But here a salient issue is what is to be adverted. Taxes - OK, I'm on board. But what of murder laws? I am somewhat in favor of them because they seem to me to be eminently reasonable, though I am open to counter arguments as to why they are not.
We are in full agreement on this point. Not paying a tax is not a crime, all labeling to the contrary notwithstanding. Robbing a bank, however, is and persons engaging in such actions must be held accountable for their actions lest the world fall into even greater chaos.
Once again this is the defacto truth, but things could be different. That they are not is a reflection of humanity and not of the concepts of governance. Governance per sé is not the problem - people are.
And in that society you will still have those who will do their best to master you. When things come down to brass tacks, your ability to wreak untold violence upon such persons is the only reasonable guarantee that you will be able to keep them at bay, and even then you are always at risk. How else would you protect your rights in such a culture, particularly if there was a large and powerful group interfering with you? How would you protect your rights? Help from neighbors? Perhaps, but what if those neighbors were not interested in getting involved? In the end, these matters always boil down to force and the threat thereof - they HAVE to because of the nature of humanity. When push comes to shove, force is the only thing people will respect, and if you do not have enough force you are SOL.
Consider all the lunatic groups in the world. Imagine how long would an ancap society last with kooks like fundamentalist christians, muslims and jews, just to name three? No matter how you pose the arguments and rhetoric, once the cuffs come off there will be virtually instantaneous activity arising by such groups to force the rest to toe their line of beliefs. Communists, socialists, environmentalists, creationists, evolutionists.... you name it, will immediately get to work to attempt to force everyone else into their vision of how life ought to be lived. This is absolutely guaranteed to happen. What then? Force. Force and its threat is all that stands between any given person and tyranny. There is nothing else because people who are hell bent on making you do as they bid will not likely be swayed by your pretty logic or heart rending emotional appeals. The prospect of a bullet between the eyes, however, gets their attention rather instantly.
Even an ancap society would require a broadly agreed upon framework of enforcement to best ensure that one group is unable to interfere with the rightful choices of others. Until the fundamental character of the human animal changes drastically in what I daresay is a better direction, the sword of Damocles in the form of the threat of possibly violent and overwhelming force must be held over the heads of every man, woman, and child, for without this the world would descend into madness in the blink of an eye. It takes but a tiny proportion of people acting along a common line to wreak untold havoc upon the rest. NAZI Germany and the soviet union are two excellent examples of this.
This presents some problems. For example, you join a group that lives in a clearly delineated part of a large city. That group chooses to have no law whatsoever. Murder and mayhem and anything else goes. Fine by me so long as all participants are willing and well-informed. But what happens when a shootout sends bullets into an adjacent neighborhood, killing someone? What now? Are those people not to be held accountable for having involved unwilling parties in their violence? If not, then we would be living in pure chaos and this would become very bad and would absolutely end up in some form of feudalism as each group would inevitably have to seek to protect itself against every other - and you can completely forget about individualism. That would become forgotten history because all who decided to go it alone would be eaten alive by one of the predatory groups.
As we see, there must be a baseline standard to which all must adhere, the threat of force being always present to ensure that the standard line is toed. The real issue for the question of personal liberty is not whether such a baseline exists, but what is its nature and the specifics of its implementation. We simply cannot escape this requirement in order to live freely and justly amongst each other. In other words, we as a group of individuals must agree to, accept, and abide by some set of fundamental precepts and limitations in order to enjoy a broader freedom with the guarantees and protections that those freedoms will not be violated. It is seemingly somewhat paradoxical that this would be so, but this is how it must be. If anyone can demonstrate otherwise, I am more than willing to be convinced to some contrary position.
It is used out of laziness, ignorance, and perhaps even malice in some cases. Wrong is wrong, and when wrong resides at this fundamental a level it becomes a very dangerous thing because it distorts everything that has been built upon it.
In a sense, yes, but it behooves us to understand clearly that there are other aspects to "quantity" where this is either not so, or it is justifiably so. Human affairs tend to run toward the diverse and not-so-simple. Keeping all of these sorts of things straight in one's thoughts is not an easy thing, but it is IMO a very important thing, for as the saying goes the devil is in the details. Many vitally important things that seem to be relatively insignificant details get lost in the currents of other, seemingly larger and more important issues. This is a very dangerous phenomenon and people should not only be aware of it, but should endeavor not to fall victim to the lure of easier answers that ignore such important "details".