Political Mythology 101 (Part Three)

in #politics8 years ago (edited)

The first two parts of this series addressed a number of patent falsehoods that people are taught concerning political power (i.e., “representative government,” “consent of the governed,” etc.). But in addition to exposing and refuting such aspects of political mythology one by one, there is a way to demolish the entire notion of civil “government,” and everything that goes along with it.

All the radio and TV shows about “legality” and “crime,” all the talking heads blathering on about “public policy,” all the articles about who should be in power and what they should do with that power, all the “law” books, schools, courts, etc.—in short, everything relating to “politics” is provably irrational, artificial, nonsensical, bogus and invalid. And proving that is quite easy.

All such discussions and bickerings depend upon a single concept: political “authority.” To be clear, the “authority” referred in this context—the type of “authority” that cannot actually exist—is the moral right to rule. The term “government” implies legitimacy. The difference between “government” and any other organized crime syndicate or street gang is that most of the victims of “government” coercion and extortion view their own victimization as “legal,” valid, and even necessary. The various myths addressed above are examples of the rhetoric and propaganda used to train subjects to view their own subjugation as proper and good, and to view disobedience to their victimizers as being “illegal,” “criminal,” and immoral.

But the very notion of “government” is based entirely on lies, distortions and fabrications. Below are several independent proofs that there is no such thing, has never been such thing, and can never be such thing, as legitimate political “authority.” These proofs are so simple and obvious that they are basically self-evident, and yet many years of authoritarian indoctrination—from schools, parents, the media, and those in power—has made it very difficult for most people to grasp the simple reality of the situation.

1 - Delegating Powers

No matter how complicated and involved the related documents and rituals may be—constitutions, petitions, elections, legislation, appointments, rulings, etc.—it is self-evident that people cannot delegate rights to others that none of those people had themselves in the first place. For example, ten people who do not have the moral right to murder and rob others cannot possibly give such a right to someone else. And the numbers involved are irrelevant. A million people—or a billion people—cannot, by any means or mechanism, delegate to someone else a right which none of those people had, any more than they could give someone else an apple if none of them had an apple to begin with. This simple truth, all by itself, demolishes even the possibility of legitimate “government,” as every ruling class claims to have the right to do things that normal people have no right to do, while at the same time claiming that they got such rights from the people themselves (via elections, for example). Again, the excuses for the belief in the “Divine Right of Politicians” (the essence of statism) is more complicated, but no more rational than the old excuses for the “Divine Right of Kings.”

2 - Altering Morality

For the “laws” of “government” to be valid logically requires that the legislative rituals conducted by mere mortals can actually alter morality. If “obeying the law” is inherently good and “breaking the law” is inherently bad, that means that the day some behavior or action is “outlawed,” morality has changed. For example, if one day some legislature bans the private possession of a certain type of weapon, in the authoritarian paradigm that means that a certain act was perfectly acceptable and allowable one day, but the next day was “criminal” and wrong, to the point of justifying the forced kidnapping and caging of whoever “broke the law” by engaging in such an activity. For this to be true necessarily means that legislators have the ability to alter morality, to make right into wrong, good into bad, and vice versa. Given that politicians are only mere mortals—and not particularly honest or trustworthy ones at that—this is impossible.

3 - Obligation to Obey

The right of “government” legislatures to rule logically implies the obligation of their subjects to obey. But whenever the commands of a supposed “authority” go against an individual’s own conscience and moral judgment, he is either obligated to “break the law” and disobey “authority” in order to do what he thinks is right, or he is morally obligated to obey and comply, even though it means doing something that he personally deems to be morally wrong. The latter option is entirely schizophrenic and irrational. To simply describe it accurately illustrates the inherent insanity of it: “if authority commands it, you should feel morally obligated to do what you think is morally wrong.” However one determines right and wrong, and however flawed an individual’s perceptions or moral judgment may be, it is logically absurd to say that he should feel a moral obligation to do what he thinks is morally wrong. And yet to feel beholden to any “government” or other external “authority” requires believing exactly that.

In conclusion, the debate over how big “government” should be, and exactly what it should do, is no more rational or useful than debating how magic flying unicorns should solve all the woes of human society. Making dire predictions about how horrible things would be if magic flying unicorns didn’t exist is also a pointless discussion. Hallucinations cannot solve real world problems. Political “authority” is not real. It never has been. And getting mankind to understand that, and to change its perceptions and actions accordingly, would drastically decrease the injustice and suffering in the world.

(P.S. This subject is addressed in further detail in my book, “The Most Dangerous Superstition.”)

https://www.amazon.com/Most-Dangerous-Superstition-Larken-Rose-ebook/dp/B00UV41W2U/ref=sr_1_1_twi_kin_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1470933486

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The TV Lies
and Pacifies
Lyrics from Nevermore
about Propagandas whore

Larken Rose your thoughts are deep
In this place there are far fewer sheep
A lot of people here have heard you speak
It resounded and bounced til we're no longer meek

Reaching out and reaching far
You've loosed genie from jar
Hopefully more will hear your words
And hopefully not only us nerds

Steemit is new and powerful I believe
What might freedom let us achieve?
Thank you for your thoughts and keep them coming
Yet another chance to halt what the world is becoming

wow. you should put this to a beat and do a video rap!! very good

The first two lines are from a Nevermore song called "Poison God Machine" which is why I mentioned their name in the third line.

I'm glad you like my poem. I am posting under this account as I try to never take @chaospoet out of character. :)

The song Poison God Machine is metal so since you mentioned rap it may or may not be your thing.

If you're an Anarchist like me though the lyrics are pretty awesome:
"I know what it wants now... the void has swallowed
the light and the machine wants my soul"
The media machine knows what to do
It knows how to feed the poison to you
Useless information for your useless little lives
The tv lies and pacifies
Do you believe everything you see?
Children of the void come follow me
Denounce your faith and penance the savior is unseen
I am the new drug, your poison godmachine... poison
Poison godmachine
Poison is a word, God is a word used for fear
In subtlety we obey through ink and broadcast wave
The doubts and fears that shadow media decay
Deprogram this affliction and the cathode ray unclean
I am the last nail, the empty soulless screen... soulless
Poison godmachine
And we eat the poison, we created the poison godmachine

Great! Metal is good too.. About the only genre I don't care for is Country.

Larken neglected to link to his book. The Amazon Kindle version is available here for $7. If you prefer dead trees (I'd prefer hemp paper, if I could get books printed on it), Amazon charges way too much. Get the paperback for $13 from Larken's store.

Larken is the worst self-promoter in human history. Don't be shy to tell people about where they can get your great books Larken!

Oops. Thanks for pointing that out. I added one at the end.

you might actually do better if you addressed Larkin's actual words and not just asert they are wrong because YOU personally dismiss moral norms.

When are you going to have more copies printed for amazon?
Don't you think the $83 price tag is discouraging people from buying?

Hmmm... I live in Colorado. I wonder if people have considered doing hemp paper here now. I also wonder how Colorado and others that have legalized it (and the sky did not fall) are going to fare with the stupid new ruling from the State (yes, I still talk about it because it s there and if I don't pay attention it does impact me much to me chagrin).

I'm referring to Marijuana to remain illegal under federal law, DEA says

Also I do not partake, but family members do, and benefit from it. I don't drink alcohol either. Personal preference but, I'm an advocate for legalizing everything... letting people make their own choices... and being personally responsible for our choices.

I've seen CBD oils do wonders for my elder father-in-law (85) body pains in hands and feet and such. Actually work far better than pharmaceutical stuff doctors had him taking.

A lot of useful products from both Hemp and Marijuana.

Books made from hemp paper - I like that idea!

IKR?? I mean, if it is good enough for the Constitution, then why not?!!

Statistics show 85% are willfully blind when it comes to inconvenient truth. Some superstitions are so faithfully defended that death is preferred to facing the truth. Unfortunately, death is rarely the outcome of superstition. It is punished by exploitation. The faithful are farmed by TPTB. This is sad, but just, because the faithful chose it. The injustice comes when the faithful are in the majority and force the free thinkers into submission to their delusion at the point of a gun.
Ironically, the majority may not elect the so-called representatives of all. All do not vote, many times less than half vote, therefore it cannot be claimed the will of the majority was known. Additionally, many law makers are unelected bureaucrats and LEOs. the latter enjoying unofficial law making, of which they exempt themselves. (So much for "equal under the law".)

Nowhere right now can you see the true nature of government better than in the Phillipines, where three months ago the newly installed President told police and citizens to start murdering any 'addict' or 'dealer' they encounter.

The result is that in 3 months over 700 people have been murdered by police and vigilantes, people who likely weren't at all violent, weren't doing anything wrong other than providing a service and consuming drugs that are more often than not, safer than prescription pharmaceuticals.

Government is chaos and criminality. The only order is the market, there is no other choice.

With a bigger market share now available to more ruthless, militarised drug dealers.

My book never did completely recover from the wee'de toilette, you know.

  • Still smells as well, here two years after. And I haven't used government post offices since.

I did manage to read it anyway. Why? Because it's a damn good book.

Can't wait to address this post! I'm itchin'!


Larken I'm indebted to you for taking me from confused, apathetic/apolitical statist to anarchist in the time it takes to watch one short video.
The gear-grinding, nails-on-the-chalboard feeling of all the conflicting ideas grating and clashing around inside one's poor brain can be deafening and exhausting. This video created a moment of peaceful silence in my head and I just stood there (folding laundry and surfing the weird part of the internet) thinking, "Amaze-balls. Did I really just find something that makes perfect logical sense??"

What peace of mind there is in lending the slightest piece of one's mind to rational discourse. And what a tragedy it is, as has been said, that we humans are not rational beings but rationalizing beings, thereby rendering any act, no matter how heinous, "rational."

Thanks, Larken, I've followed you for awhile now, from the larger prison known as government.

Most people I speak with cannot wrap their minds around the idea of not having government for some reason, though they seem to be able to get up and go about their day just fine pretty much every day (excepting those where run afoul of their rulers).

Leaders vs Rulers

For some reason cough public schools and media cough, most people confuse rulers and leaders.

A peaceful society can have as many leaders as there are people, simply because different people are better than others at different things.

Simply replace rulers with leaders and you would have a different world. The difference being that a leader has no perceived right to force others to do anything.

thanks for the post. its hard to believe i once thought government was legitimate, and that politicians, however evil they are, were necessary. your writings have helped lift the veil for me, and i've yet to read your books.

someone who wants to take the president of Venezuela Nicolas Maduro! here only brings misfortune.

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