... Once real estate (e.g. a country) is fully absorbed into the commercial matrix, it is essentially deterritorialized. ...
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Replying to @Outsideness @KalishJantzen
... Nations don't trade territory often, but there's no reason why they couldn't, if deeper and more fluid markets were operating.
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Replying to @Outsideness @KalishJantzen
... There's nothing territorially 'fixed' about a state, except through inertia.
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Replying to @Outsideness @KalishJantzen
So you basically eject human agents and create an autistic "matrix" of things.
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Replying to @Neoabsolutism @KalishJantzen
Human agents are already subsumed into a greater matrix of things -- physical, biological, technological, and commercial -- which selects.
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Cnut the Great tried to explain, but hubristic ultra-humanists don't want to listen.
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This appeal to consequences is just empty. You can't investigate anything because you haven't a clue on anthropology.
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Replying to @Neoabsolutism @Depopulator83 and
Worse actually, you work from assumed liberal antrhopology.
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The rage against "liberal anthropology" is modern history's most continuous comedy feature.
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Replying to @Outsideness @Neoabsolutism and
"You can't treat people as atomized contractual agents!" "Buzz off, we're doing serious business here."
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