*That’s the thing. You do not “implement”, you stop “implementing”. You just stop pushing people to live as you think they should, stop looting them to pay for the things YOU value.
You criticize the distributists because they do not seem to have a plan for getting from here to there, yet your plan does not seem to consist of much. What do you think, that the government will wither away?
And it is quite clear just from our conversation that you and I have very different values. If you promote your values, and I promote mine, then nothing is really going to happen.*
You persuade by example, are vigilant for proposed schemes to transfer wealth or destroy the concept of private property via property taxes…even for the poor or for the children.
OK, people have been doing this for a century, and yet all that has happened is that by your standards, things have gotten worse.
Ends do not justify means. Can you imagine how much money gov’t schooling saved and transferred to *Big Business by training people to be job seekers, home owners, consumers, under compulsion and the lie that they were being educated?
I agree with you about education, but at the same time, I think that you go too far in your thinking. The fact that it is wrong of the government to force a business-inspired propagandistic education on our children does not mean that it is wrong for the government to tax, which you call stealing, even to use some of that money to help people who really need help.
I see the problem here as what someone else mentioned, a lack of control by the people (real human beings, not the legal persons known as corporations) over the government. And this is something which has developed since the Constitution was signed.
Ron Paul is a statist, but he would remove layers of bureaucracy and tyranny,…
Whatever I am or end up being, my desire is for a situation in which the things I see as having too much power are scaled back to a human level. I see a major problem as being the lack of subsidiarity caused by power-mongering–our main difference is that I see a necessity for a balance of powers rather than the eradication of what I see as only one source of the problem, and which you see as the sole source of the problems.
*I agree. Subsidiarity and broad based property ownership are desirable.
I see what you are saying and I agree.
But property owners are independent and do not need the state.
This is where your thinking just for me shatters into little pieces.*
To me, the “state” is to be like an umpire. It is supposed to take care of things which need to be taken care of on a corporate level: so that instead of each individual in a community separately hiring a road-building crew to build and maintain roads, or even having each and every property-owner having a tollbooth to get people to pay for the use of the road (imagine that in your suburban subdivision!), the whole thing is taken care of by the community working together as a whole.
And the umpire-state regulates things like property boundaries. If my neighbor and I differ as to where the boundary is, then what are we going to do? Duke it out? Build fences? No, we should be able to have an independently maintained record to clarify and settle each claim.*
But should the local government be so independent of us that they can do this or that that we do not like? Should one or two people in the area have so much power in the structure that they get their way to the detriment of the rest? No–and this is where the mediating structures of guilds and other organizations such as churches (which are currently forbidden to involve themselves in politics) can come in and lend a balancing weight.
So to me the idea that just because someone owns property they become independent and not in need of the state is inaccurate.
They have their own resources.
Property owners have their own resources… but do they have sufficient resources? Not necessarily. I own property, but do not have sufficient resources to be an island apart from those around me.
How to achieve that is where we disagree. History has shown humans are not competent to do it even if they were morally fit to do it.
Now this is where I am not even sure of what you mean. Humans are not competent to do what? Govern? There have been many good “governors,” including some saints. The problem is that just in every other field of endeavor, there are bad apples.
But then without government, the bad apples have nothing holding them back. And see, you were saying that those who don’t agree with you think all our neighbors will begin to murder and pillage without the government, but no, this is not what we think. What we think is that everything will be a mess; the bad apples will do whatever they can get away with, people will be on their own to deal with it, and either a tyranny of the bad will ensue or the Hatfields and the McCoys.
Yes, I know you all think that everyone will have insurance to cover the costs if someone robs you and what have you, but if the insurance fails? Or if a father’s daughter is raped? No, you cannot think that people are inadequate to govern and then assume they are adequate to live with no government! It is a conundrum, but this solution is totally illogical!
Continued below…