aldompdx
Posts: 538
Joined: 10/24/2004 Status: offline
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What you describe is an authority based relationship, not a power based relationship. The two are different. This response further assumes you live in a common law jurisdiction, Canada, where it is unlawful to own or enslave another person. The first core value is informed consent. One cannot exercise power to own or enslave another, because it is unlawful. However, one can freely choose to serve another in a similar manner, while always retaining the power to withdraw their consent to follow the preference of their partner (delegated authority). In this context, obedience is always a choice (SSC, RACK, SSICK). It is the responsibility of the controller to provide the foundational training which supports and enables the surrendered to grow, evolve, and transform their morals, boundaries, and limits -- which must always be respected. It is not coercion, manipulation, or oppression. It is not trust, faith, or hope. Instead, it is about having confidence in one's own discrimination to choose based on experience gained over time. The ultimate question posed is whether it is okay to exercise power and abuse another person against their will, or whether one must always respect the power of another person to freely choose what they share. Surrender is a free choice from self will, not an adverse imposition of a self proclaimed master's will. One can own their choice to surrender, or own their choice to exercise authority that is freely delegated by another, but one cannot own another person. It may be a nice fantasy or psychological delusion, but such ownership is not real, and the power to impose value or morality is also unreal within the civilized society and rule of law which underlies this discussion. It is actually the controller who surrenders to the boundaries and limits which the controllee chooses not to waive. Everybody has limits -- EVERYBODY. Death is the ultimate limit of life, which is a process of exercising power and authority, of thinking, feeling, and choosing. Hopefully, nobody here believes that homicide is an acceptable imposition of power against the values and inhibitions of another. Work backwards from that philosophical ultimatum.
< Message edited by aldompdx -- 8/9/2009 5:14:46 PM >
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