No matter what politician or party we vote for, the belief that a select coterie of fallible human beings should operate an all-powerful institution to meddle in the lives of everyone else is paramount, not only in those who seek to lead but also in those who seek to be led. — NOS4A2
I think there is a direct relationship between statism and population.
I think there is a direct relationship between statism and population. — James Riley
It seems as individuals grow more powerless, alignment to states and political parties and ideologies becomes a means of satiating their will to power. — Tzeentch
Whenever I flirt with anarchism or throw shade at the government, for example, someone always brings up roads and bridges and how a state is necessary for infrastructure, the implication being that only man in his statist form can flatten ground and lay asphalt. — NOS4A2
I fear the latter end of the spectrum because it approaches a degree of statism expressed in fascism and made concrete by a variety of totalitarian regimes. — NOS4A2
The state is only a consequence of the development of technique (being a technique in itself). — darthbarracuda
Yes that seems logical to me. Instinctively I have some sympathy with NOS on this. I love post apocalyptic stories and dramas that involve drastic population reduction so we have a nearly empty world again with no authorities. What authorities there are might be private gangs. So I'd probably start setting up a pubic authority asap and embark on a programme of public goods, as long as the electorate let me of course. — bert1
at or beyond a critical threshold, — 180 Proof
aggregately decoupling the means of consumption from the means of production. — 180 Proof
Aristotle wrote Politics, which is merely to say that for at least 2300 years and no doubt double that, people have been thinking about government. The US founding fathers thought about it and decided that some government was necessary, and the form they cast it into, subject to correction, is the oldest currently continuously existing form of government on the planet, excepting the governments of the thirteen colonies that preceded it, from which much was borrowed, and perhaps the Iroquois Nation, from which apparently much was borrowed.I don't understand your point, Tim. Perhaps this is because you insert quotes where your own thinking could have been. — NOS4A2
Statism takes a variety of poses. My own is of the minimal, “night watchmen” variety. Others prefer the state to intervene in nearly every facet of life, if not to nominally determine and protect our rights, than to provide the most basic necessities and securities, to direct our trade and industry, to educate, to house, to regulate our lives as if it were a parent and we it’s unweaned children. I fear the latter end of the spectrum because it approaches a degree of statism expressed in fascism and made concrete by a variety of totalitarian regimes. — NOS4A2
Crash mass consumption — 180 Proof
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