That you're asking me what "my" ends are indicates that you're not quite clear on the concept. It's really simple. Everybody wants the most bang for their buck. This is the universal economic principle. Now...what happens when we apply this universal economic principle to the public sector?
If you wanted the most bang for your buck, you wouldn't have a public sector as an end result. State monopolies on those services are not necessary to have those services the state monopolizes exist. They exist when not monopolized...because the markets demand them.
Well...given that you're an anarcho-capitalist
I'm actually not. I'm a market anarchist, and you should probably look up the difference in order to understand where I'm coming from. AnCaps are a subdivision of the larger category market anarchist. Also under this category are Voluntryists, Agorists, etc.
According to you...the private sector provides more bang for people's bucks than the public sector.
Not just according to market anarchists of all persuasions...but according to all logic, reason, and what we know of market economics.
Therefore, from your perspective the "ends" of tax choice would be anarcho-capitalism.
The ends should be a free market (and that includes not having govt regulation over any markets...like the ones you ignore that are monopolized in the "public sector"). How is it a free market when there are regulated or coerced monopolization of several sectors of that economy? It's not.
However...if somebody is a socialist then the answer is simple for them as well. They believe that the public sector provides more bang for people's buck than the private sector. Therefore, from their perspective, the "ends" of tax choice would be pragma-socialism.
And they can exist simultaneously with market anarchism. It's called panarchism and panarchist synthesis. BTW, they don't want a public sector (state) either...they want a socialized market. Socialists do not operate outside of market economics per se. Look up market socialism. Maybe you mean anarcho communism, which wishes to operate communally. But even that doesn't want a public sector state, they want a voluntary set of monopolies. You do understand the difference between coerced monopolies and non-coerced monopolies, right? If in a market one company can better produce a service or good at the lowest price and consumers voluntarily give them 100% (or close) market share, that's a voluntary monopoly...but it isn't harmful as there is no barrier to entry into the market. The same can be true if in a commune, where it won't be based on consumers and their purchases, but on their preferences in some organizational method (like democracy for instance). Neither is a coerced monopoly. To have a coerced monopoly you need the same amount of market share, but there has to be barrier to entry into the market (free markets) or the monopoly must be coerced upon the people (commune).
Voluntary monopoly = okay...involuntary monopoly = state and bad.
Your "public sector" is a state...it's creating a monopoly by force, and it limits entry into the markets therefore. It isn't free market, by definition. It may be "pragma" but it's also TYRANNY.
This is why you MUST have the end goal of anarchism for me to support tax choice...otherwise you're just giving the tax cattle a more comfortable stall to live in.
Thou shalt not steal is one of the 10 commandments...but for some reason you think that people don't understand this fundamentally basic concept.
Hence you admit my point (unintentionally). A just and better society occurs via ethical understanding (although I'm not sure religion is needed to have ethics...in fact I know it isn't), not because of economical understanding. You seem to want to spread economical understanding, not ethical...I say spread both by all means, but do NOT say economics trumps ethics..it doesn't. Clearly ethics always trumps economics or we have a world of aggression and "might makes right". That isn't very libertarian.
Who do you think your target audience (TA) is?
Nationalist statists...and they need ethics (which they lack) more than a lesson in economics. They need both sometimes, but all of them need ethics 101.
Are you telling taxpayers...aka the "victims" of theft...that they shouldn't steal?
Stop saying "victims" or I'll qit responding to you...I'm tired of you trying to avoid the undeniable fact that tax is in fact extortion on the threat of kidnapping; and when you resist that kidnapping you are murdered. If that isn't victimization to you, then we have nothing to discuss...that would be apologetics for sociopathy and "might makes right". Yes, I'm waking them up to the fact that raising taxes on their richer neighbors is just cheerleading for extortion for hire (or by proxy)...because that's exactly what it is. It's a more effective argument than Ricardo's comparative advanatge, trust me.
If so...why would you preach to the victims?
Because most of those who are taxed are also under the brainwashed belief it's either necessary, benign, beneficial, or ethical. Those who are victims in most cases are simultaneously perpetrators of this policies (crime) perpetuation.
You should see the face of someone when they first realize that the state is a mafia, that tax is extortyion, that prison for tax evasion is kidnapping, and that resistance to that kidnapping that leads to death of the evader is in fact murder. Their face changes, and so does their worldview forever.
Are you telling voters...aka the beneficiaries of theft...that they shouldn't steal?
You don't need to vote to be a beneficiary or victim of tax. But yes, I'm telling voters (the minority of Americans) that extortion is wrong even when the state does it...because it is!
If so...why would they even listen to your sermon?
Because of these wierd things you stripped out of libertarian philosophy by turning it into an overly simplistic ideology...argumentation ethics, reason, and logic.
Are you telling the state...aka the "evil" organization...that they shouldn't do what voters tell them to do?
You can't be that delusional that you believe the state does what voters tell them too...LOL. Oh, that's rich. LMFAO. Let me clue you in, again: monopolies have no accountability and therefore no incentive to respond to consumers (in this case, voters). All they do is get goodies for their voters, bribe them with extorted money from others, and then keep power. See, the state is a market failure. Market failure is when individuals persue rational goals but it leads to collective irrational results. Whewn politicians keep bringing home goodies, and no one wants to be taxed more but wants everyone else to be paying for their goodies, the deficits and debt rises. When no one is willing to cut their goodies (rational) but it results in 15 Trillion in national debt (irrational) you have a market failure.
That's what you think is politicians in the state doing what the voters tell them to do (supposedly upholding the Constitution)? Yeah right!!! That's pure democracy's failing (the mob voting itself every convenience until collapse)...and apparenly the Republics are also susceptible to it. Hence, all states fail. It's logical. It's predictable. And you seem to like this system of downward spirals or repitious stupidity.
I personally think market failure is a problem. Nothing is more open to market failure, and tragedy of the commons, and the free-rider problem (50% don't pay income taxes right now) than the state.
If so...why bother preaching to the state?
I don't preach to politicians...they wouldn't care. They're almost all (Ron Paul and few others excepted) sociopaths or habitual liars (or both). I'm not into preaching ethics to sociopaths and sophists. They are a tiny fraction of percent of society...I'm preaching to society at large (not the state, logically).
My TA is obviously the taxpayers. The large majority of them believe that taxes are necessary.
And they're wrong...so why not educate them to this fact?
Trying to dissuade them of their belief will only hamstring my efforts to help them understand the problem with 538 people spending other people's money in the public sector.
You have different goals than me. I'm interested in ending the root problem, the state...not making more comfortable tax cattle out of the currently uncomfortable tax cattle. Again, transitionally I can see the value in your idea...but not in your ideas on persuasion or end goals.
If you want to put it in ethical terms...it's wrong to impose our perspectives onto others.
"Impose" is force...I'm an anarchist, I want an end to imposition of perspectives. But you want to keep the great imposer (coercer, forcer); the state. Anarchists aren't forcing anyone by waking them up to facts and ethical perspective...as no one is forcing them to listen or live our way...anarchism isn't force, it's anti-force. Hence why it seeks to abolish the forcer in society, the state. When has an anrchist threatened you with jail if you didn't fund their ideas? NEVER. When has the state done this imposition of perspective? ALL YOUR LIFE.
You have Stockholm Syndrome of the state, imho. Most Constitutionalist minarchist nationalist statists do. Some wake up, some stay asleep until the end. This is why philosophy is more important than some component ideology contained within it.
But we do it all the time with friends and family.
Just our kids....otherwise conversations are not force dude...please tell me you understand the difference between sharing opposed opinions in conversation and aggression and force.
We tell them to do this instead of that...we grab their keys if they try and drive drunk.
And they thank me when they sober up. It's not coercion when someone isn't in their right mind.
"If you have the mental and physical ability to govern yourself, then you have the right to govern yourself. If no other person or their property is harmed in that self governance, then logically all external compulsory government is tyranny." --- Me
Notice the "mental and physcial ability"? GOOD.
However, it's still wrong if we do it to such an extent that we smother somebody else's perspective.
And you cannot do that without force...the state. Your arguments are illogical for defense of the existence of the state.
It's really wrong for 538 congresspeople to impose their perspectives onto 150 million taxpayers. They've never met you...they don't know your name let alone your ideas, interests, values, desires, wants, needs, priorities, concerns, fears, hopes, dreams, goals, experiences, preferences, and partial knowledge.
Agreed...so abolish it. Stop trying to make tyranny work "better".
So...in a sense we're saying the same thing. We're saying that freedom matters...but we're saying it in different ways. You're looking at the ethical aspects of restricting people's freedom...while I'm looking at the economic aspects of restricting people's freedom.
I agree...except I'm also stressing economics, just as of secondary importance...because freedom is about an ethical society far more than it's about an economically educated society. You can educate sociopaths all you like, the lack of ethics will inevitably lead to tyranny.
From my perspective...you're not telling people anything that they do not already know.
Oh, but I am! And you should see their faces when they realize it for the first time. The lost look of epiphany setting in, the look of guilt afterward for having participated, and the look of wisdom and confidence afterwards. Moral certitude is a powerful thing.
On the other hand...people clearly do not understand the value of integrating 150 million people's perspectives into the public sector.
Hence the state needs abolished, and a free market (in all sectors, not just the ones you don't mind being de-monopolized while others are remain monopolized) is the answer for all voluntary participants. Panarchism and panarchist synthesis.
Everybody understands that theft is wrong..
Not all...and the ones that do understand (most) don't understand that tax is extortion (because of brainwashing and Orwellian doublethink).
Let's consider it on the individual level. Say I added you to my ignore list. Did I steal from you? Nope. Did you steal from me? Nope. Was there any type of coercion involved? Nope. So was I harmed at all in blocking your perspective? Of course I was! Right? How was I harmed though? Well...you know the value of your perspective. So what if I added somebody else to my ignore list. And then another person...and then another person...until I had 150 million people on my ignore list. There wouldn't be any theft involved...or any coercion involved...or any state involved...but clearly I harmed myself by engaging in self-tyranny.
It is impossible if you are mentally and physically stable to engage in self tyranny...if you agree with it, no matter how detrimental (even suicide), it's not ytanny by definition. It's be tyranny to stop you from engaging in these activities.
But what you describe is what the state does. It doesn't allow other perspectives...it says it's their way of life or you die (or go to prison). They block everyone else out, and only allow one perspective to run society, law, police, fire service, roads, first class mail, legal tender, interest rates, military, etc., etc., etc.
If I ignore you...then I'm saying that your perspective does not matter.
Not necessarily. You're saying it's dogmatic and a waste of your time, or it's naive, or it's offensive for no reason. Hence why above I said I'd stop replying if you kept refering to tax victims as "victims"...because that's offenseive, dogmatic, and a waste of time to me. But I never put anyone on ignore. I would never ignore you. I've had my life threatened on these forums and not turned anyone in, or blocked those that did it. I'm not that sensitive either (I assume you aren't either...and good for you).
If we ignore each other then we are like two countries that do not trade with each other. We would both lose. Lose what though? Can you articulate exactly what it is that we would both lose if we ignored each other?
Yes. I know the importance of free trade...please go look at my past posts on the subject in other threads. I defend it vehemently because it impoverishes the people and trade deficits are not harmful. I gave data, graphs, etc. to support the case. It's also why I oppose Hoppe's ideas on immigration...because a) he makes assumptions about immigrant valuation, and b) it's protectionism. I could add c) it's been proven fallacous with data that "you can't have open borders in a welafre state".
I agree we both benefit from the conversation...even if the benefit for me is just being able to argue against your ideas better when others present them. We could ally...but only if you wanted the same end goal as me...otherwise I think this idea could be very dangerous to my goals and society.
Learning not to disregard other people's perspectives is what led me to pragmatarianism. I was a libertarian that decided not to disregard the perspectives of anarcho-capitalists.
I disregard anything unethical, illogical, or irrational (in reverse order).
In order to become a pragmatarian...perhaps you have to decide not to disregard the perspectives of statists.
I can't do that...I used to be a statist, and I know it to be unethical (coercive), irrational (market failure), and illogical (the arguments for it are decidedly lacking in logic).
They can have voluntary govt if they wish, they may not coerce others into a state against their will. Anarchism and statism are antithetical and mutually exclusive...like life and death. You are either alive or dead...not both. There is no anarchy in a state.
I hope you can read this lengthy comment and really ponder the answers I've given you. Thanks for your time.