I only suggested that you were indoctrinated, not that you are unable to think freely or unenlightened.
You and S.H.O.D.A.N. need to stop trying to make this a personal thing about how anarcho-capitalists are such selfish, mean, condescending people.
I was merely pointing out the government uses propaganda to convince people that we need the state. If you disagree, perhaps you'd care to counter my points about indoctrination and explain why we learn about almost every political philosophy except libertarianism in public schools...
I think it's a bit of a moot point to bring up what is taught in a school environment (not just public schools - there is a curriculum that all schools, including private, must follow) as you can apply that same issue to any discipline covered. Why aren't art students taught about EVERY artistic movement ever? Why don't we learn about every various type of verse and prose? Why doesn't geography cover every geographical location in the world? Why don't we learn about the history of every nation in our history classes?
Obviously there is a limited amount that can be taught and the people who decide the curriculum have chosen the most pertinent, applicable and overall useful topics for the average Australian student.
If you're going to cry foul because you weren't taught about Libertarian ideology, then I'll stomp my feet at having to independently find out about German surrealist cinema and shoegaze music. I think you may have to just accept that anything which deviates from the popular and the norm will likely have to be discovered outside of a school environment.
Also, I am not saying that all anarcho-capitalists are selfish, mean, condescending people. Of course I do not think that (or else I would hate my boyfriend, right?)
What I think is that, ironically enough, the way you tend to present your arguments gives the impression that you have actually been somehow indoctrinated by Libertarian propaganda. You spout a lot of, what seems to me to be, empty rhetoric. You are able to point out the flaws in the current governmental system, but think that anarcho-capitalism will somehow fix it all, despite your arguments being purely hypothetical.
You are just making baseless assumptions about us as a group. Either say something of substance about why you think anarcho-capitalism is bad, rather than just attacking us as bad people or stfu.
Many of us care greatly about the weakest members of society and believe that statism and socialism actually hurts the weak and the poor greatly. For instance:
-Public housing forces poor people into concentrated areas where social problems a rife.
-Welfare keeps the poor in poverty and perpetually dependent on welfare.
-Overwhelmingly poor, uneducated minorities are the people locked in prison for non-violent offenses such as drug possession and petty theft.
-Poor people often join the army because it is the only job they can get that has decent pay, so they are sent overseas to die in the states pointless wars.
-Private charity struggles to help the poor because people feel enough money has already been taken from them through taxation and redistributed.
-The minimum wage prevents poor people who want to work from being able to get a job and instead forces them to remain on welfare.
Most importantly, the inefficiencies of government destroy wealth for everyone and ultimately slow down human progress which could lift millions out of poverty.
You might also find this article interesting:
RealClearPolitics - Articles - Conservatives More Liberal Givers
It cites research that shows that conservatives gives 4 times more to charity as a percentage of their income than liberals who believe the government should take care of people.
The trouble with socialism is its easy to claim that you're compassionate and generous when your proposals are based on spending other people's money.
I don't doubt that you genuinely do care for the weak, poor and undesirables of society; however, I think that rather than actually completely knowing and understanding their positions and being absolutely SURE that anarcho-capitalism will benefit them, you find a way to make their plight fit in with your worldview. I do not believe their quality of life is a primary concern of yours at all.
The current welfare system in Australian undoubtedly needs to be looked at and refined, but to suggest that it has no place whatsoever is utterly narrow-minded.
The argument about private charity also fails to take into account a few disturbing factors:
1. Private charity for people with ailments such as mental illness and addiction does exist now. Nearly all of them are run my religious groups. Many use them as a way to convert people or use shaming tactics to "cure them" (Mercy Ministries, I am looking at you). I would hazard a guess and say that, in the absence of any government-provided welfare, most private charities would be set up by organisations with some vested interest in having power over the weak. Though the government is flawed, I do not believe it has this same interest.
2. I have had some close experience with a physically disabled friend who recieves government benefits as well as funding from private organisations. From what I have observed, though the private organisations provide MORE funding, they have been the ones to put restrictions upon her such as not being able to work or risk losing all funding completely (this includes things like costs for her mobility - wheelchair, hoist, etc.) The government does not place these same restrictions upon her.
I do agree with your point about the criminal justice system and the overabundance of non-violent criminals in prison. I support drug decriminalisation/legalisation. All of that certainly needs an overhaul and sentencing should certainly be looked at, etc.