>>18
One major factor you miss...
Your comments show some confusion about the points I was trying to make.
"A regular liberal democracy with some limited powers so the police, military and courts can act effectively and the president or constitutional monarch can intervene in times of trouble" is what we have now, and it has failed us. Or perhaps it is we who have failed it. Either way, like it or not, change is coming, and what you have described is just a conservative "small government" model. It
would be a change. It would be heading backwards.
I'm not gonna get into good and evil any more than to say that to expand the frontiers of human knowledge, and to protect all who ask is generally a good direction. Cicero said something along the lines of "an organization/government/nation must have some noble purpose to survive. If it exists only in order to maintain itself, it will surely descend into ignominious oblivion" We make mistakes and we learn. We progress. WWII did a number on us. We're supposed to have been left with a deep mistrust of leaders and movements, and rightly so, but still we yearn for them, for it is from great leaders and righteous movements that progress springs. Now the lessons of the second world war have been learned, but the memory of the pain abates with every generation. Instead the pain of discontent grows. Freedom is dead, we're stagnating politically and economically, and we've discovered that this great machine that we have built has no steering wheel, and is smashing into the earth and what's left of our dignity.
Instead of arguing for absolutely no authority figures whatsoever you should be arguing for less in general, or preferably arguing for a viable alternative where people believe authority is needed.
Yeah, so I said..."free individuals provided with sufficient land for self sufficiency, connectivity, and the
opportunity to freely interact, trade, and organize with others.
In, or out. Purpose regained. Freedom restored. Integrity called to task.