No you moron, its the opposite of what I'm advocating. I'm advocating no government at all, which makes this sort of thing impossible.
Sigh. Read the rest of that paragraph. As I said, only the state is going to be able to reduce the power of the state. This is an example of that happening. The fact is that either a state will dismantle itself or it will be overthrown, most likely in a violent fashion. Do you advocate the violent overthrow of the state? Because if you're advocating no government at all, then those are your two choices as far as I'm concerned.
We are enslaved to the state, which is a group of persons, which fits your own definition. The fact that in a democracy we have a tiny fraction of a vote in how the state is run does not make us any less enslaved. Being free means the ability to opt out of being controlled all together, not having a minuscule, insignificant say in how you are controlled.
Aside from that first sentence being a great example of begging the question, I was arguing that the function of a state is determined primarily by laws, at least in this country, iirc. I explicitly said this. And your ugly dichotomy rears its head yet again. There are
degrees of state control, degrees which you have exemplified time and time again.
You assume here that it is in the state's interest to suppress democracy. However, individuals in society have the capacity to gain access to the machinery of the state and change those regulations if they so chose to.
The point it that it is coercive and the state uses violence and threats of violence to compel obedience and does not give us a choice to opt out of statism. Whatever you want to call this, I regard it as destructive and immoral. Nearly everyone accepts that theft and violence are wrong and so far no one has provided a moral justification for why the state should be exempted from this moral standard.
Again, you think in overly dichotomous terms. To you, state = bad. By virtue of it's very existence, the state is immoral. Why do you believe this? Because there is a suppressed premise in your argument: that the state will
always act destructively and immorally. However, I would argue that the state acts
to preserve its own existence, whatever that may entail. Does this have to be violent and destructive? No. Yes, I accept that theft and violence are wrong. No, I don't think that states should be subjected to moral exemption in regards to these ideas. And you know, I happen to believe that perhaps here and in other countries, the state should have less control over people's lives in the long term. I think that at some time in the far future the entity of the state will become entirely redundant. However, if I bring my eyes back to the present........there are certain ideas that would suggest that the state remains a positive institution to have around. What if the state provides everyone with free healthcare: I don't wish to argue amounts, but say that it provided some arbitrary level of healthcare cover for every person under its jurisdiction. Is this an activity that is beneficial to society at large? I would argue that it is. At present, would such an activity continue in the absence of a state? I would think not. As such, the state provides certain benefits to it's citizens that other institutions may be less capable of providing.
The state generally relies on threats of violence. Because the state is so big and powerful, the threats alone are usually enough to compel obedience, and actual violence is rarely used....... the police use violence and threats of violence like the mafia gang to compel obedience. Most people obey because like the mafia gang, they are so powerful and far reaching that failure to co-operate will be detrimental. The police are empowered to shoot people if they do not stop when police tell them to, or if they are escaping from prison. They are empowered to grab people are forcibly drag them off to jail and they are empowered to lock people up for years and control every aspect of their lives, often for committing non violent offenses. This is all extremely violent, coercive behavior.
You seem to think that violence only means injuring people, like bashing them or whipping them. I'd argue that Kidnapping people and locking them up is extremely violent. If you don't want to call it violence, fine. I don't care to have another debate about the definition of words with you. The point is kidnapping is a morally deplorable action which we generally regard as an extremely harmful crime, so we still have the problem of why the government is allowed to kidnap people for committing non-violent crimes like tax evasion.
The state is sometimes violent and coercive, just like individuals or other organisations are sometimes violent and coercive as you mention. I don't believe that the state is intrinsically justified in acting in this way, in fact, in some cases I deplore it. But what you have ignored is
why the state may operate in this way and
what it operates in reference to, namely, the legal system. In Australia at least, all cases in which the state acts in a violent manner are prompted by some violation of the law, and if they are not then that is frankly unacceptable. So we must ask ourselves: what is the function of law in modern society? Not a hard question really; laws have a couple of main purposes. One is to restrict the actions of the individual citizen. In some cases this may be bad, in other cases it may be good. The law is there in part to
protect us, not just to oppress us. As well as making us pay tax, the state is also responsible for dealing with individuals dangerous to society and so on. This to me is a vital function of the state. Apologies if this is insultingly simple or anything but I feel that it needs to be established as part of this debate. I do feel that the state is justified in it's acting to uphold the law, as long as I personally believe that those laws are justified, but that is another topic altogether.
Now you hold the imprisonment of an individual for a non-violent crime such as tax evasion to be morally unjustifiable. In some ways I can understand why. However might I remind you that taxes are not uniform in every state: you could go to somewhere like Monaco and pay very little tax (although the cost of living is exorbitant). Furthermore, paying tax is not just a money hole; tax money is used to deliver socially beneficial programs in many cases. If an individual chooses not to pay their tax, are they not therefore obstructing the funding of such programs, that benefit society at large? Is this in itself an immoral act? Now of course I realise that not
all taxation money is used to pay for social programs (some is used to buy $500K office chairs), but perhaps I am sympathetic to the state in this way: the fact that the state does such things
at all mostly justifies why I think I should contribute to it in monetary terms at the least.
With these points in mind, I feel that dealing with the state is a case of minimising the bad and maximising the good. We should minimise the violence and coercion of the state, applying reasonable moral standards at first and then acting in more specific cases thereafter. We should maximise the social benefits of the state, whether this means locking up crims or giving everyone free healthcare. We must ensure that the state's power is controlled adequately by the courts i.e. ensure the separation of powers. If we can do all these things, would it be necessary to opt out of statism? Would we be any better off? I personally do not think we would. There are certain things that a human society at this point would find it very difficult to achieve without some organised, centralised influence without reverting to what is basically mob rule; this influence does not necessarily have to be a bad thing. That is my inherent justification for the existence of the state: that it represents a valuable opportunity for peace and stability in modern human society.