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Old 09-01-2007, 09:34 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Absolute Power: Violence


Being a humble creature of this island Earth, I have thought about it extensively and propose that violence is the root of all power on this here rock.

Any facet of it: actual violence, the threat of violence, the ability to do violence, fear of violence, the proliferation and research into the advancement of, those who manufacture the preferred tools of, those who seek to control and limit it, etc.

I propose that violence governs all, is responsible for all of society's constructs, etc.

Any thoughts?
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Old 09-01-2007, 09:54 PM   #2 (permalink)
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I'd say that violence ultimately just proliferates until whatever power gained from it becomes unmanageable. It's one way to gain power, but it's an unstable source.
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Old 09-01-2007, 10:39 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Power is not violence but rather lack of it. Most of us are violent but few are powerful.
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Old 09-01-2007, 11:14 PM   #4 (permalink)
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Power is an illusion. It only exists through the consent of the controlled.

Those who attain power through violence will see violence as the root of power.

Those who attain power through fear will see fear as the root of power.

In other words, whichever method is used to attain power will be seen as the root of power by the group that used that particular method.

Their beliefs are mistaken because, as I've already mentioned, power exists by consent only. The root of power is consent.
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Old 09-02-2007, 06:35 AM   #5 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Borgs
Power is not violence but rather lack of it.
Bingo.

One definition of power is: the ability to produce results without force.

Only the powerless need to resort to force or violence to produce results. The truly powerful NEVER do.
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Old 09-02-2007, 06:42 AM   #6 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JumpinJesus
Power is an illusion.
Somebody inform countries with primitive military technology who get their asses kicked.

Somebody inform kids who get beat up at school for being physically smaller, weaker.

Somebody inform the White House. They play the violence card all day.

Somebody inform the feeling you get when the police pull you over for a traffic violation.

...

We've already established that life is an illusion, too.
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Old 09-02-2007, 06:51 AM   #7 (permalink)
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I remember a few lectures by my political theory professor on something termed the economy of violence it sounded similar to what you're trying to say. As I recall he made some very interesting points, however, that class was over two years ago and I'm not a political science major so I won't try to recreate them. Maybe someone who knows more about it will chime in. I did manage to find this tidbit of info:


Quote:
I have suggested a number of places where Machiavelli is consciously or implicitly breaking from the ancient political tradition -- politics as a science, dual standard of morality, appearance vs. reality, focus on realism vs. idealism. Perhaps the most dramatic break with the past is in Machiavelli's discussion of violence and the political process.

There had been few political theorists prior to Machiavelli who regarded power and violence as dominant attributes of the state. With Machiavelli power has come to the front stage in the concerns of the theorist. Politics could be controlled or directed without the application of force.

What Machiavelli tries to do is create a science of the controlled application of Violence (See Sheldon Colin, Politics and Vision for an extended discussion of this thesis.). It would be a science able to administer violence in precise and measured dosages. In a corrupt society, for instance, violence represents the only means of correcting decadence, a brief but severs shock treatment is necessary to restore civic consciousness. In other situations, violence might be unnecessary, the prince might only threaten its use or play on the fears of his constituents. Machiavelli is not suggesting that violence should be used indiscriminately. Violence must be regulated and apportioned. It would be foolish to use it where it was not needed.

Machiavelli's writings on violence represent a profound shift in Western's societies acceptance of violence as a one amongst many of the tools of the politician. Classical Greek thought abhorred any action that exceeded standards of morality or the mean. An act of violence was a break in the natural limits that a good person was duly bound to preserve. Aristotle, the tutor of Alexander the Great, thought long and hard about these questions. Masters, he said, must never be confused with statesmanship. There is something deeply wrong when a profession is so practical as to justify deliberate killing. The success of a conqueror like Alexander does not place his acts outside the limits set by; nature and morality.

The conviction that natural limits to violence existed and that violence was inherently wrong persisted into the sixteenth century. To what degree Machiavelli is responsible for the changing views about violence in the sixteenth century is hard to say. For a whole series of reasons, and Machiavelli was just one part, violence ceased to be regarded as an act of passion. It was possible think of the use of violence in a cool and calculating manner. Machiavelli instructed people in what might be called an economy of violence. Violence as a tool in the hands of the statesman, was not to be misused or overused, but now violence was an accepted part of the politicians tool bag.

The break of modern political theory from the past was well under way. Machiavelli is a figure that seems much more comfortable in our world of the late twentieth century. Aristotle would have a much harder time dealing with this political theorist from Florence
from http://www.wiu.edu/users/mfcjh/wiu/e...n/machpol2.htm.
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Old 09-02-2007, 07:36 AM   #8 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Crompsin
Somebody inform countries with primitive military technology who get their asses kicked.

Somebody inform kids who get beat up at school for being physically smaller, weaker.

Somebody inform the White House. They play the violence card all day.

Somebody inform the feeling you get when the police pull you over for a traffic violation.

...

We've already established that life is an illusion, too.
Nobody said that violence and threat were illusions.

The illusion is the connection between those things and power.
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Old 09-02-2007, 07:57 AM   #9 (permalink)
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I don't think violence is the root of power. Violence is an action, a manifestation, if you will.

The root of power exists in the individual mind. How you interpret the world, decide on your course of actions, and then follow through will determine your source of power.

Mastery over others is being strong; mastery over oneself is the greatest power.
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Old 09-02-2007, 08:51 AM   #10 (permalink)
 
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first off despite the fact that you might use the same word---power---to designate a relation or pattern in any number of situations, power is not really one thing. you could say that power is a type of dominance that relies on assymetry of force that in some abstract sense can be linked back to the potential for violence--but it is not obvious that this says much simply because i am not sure that it is so easy peasy to separate "power" from the modes through which it is exercised. violence then becomes a subset of the term power, and what it means is a function. power is linked to the routines of its exercise and the framework (legal or convention or otherwise) that legitimates it/outlines it on the one hand, and the systems of institutions that are developed--and both these general characteristics are, taken together, basic to political power--as is the legal or political framework that orients these institutions and legitimates the apparatus as a whole. so power and legitimation are tied every bit as closely as power and violence. all these seem to me to be mutually defining terms.

for example: modern state power is often understood as *routinized* violence. the routinization---via bureaucracy say, or more obviously through law---is a sublimation of violence.

depending on the legal and political context, you can easily imagine situations in which the breakdown of this routinization leads to direct use of violence leads to a breakdown of legitimacy of the state itself. a simple example: the photograph of the kent state student shot by the national guard in 1969 (i think)...you know the photograph, i expect:



so if you use this photo to think about the question posed in the op---in this instance, the state exercised violence--and not its police function (say)--because the act itself violated the rules--and so was delegitimating of the state. it is possible that, from a different political viewpoint, there was no violence at kent state, only the legitimate actions of the national guard. so the notion of violence floats in and out of your interpretation of the photograph.

==============
the idea that violence stands above the routines that shape it does seem to come from machiavelli---but it is strange that this would be the case, if you think about it.

you could say that just as machiavelli's work instituted the notion of the political itself (rather "the prince" is the text around which the instituted notion of the political as a category took shape), it follows that the notion of the political duplicates the logic of various readings of "the prince"--many of which use it to effectively detach the notion of violence from having and holding power from any particular routine of exercising power.

but if you think about this, i think it's clear that the scenario of conquest (which is the basic scenario addressed in that book) is itself a situation. so the prince doesn't describe the basis for ALL situations--rather it is about the fundamental role played by situation itself. so you cant move from the prince to a general theory of violence and its relation to power---you move from violence to the problem of stabilization and the development of routines as the basis for power. getting power is one set of question: exercising it another.

what the "the prince" is mostly directly about is not violence, but the notion of situation itself: the situation of conquest or invasion and how a prince would go about managing its particular complexities--so you could say the same thing about it--violence is not the same as power, but its crude precondition *in the situations that machiavelli addresses*

power is implied by the way it is exercised--so it is situational or frame-contingent--so in the prince, the situation of having-conquered another community places, you, mister prince, by definition outside the routines----and your problem, really, is establishing legitimacy long enough to be able to set up new routines based around a different center. which of course is you.

sometimes i think people are so fascinated by the prince because while they are reading it, they are addressed as if they *are* the prince and there is something flattering in that, isnt there?


anyway in *that situation* power is violence but its exercise is about stabilization. but the next step is obvious: without successful routinization, there is no power. there is only the after-image of violence. that is not power.

and this is a situation amongst a host of them, and is not a meta-situation (one that outlines the logic of others).

you could say that political power, then, is both the potential for violence and the routines that channel it/transform it--and that one only has meaning in terms of the other.

so let's see---violence can only be deployed as power through its routinization.

routinized violence is a way of seeing the ways in which state power is exercised--but its sources lay in the routine itself and the legitimacy of the institutions that enact it and the framework that orients the political system as a whole.

so i dont see how you can detach violence from its routinization and questions of legitimacy if you are thinking about political power.

at this point, the post dovetails with what the other rb and jj posted above.

this is written through my 3rd cup of morning coffee, so any logic lapses are early morning products yes.
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Old 09-02-2007, 09:14 AM   #11 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Crompsin
Somebody inform countries with primitive military technology who get their asses kicked.

Somebody inform kids who get beat up at school for being physically smaller, weaker.

Somebody inform the White House. They play the violence card all day.

Somebody inform the feeling you get when the police pull you over for a traffic violation.

...

We've already established that life is an illusion, too.

All of those things you mentioned happen because those who are victims of that violence don't act to stop or prevent it. It has nothing to do with the perpetrators being powerful.

What you describe as power is bully mentality. Bully mentality is not power, it's insecurity. Weak and insecure people are quite capable of violent and horrific acts.

I think it more interesting to ask why some people are so interested in attaining power.

And the "life is an illusion" cliche isjust that, a cliche. It has nothing to do with this discussion. I'm not sure why you brought it up.
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Old 09-02-2007, 05:02 PM   #12 (permalink)
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Violence is a currency.

It is the most powerful currency our species has, its how we are wired as great apes.

The funny thing is while we claim to abhor violence it is perhaps the very reason we have civilization in the first place. A clan, becomes a tribe, becomes a nation, for power and protection. To do violence unto others while protecting itself from others.

To deny its importance is to deny our heritage, and even trying to change it may well be folly as those who don't change will have the currency the pacifists lack.
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Old 09-02-2007, 05:22 PM   #13 (permalink)
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I would argue that cellular respiration is the root of all power in this here rock, but that would only apply to the efforts of animals. Perhaps the physical laws of the universe are a more apt basis.

I don't know why you'd stop at violence, as far as finding the roots of power goes; there are plenty of other sources of power that don't involve violence at all - unless you like really broad definitions of the word.

If you think that all coercion is backed by a promise of violence, you are mistaken.
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Old 09-02-2007, 08:08 PM   #14 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by filtherton
If you think that all coercion is backed by a promise of violence, you are mistaken.
But such are the minor currencies.
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Old 09-02-2007, 11:26 PM   #15 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
But such are the minor currencies.
I don't know about that. I think that a member of any number of successful nonviolent movements would tend to disagree.

Unless you equate many different types of things that aren't traditionally considered violence (poverty, etc) with violence, which some folks like to do, the two aren't necessarily linked at all. It all depends on how broadly you want to go.

Look at how much power international banking institutions have. As far as i can tell, they don't have their own armies, and would have a difficult time convincing somebody else to provide an army to force developing countries to pay off their debts. So, with no means to commit violence, how do they manage to hold countries to their debts?
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Old 09-03-2007, 02:22 AM   #16 (permalink)
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Mmm.

Maybe - but respectfully I'm going to try to throw spanners and see if anything sticks.

How does this explain

- sexual attraction.... of men to women
- power of a child, over a parent
- Ghandi's non-violent protest movement
- mass religious movements such as cults
- the effectiveness of modern advertising
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Old 09-03-2007, 02:28 AM   #17 (permalink)
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And don't let me unravel the discussion w/simple semantics, but I think others have already touched on it...Both power and violence are merely points of view...Different sides of the same coin so to speak...

Whether we are talking violent in the sense of an action taken, even then it can be debated...Violence as the root of power, as in conflict or lack thereof, almost always depends on the end more so than the means...
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Old 09-03-2007, 01:28 PM   #18 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by filtherton
I would argue that cellular respiration is the root of all power in this here rock, but that would only apply to the efforts of animals. Perhaps the physical laws of the universe are a more apt basis.
I don't know, bro. That might be involuntary!

If I had a choice to breathe or not... I might just stop!

Rumor has it too much breathing causes lung cancer!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
Violence is a currency.

It is the most powerful currency our species has, its how we are wired as great apes.

The funny thing is while we claim to abhor violence it is perhaps the very reason we have civilization in the first place. A clan, becomes a tribe, becomes a nation, for power and protection. To do violence unto others while protecting itself from others.

To deny its importance is to deny our heritage, and even trying to change it may well be folly as those who don't change will have the currency the pacifists lack.
Hey, this is what I was trying to say.

Thanks, chief.

Quote:
Originally Posted by JumpinJesus
And the "life is an illusion" cliche isjust that, a cliche. It has nothing to do with this discussion. I'm not sure why you brought it up.
Totally sardonic comment. A lame retort to the "power is an illusion" cliche, chief... like my choice of underwear, not to be taken seriously.

Silly side point:

Sure, power/force is an illusion in society. It is based on an action timeline. Illusion? Definitely. Damned if it doesn't just "illusion" some people to death!

See "World War 2" for references to the illusion of power killing people.

...

Just screwin' around. I love your brains.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Nimetic
Mmm.

Maybe - but respectfully I'm going to try to throw spanners and see if anything sticks.

How does this explain

- sexual attraction.... of men to women
- power of a child, over a parent
- Ghandi's non-violent protest movement
- mass religious movements such as cults
- the effectiveness of modern advertising
Mmm, let's be really vague:

- Sexual chemical reaction reward mechanism... I only want sex because my brain chems are screaming for it
- Parental chemical reaction reward mechanism... I only protect my child because I get a high from it or prevent a low
- Dunno, but I'd still fight him
- The cult stereotype typically involves fanatics and violence... we talking Charlie Manson or Catholic church? Both killed a lot of people.
- I don't own a television, but magazines seem to play on #1 and #2
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Old 09-03-2007, 01:57 PM   #19 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Crompsin
- Dunno, but I'd still fight him
There you go right there. You might fight him--and you might win the fight--but you'd lose the battle in the process.

Ghandi was one of the most powerful people of our time precisely because he produced extraordinary results (the independence of India, the cultural unification of Hindus and Muslims) without force.

Dr. King same story. Powerful man. Altered the world. Zero force.
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Old 09-03-2007, 02:07 PM   #20 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ratbastid
There you go right there. You might fight him--and you might win the fight--but you'd lose the battle in the process.
Okay, I'll bite:

In theory, if I'd won... he'd have been dead. And thus, not being non-violent anymore... or alive, for that matter. Dead heroes (violent or non-violent) don't create anymore flashy ideas, and their perpetuation-oh-so-shiny charm power (or is that force? ) generally goes with them to the grave. Sheeple carry the ideals on, but they often lose their potency.

Abe Lincoln could have probably kicked my ass, though!
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Old 09-03-2007, 02:17 PM   #21 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Crompsin
Totally sardonic comment. A lame retort to the "power is an illusion" cliche, chief... like my choice of underwear, not to be taken seriously.

Silly side point:

Sure, power/force is an illusion in society. It is based on an action timeline. Illusion? Definitely. Damned if it doesn't just "illusion" some people to death!

See "World War 2" for references to the illusion of power killing people.

...

Just screwin' around. I love your brains.

I can agree with you that violence has killed a lot of people. I think we're arguing over semantics, which would be silly.

I see violence as very real; I see power as very real. I just believe that seeing power as an absolute is wrong. It's like the value of our money. Once we went off the gold standard, our money became literally worthless, not worth more than the paper it's printed on. It's our belief in it's value that gives it value. Power is the same for me. There is no real power, only the belief in power that gives it.

And don't worry. I love this type of debate.
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Old 09-03-2007, 02:30 PM   #22 (permalink)
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I concur. And I endorse this message:

Violence, like gold, is tangible. You can even do violence WITH gold! Hot.

"Power" / "Force", like the tired American greenback, might be the "illusion" of which we speak.

Somehow that isn't enough for me, though. I still feel like power is tangible somehow.

I'll work on it.

...

UsTwo, that smart cookie, used the saying I was craving.

Currency. A medium. A from-me-to-you thing.

(Crompsin gives UsTwo a gold star)

...

Hah, and I always break up fights in real life.
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Old 09-03-2007, 03:54 PM   #23 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Crompsin
In theory, if I'd won... he'd have been dead. And thus, not being non-violent anymore... or alive, for that matter. Dead heroes (violent or non-violent) don't create anymore flashy ideas, and their perpetuation-oh-so-shiny charm power (or is that force? ) generally goes with them to the grave. Sheeple carry the ideals on, but they often lose their potency.
I'll ignore the fact that by using the word "sheeple", you just failed this conversation...

Gandhi's power came from the power of his ideas, the passion with which he spoke them, and how far he was willing to sacrifice personally in pursuit of them. When someone that powerful is creating a future, at some point his physical existence is no longer required. In other words, you could kill Gandhi (and he'd have let you), but after some point in career, even his own death couldn't have stopped the future he was creating. THAT'S power.

The other thing to point out is that non-violent power results in creative results--things that unify people and create new outcomes. Violence only ever creates destructive results. Given that, I choose to be powerful, rather than forceful.
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Old 09-03-2007, 04:02 PM   #24 (permalink)
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Okay, I've thought about it. I agree that violence is a currency. It is a currency of power. But so are other things--knowledge, for example. And by that, I don't necessarily mean "the knowledge of truth." What I mean by this is "the knowledge of perceived truth." This "knowledge" is determined by those in power to those and disseminated to their subjects. Any behaviour that is aberrant to this "knowledge" would be subject to the discipline and punishments issued by those in power. This may or may not include violence, but in many cases it does.

Other currencies of power include: incarceration, deprivation, and abjection (or exemptions thereof). Violence, I would say, is amongst the most primal and powerful of currencies, but our evolution of the mind has set power up as a complex state unprecedented in any other species. Power is within us all to some extent, as we often have power over children and pets--violence sometimes being a way of upholding that power. One of the most powerful entities is the state. It is the most enriched by the currencies of power, violence being entrenched in police services and militaries.

Basically, those with the most power are those who control "knowledge" and have the capability of upholding it by means of discipline and punishment (or by other means), which can be carried out by such currencies as violence. There are, however, certain entities of power that don't require such a currency. The corporation, is an example. Gandhi's movement is another. These types of non-violent (or nearly) entities use other currencies to disseminate "knowledge" and uphold it. Some of these include: non-violent punishment, monetary rewards, dissent, and disobedience.
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Old 09-03-2007, 04:56 PM   #25 (permalink)
 
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a currency is simply a medium of exchange.
it is invested with power/value by social consent.
it has no meaning outside what a society decides it is.
so it begs the question here.
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Old 09-03-2007, 05:15 PM   #26 (permalink)
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We're all bits of skin...

Quote:
Originally Posted by ratbastid
I'll ignore the fact that by using the word "sheeple", you just failed this conversation...



I resemble that remark! Aaah... failure, my dear friend. How art thou?

Wait an eon! Life is suddenly no longer analogous to a cosmic totem pole? Clans and tribes, clans and tribes and nations, oh-my! Oh, it applies here.

Absolutely fine as long as we realize we do indeed include ourselves in such fabulous pop culture titles. I know I do. I "Baa!" with the best of them... and why? Because people in "power" used "force" to establish "peace" in this world.

Very truly I tell you: To my tiny brain it seems men are equal only in chemical composition and (ideally, perhaps) protections under the law.

Everything else? Crabs in a barrel / kids at the mall.
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Old 09-03-2007, 05:19 PM   #27 (permalink)
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roachboy, within a system of government, haven't all forms of violence been accounted for? Wouldn't it exist as a currency within that context? Violence has a value inasmuch it has consequences and privileged use depending on the circumstances. And also consider that there are forms of violence that have no currency within social systems--there is a lot within the animal kingdom that would be on the outside.
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Old 09-03-2007, 05:20 PM   #28 (permalink)
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If you take away government... violence still has value to the individual.

Violence always has value to people.
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Old 09-04-2007, 03:54 AM   #29 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ratbastid
Bingo.

One definition of power is: the ability to produce results without force.

Only the powerless need to resort to force or violence to produce results. The truly powerful NEVER do.
While I understand the idea you are trying to point out, this is just wrong. Sometimes violence is the best answer. Even if you don't agree with that, surely you can at least say some "truly powerful people" have used power to great success to whatever goals they were trying to achieve.

Quote:
Originally Posted by JumpinJesus
All of those things you mentioned happen because those who are victims of that violence don't act to stop or prevent it. It has nothing to do with the perpetrators being powerful.
I think one of the reasons violence is chosen as a course of action is to remove the choice from the person involved (do it or I shoot you/your kid, etc), or to make the choice so lopsided that they go along (do it or you will lose your job, etc). Obviously there are problems maintaining this situation, but as long as you can...

People react more strongly to threats to take something away than they do to rewards.

I'm glad this thread was made. I think people don't realize how much violence plays a part in every interaction humans make. I think a whole bunch of things can be broken down to that point. We are just expressing it in different and more subtle ways now... unless shit hits the fan enough for the gloves to come off. Then we can show we really are just humans.
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Old 09-04-2007, 06:04 AM   #30 (permalink)
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It is important to understand the physical means by which the world is governed... whether active or in reserve... they are there.

They have always been there, are there now... will always be there.

The tools and the names change, but the crunchy innards are the same.

Law of the jungle, people... law of the jungle.

When you're in the trees... you gotta swing.
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Old 09-04-2007, 06:24 AM   #31 (permalink)
 
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this is an interesting thread.
i dont buy the conclusion crompsin arrived at before it started, however.

Quote:
I propose that violence governs all, is responsible for all of society's constructs, etc.
this is obviously too simple--most of the posts to the thread are one way or another about this problem.

to condense the range of objections into two or three points:

--the idea of violence is relational
--the relation of violence to power is much more complicated than the op makes it out to be.
from which follows the claims, variously made, that the exercise of power (from either the side of the governing apparatus or resistance movements) often works best to the exclusion of violence.

somewhere along the way, the discussion began drifting toward a strange category: "absolute violence.."
i dont know what that is.
but it seems linked to a consistency in crompsin, us2 and maybe one or two other posters' positions: the claim that violence is not relational, that there is some kind of essence to violence that enables you to think about it in isolation.
from this it follows that crompsin would say: "Violence always has value to people."

i dont buy it.

first violence is a category that denotes a range of actions, not the actions themselves. these actions "are" violence because we call them violence. that this term operates in relation to other terms is obvious. from this it would follow that "absolute violence" is meaningless, except as a thought experiment that uses the possibilities opened up by the noun "violence" to shape speculative games.

another way: the thread is about the word violence, the category violence, and not about the actions its groups together. given that, all the problems of usage/meaning that you can run out with reference to any noun obtain here.

in the context of the relation of violence to "social constructs"---power and its exercise being a convenient example---it is also obvious that what constitutes violence changes and changes quite often. it is a waste of time to indulge trans-historical claims, shifting arbitrarily back and forth from system to system. this is a consequence, unfortunate or not, of the claim that violence--like any other noun--is relational. it means that its meanings are particular. you strip away situation and you strip away meaning.

another version of the same problem: in the context of modern states (products brough to you by 19th century capitalism) violence is most often (it seems) used to designate actions that are excluded or sanctioned, as over against forms of "legitimate" violence, which are called something else and so which are, in a sense, something else.

to counter it, there is max weber's definition of the state, which is that entity that "holds the monopoly on legitimate violence"---this means that behind all state actions is coercion and behind that violence or the threat of it.
you could argue from here, but that argument would be entirely different from this:

Quote:
Violence always has value to people.
imagining that this kind of statement implies the critique of modern state and its mode of power is like saying that standing on a street corner for 4 hours implies that you have been to a baseball game. you did some of the same things (not a hell of a lot for a specific duration)--but you did not do the same thing.

another line of argument here has concerned the use of non-violence in political actions.

so there are a number of different arguments, most of which have been dodged in favor of a line that prefers to imagine that a category and what it designates are somehow essentially linked.
there is no way to justify that move, and so the claims built on its basis dont work.
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Old 09-04-2007, 06:45 AM   #32 (permalink)
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Wait a second... Who the hell used the term "absolute violence"? I never attempted to coin that kinda silly combination.

...

Oh, let's assume that "violence" ad "force" are the same concept.

My "horseshit" aside, let's also suggest that violence means, "I AM TRYING TO KILL YOU AND I WILL KILL YOU IF I SUCCEED."

Yeah, it's pretty obvious I didn't wanna dig too deep into Merriam-Webster or a sociology text when I started this thread.

Shows what I get for screwin' around. Can of worms? Opened!

I'm really happy with the comments. You guys are really some genius-pants.

Reason! Logic! Passion!

...

Of course the total moron answer to your eloquent monologue would have been:

*PUNCHES YOU IN THE FACE*

But it would have been pretty effective.

In real life, anyway.

...

GI Joe says: Never attempt fight an incoming fist with reason.
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Old 09-04-2007, 06:58 AM   #33 (permalink)
 
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i'm doing other stuff at the moment, but can maybe come back later to say more...but:

so what you are proposing is to push the notion of violence back onto one of intent?
that's what this looks like to me:

Quote:
"I AM TRYING TO KILL YOU AND I WILL KILL YOU IF I SUCCEED."
what does that change?

you are also narrowing the notion considerably when you do this.
do you mean that violence is now restricted to intent toward exercising lethal force?

i anticipated the "punch you in the face" response. i was going to write something about it above, but it was already too long. but think about what that would actually demonstrate. maybe explain it to me. for example, i might conclude that you are a sociopath from that response and nothing whatsoever about the "intent" you impute to the action.
so it would perhaps have been effective in the sense of ending the debate, but as a demonstration of anything...i dont see it.

things get curiouser and curiouser as you head down the rabbithole.
just saying.
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Old 09-04-2007, 07:03 AM   #34 (permalink)
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But maybe there's more to life than incoming fists.

Maybe those who expect to see incoming fists everywhere see incoming fists everywhere. Maybe such people end up fighting a lot in life. Maybe such people end up formulating theories about violence as the fundamental currency of humanity.

Maybe there are other kinds of people, who don't see all interaction as combat. Maybe such people see whole other possibilities.

To the "sees incoming fists" person, that second kind of person seems like a deluded weakling who won't fight for their survival when it inevitably comes down to it.

To the "doesn't see incoming fists" person, that first kind of person seems hopelessly limited and borderline psychotic.

So far nothing in this thread has transcended this fundamental interaction of views.
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Old 09-04-2007, 07:08 AM   #35 (permalink)
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Confused.

Why should it transcend anything?

I was trying to elaborate on a simple muse.

Examining, with what little intellect I have, a tiny slice of humanity... the issue of physical force.

Human violence is a human problem, a human device.

And sadly... we're all still humans.

It doesn't seem to be decreasing much over time, it just changes forms, changes names.

How do we transcend that, again?

...

What I'm NOT saying is that violence is the do-all-be-all; no-no... obviously there are many other facets to humanity. I'm suggesting that physical force always seems to come into play somewhere regardless of how well mannered people are, regardless of how the government works, etc.

I'm thinking that it is always there under the surface or up in your face. It is an option that never ghosts itself on the human life menu.

Maybe violence / force is "the cheese"... whether you eat it or not is a personal choice and often changes on a long enough time line.

"Reasonable" people doing "unreasonable" things.

Happens all the time, apparently.

...

And now I'm a "sociopath" because I make bar room jokes.

Name calling! (j/k)
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Old 09-04-2007, 08:26 AM   #36 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ratbastid
There you go right there. You might fight him--and you might win the fight--but you'd lose the battle in the process.

Ghandi was one of the most powerful people of our time precisely because he produced extraordinary results (the independence of India, the cultural unification of Hindus and Muslims) without force.

Dr. King same story. Powerful man. Altered the world. Zero force.
And they both died for it by violence.

Also you might want to think about that cultural unification of the Hindus and Muslims line of yours, its not correct, nor was it ever correct in my opinion. It was a best a unification vrs a common enemy, and those unifications are always temporary and shallow.

Plus what ALLOWS non-violent methods to succeed is only that Western Civilization is powerful enough to restrain its own violence. Only our cultural sensibilities allow it to succeed, a very slight change in those and its back to slavery and subjugations which is what the bulk of human history accepted as normal.
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Old 09-04-2007, 09:17 AM   #37 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
And they both died for it by violence.
You say that as if you're making a point. I'm not sure you read my post--the fact that they died meant NOTHING in terms of what they were out to cause. King's death didn't end the Civil Rights movement. It kept on going--in some ways it's still going to this day--without Dr. King at the helm. All without any violence on King's part. If that's not power, what do you call it?

The other thing that Gandhi and King (and others like them) have in common is that they're interested in something bigger than themselves, such that the sacrifice of their physical person is a trivial price to pay. Indeed, Gandhi was quite willing to die rather than see India tear itself in half, and the threat of his death was what ultimately unified it. It wasn't "united against a common enemy", Ustwo; your timeline is wrong. Gandhi's hunger strike was years after Indian independence.
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Old 09-04-2007, 09:40 AM   #38 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
And they both died for it by violence.
So did the violent people. Remind me, how did Alexander the Great die? Poison. How did Attila the Hun die? Wife. Genghis Khan? In battle. Hitler? Suicide.

I suspect that simply bringing about change is what draws the violent end, though there may never be a sure way to know.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
Plus what ALLOWS non-violent methods to succeed is only that Western Civilization is powerful enough to restrain its own violence. Only our cultural sensibilities allow it to succeed, a very slight change in those and its back to slavery and subjugations which is what the bulk of human history accepted as normal.
So Eastern Civilization can't restrain their violence? Did I miss something? Did Japan already destroy NK?
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Old 09-04-2007, 11:30 AM   #39 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Crompsin
Confused.

Why should it transcend anything?
Because the alternative is to tread the same patch of carpet until it's worn through. The first step of the way out of a paradigm is to identify the paradigm. The paradigm in this thread is: some people see violence everywhere, and to them, those who don't are pitiful naifs. Others don't see violence everywhere, and to them, those who do are pathetic cro-magnons. We can do another 39 posts walking that piece of carpet, or we can identify that as the paradigm of the conversation, and start asking real questions about that.
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Old 09-04-2007, 11:57 AM   #40 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ratbastid
You say that as if you're making a point. I'm not sure you read my post--the fact that they died meant NOTHING in terms of what they were out to cause. King's death didn't end the Civil Rights movement. It kept on going--in some ways it's still going to this day--without Dr. King at the helm. All without any violence on King's part. If that's not power, what do you call it?
Strategic thinking, violence wouldn't have worked when the money, power, and population as a whole (in the case of segregation) would be against you. Guilt works well, but no amount of protesting would have gotten rid of fascism. Its again, our current structure that allows it, and democracy is not eternal. It could be overthrown by violence here like other places where it has been.

Non-violence only works were the side who has the power is willing to change in the first place. If white America didn't want civil rights, we wouldn't have it period despite what Dr. King did.

Quote:
The other thing that Gandhi and King (and others like them) have in common is that they're interested in something bigger than themselves, such that the sacrifice of their physical person is a trivial price to pay.
Yes but if you asked them I'd guess both wouldn't have shown up to get shot. The problem with non-violence is that its HARDER to do than violence, plus it only works if the people who control the violence agree to give in. By harder I mean its one thing to die fighting, thats part of human nature to risk your life like that, its part of what we have been doing since before the neolithic. Its another thing to fight for your cause by LETTING them beat the crap out of you/kill you. They call it the fight or flight reflex, not the sit there and take it reflex for a reason.

Quote:
Indeed, Gandhi was quite willing to die rather than see India tear itself in half, and the threat of his death was what ultimately unified it. It wasn't "united against a common enemy", Ustwo; your timeline is wrong. Gandhi's hunger strike was years after Indian independence.
Gandhi advised the Congress to reject the proposals the British Cabinet Mission offered in 1946, as he was deeply suspicious of the grouping proposed for Muslim-majority states—Gandhi viewed this as a precursor to partition. However, this became one of the few times the Congress broke from Gandhi's advice (though not his leadership), as Nehru and Patel knew that if the Congress did not approve the plan, the control of government would pass to the Muslim League. Between 1946 and 1948 , over 5,000 people were killed in violence. Gandhi was vehemently opposed to any plan that partitioned India into two separate countries. An overwhelming majority of Muslims living in India, side by side with Hindus and Sikhs, were in favour of Partition. Additionally Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the leader of the Muslim League, commanded widespread support in West Punjab, Sindh, NWFP and East Bengal. The partition plan was approved by the Congress leadership as the only way to prevent a wide-scale Hindu–Muslim civil war. Congress leaders knew that Gandhi would viscerally oppose partition, and it was impossible for the Congress to go ahead without his agreement, for Gandhi's support in the party and throughout India was strong. Gandhi's closest colleagues had accepted partition as the best way out, and Sardar Patel endeavoured to convince Gandhi that it was the only way to avoid civil war. A devastated Gandhi gave his assent.

Ummmm my timeline is wrong?

Plus even today, ask an Indian Hindu how well they get along with the Muslims.

Interestingly here is another Gandhi quote..

"Gandhi guarded against attracting to his satyagraha movement those who feared to take up arms or felt themselves incapable of resistance. 'I do believe,' he wrote, 'that where there is only a choice between cowardice and violence, I would advise violence.'"

and another...

"At every meeting I repeated the warning that unless they felt that in non-violence they had come into possession of a force infinitely superior to the one they had and in the use of which they were adept, they should have nothing to do with non-violence and resume the arms they possessed before. It must never be said of the Khudai Khidmatgars that once so brave, they had become or been made cowards under Badshah Khan's influence. Their bravery consisted not in being good marksmen but in defying death and being ever ready to bare their breasts to the bullets."

His movement may have been non-violent but he seemed to have no problem with those who employed violence to fight for what they believed in. He used non-violence because it was the best way to fight for independence under the existing power structures. He also had some interesting things to say about the Jews in Germany prior to the Holocaust which are quite interesting but may stray to far from the current topic to matter.
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