You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: Age of Consent (Part One)

in #voluntaryism7 years ago

As most voluntaryists will readily discuss, a stateless society would still have courts.

I definitely understand where you're coming from in your article here, Larken, and I believe this is compatible with my own perspective on the matter so long as the courts make no such distinction regarding competence; after all, for somebody to be in court arguing for their self-ownership, they clearly must be competent enough. When I talk about the issue, I'm talking about the legality of it. Surely within a family, even a peaceful parenting family, people will technically violate the NAP. A brother will pull his sister's hair with a smile. A mother will yank her son away from an open sewer hole. A husband will lift and carry his wife against her will. It happens, and it's generally not a big deal.What would become a big deal, however, is for the courts - and therefore the security market - to back up the use of force against a person to protect that person from his/her self. That's when this becomes a downright insidious matter. That's where you find true oppression; when the use of force to protect somebody from his/her own foolishness is not only legal, but legally backed.

Personally, I would forcibly interfere if my child were about to commit suicide. I just recognize that I would be violating the child's rights, and it cannot be a legal matter; I shouldn't be able to send the kid to a padded room over it, and if the kid wishes to sue me, that's shitty, but ultimately, my behavior wouldn't be ethical

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.18
TRX 0.13
JST 0.028
BTC 57097.85
ETH 3049.62
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.30