There it is again, that troubling attitude...
The goal should be the maximization of human liberty.
If a given political system doesn't do that, we shouldn't be advocating for it.
That a political system could work if people were different than they are doesn't improve the case for that system.
It's like your insisting that we all put water in our gas tanks, because water should run an internal combustion engine.
These are excellent arguments against the state, of course.
And in the case of the "minarchist" State, we have documented evidence that it does not work; in fact, we have evidence that what the minarchist State becomes is a ravaging beast which destroys everything including and in particular human liberty.
So, could you please explain how you - as a minarchist - have as a goal the maximization of human liberty, please?
I'm not sure what you mean..
I mean, what is the foundational principle upon which you advocate for your preferred order of society?
For instance, the Founders at the point of secession stated that they hold certain unalienable truths to be self-evident... then they built from there. Unfortunately, they engaged in a logical inconsistency, when they stated that they hold that all men are created equal (observably so), yet inaugurated a State, an institution which manifestly overturns that objective fact.
However, they did seek to establish a State that was respectful of that fact. But that was then. We can see today that it is not possible to establish a state which is respectful of human liberty.
Failed how, and in comparison to what?
Surely you're not preparing to make a case that the American State is somehow respectful of human liberty?
It has quite CLEARLY failed at securing human liberty; in fact it is in direct and open conflict with the concept of human liberty.
Please don't ask me to bear that out. Seriously...
/thread Anarchist have much in common with communists. There is a temptation to rewrite history to ignore that this is in fact the history of mankind.
Along with the idea that if everybody was a voluntaryist, the concept would work perfectly.
Philosophically, communism works very well. The test of any theory is reality.
Incorrect. The principle from which communists operate is that "all men ARE EQUAL", full stop. This is observably false. We can easily prove that all men (mankind) are not equal. Thus, communism fails philosophically.
That men are created equal is observable, and true. If there were some objective instrument by which we could determine which men amongst us who are capable of ruling over other men, then we would have an argument in favor of the State. If there were some objective instrument by which we could determine that all men are in all things equal, then we would have an argument in favor of communism. We have neither of these instruments.
What we can observe and know is that one man is in no way superior to another in any provable manner. Thus there is no basis for one man to rule over another. Thus there is no basis for the existence of the State.
So, you're wrong. Communism does not work very well, neither in practice nor philosophically.