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Scholar and a Gentleman
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2006
- Messages
- 6,729
Because libertarians don't trust the electorate. Specifically, they believe that just because the electorate agrees to provide a service does not constitute a reason for the government to actually provide it.
Or, in other words, there are certain things that the government should NOT do no matter how many people want it. Nothing wrong with that idea; that's what the Bill of Rights, for example, details. The Bill of Rights says that even if the entire electorate of Texas says that we should establish Southern Baptism as the state religion, they still can't do it.
But, as usual, the libertarians take a reasonable position to an unreasonable extreme.
Quite. As usual, well said.
I find these arguments about "size of government" so strange and so spurious, as they're so far from pragmatic concerns and so wedded to ideological ones. It doesn't matter if Government Intervention X is popular, or would provide a net benefit; if the government is already of the pre-determined size, this intervention is a step too far. I find it hard to fathom how rational people are so conent to construct such arbitrary barriers.
It comes up in healthcare threads quite often. As a direct answer to the question "Why are you against universal healthcare", "I want a small government" seems like such a non-answer. It short-circuits any justificatory reasoning and defaults to bald ideology. There's not even any attempt to argue why small government is better than (some) people going without healthcare. It's simply that they have settled on a size of government they are comfortable with (whatever that may mean) in advance of any rational cost-benefit analysis of making it any bigger.
What they're actually doing is starting with what the government shouldn't do, with a default answer being "anything."
Exactly.