wilheldp_PE
PE, LEED AP, SPAM KING
And are there unicorns in the forest that fart rainbows? That's a very noble view of what government is supposed to be, but in reality, the magnified weaknesses of politicians are thrust upon the people while we are being told that it is all for our own benefit.^Absolutely not. Government, at least as far as American government goes, is an attempt to take such weakness into account and operate a system that, if run properly, cancels those weaknesses through the checks and balances set up by the constitution. It is, on its very face, an attempt to set aside those human weaknesses and develop a set of rules that make sure that all important decisions are made with a level-headed, rational consideration of the good of the many versus the good of the few.
If the first quoted section of your post is what you think government is, then anarcho-capitalism isn't for you. The government isn't there to solve all of our problems for us...never should have been, and I don't think that is what the Constitution set out to do. Personal responsibility is the central governing thought of both anarchy and libertarianism. If there is a serious health risk, then you better get to work solving the problem before you die. First person to invent the solution wins, and can become very wealthy selling said solution (i.e. the capitalist part of anarcho-capitalism). Second person to solve the problem also becomes wealthy and provides competition to the first person (i.e. a check/balance). If one of the providers is seen to be corrupt or greedy by the population, they will buy from the other guy, and the first guy won't become wealthy.What is the overriding philisophy of anarcho-capitalism, in how it would be "best" for society as a whole? In what way would anarcho-capitalism prevent a public health catastrophe resulting from the reluctance to deal with wastes? The way I see it, the expense and trouble of dealing with wastes would be ignored until it became so desirable (e.g., in the event that catastrophe strikes) that the private sector sees a potential profit, and the public at large are willing to pay for it. In other words, by the time it's too late, and great Auntie Petunia and little Jo-jo have already died of cholera or the plague...
Having a large central provider as the government breeds helplessness and laziness. Instead of people taking responsibility for their actions and suffering the consequences, they just look to Big Brother to bail them out (see: the current housing bailouts).