One of the implicit ideas that gets used as justification for the existence of governments is;
Humans are falliable and flawed, therefore government is necessary to maintain order and protect them from each other.
Or as Thomas Hobbies put it, without a mIghty power to hold all in awe, there would prevail a condition of war of all a upon all, and human life would be nasty, short and brutish.
Just as a thought experiment. If men (of all genders!) were "angels" who were created perfect, government would be composed of angels, and perfect, but it would also be unnecessary, as the population is already perfect.
Government in our world must be composed of the inherently falliable, flawed, humans.
Having falliable flawed humans in the position of a "mighty power to hold all in awe" isn't going to somehow make them perfect. To believe that gaining power could make a human entirely good, would be a very dangerous kind of magical thinking.
What sort of humans go seeking power over other humans?
Err, yeah, just look at what you have in power at the moment.
Don't think that it was any better in the past either. There never was a golden age of wise or good government.
Now, who thinks that it's a good idea to make a population defenseless in front of such a fundamentally flawed institution?
How has that gone in the past?
Civilian disarmament may not be a sufficient step to cause a genocide, but it has always been a necessary step.
Humans are falliable and flawed, therefore government is necessary to maintain order and protect them from each other.
Or as Thomas Hobbies put it, without a mIghty power to hold all in awe, there would prevail a condition of war of all a upon all, and human life would be nasty, short and brutish.
Just as a thought experiment. If men (of all genders!) were "angels" who were created perfect, government would be composed of angels, and perfect, but it would also be unnecessary, as the population is already perfect.
Government in our world must be composed of the inherently falliable, flawed, humans.
Having falliable flawed humans in the position of a "mighty power to hold all in awe" isn't going to somehow make them perfect. To believe that gaining power could make a human entirely good, would be a very dangerous kind of magical thinking.
What sort of humans go seeking power over other humans?
Err, yeah, just look at what you have in power at the moment.
Don't think that it was any better in the past either. There never was a golden age of wise or good government.
Now, who thinks that it's a good idea to make a population defenseless in front of such a fundamentally flawed institution?
How has that gone in the past?
Civilian disarmament may not be a sufficient step to cause a genocide, but it has always been a necessary step.