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by feoren
1269 days ago
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And yet there are effective governments in the world; even in the U.S. (NIST, USGS, FAA, many others). No country has a perfect government, but for any given government function, you can find a country or state that is doing it well. We can examine why it's working well there and try to improve our own government. But that takes a lot of work, and it's much easier to just say "Government bad; burn it all down". Of course when you do that, you're usually just transferring power from an entity that the public has some limited control over, to an entity that the public has no control over. This is, of course, what the very-most corrupt want to happen. Dissolving government and giving that power to profit-seeking corporations is the result of extreme corruption, not the solution to it. Can we instead just all agree to actually try to make things better, instead of constantly burning down anything that's not perfect and telling ourselves Ayn Randian bullshit to make us feel good about it? |
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That's a very large strawman you just argued.
I'm saying that successful government is limited in nature. And that overgrown government usually not only fails to achieve its goals, it does more harm than were they absent. Look at the past 20 years of military intervention, for example.
> Of course when you do that, you're usually just transferring power from an entity that the public has some limited control over, to an entity that the public has no control over.
This isn't even remotely true. All if not most of our regulatory bodies & bureaucracies are beholden to lobbyists and special interests, so how exactly is that entrenched and unimpeachable corruption more accountable than private interests that are at least subject to competition? Say what you will, but the monopoly power of government is far greater than any private business in my opinion. One has a world-dominating military.