Potjeh wrote:jorb wrote:A man is free when he is allowed to act in accordance with his own volition and is not subjected to acts of physical compulsion. The fewer such acts the state commits the freer the society is.
What if my volition is to inflict violence on other men? What about theft? Conning? Where do you draw the line?
In that case I wouldn't fault other men for defending themselves. The organization of such common defense is, indeed, the reason why governments are instituted in the first place. Fraud and the like I would consider instances of a particular form of theft, quite simply.
Also, how were monarchies better in this regard? How is taking from people to build Vasa any better than taking from people to help people in need? It's not like many kings were know for being fiscally conservative, and guess where the money they were burning through came from.
Ok, I'd like to point out again that a discussion like this kind of necessitates speaking about Monarchy... in a vaccuum, if you see what I mean. I don't think it's quite as simple as monarchy good and democracy bad. I would probably prefer Swiss democracy -- which I find quite interesting in that it seems to have been able to preserve much of its character of a local and non-anonymous institution, much like, say, a New England Town Hall meeting. In forms like that, preferably with rather restricted franchises, I believe that "democracy" (or perhaps rather voting) as a deliberative method can work quite OK. -- over the Chinese Emperor or even the Russian Emperor. Sweden used to be an elective Monarchy, and I don't necessarily think that that was a horrible order of things either. It is very reminiscent of a constitutional republic.
When I speak of Monarchy I generally think of the totality of the broader European political system as it appeared from, say, after 1400 and up until the first world war. Notice that I am not saying that there wasn't plenty of things to dislike in those days -- mercantilism, ffs -- but I am saying that the decentralized and largely monarchical character of the European continent as a whole was rather well suited to preserve liberty. Institutional competition between the hundreds of countries that then existed in Europe was of course a huge part of that. No one princely state in Germany could, for example, institute too oppressive tax rates, as that would simply have caused people to move away from his country. The case, for example, of Voltaire alternating between living in France, Switzerland and Prussia, depending a bit on where he had made himself impopular at the time.

The system was better in that it had a far lower degree of *petty tyranny*. If Louis XIV had tried to prohibit alcohol, or institute a tax rate of 60% of net income (not that that is very petty, but oh well), or mandate bicycle helmets, or ban smoking in bars, or regulate the precise minutes of what can and cannot be printed on a bottle of water for sale, he would have had a revolution on his hands. Only a state that is in some sense totalitarian can force through such tyrannical edicts. It is worth noticing that Lenin & the Bolsheviks very much considered themselves to be in some sense democrats, as did the national socialists. People in Monarchies understand that the interests of the King and their own interests tend to diverge, thus Monarchy inoculates the people with a very healthy distrust of government. Such distinctions become very blurred in a democracy, where people to a far larger extent come to identify with the state. Modern democratic parliaments wield a power over their subjects that would have made the most autocratic Monarch green with envy.
(As a complete side-note: Fascism in Italy was a far less oppressive regime than national socialism in Germany as it had to deal with both the Italian King and the Catholic Church. It is worth noticing how Hitler hated/was deeply suspicious of German nobility, the Hohenzollerns and other "reactionaries". It is also worth noticing how nigh on everyone implicated in the von Stauffenberg bomb-plot against Hitler came from precisely such backgrounds.)
Yes, not all Monarchs were fiscally conservative, but the system has several characteristics which serve to curtail excessive spending. Most notably, perhaps, the King doesn't have to run around the countryside promising people bread and circuses to be reelected. Also, when the King does spend money it is usually his own money he's spending -- his appanage if you will -- and not strictly speaking the money of the state.
Also, I'm not enough of a utopian to believe that one can get rid of taxation completely. What I am trying to identify is a political system which can minimize the intrusive effects that the state has. The state is by definition a monopoly on the use of force, and such extreme coercive power *necessitates* that the power be wielded in a very responsible manner or things will inevitably end in bloodshed. Modern democracies strike me as being completely irresponsible in their use of that power, and thus I seek to formulate an alternative. Coercive power should only be used when it is *absolutely* necessary, and regulating how people can and cannot advertise water, or what they should and should not read in school, or eat, or watch on television, is as unnecessary as it gets.
Monarchy seems to be the most natural sort of government, for whatever nature produces with more than one head is esteemed monstrous.
Frankly, I'm rather surprised that you -- with your rather open cynicisms about mankind in general -- can be so seemingly unconcerned with putting people in charge of a completely unrestricted violence machine without any sort of real checks on their use of it, and with all the institutional incentives in the world to use it for bad ends.