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Original post by LessBread
So that's your reason for beating your wife?
How about avoiding the loaded questions?
Why not debunk the question? "Big Business" uses government to create impediments for entry into the free market, and exploit these regulations to create cartels and monopolies. As a supporter of said regulations why not just square your position? We both apparently agree that government has a hand played in the creation of cartels, and that business often pulls the strings of policy to generate graft, why do you continue to support this creation?
Your earlier point about graft existing without government is fine but shouldn't government first be uninvolved in said graft and only then protect the citizen from the graft?
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Jefferson held that government is the institution that secures natural rights. You seem to believe that government is only capable of evil. How can you square your fondness for Jefferson with that?
As I've stated before, my understanding of "a MOST perfect union" is incomplete and still needs continuous development. Below are some of the quotes penned by Jefferson that makes me fond of him.
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A democracy is nothing more than mob rule, where fifty-one percent of the people may take away the rights of the other forty-nine.
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A wise and frugal government, which shall leave men free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned - this is the sum of good government.
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Conquest is not in our principles. It is inconsistent with our government.
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Dependence begets subservience and venality, suffocates the germ of virtue, and prepares fit tools for the designs of ambition.
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Every government degenerates when trusted to the rulers of the people alone. The people themselves are its only safe depositories.
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Experience hath shewn, that even under the best forms of government those entrusted with power have, in time, and by slow operations, perverted it into tyranny.
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I own that I am not a friend to a very energetic government. It is always oppressive.
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I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them.
Any number of those quotes would spawn a lengthy debate with you on this forum. I take Jefferson's view that a good government is exceptionally limited in its role. It may be that even while so limited it is simply a matter of time before it grows to be a tyranny. He was obviously concerned with this issue.
Who's to say if he had modern technology and an understanding of the last 200 hundred years he wouldn't revise his views in some ways? I think it is foolhardy to assume he wouldn't.
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The Presidents I listed made America what it is, so if you don't like them because of what they accomplished, then you don't like America, because what they accomplished was the making of America.
In your very narrow and "made for this thread" definition of it I imagine you're correct. Maybe I like Spooner, Rothbard, and Jefferson for what this country could be and the impacts they've had. Maybe I like the people and the general will of independence that was once more popular. Maybe I like this country in spite of a president that sent his political detractors to jail and deported them and suspended your right to a fair trial, or squashed the freedom of the press. Maybe I like it in spite of a president that extended the great depression and set the stage for the downfall of the us government by hanging future generations with a ponzi scheme form of entitlement.
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Now you say that you see a role for government in providing national defense and a justice system, but those are the very functions that pose the greatest threats to liberty, indeed, potentially violent threats to liberty. I find it very odd that an anti-statist would identify those two functions as acceptable.
I agree completely. Those two issues are both extremely sensitive to corruption and easy entries into tyrannical rule. Your point about "violent" threats are moot because all incursions of liberty are a violation of the right to self ownership. Or stated more simply, you can't take away my liberty without violence or the credible threat of violence.
I'll give you the background basis of where I'm coming from.
All forms of monopolies are bad. All forms of monopolies tend to create additional monopolies. In its purest form a standing army and a justice system are the mechanical hands of a monopoly on force in a given geographical region.
This is the genesis of the "government is a necessary evil" mantra.
The belief that in order for society to function at or near peak that a monopoly on force must exist.
If you look to nature you see that you have both models represented.
Homogeneous social creatures tend towards a monopoly on force. Wolves have an alpha that maintains a monopoly on force, the same is true for many types of homogeneous groups.
The ecosystem, in all its permutations, has no monopoly on force. A eats B eats C is eaten by bacteria. Repeat ad infinitum.
Both models have "made the cut" through the years.
The anarchist view of the justice system I'm not far from being able to internalize.
Here is Rothbard on a treatment of the issue. I wish he were alive today so I could prompt the guy to extend his treatment and handle a few special cases. What if a victim has no heir and is killed in a crime? For instance, a homeless person whos identity is unknown. Would the murder of that person be legal in effect? So I can see some issues in his outline.
There are quite a few positives as well. If you've ever been involved in arbitration it tends to be more representative than public courts so long as both parties choose the arbitor and not the monied party only. Especially in the case of specialization. When you're dealing with a highly specialized case there's some real advantage for both parties if the arbitor understands the topic at hand.
On national defense,
Here is an unsatisfactory treatment by Rothbard. I have more issues with this part. The concept and implications of private defense on a national level seem utopian. Whereby economics and even justice can work iteratively, national defense is zero sum in many cases.
That said, I'm still hitting it from different angles. I'm not prepared to discard it entirely.