No problem; just didn’t want credit for something I didn’t write
On another thread you are advocating “going to war” with people who commit actions with which you disagree. Others, who disagree with you, would then retaliate.
In a state of anarchy, no one would be saying what rules we go along with and people would be doing what you want to do against abortionists against the sellers of alcohol, sellers of religion, blood donors, euthanizers, … whatever they were against, while those attakced would be retaliating.
What keeps this from happening is that we do have government to adjudicate these things.
[quotewWould you agree to the proposition that human nature resists moral perfection? If so, then moral perfection is a foolish goal, by this principle.
[/quote]
Moral perfection is within our grasp *and * is a very good goal, so is not a foolish goal.
Anarchy, otoh, is a bad goal because we humans are by nature social beings. It is against our nature and our practical limitations to live in isolation, and for us to live together requires an agreement on which rules we will live by, whether to drive on the right or the left all the way up to under which circumstances it is allowable or prohibited to take human life, as well as an enforcement method.
In the case of violence between the citizens of an anarchy, people would pick whichever side they believed to be righteous. That’s human nature
And then you have the Hatfields and McCoys–never-ending cycles of violence.
People want to see justice done–that too is part of human nature. The problem is that people’s desire for justice can be enlarged to revenge by their passion of anger–their view is clouded and they go too far, so the other side then desires justice, and so on. Thus, an unbiased mechanism, any reasonable mechanism, for sorting out disputes is needed, whether it be the wise man or elders of a village or whether it be the full panoply of a king’s court.
When the people as a whole are attacked, I guess the defenders will organize naturally.

I don’t know where anarchists get this idea (I have heard it before). First, a nation which has a government will have an well-trained and well-equipped army which can easily overwhelm the “naturally organized” and poorly eqipped troop an anarchic nation can get together.
True, there wouldn’t be a standing army, that’s the main point of government… but governments get so overbearing after they’ve been in power for 150+ years, is it really worth it?
Here you have hit the nail on the head! This is indeed the problem, what is at issue is the solution.
Is the solution anarchy? No, for the very readons you have brought up–there is just too much room for bad guys to do bad things and mess things up. Instead of having to keep an eye on those few who make up the government, one is at the mercy of *everyone *around them.
Our Founding Fathers (in the US) tried to institute a government with boundaries to keep the government from getting overbearing. Other societies have done the same.
What we need is not anarchy but a restoration of balances of power which used to exist in our nation. Government provides boundaries for us, but there need to be boundaries for government as well, because government is really just people who are just as capable of being bad as the rest of us are.