I notice that “simpler/fewer laws” is leading in the poll, and I want to ask the people who picked that a question to make sure they understand it right: would you say that a government with a single rule, “obey all commands from the monarch”, is a “small” government? Because that’s very few and very simple laws; it’s just not a very permissive law. — Pfhorrest
the notion that the power of government to issue laws is restricted to certain clearly defined domains. — ChatteringMonkey
The thing that defines it, is not the brute amount of laws or finances, but the fact that it's powers to govern (the issue laws) is restricted severely. — ChatteringMonkey
It's tough, because of the whole climate surrounding these issues, but I think i should be possible to come to some empirically grounded conclusions. — ChatteringMonkey
empirically some amount of regulation seems to work better than no regulation or complete regulation. — ChatteringMonkey
agree, in general, but we need also to agree on objectives as no empirical data can tell us what our objectives 'should' be. I fear that, in this, we will end up with so much disagreement as to render any objective data about how to achieve these objectives useless.
Hence I defer to the idea of battling it out politically. — Isaac
I'm not even sure we can get there, but I agree it's probably true. Technically, the disasters of excessive state control could have been caused by any number of comorbid features. Those states were hardly tried out during easy times globally. Likewise with no states at all, one would have to look at context to check it wasn't external factors which caused the problems. I don't think we really have a large enough sample size.
That being said, we've got to decide one way or another and I agree the failures we've seen at either extreme are good enough evidence to be going on with, in the absence of any better. — Isaac
much of battling it out politically ends up being about securing votes, so ultimately about the perception of doing something rather than actually doing that something. — ChatteringMonkey
Maybe if we could at least get clear on those, some of the disagreement would go away. — ChatteringMonkey
Yeah, I certainly think it can't hurt, and may just eliminate a little of the disagreement. At least clarify the options. One of the big problems I think is that people can try to support their policies with an excessive coverage of objectives (by which I mean claim their preferred policy meets 'everyone's' aims). If we had greater clarity about methods it would at least cut down on this type of deception. Very few things are panaceas and most sacrifice some objective for another, yet if you read any political manifesto you'd think they'd found the door to Valhalla. — Isaac
Besides municipal, county, village, & (small) island governing bodies almost by definition, and most Western social democracies (i.e. market socialist welfare states), any network or federation of cooperatives like Mondragon in the Basque region of Spain, etc have "small(er)" adverse, or unaccountable, impacts on civil society (e.g.) in terms of public cost : public benefit ratios (high) than most laissez-faire / administrative 'nation states' - certainly in comparison to the United States and other state capitalist paradises like Singapore, Vietnam, China, (Thatcherite) Britain, etc - the public cost : public benefit ratios of which are low(ering) while the public cost : private benefits are skyrocketing (i.e. corporate subsidies (e.g. "neoliberal supply-side" policies) that shift fiscal burdens on to median income taxpayers, non-luxury consumers & the rest of the precariat).Are there any real world examples of small governments? — Michael
I'm not twisting anything. You called rights 'wants'. You never mentioned that some had 'reasons' to be included as rights while others didn't. So what are the criteria for something to be a 'right' that you think say, free speech, qualifies for but healthcare (where its available) does not?
I never called rights ”wants”. I called your version of rights “wants”, which I don’t believe to be rights at all. — NOS4A2
Pretend rights like healthcare are not, but are demands for goods and services from the government and other tax-payers. — NOS4A2
Apparently voting for political parties, is much less about what the individual policies are of the political parties on certain issues, but more akin to supporting and identifying with a certain sports team. You choose a side, and usually stick to that side no matter what policies they propose, because its your side. So there's that. — ChatteringMonkey
What you 'call it' is a pointless waste of time on a philosophy forum, we're not discussing your pet names for things. If you want to establish a difference between your list of 'rights' and my list of 'wants' which has a bearing on which the government should provide, you'll have to do more than just label them.
What criteria are you using to decide which services the government should and should not supply?
What justification are you using for your claim that these criteria are anything more than just your personal 'wants' regarding what you want your government to provide?
Defence of property, protection of free speech and defence from military invasion are all services you demand from the government. Why are your demands different from mine? 'Cause all I'm getting at the moment as a difference is that yours allow people to become self-obsessed sociopaths, whereas mine actually give a shit about other people.
My claims are different because they aim to protect citizens from tyranny. Yours introduce a sort of tyranny, that one must give up the fruits of his labor for the sake of others. — NOS4A2
If you gave a shit about people you wouldn’t delegate your duties to the government. There is nothing stopping you from providing healthcare or housing yourself. — NOS4A2
Right. And why (apart from your own personal preference) should government services be limited to protection against tyranny? Why (apart from your own personal preference) should people who share the same country not give up some of the fruits of their labours for the sake of others?
Yes there is. I don't have enough money. I need someone with power to extract money from those who have more than me.
It isn’t a Government service to refuse to engage in tyranny of its citizens. It’s a matter of ethics and good government. — NOS4A2
There is a long list of thinking men and women who argue for free speech, for example. These are long, hard-fought battles, and the existence of rights are the fruits of these battles. — NOS4A2
Yes there is. I don't have enough money. I need someone with power to extract money from those who have more than me.
Straight from the horses mouth. — NOS4A2
I guess that a government that has limited legislative power, a small government, could have very strict laws on the few subjects they are allowed to regulate. So small government doesn't necessarily mean permissive across the board, but it certainly does for the things they are not allowed to regulate, as no regulation is permissive naturally. — ChatteringMonkey
I'm not talking about the government's tyranny. You said that the government should protect your property, protect your right to free speech and defend you from threats to your freedom. Those are services. Why (apart from your own personal preference) should government services be limited to those.
So, do I take it your answer to the question of how you justify your claims about what services the government should and should not provide is whether a long list of intellectuals agree with it?
There is a long list of thinking men who argue for all the other human rights too, as there are who argue for free healthcare, even full egalitarianism. Are you suggesting there's some sort of consensus among intellectuals about what services the government should provide? I don't think your neo-con liberalism is going to come out well from that criteria.
And? You asked me why I didn't provide healthcare and housing. Its because I haven't got enough money. If I want others to have healthcare and housing I'll need to get money from others who are richer than me. What point do you think you're making here?
Why don't they have a choice in it? Where did I suggest we get slave labour to build houses?
There's all sorts of qualifications we can put on rights without abandoning them.
No, the topic is 'small government'.
you cannot simply dismiss these claims on the basis of a simple philosophical position, you're now having to demonstrate that each claim is unsustainable on its own merits.
The point is that you've agreed these claims are not denied the status of 'rights' on some categorical philosophical basis.
We agreed that harm to society resulting from satisfying these claims is the only reason to dismiss them. Seeing as the harm to society these claims may cause is still a moot point among experts, that should be the end of it.
No, what I mean is it’s about confronting the arguments, not accepting the consensus. — NOS4A2
Should I be allowed to take from you the fruits of your labor and use it as I see fit? Personally I see that as morally wrong just as I would any kind of thievery. — NOS4A2
Nothing is stopping you but your own refusal to act. So why not try to care for others instead of demanding others fund and do it for you? — NOS4A2
Why don't they have a choice in it? Where did I suggest we get slave labour to build houses?
Because rights entail duties. A duty must be fulfilled. — BitconnectCarlos
You do realize that we have homeless shelters? — BitconnectCarlos
This is a perfectly valid way to go out it, if you're going to pitch an idea I'm going to try to press you for specifics and when you can't provide those specifics or the details result in undesirable consequences that makes everything worse then maybe, just maybe, you should take that into consideration. — BitconnectCarlos
I have presented a philosophical distinction between positive and negative rights but you didn't really care. — BitconnectCarlos
When you place the material well-being of society above fairness or free choice you will fail. — BitconnectCarlos
But you haven't provided any arguments whatsoever. All you've done is said things you prefer. You prefer states to only "limit government power while at the same time defending me from those who would take my freedoms away." and you dislike those that provide other services. All Along you're hinting at it being about more than just your personal preferences but you haven't said in what way.
Who said anything about "as you see fit"? I was talking about taking excess to meet people's basic needs. Yes, you should be allowed to take excessive wealth from me to give it to others who do not yet have their basic needs met. I see it as morally wrong to allow some people to suffer while others have more than they need.
I am. I support governments who take money from those that have spare and give it to those in need. Why is demanding money from those who have spare not caring?
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