Follow up - What is the single purpose of government...

Posted by edweaver 10 years, 8 months ago to Politics
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The single word for the purpose of government turned into a fun discussion with many ideas and good thoughts. Thanks to all who participated. I decided to re-post in hopes that it would make it easier for all to see where I was going. It is my hope that I am not breaking a gulch rule.

I believe you can apply the word “control” to everything that government deals with at every level of government known to man. Government is not necessary to make things move because that will happen without force. I’m not advocating for more control and IMHO we have been run over with control. I’m just saying that there is no need for government except for the purpose of control.

That being said, I believe this country became so incredibly prosperous because our founder limited our governments control over the people. Unfortunately since our founding, government does what it is naturally inclined to do. It grows and consumes power.

Would love to hear more thoughts & comments


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  • Posted by Robbie53024 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    And I think that there are viable mechanisms to take care of the second item privately. So really, the only necessary role for gov't is a military to protect from foreign aggression.
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  • Posted by Robbie53024 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Carol: Many seem to get that concept wrong. There is no statement in the Constitution expressing "separation of church and state." The First Amendment identifies that the gov't shall not establish a state religion, nor prohibit anyone from their ability to practice whatever religion that they choose. It was meant to prohibit the gov't from imposing itself on religion, not the other way around.
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  • Posted by Herb7734 10 years, 8 months ago
    Throughout history the most powerful gathered the productive people around them and offered protection in exchange for products and wealth. It became what we call taxation. This is what gave control to what was to become the "nobility." Power backed up the control and inspired loyalty. The American Experiment was the first time that the power of control was put into the hands of persons by the consent of the people. Almost overnight, the country became the freest most powerful in the world. But instead of learning the lesson from such a clear and obvious example, humanity is once again sliding into the rule by power without consent. If it keeps up, be prepared for a return of the Dark Ages.
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  • Posted by Robbie53024 10 years, 8 months ago
    The US was the nation that it was because there was a culture and ethos of liberty, property rights, and justice. Those things have been subverted over time such that the current culture and ethos is one of oppression, wealth distribution (instead of wealth creation), and social justice.
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  • Posted by CarolSeer2014 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Flanap, perhaps you missed the purpose behind the founding of our country. The earliest post-Columbian immigrants were the Puritans, who settled here because they had a profound instinct that"No government is going to tell me what to believe!"

    Well, I probably wouldn't have made it as a Puritan, but that drive or desire culminated in the most important of our liberties--separation of church and state.
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  • Posted by flanap 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Perhaps you missed the caveat below the verses...here it is again.

    "The only authorization for a person not to do as government says is when it directly, by law, or fiat, or other forceful means, requires behavior directly in contradiction to that which God requires in His Word."
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  • Posted by CarolSeer2014 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Yes, I like to think so. In fact, I have always thought so. Until TODAY--when I perceive the world has gone MAD! (Capitals, exclamation point!)
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  • Posted by flanap 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    "Plato wanted to rank poeple based on intellect." Sounds like a eugenicist.

    Yes, the purposes are entirely different, especially since God considers partiality a sin because for no reason other than man's own selfish desires he chooses to give and withhold help and knowledge when being partial.

    By the way, for those that may think this is a universal principle, it isn't. Partiality isn't when someone does something for value; therefore, you cannot use this argument to pay all people the same rate regardless of their contribution.
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  • Posted by flanap 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    "always submit to them"

    Perhaps you didn't read the caveat below the verses.
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  • Posted by flanap 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    You can only do so much to direct government, but ultimately, it isn't about the government, it is about your decisions in light of government's existence as directed by God.
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  • Posted by flanap 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Your assumption is that man's intellect is increasing; I would argue man's intellect is decreasing since the Fall.
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  • Posted by $ blarman 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Uh, having read both, I point out that the aims of the two books are entirely different. I know that to the outsider Plato's proposed government may seem to mirror the ecumenical structure of many Christian sects, but the purposes and the ideology could not be more different.

    Plato wanted to rank people based on intellect - placing those with the least intellect as common laborers or merchants, those with some intellect and sound body as the military, and those with the most intellect as politicians. The problem was that this is the basis for elitism: you have the political elite who control the military who in turn control the people.

    When Christ was asked by his own disciples who was greatest, instead of picking one of them, He selected a small child from the crowd. He told the vying parties that their purpose was to serve and minister to the needs of the people - like that child. He told them that only the child had the correct attributes by which to govern at all!

    Now I do not defend those sects which have departed from this mandate - and some have. There is principle, and there is practice. But to propose that the principles of governance proposed by Plato are equivalent to the principles of governance taught by Christ is inaccurate to say the least.

    I would go on to point out, however, that the later portion of "The Republic" does go on to point out the absurdity of the Greek Pantheon as a violation of logic. He thoroughly debunks the absurdity of a group of uber-powerful beings as capricious as the Greek Gods.
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  • Posted by CarolSeer2014 10 years, 8 months ago
    Let us consider this: Is the object we seek government itself; or is government the means by which we can acquire the "object".
    One criterion of the "object" might be Jefferson's plaintive, "the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness." Certainly, it is not government's purpose to ensure your happiness, only your pursuit of it.
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  • Posted by m082844 10 years, 8 months ago
    Control doesn't seem like a principled purpose to me -- it sounds more like a function or action. "Control what?" Would be the next question I'd like you to clarify about a government's proper role. Although I assumed you meant proper role. If you really meant purpose then it depends on the type of men running it. An institution as such doesn't create its own purpose -- human beings do. And many people have different purposes in mind when they run a government.
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  • Posted by CarolSeer2014 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Keep in mind that St. Paul wrote his letter at a time when mankind had not yet attained the Age of Reason--in the Catholic Church, this age is about seven (7). After some 2,000 years, the Age of Enlightenment and Science, I think we can safely say mankind is at least ready to use his intellect, and not simply rely on a "Command Morality"--who some ever is its determinator.
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  • Posted by Fish 10 years, 8 months ago
    The question was what the purpose of government is. I chose "enforcement" as the single word.

    The problem comes when the laws that the government can enforce reduce our liberties and freedom to unacceptable levels. We are discussing right now in my country a law that will reduce the freedom of most parents to choose the school for their children (it is not US). And this is among other reforms equally against liberty.
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  • Posted by Temlakos 10 years, 8 months ago
    Control, or the "security" of rights, is the real purpose of government.

    What do we wish to control?

    The use of force in retaliation against those who initiated its use. And the occasional application of force to make whole someone who has lost something through breach of contract, or fraud.

    Rand held that control of force-in-retaliation was preferable either to:

    1. An escalation of retaliation with no control, or

    2. Total forbearance from retaliation.

    The former alternative would lead first to long-standing violent feuds, and then to a free-for-all, total warfare of all against all. But the latter would let malefactors steal, rob, assail, or kill with impunity.

    And either alternative would make a nation-state vulnerable to outside invasion--the former through disunity, the latter through failure to resist.

    The Gulch succeeds in AS, only because membership in it is by invitation only. Everyone is on the same page. Thus a Committee of Safety, and a retired judge who offers his services as an arbiter, suffice to make the society both safe and just.

    By the way: the "Gulch rule" the original poster mentioned is probably the custom of never giving anything away free. John Galt mentions this to Dagny by way of explaining why he will rent Midas Mulligan's automobile for twenty-five gold-standard cents a day.
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  • Posted by $ blarman 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Words are nothing without the meaning behind them. And there is nothing that says the poster has to be right. ;)
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  • Posted by Solver 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I disagree that everyone should be blind to men who use force to rule other men, and always submit to them. I'm sure many Jewish people also tried to disagree during those times when the democratic socialist worker party had legal authority in Germany. Even the ones who did agree not were not treated well by this government's authorities.

    Some of this sounds like some king had some scribes edit some Bible books so long ago, that it was ever done has been forgotten in time.
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  • Posted by jimjamesjames 10 years, 8 months ago
    There are only two things that government feeds on: individual liberty and individual treasure. To preserve those, government must be limited. The Founders knew that and that is why the Constitution says what the Government can do and the Bill of Rights says what the Government can't do.
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  • Posted by walkabout97 10 years, 8 months ago
    There are only two, related, appropriate functions of government. One, to protect the citizens of the country from outside attack and two, protect each citizen from other citizens. Thus, a military system to protect from external threats and a legal system to allow citizens redress (criminal and civil) from attack from others w/in the country.
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