| | Daniel,
You said, ... he will have to explain why, if I want to maintain an adequate defense force, that it is morally right that *I* end up involuntarily compelled to pay for as many “free-riders” as feel like riding too!
There are a couple of things you need to explain, not to me, and not to any of the other Objectivist who have been trying to help you, but to yourself.
First, what difference does it make what you want? Why should anyone else be forced to support what you want. Why shouldn't you be forced to support what they want? If someone else wants something different from what you have decided is adequate defence, for example, why shouldn't you be forced to support what they want? So far, you have provided no answer for that. You already know the Objectivist answer: no one may rightly (morally) be forced to pay for anything they do not want or choose, no matter who wants it.
Your're whole argument amounts to this. "I want more rain. It will be good for my garden, my lawn, and my trees. Most of my neighbors want more rain for the same reasons. Those of us who want more rain have chosen to hire a rain-maker to provide us more rain. But, a couple of my neighbors don't care if it ever rains. They hate gardening, despise cutting grass, and love sitting in the sun. They refuse to help pay for the rain maker. So, when the rain-maker brings the rain, those who didn't pay will benefit just like those who did pay, therefore, they are compelling us to pay for the rain that benefits them." That is your argument. Absurd, isn't it?
Second: I asked a simple question in another post, but I may not have made it explicit enough, so I will now. Please explain how your so-called "free-rider" problem could possibly exist outside the context of a coercive government.
You say you are compelled to pay for, "free-riders," but you are only compelled to pay where and when a coercive government forces people to pay (e.g. taxes). But if that is the context, how could there be any of your so-called free riders, since everyone (who can) is compelled to pay those taxes and no one can refuse to pay. If there really are those who can choose not to pay, the context cannot be one where a government forces everyone to pay. But if no one is forced to pay, neither are you; you are not compelled to pay for anything, much less, "free-riders."
It is simple. If no one is compelled to pay, even if there were such things as "free-riders," only those who chose to would support them, because, no one is compelled to pay. I everyone is compelled to pay, there cannot be, "free-riders," because "free-riders would be those who did not pay, and everyone is compelled to pay.
Objectivists believe no government may rightly force any individual to pay for or support what they do not freely choose to pay for or support. If someone else or some circumstance provides or forces any individual to have or gain anything they have not freely chosen to seek or pay for, it places no moral obligation on them, because the so-called benefit is not a result of any choice or action they made. No one is morally responsible for anything that is not the result of their own freely chosen action.
To require anyone to pay for some benefit they never chose or sought is a con-game. Before it was outlawed, some companies would send products to people who never requested them, and then would bill the people for those products. The so-called "free-rider," problem is only a problem for people, who like those crooked companies, want to provide people with benefits they neither seek or want, and then force them to pay for them.
Statists believe the government does have the right to force people to pay for or support what they do not freely choose to support or pay for.
Collectivists believe that society, collectively, in some way is more important than any individual. Most statists are collectivists, because it is collectivism that is the excuse for violating or oppressing individuals. Collectivist statists argue, what is good for society is more important than what is good for any individual, therefore individuals may be forced to support what is good for society against their will.
Your arguments, so far, exactly fit the collectivist statist view. They certainly are not Objectivist. It should not be very difficult for you to figure out which (statist, collectivist, or both) that you are. It would be very helpful if you plainly and frankly told us which so we could know how to help you, if you care to be helped.
Regi
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