I sincerely appreciate the politelness in your response. However as a rule it is useless to say "there are contradictions in your logic" without citing any contradictions at all. You may as well say "I disagree" and not cite the reasons.
Let me try to address your comments.
I disagree that this is a contradiction.
I totally agree that there are always "special interests" for example those making a living from the swamp, but
that doesn't change the fact that even these swamp-workers are subject to malaria, as are all others. So they do benefit similarly from the eradication of a source of disease. Yes they are economically harmed but no one has special rights to use of a commons [and this example is predicated on the swamp being public land, not privately owned].
No, the individuals of society do not
similarly benefit from "treatment of the [infected]
affected population". The treated individuals are the primary beneficiaries of the treatment. When you say ... "positively contribute instead of dying off". you imply that the primary benefit of these individuals lives belongs to similarly to all members of society, when in fact that's extremely unlikely, perhaps impossible.
Charitable treatment of the infected is important, but I still have problems with forcible taking of some peoples work product to benefit others. We cannot know the needs or dreams of those from whom we steal.
To recap
yes - draining the swamp provide a similar benefit of removing the source of disease for all, even swamp workers.
no - treatment of the ill individuals does not provide a similar benefit to all, but a particular benefit to the treated individual.
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On the Constitutional interpretation - the enumerated powers section of the Constitution include a list of well defined *limited* powers ceded by states to the Federal government, and includes the language:
So to interpret this use of "general welfare" to mean "whatever you think would benefit some" seems silly. Why would they carefully make a list of limited power for the new FedGov and then include a massive escape clause like, "or whatever tickles your fancy" in the text ? It's a nonsensical reading based on context. Originally "general welfare" in this case means to the similar benefit of all 13 states. This was a 'contract' between independent states, not between citizens.
The 'Story" interpretation,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Welfare_clause#United_States
is that here "general welfare" was a necessary qualification for taxation. They could only tax states for things that generally benefited all states and not for example a bill that only benefited NY & NJ. John Marshall and Madison were also aligned with a narrower view of the term. Only much later in 1936 was the term expanded to imply Congress could tax for whatever it pleased. A silly interpretation.
Nope - Wrong. That term was only part of my argument related to Constitutionality. Even if you successfully rebutted it (and I don't think you have) you can't dismiss the economic, moral, libertarian political views, social contract arguments with a hand-wave. You didn;t address the motivations toward totalitarianism issue. None of those are dependent on "general welfare".
To directly rebut this claim - I specifically said -
For example if I crack your savings account and steal money and use it to buy you a new car, this is using force to take your money and then using it for your benefit. Every rational human would consider this action by an individual a crime.
Why do you imagine this is one iota more moral or lawful when the government (a mob of 50.1%) swipes parts of your paycheck and uses it for ....
- ridiculous warfare (supposedly for your benefit!)
- a failing retirement system you don't want
- to gen' up a police state the kills citizens by drone using only executive fiat as a means of justice (thus protecting you for your benefit) ?
It's still a crime. It's still immoral. It's mostly unConstitutional to the extent these things are not within the FedGov's limited powers and properly executed.
Nope. You are trying to paint my comments as selfish or self-interested only. This is a variant of the "kick the crutch out from under TinyTim" ad hominem fallacy. Nothing I said implies this in any way. Further you are trying to personalize this rather than addressing the actual issue as presented.
Let me suggest first that
charity, voluntarily reaching into ones own pocket or giving ones own time is the only selfless act here. Your notion of selflessness is to vote to steal from Peter to give to Paul. To reach into someone else's pocket is not selfless or charitable at all. It is arrogant in the extreme to assume you have some right to tell others what to pay for, or what is the best use of their assets. Further it's immoral.
Perhaps your erroneous view is due to your unwillingness to accept that government is not the only way to address issues. This is a closed-minded view. There is a place for government but primarily wrt crime and national defense, but it's not to tell others how to live, nor to force YOUR views on others, nor to "democratically" choose how to dispose of their property.
You still persist in the claim that this actually helps in the long run - how exactly ?
By creating a paternalistic government that tells ppl how to live (according to government dictates) ?
By infantilizing ppl who should be able to shift for themselves, making them weak and dependent and subject to demagoguery instead of independent and self-realized ?
By creating massively inefficient central planned economic systems instead of neutrally enforcing free market regulation ?
By constructing a massive government that shreds the Constitution in order to "protect us" ?
By creating a Cass Sunsteinian propaganda machine that attempts "nudge" citizens to do that the central planners prefer ?
I see nothing desirable in this notion of big central socialized government. The consequences for economics, personal liberty and community are terrible.