laws in the universe in the
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cosmos we take culturally her question was difference between natural law and
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something in 500 BC and something now those are cultural changes that's not
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natural law changing because natural law only changes if the cosmos which is
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changing changes those natural laws that's just to start with then morality subjective
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ethics and so become legal law and the
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this this use of nature natural law is what I said it is well this h of nature
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is essentially lumping together human nature with the broader
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nature seems is saying well not really because we are after all living beings
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we're part of nature but it implies that there's a well thing called human nature which is understanding the same basis
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that we understand external nature but yeah I it can we can generally
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observe that most human beings are going to object to being killed injured
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imprisoned or deprived of the ability to pursue
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happiness certain there are certain base things that if you do to almost
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everybody they are going to resist even to the point of resist killing and being
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killed right so it goes again to restraining a state doing things you don't want done to you as or other group
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but it I don't understand I still don't understand the link between nature and
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the general consent to the loss of enval right it seems to is to preventing a
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state from doing something which you may be into position toce well because this
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the social contract makes a tradeoff and the the the main purpose of
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the social contract is mutual defense
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so in the state of nature we're all subject to the hazards of
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nature in the social contract we band together in mutual defense but we also
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need to make a tradeoff in which we have to be able to defend not only against
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things outside the society but other members of society and again and for
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that we have to allow them to defend against ourselves so if we're going to get them
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to agree to defend us we have to allow them to defend themselves against us
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and that's where we have a due process stipulation that okay now we're all
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members of this Society normally I would not have the right to give up my life or
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Liberty or property but if I violate your
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right and you can set up a court to decide which of us is in the right and
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if it desire that I'm in the wrong that I'm the offender and I forfeited my rights
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because I'm the offender to to switch years for a moment
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from the theoretical to the Practical if I understand you you seem to be
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advocating that we return to a form of government that
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existed as you described it in the in the in the late 18th century early 19th
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century America when as you indicated uh the average County population was
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4,000 how can can such a scheme be practically applied to a
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country of over 300 million in counties which have million more people well one
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of the things I suggested was a Jefferson suggestion which just move
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government down to the ward level and keep breaking ourselves up
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into smaller SP WS with about 3,000 people in each the way we redefine
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voting precincts then how did these Wards then we're going to have thousands
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and thousands of little autonomous units how are they going to relate to each
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other well they are Federated together into larger units and larger L ger units
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and larger units so your your voting Precinct then
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becomes the equivalent of a Township with its mayor or Constable or
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uh judge or other official its own jury its own
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courts able to resolve most ordinary problems within the
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war the next probably higher level would be the C
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it might be a subdivision of the county you see so there are many ways
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of moving government up or down the level appropriate to getting it as
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closest possible to the people without losing the generality that is NE may be
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necessary for some kinds of problems but I don't what what is confounding me is
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when more and more of our problems involve greater numbers of people and
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larger geographical areas to resolve for example the Colorado River problem
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having of water we're going to have all these different Wards trying to to
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solve that that problem Each of which has a different outlook on on the
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problem and how we ever going to resolve these problems which take in large
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geographical areas and large numbers of people well for things like large
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projects like water sheds and Dam projects and so forth you create
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authorities which deal just with that problem but those authorities like the
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Colorado River Authority don't have the authority to let's say adjudicate a
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marital dispute or a stolen bicycle or do a lot of the other things
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that government has called on to do property dispute so you have
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different levels of government with different specialized subject Territorial and personal
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jurisdictions but it can be done in in principle in principle I buy my rib Stak
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at RS but it was killed in Kansas and it was packaged in Chicago and it was irradiated in Tennessee and
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whatnot I want I want the federal government to
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say and I have confidence that that package with that seal on it does not have rat droppings in it and it's full
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of eoli there are millions of problems like that yeah millions of them and an
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obvious solution would be to put out for bid contracts by
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private organizations to serve as inspectors and if an inspector ever
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misses something he loses the contract and his competitor gets
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it now you get enforcement but you also get a
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competitive incentive to do it better who enforces all that it's
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so if the I think the model here is consumer reports and and the Good Housekeeping seal of approval and other
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kind of you know well recognized names with no government Authority but and
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yeah I mean you're you're leaning on a more educated consumer quite heavily but it's much more than that I
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mean when something actually goes wrong something actually has to be done someone has to have the authority to do
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that there has to be a higher level of organization to grant that authority over entities that operate across
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multiple political boundaries and it can contractors can issue a finding and go
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to court and get it enforced but who's going to have the expertise of the contractor no to
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supervise the contractor other than something like the Food and Drug Administration which requires huge
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Laboratories and train people of money those Laboratories will themselves be
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contractors and they would compete with each
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other so if we were let's get L leardon here he's looking
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anxious and after that I want to
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understand more about the militia there seems to be a Fascination in this country about the militia and uh so this is complete
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change of to now I read this little Constitution and I find the word Mila in there five times it's listed in four
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paragraphs that total about 18 lines only this slight so real Constitution
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probably has about nine lines yet there are all sorts of claims made about militias these days that I'm
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just not seeing it here in the Constitution the clearly just a reading
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of this makes it clear that the founding founding father who wrote this constitution the are
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State basically little State armies to be regulated by the state don't have to be owned by the state but they are
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regulated by the state in which the federal government can call into service
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and take over the regulation of at any time there and that they are to be they are
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used for uh to execute the laws of the Union to
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suppress insurrections and repeal repel invasions I focus on suppress
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insurrections because militias as a lot of those questionable folks who are so
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interested in militias these days they are more likely to uh be the
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insurrectionist and before you answer that is there a slide that you'd like me to put this on so so my question is why
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why in the world do you make the comment that we all have militia Duty I I deny
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that I have militia Duty I do not have militia Duty well the the the duty of
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the social contract is militia is mutual defense not against
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it's really Mutual cooperation well defense in so far as your neighbor isn't allowed to do
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something to you totally for his benefit he we all have this contract to work together basically yeah defense is part
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of but it's also the duty to take action by yourself if nobody else is around my
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point is my question is on what constitutional Authority do
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you say that we all have no should do it actually arises out of the social
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contract theory Theory only with a unique interpretation of social cont not that unique if it
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isn't written in the Constitution what gives you the right to say that it exists well if the fact that it is
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written in the Constitution if you read it carefully the problem is that with
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today's militias we mostly feel that we need to be protected from them and not the other way well they would disagree
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but here's the concept what we're supposed to have is a robust militia
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system that is organized by the state every sheriff is supposed to be
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militia Commander for his County every Constable for his
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County Precinct this is extra constitutional no that was the standard
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practice in the founding era that was presumed when the Constitution was written as so as with so many other
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parts of the Constitution it's completely outo now we have now we have paid police forces and we have a
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full-time standing and paid police forces would have been considered
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unconstitutional because they select militia a militia that is not not
40:27
broadly representative of the people as though it were randomly
40:32
selected it's not in here it's but it's in the history behind there where's the
40:39
National Guard come the National Guard is another select select
40:44
militia and all national Guardsmen are also members of the US military there's
40:51
a dual enlistment so when you join the National Guard you're also joining joining the Army or the Air Force I
40:59
think militia people that are interested in being militia members today are by and large people that just want to have
41:04
excuse and use the Constitution to do it to go out and raise Hill and have a good time and uh and and make it somehow okay
41:14
but if a if a manufacturer in Connecticut okay well I it has been pointed out to me that we are well past
41:20
one o00 and and so we yeah yeah I I I suggest that we we
41:28
save the continuation of this Lively debate for the third Q&A
41:38
period on the bord T time period would you say this militia
41:46
tradition that you're talking about is actually an existence
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