Skipjack wrote:Karl Poppers
It is Karl Popper without the S at the end.
So it is. I corrected it above. Fascinating fellow, with fascinating ideas. Another Austrian

. I especially like his "paradox of tolerance." It exactly mirrors some thinking I did back in the early 90s. Of course he thought of it first, but I thought of it as well without any knowledge of his work. I suppose it's rather obvious, at least to conservatives. We have to deal with this sort of thinking on a regular basis.
He is addressing your point that " More work is always good" (or whatever it was you said along these lines.) by proffering a ridiculous example of a condition in which the work is meaningless, and therefore NOT good.
So you think that treating sick people is meaningless work? [/quote]
To me, the wonderfullness of the work is not the issue here, it is whether or not someone should be compelled to work on someone elses behalf.
It is simply another iteration of the slavery issue.
Sick people need to be healed, Hungry people need to eat food, homeless people need shelter. Those of us who feel that something needs to be done should do something, but what we should NOT do is make OTHER people do something.