E
exnihilo
Guest
Corporations are children of the state. They are a legal fiction. Big government has created big corporations. They exists because of each other and build each other up.If I had to choose, I’d say “smaller.” But most folks these days who talk about “smaller government” have in mind a society without a conception of the common good, characterized by radical individualism, and probably dominated by big corporations. (This is less likely to be held up as a good, but it seems to me that it would be the inevitable effect of “small government” political programs.)
Indeed the military is one of the largest expenditures of the federal government. What I observe is the Democrats want big government for social programs and the Republicans for military. In reality they are both social programs. As terrible as giving people money for nothing is destroying the world is worse.It also seems to me that “small government” often refers only to domestic, civil programs. I have a lot more respect for consistent “small government” folks like Ron Paul than for the typical “small government” Republican who wants a large military.
How are we not already serfs to Bill Gates? His company as it is buys up competition. Google has become a big firm and if you notice is itself buying up any good idea that comes along.The question, in my mind, is: if we dismantled much of the present government bureaucracy (which in itself is something I would favor), would the result be a growth in small business and a revival of the institutions of “civil society,” or would we all just become serfs to Bill Gates? I tend to think the latter. So I welcome the “anti-business” measures of the Democrats, which pit the two leviathans of our society against each other. That way maybe the rest of us can eke out some space in which to live normal lives.
Why would you think the ‘anti-business’ measures will actually achieve their stated purpose? Why would you think that the Democrats policy will really work? The Dems as much as the Republicans dont really spend their time hanging out with the common man. They hang out with rich industrialists. The corporations write the laws that regulate them. They make sure they have outs and that the law will strengthen their position by creating barriers to entry. It is no mistake that GE pays nothing in corporate tax. They wrote the laws.