Hi Colin, I'll tell you how my thinking has evolved. First, as far as I know, I'm completely in agreement with Ayn Rand's description of individual rights and that they must be the foundation of a proper government. But how do you do that? What would such a government look like? How do we get to there from here? One small shift in my thinking is about realizing that government does NOT protect individual rights - not in a direct way. It isn't that they shouldn't, but rather that it doesn't work that way. If you are walking down the street it would be extemely unlikely that a cop would be where he needed to be to stop a mugger before he could go after you. We can't protect individual rights in that way - it wouldn't work. With criminal law, government comes in after the crime in almost all cases. The crime gets committed, then they catch and lock up the criminal (he is less likely to commit a future crime either because he is in jail, or because he has been taught a lesson, and other would-be criminals might be detered). If we want to measure the effectiveness in protecting individual rights we have to measure the enviroment to see how much it favors individual rights. For example, if we measured all muggings that occured, but ignored some wierd law that failed to put muggers in jail - maybe because it was overcrowed, and because of that law, mugging were way up, it wouldn't matter that muggers were being caught. It has to be the measure of the environment's overall friendliness to individual rights. I was seeing Objectivists who argued that we could not have any taxes at all - that we could only have voluntary funding (which I think we CAN achieve, eventually). But insisting on it now is like throwing out the baby with the bathwater because without any funding we can't have any of the needed structure to protect rights. Then there were the anarchists who didn't want any organization to have a monopoly on creating laws, but without uniform laws, there is no way to impliment descriptions of the acts that violate rights and therefore no way to protect rights. When a person understands that it is an entire structure (legislators, laws, administrators, enforcement officers, courts, etc.) that has to be in place, and has to be stable, and properly run and monitored and adequately funded then they won't claim to be reasonable while asking for the impossible: the protection of individual rights without any costs or means. When you undertake the protection of rights it has to include the minimal costs involved. It is about purpose. What is our purpose? It is to create the environment that will best encourage and maintain the protection of individual rights - that takes us to the questions of what structures, what laws, what processes will do that? Then we keep on improving on every single aspect of the environment to get us closer to the ideal protection of individual rights. Ayn Rand defined Individual rights as moral principles that apply to those actions that can be taken in a social context without anyone's permission - and as those actions that no one has the right to violate. So, if you wish to live in a social context and to accept that man cannot live without morals, then you are buying in to the whole package. It means that no one can logically make a moral claim against a bare minimum of taxes needed to pay for the bare minimum criminal justice system based upon individual rights. When we, as a society, get close to that minimum I have no doubt that creative people will come forth with many workable plans to replace taxes with forms of voluntary funding. Calling for respect for individual rights but denying any practical means of implementing their protection is just living in the cloud land of floating abstractions.
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