So, I open the floor to any questions. What can I clarify? What issues would you like me to address?
The last Objectivism thread we had, I recall you mentioning that Objectivism (your Objectivism, anyway) wasn't a workable philosophy. While it had value as a foil to current political and philosophical thinking, it wasn't meant and shouldn't be interpreted as a discrete system of ethics which could stand on its own. In short, that any attempt at a Galt's Gulch-style of large, self-contained Objectivist community would be doomed to failure the moment it hit reality.
Would you still take that stance? If so, what do you think the principal failure points are? What is lacking in current Objectivist philosophy that would be necessary to prevent a slide from Galt's Gulch to Lord of the Flies?
I'll take a stab at it without trying to speak for Dinwar. I think what you are doing here is applying a double standard. You wish to exercise your preference (that's what a rational egoist would do) while denying to certain others (in this case the rich) the freedom to do the same with whatever income they might prefer to keep. How do you justify that?
I'll take a stab at justifying it for Dani. A dollar buys a poor man a lot more freedom than a rich man. Taxes are a burden to be shared by all, in as equitable a manner as possible. Normalizing the costs to freedom, this means rich men should be paying a substantially higher share of the burden in raw $ amounts, precisely because they can afford to.
Same thing. Person A has that right - if they have the fossil fuel, they can burn it. But sometimes land disappears beneath the waves, and there is no right for that not to happen.
But as a societal bargain, it's a worthwhile tradeoff.
That doesn't follow. If I dam a river, and flood the people upstream, and gouge the people downstream, they would both argue that, yes, they DO have a right to have their land not disappear beneath the waves, or the waves not disappear from the land, as an effect of my usage. I believe Dinwar has said as much in previous threads, so whether or not it's an Objectivist position, it's a Dinwarist one.
So, property owners are responsible for the negative externalities of their usage. In the case of global warming though, as with most tragic commons, the problem is that it is simply impractical to resolve through the usually-proposed suits. A class-action lawsuit against a class action defense, with most of the participants being on both sides to various degrees, and damages (therefore, penalties) extending to centuries from now? Ridiculous!
But that doesn't mean individuals have no right not to be influenced by others' externalities. It just means Objectivism (and Libertarianism, and any other political philosophy which thinks lawsuits alone can solve everything) fails to protect that right.
That doesn't jive with the way English works.