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by claytongulick 1185 days ago
I appreciate your perspective, because it's one that I've so often found confounding.

> I think I lie towards giving up more if it gives me a comfortable society in return

It seems like you are very practical minded, which I appreciate.

I think the fundamental skepticism that those of us who tend to be more "libertarian" minded is whether you're actually getting value in return for giving up liberties.

> I am willing to mask up if it means that fewer people in my vicinity may "possibly" get sick less.

I think this was the mentality of the majority of people who supported universal masking, and I think it came from a genuinely good place. The issue that I had with it was the lack of evidence to support universal masking, and the draconian implementation without regard to potential negative consequences. It struck me at the time as being the TSA of pandemic response, more theater than effective intervention. Time and research seem to have borne this out.

> I am okay with video cameras in public places if it means less crime in my neighborhood.

Except they don't on their own [1], but they are an incredible weapon and boost in power granted to the surveillance state.

> I am willing to pay more taxes if it means public infrastructure can be improved and schools can get better teachers.

The relationship between taxes and education outcomes is complex (at best) [2], and you need only live in the North East for a short period of time, pay those exorbitant taxes and drive 95 and the Jersey Turnpike to understand that higher taxes don't necessarily translate to better infrastructure.

Drive from New Mexico, through Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama to Florida sometime and compare the roads and bridges.

I've lived all over the U.S. and experienced the difference between many states. They each have unique challenges, but I can tell you one rule that's held true in all my travels: granting more power and money to the government past a certain point doesn't translate into a better quality of life for the people.

[1] https://www.mtas.tennessee.edu/knowledgebase/there-empirical...

[2] https://www.forbes.com/sites/chuckdevore/2019/01/21/a-connec...

2 comments

I do live in the North east so I partially understand. I would love to go around more of the US and understand these differences. Thank you for your measured response!
> Drive from New Mexico, through Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama to Florida sometime and compare the roads and bridges.

TBF it's much easier to maintain infrastructure in a mild climate.

Sorry, I should have been more clear: my point was to compare and contrast between the roads and bridges of those states.

There's significant quality differences between them that are noticable as soon as you drive across the state line.

I've done the drive many times, and it's always stood out to me.