So I agree that we're all wrapped up in the state somehow, or more accurately that the state has wrapped its tendrils of aggression all over us. Is there any conclusion in particular you were drawing from this?
I was only questioning Block's assertion that accepting public money is "positively good". I don't have any judgments toward those who do get their kneecaps broken by the state and end up applying for crutches, but I don't necessarily consider it a 'good' thing, and the rationale you gave didn't resonate with me at all.
Well, we do have a choice as to whether or not we apply for and accept AFDC, food stamps, veterans benefits, the SS blood money, etc. So should we take that choice and receive the money?
I am with Walter Block that it is not only "fine" under libertarian theory to accept these, but positively good. It is "a mitzvah" as he puts it. By doing so, you are relieving thieves of some of their wealth and putting it back into the voluntary market. You are a one-man privatization crew, removing stuff from the "public" (yuck) sector and putting it back into the private sector.
My point was that the public sector doesn't produce anything that didn't originate from the private sector anyway, so the idea that private individuals are somehow doing a service by tapping into public funds to "privatize" them is something I don't see. Again, that would be like someone stealing from me, and handing it to another. I can't see myself saying, "Well at least someone in the private sector got it, and not them."
Is a state employee part of the state? Yes. Walter Block, for example, is part of the state. Could we just as well say that the handout recipient is part of the state, at least when acting in their capacity as receptacle for funds? Perhaps. And so in that sense angelatc is part of the state. I think that's what you're getting at. You are saying angelatc is part of the public sector, not the private sector. But she will (likely) spend the money into private companies, and after that it's in the private sector.
In the current state of affairs, there is no absolutely clear line between private sector and public sector, it's true.
The line I see is similar to the line I apply to the thin-air banking system. It's all about First Users. Take out a loan, and you are a direct facilitator of the Fed System, while anyone you trade with, but who did not take out a loan, is not.
Likewise, if you take funds directly from the state, you are directly part of the state, and a facilitator of the state by extension. Those funds are laundered directly by you. In the case of food stamps, medicare, etc., the beneficiary is directly part of the state, and whoever takes funds from them is the First User (because they actively applied to accept food stamps, medicare, etc.,). In that respect Ron Paul was not a facilitator of the state, because he never accepted medicare, but if he ever took out a loan, he was a facilitator of the Fed Banking system.
Again, no judgments or condemnation of anyone who feels compelled to imbibe in either, especially when their survival depends on it. I fault the system that fucked everything up at its core, not those who get caught in its tentacles and are forced to play to survive. But that is the distinction for me, and I don't see any 'good' in it.
Virtually all businesses are also tax collectors. Tax collection is a state function.
In my view, state tax collection by businesses is no different than people who are conscripted into military service against their [erstwhile] will. Businesses may collect taxes under threat, duress or coercion by the state--and through fear of loss of life, liberty or property if they don't, but that does not make them part of the state in my mind. That's all because they aren't given a choice. If they were given a choice, and chose to do that, they'd be complicit, and very much part of the state.