lpetrich
Contributor
Why don't deficit hawks care about the cost of military adventurism? - LA Times
I've collected such professional-pennypincher arguments and applied them to military and police forces. Here goes:
End protection welfare!
Abolish all government military and police forces! They must all be turned into private companies or else disbanded.
Thus, single-payer healthcare, free college tuition, Social Security, Medicare, and the like are considered intolerably expensive, while wars and military procurements costing trillions of dollars are not. Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have cost over $5 trillion, with Iraq costing $2 trillion, and development of the way over-budget F-35 fighter plane costing $1.35 trillion.Crippling deficits and a nightmarish national debt are popular, recurring tropes in American politics: Every few months, politicians and the pundit class seem to recall that we’re broke. While some are no doubt sincere in their concern, our pocketbook cops are wildly inconsistent. They complain that America is running out of money when it comes to helping the poor, people of color, the disabled and the elderly. Their worries miraculously disappear whenever the military wants to start a new war.
I've collected such professional-pennypincher arguments and applied them to military and police forces. Here goes:
End protection welfare!
Abolish all government military and police forces! They must all be turned into private companies or else disbanded.
- Let the market decide. If soldiers' and cops' services have any value, people will hire them, or else people will become vigilantes. Government coercion is unnecessary.
- Government protection is one-size-fits-all. Vigilantism, hired guards, and mercenaries can be adjusted to individuals' protection needs and desires, while government protection cannot.
- Government involvement in protection crowds out private investment in protection solutions, solutions that will inevitably be superior to government ones.
- People who refuse to protect themselves deserve to be conquered and beaten up and stolen from and extorted from and raped and enslaved and murdered and whatever other crimes that they might suffer. Protection laziness ought to have consequences, and government protection protects people from the consequences of their actions.
- Crime victims are really crime enablers, and they deserve to suffer the consequences of their crime enabling.
- Self-protectors should not have to protect non-self-protectors by the government stealing from them to do so. Government protection is governments robbing Peter to protect Paul.
- Individuals are much better at protecting themselves than governments. Therefore, government protection is unnecessary and people should not be stolen from to pay for it.
- If there are any people who are not capable of protecting themselves, then private charities like vigilantes will do much better at protecting them than governments.