Because I Said So! - Apex's Notes
Because I Said So! - Apex's Notes
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It appears as if the insanity of the past 2 years is only intensifying within the minds
of the oversocialized. A handful break through, but most, when presented with data
suggesting vaccines don't work to halt transmission, simply dig a deeper hole: "If only
we had 100% vaccine coverage instead of 99%, transmission would have stopped!", "If only
people wore N95 masks instead of cloth ones we'd be free by now!", etc. Nothing suggests
that a significant number of these people will break through the other side, at least
not without suffering a severe trauma (and even those who do suffer severe trauma
appear to refuse to see reason).
And in the face of this, the insane are doubling down on mandates for vaccines,
masks, etc. These mandates will, of course, fail, but they will soothe the psyches of
the fanatic hypochondriacs who rule our society. But I'm not here to do another piece
on why vaccine mandates are stupid. Instead, I want to delve deeper into the
questions behind mandates. In particular, I want to delve into the following question:
“Owner” does not mean, and never has meant, “I am the demi-God of this patch of dirt
and whatever I say is law within these fences”.
Which begs the question: what are the limits of (employment) contracts?
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There are those who argue that two men, acting "freely," can come to an agreement
and sign a contract, laying a set of rights and responsibilities onto each other. But
these rights and responsibilities must conform to the natural moral law, lest the
contract be null and void. Enforcement of said contract is tyrannical. Or, in other
words:
The questions of "is it just to sell one's labor-power/to purchase the labor-power of
others" or "is it justified for an employer to require their employees to take a vaccine
to maintain employment status" cannot be wholly answered by what was consented
to in the contract. If the contract's claims and duties do not abide by the natural
moral law, the contract's claims are void. We will return to the topic of natural moral
law shortly.
But first, there is a further problem with consent and appeals to "free will" that some
Liberals make: that the pressing concern of particular very negative outcomes
(starvation, exile, etc.) eliminate the freedom and ability to make morally significant
choices (and therefore for the consent to the contract to even have any weight in the
first place). To discuss this, let us take a detour into an intersection of philosophy and
religion: Michael J. Murray's response to the Problem of Divine Hiddenness.
3. Because he desires our salvation, he will give ample evidence of his existence, so
that belief in him will be a straight-forward matter.
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So, now, a serious problem for the theist: how to reconcile God’s hiddenness with his
desire for our salvation. The clear answer is that God’s hiddenness has to exist in
order to further some kind of greater goal; however, this does not explain at all what
that goal might be.
Murray argues that an individual is only free to make a choice in so far as that
individual is not confronted with a "significant threat." What makes a threat
significant? Murray breaks this into three parts: threat strength, threat imminence,
and wantonness of the threatened. From this, Murray presents the theist with a new
problem: the Problem of Hell. Put simply, the threat of Hell, the eternal punishment
for defying God's commands, is so great that it becomes impossible for any person's
will to be free. Divine Hiddenness, according to Murray, is a way to mitigate this
threat: the threat of eternal damnation no longer overrides and destroys the ability
for finite individuals to make morally significant choices in their lives. (There are some
further issues that arise from Murray's response which you can build reasonable rebuttals for,
but those aren't relevant to this particular conversation, so I will leave this topic here for
now.)
Now, starvation may not be as significant a threat as eternal suffering, but I would
argue that it constitutes a significant enough threat that it makes most contracts with
regards to selling one's own labor-power unjust. In fact, the power differentials today
suggest that most of the contracts we "consent" to cannot be considered properly
just, as the consent was conditioned by the power differentials. At least one party's
choice wasn't sufficiently morally significant. Of course, any rigorous account of this
would need to demonstrate and defend a framework about what counts as a
sufficiently significant threat to remove moral significance from one's actions. I
intend to return to this idea in the future, but this piece will not have room for it.
And so, we return to the concept of the natural moral law. If you are any kind of
moral realist, as I am, the moral law cannot be fabricated ex nihilo by the actions of
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man and our positive law. Instead, a natural moral law exists outside of/prior to man
and our decisions. Contracts that fail to respect this natural law are void.
A summary definition of natural law can be given as those moral obligations which the
human person should impose upon oneself by the use of one's own intellectual powers
because these actions are in conformity with human nature and dignity.
The key point here is that the actions are in conformity with human nature and dignity.
The question becomes, what precisely is human nature and dignity? Again, this is
something to return to in the future, as I cannot properly fulfill it in 100 words...
I will not delve super deep into this, but I first point to Hugh LaFollette's piece,
"Morality and Personal Relationships," for this. LaFollette explicitly argues and
defends that,
Modern ethical theories, with perhaps a few honorable exceptions, deal only with reasons,
with values, with what justifies. They fail to examine motives and the motivational
structures and constraints of ethical life. They not only fail to do this, they fail as ethical
theories by not doing this.
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There is a wonderful story called "The Little Prince and the Fox," which was
discussed in a beautiful piece called The Lost Rites of Friendship:
This, too, is the lesson of The Little Prince and the Fox: that friendship requires the same
combination of rhythm and depth.
“To me, you are still nothing more than a little boy who is just like a hundred thousand
other little boys. And I have no need of you. And you, on your part, have no need of
me. To you, I am nothing more than a fox like a hundred thousand other foxes. But if
you tame me, then we shall need each other. To me, you will be unique in all the world.
To you, I shall be unique in all the world . . .”iii
The Fox indicates rightly that they have no need for each other; that true friendship
transcends the initial utilitarianism of the modern world.
...
This depth becomes superabundant if properly attended to. It reaches out to colour the
entire world in which the lover and loved one lives.
“My life is very monotonous,” the fox said. “I hunt chickens; men hunt me. All the
chickens are just alike, and all the men are just alike. And, in consequence, I am a
little bored. But if you tame me, it will be as if the sun came to shine on my life. I shall
know the sound of a step that will be different from all the others. Other steps send me
hurrying back underneath the ground. Yours will call me, like music, out of my burrow.
And then look: you see the grain-fields down yonder? I do not eat bread. Wheat is of
no use to me. The wheat fields have nothing to say to me. And that is sad. But you
have hair that is the color of gold. Think how wonderful that will be when you have
tamed me! The grain, which is also golden, will bring me back the thought of you. And
I shall love to listen to the wind in the wheat . . .”v
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A society is Good if it respects the dignity of each human being and grants them
room for moral development. This, of course, means that each person in the society
must have the close personal relationships needed for them to cultivate their own
virtue and learn to love others. What is necessary for this? First, individuals need to
both be embedded in a community of personal relationships AND have more private
spaces where they can engage in self-discovery and reflection. Second, individuals
need the time to develop themselves, which in our society means they need the money
to afford said time.
And so, if most contracts are "consented to" within power differentials that present
significant threats to at least one party, and if some or all of the same contracts do
not abide by the natural moral law, "consent" in today's paradigm is worthless.
Considering this, your employer cannot demand you get the vaccine by recourse to an
employment contract. There was no reasonable case for a vaccine mandate prior to
omicron, and there absolutely is no reasonable case for a vaccine mandate now (and
that isn't even taking into account the potential for unforeseen long-term
consequences to pop up). Because there is no reasonable case for this, the demands
by the employer lie outside the moral authority of the employer. The mandates are
immoral. “Private companies” cannot just “do what they want.” (In fact, “private
companies” don’t even exist)
In coming pieces, I intend to lay out the material conditions that allow for people to have the
security to be able to make morally significant choices at a far greater extent than today. I
believe that the "freedom" so many advocate for on both Right and Left is tyranny in
disguise, aimed at enslaving people either to a class of property owners or a class of
bureaucrats (or, realistically, both). If we want to achieve anything resembling a true
"freedom," we require both a robust understanding of human flourishing and an acceptance
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of the material conditions that are necessary to make that flourishing a reality for more than
a select few.
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