I'm not suggesting we completely destroy the unifying structure of country->state->county->town/city, I'm just saying that power should be pushed down as far as possible in every case to empower the people living at the town/city level to make decisions that are best for them and their situation. The further up you go on the chain, the less efficient everything becomes because 'one size fits all' is the order of the day.Superior Mind wrote:
If society were structured like that, a million local and independent democracies, we would have to contend with the potential for tribal warfare/"Greek on Greek" fighting. Due to our present thirst for fast information and goods exchange, each independent group would be forced to have constant contact with others. Trusting each other not to devolve into bandits and raiders would be hard. Societies cannot be forced to be insular or self sufficient unless there are geographic barriers between them and others. Since the Eastern forest is mostly cut down in the US and we have highways everywhere, there is no hope of becoming a land of city states or the like. The only way would be in the case of massive decrease in the population.Jay wrote:
No, of course not. Some people eschew money altogether (Mother Theresa comes to mind).Spark wrote:
Money is not the only representation of impact.
Look ken, stop getting your panties in a twist. I don't value a person by their paycheck. I have a whole slew of values that I judge people by: loyalty, being good at heart, not fucking people over etc. But society as a whole cares nothing for that or they wouldn't worship pop celebrities and politicians. Society judges people by their impact, money being the easiest representation. And that is why I believe in small government libertarianism. No one really gives a fuck about anyone outside of their own locale, and you're less likely to screw over your neighbor and get away with it. Large democracies do not work well. Small ones can. I prefer a million small ones to one giant cesspool.
You absolutely need some unifying structure as you go up, or you will devolve into competing city-states. Having a federal government that enforces free trade between the various parties involved, punishes and/or prevents 'downstream' damage etc.
The solution doesn't come from the federal government, however, it comes from the people themselves deciding to pay more attention to local issues and elections, ignoring the national media political bullshit, and to stop expecting national politicians to solve local issues. This is real grassroots democracy, not the stupid PACs with their limited issues.
It would also require each level of the hierarchy to respect the lower levels 'home rule'. Yes, that means states rights.
Last edited by Jay (2012-09-13 08:10:40)
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat