| "there's a lot more to go around for everybody" I think you've made an unstated assumption that it will go around to everybody. If wealth concentrates to the top over time, then most people could be worse off, and a few be spectacularly rich, even if desires remain unchanged. "Oh, OK then, we'll just peacefully crawl over here and die then." If the government utilities stop providing water and power to your house, what do you do? (I assume you want those things.) Yes, you could switch to solar, or a generator. And you could drill a well and harvest rainwater. These are high costs. Can most people afford doing that? And afford the higher maintenance? Or you might get a non-government utility to come in. Which means they need a line from the power plant and a pipe from the water works, both to your house. There's a lot of people in between who might say "no" to the request to string a power line or dig a trench across their property. (The concept of "right-of-way" requires some sort of coercion.) Yes, it's doable. There are entire communities which are off the grid. But costs time and money, which most people aren't interested in doing. Or you could sneak in and hook up to the government utilities, so each time they'll disconnect and make it harder. Or you could connect to your neighbors. Then the government disconnects them. This is inconvenience, not violence. Where's the government force in my example? But yet it is coercive, yes? When I graduated from college, I had to pay off a small library fine before I could get my diploma. The college didn't force me to pay the fee. But the threat that I wouldn't get my diploma unless I paid was a very big incentive. So I know at least one case where this model of mine makes a good prediction. "what that peace is built on". The "men-with-guns" models simplifies that to the point of farce. There are incentives to having and being part of a good government. There are means of coercion other than force. And there are men-with-guns in places without government. |
No. I've simply observed there is a lot more to go around.
"f the government utilities stop providing water and power to your house, what do you do?"
In general, and under the conditions you've stipulated where the government is also preventing me from taking any other options, start rioting. This is what I mean by your model failing to accurate predict the real world; you need only look out there to see this happening. If the government wishes to make this stick, they are going to have to use violence.
You seem to simply be unable to conceive of the possibility that violence is an option for the non-government as well, which will require either violence or acquiescence from the government in response. I assume this is because you live in a place that has probably been civilized for centuries. But it's all ultimately based on violence. Try to not pay your taxes, and not go to jail. Sure, the enforcement starts nonviolently; it isn't in anybody's best interests to escalate that fast. But if you've done anything the government cares about at all, sooner or later the police come out. If they don't, then it is because the government didn't care in the first place.
"Where's the violence?" Why, of course you don't see any. You've carefully crafted your examples to stop right where the violence would start in real life.
"There are means of coercion other than force."
Which, by definition, can therefore be resisted by force.
"And there are men-with-guns in places without government."
Which is actually an important point to why the "men-with-guns" model is not actually bad. Government centralizes the men-with-guns, so they fight each other with methods other than raw violence (voting, bureaucracy, etc.) and allow us to get on with our non-violence-related lives. The government monopoly on violence is a brilliant civilizational innovation, not something to be deplored. But it is also something not to forget. Laws either are backed by violence if you persist in violating them, or are ultimately irrelevant, and I wish people would treat passing laws a bit more seriously, instead waving the laws and consequently the guns around so casually. This is part of how the police have gotten so militarized in the US, by being so casual with our drug policy, among others.