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by wissler
4908 days ago
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The system has been screwed up to the point where it certainly appears as if we need it, as if that is the most just solution to the problems. However, that appearance is a mirage. Unfortunately, we are so far down the path of doing things the wrong way that stating the proper solution only leads to misunderstanding. Think of a complex software system that has hack piled upon hack, and where the only programmers left are those who've been the ones piling on the hacks. These are not the people who can understand that what they've been doing is wrong. Our system is the final consequence of people who, among other things, want safety guaranteed by the government. Unfortunately, there are no guarantees in life, so they are chasing a fantasy, and fantasies can become hideously expensive, as this one has. It is tragic that they do not comprehend what they are doing to themselves, but it is even more tragic that what they are doing isn't only to themselves, but to those of us who understand as well. |
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> Our system is the final consequence of people who want safety guaranteed by the government.
That's quite a statement and I expect you intended unjustifiable hyperbole. Yet, for a moment, let's jump down the rabbit hole of political philosophy debate.
There are no guarantees in life (aside from death) and on this we agree. Accepting this fact does not require us to be a slave to it; however. As a parent, for example, I could tell my children, life isn't fair, go out and buy your own dinner, but I chose not to. I chose to create a household that in intentionally does not simulate the harsh realities of nature.
Likewise, I decide to live in a community in which we reject the idea that we are all barbarian animals, fighting for scarce resources in a dog-eat-dog world. Instead, we chose to compromise, pool resources and worth together to create the living environment to which we aspire.
This model extends naturally to government. Indeed it is the source from which government springs. Government is the cooperation of the community to reject the harsh world in which we live and try to create a better one. We often fall short. Yet in some ways, we achieve some victory over cruel nature. We establish security from enemies with our armies. We build and protect common goods such as roads and parks.
Now at some point, we quickly start to diverge in what everyone in the community wants. Some of us believe its in our benefit to fund the education of all of our next generation. And some of us believe that it would be in the benefit of the community that all would have equal access to some form of medical care. We believe that we are a rich enough, prosperous enough community, that we can afford to ensure even the poorest among us need not worry whether or not they can afford medical care. We do not believe the government is required to coddle us. We do not believe the government will solve all our problems or eliminate all disease. Instead, we want to live in a society which cares enough for one another that we fund health care for all members.
That's the philosophical difference. Not some delusional guarantee of safety or a misplaced sense of entitlement. It's an aspiration of a better world and a rejection of idea that we are enslaved into the brutal nature in which we find ourselves.