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by sprucevoid
461 days ago
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> protecting the basic rights that everyone has to have to have a free, civil society, and stopping there. A government that has more power than that has too much power. What's your empirical evidence for thinking that such a setup is better and that going further than that brings "eternal conflict"? Since all prosperous democratic countries in e.g. north america and europe combine private property with taxation for public provision that goes beyond what you desire. Furthermore in empirical studies of life satisfaction and happiness the top of the list is consistently held by countries with extensive welfare states funded by taxes[0]. How does that square with your claim? [0] https://happiness-report.s3.amazonaws.com/2024/WHR+24.pdf#pa... |
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What if you gave the same happiness survey to people in Saga period Iceland, which had no government at all?
Or to people in some of the American colonies in the late 1600s and early 1700s, such as Pennsylvania, which had governments, but those governments did virtually nothing?
The fact that all first world countries today have governments with vastly more power is no evidence at all that such a system is the best. All it means is that that's the only kind of system that's being evaluated for first world countries. It's easy to place first if you're the only one in the race.