@Didymos Thomas,
Didymos Thomas;59028 wrote:Well, if the best for society is guarding individual freedom, then you would agree that the state should do what is best for society.
(...)
In order to pay for a military, something typically seen as necessary for guarding individual freedom for people within a given nation, the government must tax and spend. But you say this is socialism.
How can a government operate without taking money from some people and investing those funds in the greater good of society? How could a government maintain a police force, for example?
(...)
You argue that socialism is an inappropriate model for a state, and define socialism. By defining socialism, and making it clear that you think a state should not employ socialism, you express to some extent what a state should not do.
You do agree that socialism is a matter of degree. We have total anarchism on the one extreme - no government - and collectivism at the other - a giant welfare nanny state.
If I make a case against the death penalty, I don't have to be against persecuting all crime. It's not all or nothing. In the same way, I'm not against military, police or a fire department, and other limited aspects that could be seen as socialism. I want to limit the government, not abolish it. And I don't think the negatives of one extreme are a good argument for the other extreme, when the question is finding the right middle ground.
The state has the objective to guard individual freedom, and thereby also to make society better. That is the social contract we employ the government for. The obbjective is maximising individual freedom. To have no government al all would just result in lawlessness.
I admit that is speculation, maybe we would be better of with anarchism, I don't think so. The most unscrupulous warlord would just take the whole thing over. I don't see a lot of individual freedom in that scenario.
I think there is a clear distinction between the government offering security, order and equality of opportunity, and taking one persons money and giving it to another person for the only reason that the first person is the minority and cant do anything about it.
I also think publicly paid higher education, like we see it in europe, is a good idea. That benefits equality of opportunity, I reject attempting equality of outcome.
And I think all that can be done with a
flat tax rate. Or even the
FairTax.
As I calculate it, a flat tax would eliminate the loop holes for the rich. (Please correct me Mr. Power.)
Didymos Thomas;59028 wrote:But what I fail to understand is how individual freedom is marred by taxation and government spending.
Money flowing through the government means that it has power. The more the government does, the more money it takes and redistributes, the more objectives it tries to fulfil, the more power it has.
Note that a strong military is something that most socialists reject.
Didymos Thomas;59028 wrote:Are you saying that taxation is, in effect, an activity by which the state deprives people the right to "own their own money"?
Yes, taking someones money by force is depriving them to own their own money.
---------- Post added at 04:01 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:47 PM ----------
Mr. Fight the Power;59031 wrote:I can understand why people think we have a need for police, although I think that sort of thing is best handled by insurance companies and private arbitration. The question I have, though, is if a nation like the US or like the UK did not have a standing army, or at least had a small collection of private police forces, would it have to worry about being attacked? What benefit could be garnered by attacking the US or the UK? After all, I can say with relative certainty that the primary need for a US military is caused by the US military.
I believe that without a military we would be quickly attacked, and the reason that that european nations can afford to barely have any military, because they - and the enemies - know that the US would step in.
Adjusted for purchasing power parity, the US spends as much on military as the rest of the world combined. That is including the bad guys.
Wiki
Of course all those nations don't have
no military. It's that they don't have to have one to actually defend themselves,
because the US would step in when attacked, and they know that.
To not repeat WW-I and WW-II, after WW-II the notion was to organise the western world in a way, that would make another european arms race unlikely.
So european nations should just not have enough military, for that to be an issue again.
Instead, the US would pledge to watch over them, so the european nations wouldn't have to have much military themselves.
Canada could conveniently join in, such as places like Australia and Japan.
Some say that money not spent on military was spent on the socialist welfare states, we see in europe today.
It's an overall explanation that makes sense to me, if you have a good argument against it, go ahead.