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 Originally Posted by boost
Certain powers should only be held by committee.
I agree. I don't think who has what rights should ever fall to a single person.
Once rights have been granted, though, I believe they should apply equally to all.
 Originally Posted by boost
I like this framework. I don't quite agree that we've reached the goal, but certainly a goal. Often times discussions, especially nowadays, seem to be stuck at some lower level where neither person actually understands the position of the other. I believe the next level is to get at how and why the other person has arrived at their conclusions, as well as how and why you've arrived at your own conclusions.
Well put.
 Originally Posted by boost
As I've said, I believe you're operating from flawed axioms. We're kinda working from opposite ends. How I see it, you've arrived at your conclusions through deduction, while I see your axioms as flawed by way of induction. I think axioms which give less than satisfactory conclusions are much more suspect than conclusions which aren't clearly traceable to actionable axioms.
Cool.
 Originally Posted by boost
So I guess I'd ask you to either say something about the axioms you're working from and why they're so sacrosanct, or give some practical support of your conclusions that aren't just references back to the axioms they're derived from.
For the latter, well, you've kinda put me in a corner, because axioms are, by definition, the "unprovable statements we assume to be True" just to start somewhere. I can't give any support for my position that doesn't point back to an unprovable beginning, but that's always true of all logic and all conclusions, so it's not a fault in my position.
To address the former
My primary axiom is "The Presumption of Innocence is among the best ideas humans have ever come up with."
I can't prove that the Presumption of Innocence is a good thing.
Where it's from is hard to tell... ye olde tymes is probably good enough... but as early as the 2nd or 3rd century in Rome. It's also present in Islamic law, but the wikipedia page doesn't really have dates in that paragraph.
My gut says it was a thing long, long before that. Human conflict resolution has to go back as far as humans, and people lie all the time, that's nothing new. Prehistoric people must have had similar ideas that they were using as axioms, 'cause I just made that up and it gives me juicy feels, so it must be true.
*sigh*
Why I hold it sacrosanct is a personal choice. IMO, it is a worse travesty of justice to punish an innocent person than it is to let a guilty person go unpunished. It must be said that in America (where I've always lived), this is the legal precedent in all cases I know of. It must be present as bias in my choice.
I get the feeling that the more popular sentiment in 'Murica these days is to just shoot all criminals and "suspected" criminal is "close enough." That simply can't be justice, IMO.
My Secondary axiom is, "Whatever laws we have should apply equally to all."
Again, I can't prove this is a good idea. It simply strikes me as completely obvious that - if we let one group of people make rules that another group has to follow, but the rule-making group does not - that's a recipe for human oppression.
I have a quiet third axiom that motivates me, but isn't really a part of my argument, and that's "I am deeply skeptical of irrational arguments that favor the curtailing of a vast swath of people's rights." Or maybe that's just a combination of the fist 2 stated emotionally.
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