Pointedstick wrote:
MediumTex wrote:
I will say it again: What do we expect from these people?
I wonder how Bush's new library will spin the Iraq debacle. Probably just more "Mission Accomplished!"
Similarly, I'm sure that Obama's future library will make much of the fact that he was a Nobel Peace Prize recipient.
Ideas like this are where my most anarchistic sentiments come from. I mean, if all we can expect from our elected leaders is lying, cheating, stealing, incompetence, cronyism, blame-shifting, and consequences that range from squandering other people's money to getting a lot of innocent people killed for no reason,
then what in hell's name do we need these people around for???
This is a good question... here's my take:
- Leadership sucks in the private sector as well. It's just human nature.
- Governmentless societies are inherantly fragile, evidenced by the fact that 1) there really are none, 2) the closest ones resemble Somalia more-so than Galtopia (see what I did there?), and 3) Nobody's rushing to start a "free island" anywhere.
- What the government does is inheratly related to life or death, unlike the production of widgets, maintaining a military (which would likely be the LAST part of our federal government to go if we started "slashing pieces away") is inherantly a violent affair. As is enforcing laws. I realize YOU may be a quasi-anarchist, but most self-appointed libertarians are not. They may want a smaller military or law enforcement mechanisms, but they don't want to abolish them.
- Government is actually good at some stuff. Putting a man on the moon when they did, inventing the nuclear bomb, certain (non-occupational) tactical military responses, a safety net retirement program with VERY little overhead as a percentage of benefits paid, an
attempt at trying to manage intellectual property (I wouldn't know how to handle this, but believe it's a very legitimate form of property... in fact much moreso than owning natural resources), some pretty awesome infrastructure projects (Panama Canal still boggles my f*cking mind). Obviously, this stuff is essentially always a private/public partnership, but that's the nature of any beast and really the whole point... good government facilitates private sector productivity, safety, a minimum level of human dignity and need, economic certainty, etc. It's only able to do so because of private production and private ideas, so I'm not even really giving "government" credit so much as saying it has a role no different than insurance has a role in our budget, even though it feels uncomfortable and at times unnecessary.
Government is coercive as a general principal, though. I think if we look at "realizable freedom" (instead of looking at freedom in a vacuum) we'll notice that if the government actually engages the private sector in the correct ways, our freedoms expand, not contract. The internet expands my freedom, the productivity-backing role of government, and even some safety nets, I'm convinced, have helped create the environment where the internet can reliably expand through the private sector.
Maybe this is an improper definition of "freedom," and I should be looking it as PURELY "lack of coercion from any other hman being," but then we have to realize that this is only one sliver of importance that at some point has to be wieghed against others... Back to my "free in the middle of the desert" analogy.
"Men did not make the earth. It is the value of the improvements only, and not the earth itself, that is individual property. Every proprietor owes to the community a ground rent for the land which he holds."
- Thomas Paine