So are governments made up of benevolent angels?
No they're made up by.....wait for it...greedy hedonistic HUMANS.
To suggest a group of people with human nature need to exist in order to counteract human nature is ridiculous.
I recognize this point and agree with it. Though you hardly allow space for an analysis of democracy. Ideally, governments are accountable to the populace. Hence, hedonistic governance should tend to reflect a preoccupation with getting elected, hence their policies should reflect broader social expectations.
i.e. public services.
Nobody has a responsibility to 'society" so fuck that shit out of here.
This is idiocy. If it weren't for 'society' you probably wouldn't have been born in a functioning hospital, nor would have been educated in a proper school, nor would have been able to walk down the street (i.e. if their were one) without getting robbed.
The liberalist doctrine of greed and self-interest cannot be reconciled with arguments of enlightened anarcho-liberalism. If we are all greedy, and there is no state to reinforce my social obligations, then what is to stop me stealing from old Ms. Jones down the street. Nothing.
orivate charity is always better at helping the poor. governments have no incentive to get rid of poverty because it would mean reducing the size of government
Again, whilst I accept that governments are preoccupied with self-interest, you fail to account for political influence, namely where hedonistic governance should tend to reflect a preoccupation with getting elected, hence their policies should reflect broader social expectations. In this instance, social expectations of poverty alleviation, should be embedded in government policy.
You know nothing about economics if you think we need the state for "regulations"
You've got me all wrong. I've personally seen the shortcomings of government bureaucracy due to primeval human nature. I'm not some idealist who thinks that the government is the be all and end all, I just think that you're too pessimistic, and cannot explain how a state (i.e. society) can function without a government.