Yeah yeah and the mail man does not deliver mail he just collects welfare and votes for the government.
No, the mailman
does deliver mail. But the policeman does
not deliver security. That is not his purpose.
(They
are both tax parasites, however - and I have no doubt that most of both groups do indeed "vote for the government," if they vote at all.)
You do your self disservice by falling into denial.
I did not deny anything that is actually true. Police do not provide security. That is not what they are for, and that is not what they do (except incidentally). As far as actual breaches or infringements of property or security go (as distinct from
malum prohibitum violations), they show up afterwards and write reports. If the situation warrants, maybe they'll give you a report number to use with an insurance claim - but that's about it.
They occasionally round up some
malum in se offenders (and significantly, note that they do not do this with the purpose of making whole the victims, to whatever extent that is possible) - but despite this being much vaunted as their greatest justification, it actually constitutes only a tiny fraction of their operations and actions. It is really just the "fig leaf" to which I referred in my previous post.
In other words, as far as "security" is concerned, the police don't do anything that others (or those they might have hired for the purpose) could not have done for themselves
* - if those others were permitted to do so by the very rules that police are employed by the state to enforce. It is the enforcement of those rules that is the purpose of the police, not anyone's "security" (unless it is the "security" of the rule makers ...).
* and far more often than not, the police do a good deal less than that, even
Police is security by another name.
No, it isn't. Police are priveleged enforcers of
malum prohibitum edicts decreed by a third party (namely, the state) - most of which most people almost certainly would not agree to if they had any say in the matter.
A security firm is police by another name.
No, it isn't. A security firm is an unpriveleged provider of private property protection.
Unlike police, security guards do not have any authorities, priveleges or immunities that any other citizen does not have.
(Proper training at a private security firm stresses this fact strongly. I know, because I used to work for one, way back in the day.)
What you said is not up to the level of discourse I am used to reading from you.
What I said is true. Police do not exist to provide security. They do not exist to "serve and protect."
Private security firms do.
That is why the distinction between "police" and "security guards" exists in the first place - they are different terms denoting very different things.
I can certainly see how any department of government whether it is police or regulators or utilities are running at bare minimum passable levels or not running at all. But that does not mean that they will not exist in free market.
Priveleged enforcers of unconsented-to
malum prohibitum rules (i.e., police) will not exist in a genuinely free market.
By definition, the two are contradictory and entirely incompatible with one another.
I can assure you if we had anarchist paradise tomorrow you would still have to obey speed limits and traffic lights on your flying car.
Indeed, I would. And whatever you might want to call them, the enforcers of such rules (rules decreed by property owners and agreed to by users of that property) would merely be unpriveleged employees of yet another private business concern, just like anyone else - and not at all like what are called "police" today.