That's a fair synopsis, Barbara. It's up to each person to look at the facts, and decide whether State power can be successfully "bound" by doctrines such as divine right of kings, or constitutionalism, or majoritarianism, or whatever.Barbara> You buy, train, and feed a dog to protect your chickens. If the dog starts killing chickens, your response may or may not be to shoot the dog (probably will be), but it most certainly won't be to give the chickens to the fox. You get another, better trained, dog - and keep a closer eye on him.
Hogeye> The fox and hen-house thing is a very good analogy to government. Statists put a fox in charge of protecting the hen-house, and seem surprised when the fox eats the chickens, even though it is in the nature of the fox to do so. Statists refuse to see the nature of foxes, so their "solution" is to get another fox, perhaps of a different color. Then they're surprised that the Tweedledee fox is just as hungry as Tweedledum.
Barbara> The fox v. guard dog (that will go bad if not watched) is the core difference in the way Hogeye and I (and hopefully a whole lot of others) see government. Hogeye sees government as the former, I see government as the latter.
My contention is that States have a natural tendency to grow in power, eventually becoming tyrannical. The history of the US is an excellent example, as it started most innocuously as a panarchist federation, and has inevitably grown over time into the world's sole remaining super-empire. Or in our analogy, it started out as a cute little baby fox, and grew into a mean beast. This growth of statist power idea is not new:"The Constitution is a mere thing of wax in the hands of the Judiciary, which they may twist and shape in any form they please." - Thomas Jefferson
"The natural progress of things is for liberty to yield and government to gain ground." - Thomas Jefferson to Edward Carrington, 1788.
"[We] should look forward to a time, and that not a distant one, when corruption in this as in the country from which we derive our origin will have seized the heads of government and be spread by them through the body of the people; when they will purchase the voices of the people and make them pay the price. Human nature is the same on every side of the Atlantic and will be alike influenced by the same causes." - Thomas Jefferson: Notes on Virginia
I see bad corporations as creatures of the State, generally only exisiting at all by statist legal privilege. The only power, sans State, that a corporation has is to entice me to trade value for value. I have never been taxed by a corporation, never been kidnapped by a corporation, never been imprisoned by a corporation, and never been regulated by a corporation. The State has done all these things. My total lifetime losses accrued from robbery by State has been over a thousand times that stolen by private criminals. I don't recall ever being robbed by a corporation. To me it's a no-brainer which is more dangerous.Barbara wrote:I see the uncontrolled mega-corporations as the fox, and must rely on my government/guard dog to protect me from them.
That said, I need to point out that I share many of the same criticisms of corporations as Barbara. We agree that corporations get special legal privileges. We agree that they often control regulatory agencies, buy legislation, and so on. We agree that (some) corporations buy power, and utilize the State for malevolent purposes. Where we differ is in our prescription. I favor reducing the power of the State so they the rulers have no favors to sell, believing the root cause of this corruption is the existence of such political power combined with human nature. Barbara (IMU) believes that it is corporations which corrupt the State, and that if only corporations would be "put down," the problem of politicians selling power would pretty much go away. (I contend that other special interests would step in as buyers.)
There may be another secondary disagreement on extent of corporate power-buying. Barbara seems to portray virtually all corporations as power-buyers, while I try to make a distinction between market entrepreneurs and political entrepreneurs. I.e. I distinguish between the Halliberton's and Apples, the Boeings and Wal-Marts. I like to look at whether a particular corporation exists because it is providing things people want, or because of government privilege and contracts. Some people think that I support corporations in general because of this, but in reality I support freedom of trade and freedom of association for all, including corporations, much like a civil liberties lawyer may defend a nazi or racist or theist because he supports freedom of speech.
So my version of our increasingly stretched analogy would be: the State is the mean, destructive, rabies-carrying fox; corporations are dogs, some of which play with the fox and catch rabies from it. Without the rabid fox around, the dogs would not be catching rabies and biting people. The dogs which stay away from the "friendly" fox are okay.
"The Anarchists are simply unterrified Jeffersonian Democrats. They believe that ‘the best government is that which governs least,’ and that which governs least is no government at all." - Benjamin Tucker