[quote name='pittpizza']
BMull and thrust, trust me when I tell you that I know a thing or two more about Con. law than you. I know exactly what the first Amendment and USSC precedent espoused thereunder says and does not say because I spent an entire semester studying just that one Amendment. I'm not confusing anything my friends, you are. Though thrust has the gist: it may be more appropriate to say "Freedom FROM religion" than "Freedom OF religion"; "From" meaning no state-sponsored religion (which is what they were fleeing and why they were being persecuted).
There really is no reconciliation for such drastic differences in views. I feel that when we spend so many billions on war, destruction, and death, yet so many here at home are sick, poor, uneducated, or saddled with an almost insurmountable debt, something is

ed up. Our government cares more about helping (killing) foreigners than helping its citizens at home, and you three are happy with it? Laughable.
I guess Bmull, thrust, and FoC feel confident that they and everybody else will do just fine taking care of themselves without any help from anybody else, including the government. This is the perfect society: an anarchical system where only the strongest survive and everyone just keeps what they make and fends for themselves. I suggest you read
Leviathan by Hobbes if you think this is the way to go. Read that book and your views will change and you'll be better citizens for it.
[/quote]
You know what always amazes me with people like you (your views, specifically) is that you love to go back to the founding fathers and the reasons for the constitution to push certain things (like your views on religion and guns). But you run from it when it comes to others.
In the 1800's everything you are proposing would have been laughable. Nobody considered it governments role to "take care of people". People were excited to live in a country that was founded to STAY THE

OUT OF THEIR WAY. That is ultimately what this country was set up for, like it or not. Everything about the Declaration of Independence and Constitution bleeds that attitude.
Even up into the 1950's, much of the nanny-state high taxes issues you espouse would have been laughed at. People had no concept just 50 years ago of a government holding out it's "helping guiding hand" in every aspect of life.
Why should one of the richest nations in the world give a shit about its citizens, or spend a single dime on them? Heck, for that matter who needs a government at all right? We can just count on the free market and captialism to make sure all is well. Car companies just put seatbelts in cars and give em good gas mileage out of benevolence right? (wrong.) After all, most everybody that isn't rich is an incompetent drug using idiot and deserves what they get. For those that really are legitimately disable, ahhhh

em!
You are being extreme. Nobody is suggesting that we completely annihilate all policy and law. But we are suggesting that we have far more policy and law than necessary, and that too much policy and law stifle everything that has made this country great until now.
So you think the taxes you pay is the government "stealing" from you? Remember this the next time you drive on a road, put a kid in school, call the cops, or live in safety. When did I deem anybody needy or disenfranchised? It surely isn't my job, it's the peoples'. Who is playing the altruistic savior role? Not me. I live fly as hell; but this doesn't mean I don't have the right to bitch about how things could be better and mis-spent tax dollars.
Obviously taxes are necessary. We are saying that beyond basic infrastructure and military protection from invasion, many programs are very unnecessary.
Yes, taking as much tax as they do out of my paycheck for many many programs, departments, so-called "services" and welfare programs, massive black budgets, pork spending, and $40,000 "hammers" - that I disagree with and it is stealing, to me.
If you don't wanna pay taxes,

in go live in the woods. Go
Into the Wild style where you can take care of yourself without having people "steal" from you so you can drive your car on nice
roads, get
water and
electricity piped into your house,
be free from foreign invasion, have the populace educated (the list goes on and on).
Interesting that you basically listed nearly all the ONLY real good reasons to give a government money. Good job.
My entire position is only that we should take every single dime that is mis-spent on death and destruction abroad, and use it for the betterment of society at home. My point is that the billions that fatten the wallets of HMO's/M.E. oil companies/defense contractors riddled with cronyism (the list goes on and on) would be better spent buying healthcare for those that can't afford it (due to no fault of their own), educating those that need it, and helping those legitimately unable to help themselves.
And my entire position is that they shouldn't have most of those dimes to begin with. They aren't mis-spent, they are unnecessary altogether.
You guys are the ones who live in a dreamworld, where everyone born is able to take care of themselves, and when they can't it is because of their own laziness. People are born retarded, people get disabled, people get sick, "life" as you put it happens.
That's not a dreamworld. You obviously don't have any faith in people's natural tendencies and abilities to take care of each other. Not your fault though, politicians have been beating into our heads the last 75 years that we can't. The answer isn't to give all the money and power to one organization to "take care of everything".
The government can make sure that almost everything you listed is taken care of by providing INCENTIVES for the free market to do so, rather than taking everyone's money and doing it themselves.
Where you three and I differ is that I'd prefer to live in a society where we actually gave a shit about each other. Where less assholes (not you, just other people like you) ask "Why should I have to help him?" and more people ask "Why shouldn't we help him?"
No actually we don't differ. We want to live in that same society. We want people to care about each other and take care of each other, and especially have the means to do so.
I view the government as a parent. If your kids are fighting or one of them is hurt, is it good parenting to FORCE the others to help because you said so? Is it good parenting to sit them all down and FORCE them to get along by punishing them if they don't? No, it would be good parenting to give them advice and incentives to take care of each other and get along. It would be good parenting, usually, to stay out of their conflicts unless one of them was really in danger.
If you have a teenager that refuses to move out or get a job, do you give him tough love and force him to for his own good or do you let him stay indefinitely, hoping he decides to grow up, because that's the "compassionate" thing to do? That's the difference between you and I.
Kids, people, and society don't/can't progress much, or become self sufficient, or live up to their full potential with permanent training wheels that don't come off even if you try.
How can you so callously assume that every single person in need is there because of laziness, drugs, or some other ignoble cause?
I don't know of anyone that assumed such a thing. I told you that there should be some, very limited, very regulated social programs. That's fine with me. But they should be privatized as much as possible, like almost everything should, through tax incentives.
I care about people other than myself, you don't.
What a pretentious crock of self-indulgent shit. I give at least 10% of all my income to charities.
It could be more, but uncle sam takes too much. Which is good, because they can obviously help people far better than I ever could, right?
I think America is rich enough to fund post highschool education, to feed the hungry, treat the ill, protect the environment, keep us safe from foreign invasion, you don't and feel that this money is better off in CEO's pockets and big business' corporate coffers. I think it is incumbent for the government to safeguard natural resources and the environment for posterity, you think that businesses can and will just do this on thier own, which is laughable to me.
What is laughable is that you fail to realize the entire reason this nation is as powerful and rich as it is, is because up until the last few decades people were allowed to prosper. The nanny-state you are proposing would threaten ruining that further than it already has been. And your lack of realization on that is astounding.
I want to live in a place that has national pride, where people care about each other, share a sense of community (not communism, COMMUNITY), have self respect and a sense of self worth, actually like the government because it helps them, and where the government fears the people and not vice-versa.
I totally agree on all points. I don't know anyone that doesn't.
The difference is, you believe you can achieve that by giving government more power, more money, and more trust to do the right thing with it all, which history has proven can never happen. The more power you give any single person or entity, it exponentially increases the risk of corruption. In fact, it virtually guarantees it.
You, like many of my leftist friends, live in a naive utopia where a government can have all the power necessary, as long as they do the right things. It will never happen. It can't happen. That's fantasy.
It truly amazes me that you have no faith in the common man, the local small governments, or in you and me, to take care of each other when left to our own devices. But somehow you have total and complete faith in the possibility of creating government that can.
I only was more ammused by the fact that you think the only thing keeping the government from enslaving the people is the fact that the people have guns. Okay I admit, the fact that you think the people and their guns could stand up to the US military is even more humorous. Ahhhh, that's cute.
Where did anyone say that was the "only" thing? For someone that keeps crying about words being put in your mouth, you sure do a bang up job.
Lucky for us, most of the people in the U.S Military would side with us on views on gun rights, and most in the U.S. Military wouldn't have the stomach to have gun battles with their fellow citizens.
But that doesn't discount the fact that the prospect of tyranny over an armed populace is very daunting. Which is why Hitler made sure that private gun ownership was banned a year before he came to power. Call it wacky, right wing conspiracy, but I'm sure most Germans didn't think it was a big deal to give up their guns at the time.
If your mother in law was unable to work, you three suggest she should just be left to starve and die, right? The government shouldn't interfere: if some charity wants to help her fine, but if not, let her die. We all know how charitable Americans are.
Americans are the most charitable people on earth, even without the government. Are you suggesting that if the government had more of our money they'd do an even better job?
Last I checked, the government was more interested in peoples right to kill unwanted life, defining who's life was worth living, and throwing money at hardened murderous criminals.
So I can get an accurate view of your positions. Answer me these questions thrust, FOC, heavy hitter, and BMull:
What is the best form of government?
I'm not sure if there would be a name for it. But I'd start by going back in our nations history when it was most prosperous, and our people had the most freedom, least government interference, and start there.
All I know is Government should always be pushed down to the most local sectors possible. Down to states, to counties, to cities, to neighborhoods and even to the individual. All according to what makes logical sense, of course. But that should be the constant goal.
Unifying power and control over a large populous is
always a bad idea.
What (if anything) should the government do? Surely you don't advocate privatization of EVERYTHING, right?
You listed it pretty well above.
Government should very first and foremost provide protection at the borders.
Secondly, it should provide infrastructure (roads, clean water, electricity, etc).
Third, if it's decided government should have money for education, I'd prefer to see that money given to private schools so people have a buffet selection of different flavors that emphasize a variety of things (even a religion).
If charity falls short on caring for those in legitimate (just assume it) need, should the government aid them?
Yes. But not without condition and not forever. Any aid the government gives should not to be taking people out of the slums, but instead take the slums out of people.
In other words, the governments job as far as that goes is primarily to provide fair "opportunity". If it is clear someone, for whatever reason, doesn't have it by no fault of their own, then the government could help them to get the point where they do.
In summary, giving all your trust, power, money to a government you blieve can/will "fix" everything better than anyone else, is somewhat noble and understandble.
The main difference between you and us, is you believe we should try to make that happen, and we don't believe it possibly can happen.