Are you against all forms of property ownership?
Sorry, I didn't make my views clear- I was vastly oversimplifying.
I'm absolutely in favor of property ownership. I feel that each person has has a right to property, along with rights to liberty, to privacy, etc. The government should protect these rights, and prevent other people from infringing on them.
How can that not happen? Unless no rule can be made without 100% consent then there will always be a minority—even if it is a minority of 1—in disagreement that has majority preferences forced onto it.
The ONLY case when government should be allowed to pass laws is if they are meant to protect people's individual rights. If the minority you're referring to is people who think murder should be illegal, than, absolutely, they shouldn't be allowed to prevent muder being legal. However, in the case of prostitution, it's simply a minority of people who aren't hurting anyone that the majority is imposing their values onto.
Do you support freedom of speech? If you do, then you agree in theory that even if a law is popular and arises from a democratic process, it shouldn't necessarily be passed. I'd support adding a lot more similar rules meant to limit the power of the government.
The alternative appears to be no laws at all.
Strawman. For some reason, every time I get into an argument like this, the other side jumps to "Then why have government at all?" I NEVER supported anarchism. As I said, laws should be passed to protect our individual rights. That includes pretty much any kind of crime that has a victim.
And in that situation the power vacuum (nobody controlling anyone else's decisions) would hardly stay a vacuum. The result would simply be informal force exercised by some onto others against their will. I contest that this "power" you refer to—if democratically dispensed—is indeed a "good" power.
Just being democratically dispensed isn't enough, if it isn't accompanied by limits to the government's power. Suppose 60% of the country wants to impose a state religion. You obviously wouldn't support it, and would probably point to the First Amendment (as you should). But if the government got to do whatever the majoritarian opinion was, they wouldn't have a problem imposing a state religion.
This occurs whenever "one person = one vote" is corrupted into "one [currency unit] = one vote". It is usually a subversion of democratically-inspired legislation and to oppose it is to oppose corrupt government, not to oppose government which is not intended to embody such corruption. And of course, money is not the only means of corrupting legislation.
Right! You agree that there are many ways to corrupt legislation!
The reason corporations donate and lobby is that the government has so much power in the economic system. Corporate and agricultural subsidies, for example- what right does government have to take our money and use it to bail out airlines and oil companies, or subsidize crops that no one wants? As soon as the government is able to give handouts to oil companies and farming unions, those organizations start doing everything they can to bribe politicians.
If you got rid of pork (legislation meant to "stimulate the economy" that sends money straight to corporations), as well as anti-trust legislation (which is usually used by monopolies to break up their competitors rather than the other way around- the market pretty much never supports a monopoly unless the government backs it up with force) we wouldn't have to worry about corporations bribing politicians.
I think the de-facto answer is that "government powers (in equilibrium) are limited to what the majority of the people want them to be limited to" in general—but there are many exceptions I guess.
Right. I don't feel that the government should be allowed to pass the Patriot Act whether it is popular or not.
Think about this- Jim Crow laws were passed democratically (although, admittedly, only after democratically passing laws disenfranchising the blacks). Just because a majority thinks government should be allowed to segregate, and back it up with force, doesn't mean that we should let government do it.
I think your problem is that you still don't see who gets to decide what the limitations are. In the end, it does have to fall to a system of checks and balances to determine where to draw the line. However, government HAS to be run by laws, not men. We should impose further amendments to the Constitution that limit the government's power to infringe upon our rights, (that is, make laws against drug use and other victimless crimes unconstitutional) and give the Supreme Court the obligation to keep the government from violatng these principles.
(By the way, my arguments are very focused on American politics- I don't mean to assume that you're American, since I don't know.)