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by ClumsyPilot
1022 days ago
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Can you define government intervention? For example is it capitalist or socialist to have a national bank and currency? Should each private bank print their own currency? When government provides employees protections against unfair dismissal we call that government intervention. But we regularly prosecute and imprison employees for 'stealing intellectual property' at the taxpayer's expense, or enforse non-competes using the power of the state, and thats never called government intervention. The way I see it, people who use term 'government intervention' are trying to have their cake and eat it. If government should not intervene when Amazon pays no taxes and abuses its monopoly position, then it should also not expend taxpayer money to protect them from shoplifting. |
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If you and your employer agree to have a contract enforced by the government then enforcement of the contract is not government intervention (and you should be forced to pay for the cost of that contract, not the taxpayer). There is also no such thing as stealing intellectual property.
Shoplifting violates the 'force is only justified in response to force' principle, which arguably the government's only purpose is to prevent. Not paying income taxes or being a monopoly does not. Not wanting to give you something is not the same as taking something away from you, as much as you wish it was.