ldrews, on 2018-May-12, 18:01, said:
Governments exist because one or more people have more power/weapons/malice than others and seek to impose their will on those others. It is the "laws" of that small group that the rest of the society is "coerced" into obeying. It has only been recently in human history that the people have been consulted about those "laws", and not in every society.
So I do agree with you, governments exist to coerce individuals into obeying the laws of society. But this avoids the question of the morality or appropriateness of those laws. It just indicates that some group that calls itself the "government" has the ability to use force on the rest of society.
Governments will enforce laws. If they don't, the government would be seen as non-functional. So sure, everyone agrees up to this point.
I suppose that even in this advanced age of snooping, a person can largely avoid government. Most of us don't want to. At 79, I benefit from Medicare. But when young, I benefited from free public K-12 education and from a state supported university. I still support free K-12 education and I hope for affordable college for those that are interested and capable. I also support other programs that are intended to help people of modest means live a reasonably decent and productive life, even if these programs are not part of my own past.
That doesn't mean that there are no problems with government programs. A recent change in rules for prescription drug prices brought an old incident to mind. I had some sort of skin rash, some infection, I was referred to a doc who examined it for all of about 45 seconds. He asked if my medical insurance covered prescription drugs, I said yes, he gave me a prescription. The amounts I will describe are maybe slightly off, it has been a while,but the idea is right. The prescription was for a skin cream that cost $200. I would have a co-pay of $20. But the doc gave me a coupon for $20 off. So, effectively, the cream was sold for $180 and I has no co-pay whatsoever.
You do not have to be an extreme cynic to see what's going on here. The pricing system is rigged so that I certainly had no reason to object to the cost, I paid nothing. The doc? Did he profit from this? I would not drop dead from amazement if he did. And of course the drug company is selling a cream for $180. Maybe it was all on the up and up, but that sounds naive.
So are there problems in trying to set up programs to help people? Yep. But all in all, as both a taxpayer and a beneficiary of some really good programs, I favor working to make programs good rather than working to abolish them
This can be an unresolvable difference in philosophy, but it also can be influenced by reflection on personal experience. Obama's "You didn't build this" was an extremely clumsy way of trying to get at something that I see as real.