Hanarchy Montanarchy wrote:@daralon
I don't think a 'state' can 'be eager' to do anything. People within the state can be eager to exert more control, so a good state will have rules that check that impulse.
I think you and I basically agree that Hobbes > Hoppe.
I like Hobbes. He is like Machiavelli. People essentially shoot the messenger but the dude was telling it like it is. He lived through a civil war for christ sake. He saw people at their worst imo.
You are right that the "state" is just the current group of people in power (be it a oligarchy, dictatorship, or a democracy) and their attitudes. The problem with rules to check these impulses is that since clever people made these rules, other clever people will find ways to get around them. Think about the White House Council or Office of Legal Council. Whatever you think of their ethics, these people are top notch lawyers who basically have the job of providing legal justification for any and all things the president does. They read the constitution in a very legalistic way, and supposedly got around the torture prohibitions post 9/11 by pulling out a dictionary and citing the definition as "permanent physical harm." They reasoned that as long as the interrogation does not cripple the person for life, go for it. I'm not going on a rant about gitmo, I'm just saying that laws and institutions can only curb impulses so much. People have a natural inclination to do what they want to do, and steamroll over legal niceties that get in their way. That's just how it is. It sucks, because I am disturbed by a lot of stuff our government does, but I don't imagine in the future we will revert back to some constitutional utopia. I wish there was a solution, but I'm not smart enough to think of one.