Re: Is being homeless a crime / should it be?
Posted: August 27th, 2021, 1:24 pm
GE Morton wrote: ↑August 27th, 2021, 11:40 amOf course we all want the government to benefit us. The question is: what government services DO benefit us? Public education? If public education (even if we don't personally use it) produces a more civil, economically viable society, don't we all benefit? Health care? If public health care results in better health care for everyone at a fraction the cost (as it seems to, based on comparing the U.S. system to those of other nations), don't we all benefit? Welfare and social security? Perhaps they cut down on crime and make life more pleasant for everyone. Wars? Hmmm. Maybe not.
It is not arbitrary. The criterion is not whether a government program is or is not "to our liking," but whether or not we benefit from it, which is (for the most part) a question with an objective answer. You can morally be forced to pay for benefits you receive, but not for government services (or any other services offered by anyone) from which you receive no benefits.
There is a tacit assumption lurking in many of the comments in this thread that governments occupy some sort of higher moral plane than mere individuals, and are exempt from moral constraints that bind individuals. That is the ghost of the "divine right of kings," debunked centuries ago by Locke.
Governments are constituted of individuals, acting at the behest and as the agent of other individuals. They possess no moral authority not possessed by the individuals who create and constitute them, and are not exempt from any moral constraints upon those individuals. If my neighbor may not force me at gunpoint to build him a house or contribute to his favorite charity, neither may any government he elects do so. Agents have no powers not possessed by their principals.
Also, based on Morton's reasoning above, if my neighbor can't force my children to go to school, can't make me pay a fine for exceeding the speed limit, can't force me to serve in the army (in the past), and can't enslave me for selling illegal drugs, then neither can the government. OK. We get it, GE. You don't think the government should do anything but protect property rights (which, for some bizarre reason, you see as sacrosanct). Fortunately, the vast majority thinks otherwise, and controls what the government can and cannot do.
The "divine right of kings" is not so different from "the divine right of the first discoverer" advocated by Morton.