who are these victims? are they the folks who refuse to use their own minds to understand the world around them? if they are, i have no pity for them. i was raised on the same garbage they were and i see no need to find scapegoats for my failures. are they the poor, raised to accept dependence on the state as a rational excuse for their failure to rise above their circumstances? i have no pity for them either. groveling for the handouts that are nothing more than the stolen wealth of others is as much a crime as the theft itself. are they the idle rich, trapped by the limited expectations of others, or the indolent masses, willing to pass off their responsibilities for the illusion of security? just who the hell are these damn victims i keep hearing about?
I think you are conflating the idea of understanding the first cause of behavior and the idea of victimization as a post facto justification for sympathy or reparations. I am not interested in the latter, and perhaps it was a mistake to use the word victim when it carries such baggage. I am however, interested in understanding why people behave the way that they do so that we can reach necessary conclusions about our relationship to government and our relationship to each other. A husband that abuses his wife physically and emotionally should receive the majority of our moral outrage. The wife, who enables her husband's behavior by staying in the relationship and keeping the children around him, or believing his lies, should receive our sympathy and help though she has failed at several of her moral responsibilities as well. If a drug dealer intentionally gets a man addicted to drugs in order to profit from his addiction, we should direct our moral outrage to the drug dealer and help the addicted man by taking away his drugs and offering him treatment. If the state sees falling poverty figures and introduces addictive welfare legislation that sucks more people into poverty, we should cast our outrage at the state and help the poor by removing the system of welfare that has wrapped them in addiction. We should not castigate them for their addiction, because they are sick and it is practically pointless and unproductive.
My issue with your statements was that it seemed like you were ignoring the first causes that instigates specific societal behavior, or at least not giving it enough of your outrage proportionally. You seem to claim that we have designed the government, yet I do not think the reality is as black and white as your conclusion. In America, certainly a group of people established the government, yet support for such a system was far from unanimous, and the government that was established was far more tolerable than the government it became. This government grew into a behemouth not fully
because of the people, but mostly
in spite of the people. The people want access to medical marijuana now and look at the level of resistence from the system that exists despite overwhelming majorities of support. The only people (generally speaking) who care about farm subsidies are farmers, yet the subsidies continue because the amount of political action necessary to revoke them relative to the cost per individual taxpayer to pay the subsidy is staggering! It's a war of disproportionate incentives... and for society, it is an unwinable war. Multiply these disproportionate incentives by 10,000+ and you can clearly see how the government grows. Blaming society for it's growth in this light is very heavy handed.
If people can be bribed and addicted, then what we need is not a government to curb bribes and addictions; What we need is a society free of a violent monopolistic institution that thrives on bribes and addictions and is far more positively incentivized to create addicts relative to the small negative incentive per individual citizen to fight it. We don't need a small cancer; We need no cancer.
we could walk away from it at any time.
Amen. That is what we
can do... walk away and don't give it sanction. Do what it tells you to avoid being shot or jailed, but don't go around voting like you think you are making a difference.