Skybird |
02-23-17 01:10 PM |
The questions you asked got adressed on that site, under some of its links. These answers are not perfect, in fact I find them a bit too short as that I woudl call them anything but "naive". But they are a start.
-->> Why should I care to endlessly repeat myself if you do not even care to check a linked site carefully? even more since I replied to this question in past years under similar topics?
As I said, the answers to "external threats" may not be fully thoguht out, still, but imagine you continue with thew ways we have - do yo9u think these are better thought out? I see them leading us deeper and deeper into a terrible disaster.
Daring the new, may or may not come with risks and may end in a mess. sticking with what we have, is guaranteed to end in a mess.
Some years ago I linked a whole thread to the example of this American city, name I forgot, where they had drmataically reduced the debts and taxation and practiced something that also points at the concept of "away from polltical giovernment, towards privatization".
You guys all already trust in your business contracts you maintain duzrign your life, for car leasing to credit cards compoanies or electricity, fire protection, and so forth. Here you see no problem. But the state, where it is enforcing its monopoly on you, betraying and ripping you off day in day out - that is opkay for you, you do not want it to be replaced by another business or treaty relation by you that you can use to sue the provider of state functions if he violates his obligations or unilaterally changes existing factors of the relation between you and the state to your disadvantage?
Where is your logic in that? So afraid of leaving the stable you are being kept in, afraid the big empty sky outside could fall onto you if there is no state-maintained roof above your heads?
There is a strong correlation between man-made violent disasters as well as slavery-like social structures, and the existence of state-like structures. Think about that.
Strates run their show without needing to fear competition, thy must not show good perofrmance, and nthat is what has brought us so deep into the mess of the present. Any business compoany that would be mangaed like state smanage themselevs,a dn that woudl waste its incomes and potentials like the state uses to do, would go bancrupt and disappear from the market. Not so the state.
With your blind loyalty to the idea of statehood, you help to keep alive and dominant the most dysfunctional, expensive and uncompetitive model of big social structures there is. And if you have still have not noticed it by now: we have entered the era when the bills for our follies started to get handed out.
We do not need states. Politicians need states.
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