Subject: Okay, then.
Author:
Posted on: 2016-10-17 22:06:00 UTC

I think Nesh brought up my main objection to the contract thing: someone who wants to (insert violent crime here) somebody isn't going to sign a contract with that somebody saying they won't (insert violent crime here) them unless constrained to.

The other thing, though, is this: who enforces the contract? If you're a weedy nerdy person like me, and you sign a contract with a group of big and strong but not terribly bright people to do their brainwork in exchange for them giving you money and muscles, and you fulfill your side, but they don't fulfill theirs, what can you do in your system to gain recompense? Because they won't be able to solve it on their own.

This ties in to how I see government (and I see you brought up taxes - score!): the government puts in place the laws agreed on by the people alongside infrastructure for mediating breaches of said laws. In exchange for this service, anyone expecting protection under these laws pays the government to provide that protection. (This, actually, is what we call the social contract - everyone agrees to follow the government's laws in exchange for not having to tidy up all their own disputes with others, among other things.) If you don't want to follow a specific country's laws, fine - you have the option of changing country.

tl;dr: Government provides services and thus expects to be paid; government is the ultimate extension of your system of contracts.

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