by Outcast_Searcher » Mon 27 Jul 2009, 15:33:08
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dohboi', '
')Because government power is based upon violence and private power is based upon voluntary agreements.
Bill Gates can't legally pull my car over and take my cash just because I can't prove where I got it. Exxon Mobil can't legally bust into my house and shoot me because a confidential informant said I had some weed.
I'm a libertarian, but
someone will end up in power, and too much power makes whoever it is a bad actor. Consider the banks recently. Unless you are financially completely strong/responsible (I know - not being that way is mostly a choice) - banks have become literally criminal enterprises in how they treat their credit card customers - by retroactively and dramatically changing the terms of already outstanding loans, for example. They don't break your legs (so far), but this behavior is just as immoral, IMO.
Medical insurance is another example. Although, in theory, I like free markets and less government, I actually support the current idea of a public option to COMPETE with private insurance. Why? Because medical insurance is so crucial, and the insurance companies have become too powerful and now behave badly. My carrier has raised my rates about 45% in just two years, and I only go to the doc. once a year and my health hasn't changed. How much profit margin is enough? How afraid of their phalanx of lawyers is it reasonable for me to be if I actually get seriously ill?
It's all about balance. With a full generation as an adult to sit back and watch the world work, perhaps I'm getting senile, but I suspect I'm a lot less idealistic than I was in my 20's, and perhaps a bit more objective.
The mixed system we have is messy, wasteful, and often stupid in the short term, but in the LONG term, it provides quite a bit of balance. I suspect that's why it holds together as well as it does.
To claim that dealing with private individuals is always better because we are theoretically free not to deal with them doesn't cut it in the modern first world complexity when bad actors with sticky products (like finance and medicine) have the concentrated power to do major harm to their customers, and those customers can do little to fight back without government controls.
Given the track record of the perma-doomer blogs, I wouldn't bet a fast crash doomer's money on their predictions.