It strikes me that the struggle to systematize human relations under the rubric of a functional 'ism', the struggle to form a more perfect union of men, the effort to secure the blessings on truth justice and liberty to ourselves and our posterity, is in fact a balancing act of pragmatism. The nature of ones vision is going to depend on the development of ones consciousness.
I make the assumption that the wisdom one has about mankind and how best to manage human life is dependent on the degree to which one knows oneself. I believe that all knowledge derives from the degree to which one is conscious of who one was programmed to be from childhood and how much of that programming one has eliminated via active psychological self-work. I believe also that the number of people who are free from their past is vanishingly rare and that, therefore, real understanding and wisdom is also vanishingly rare.
Given that, it strikes me that much of what we see in this thread between Steeplerot and Vic revolve around that same question as to the nature of man, and particularly here, whether man is good or evil.
The difficulty the two have in communication is based, I think, of focus on two aspects of a single truth. Man is both infinitely perfectible and infinitely corruptible and this leads to two different kinds of citizens. I think perfected men do not need government because they have no base self that can be corrupted and that people filled with ego are vacuums of need that can never be filled even by devouring the world.
For most of us then, there is the option of movement up or down. Do we feed or deny our ego, take the high or the low road. Do we create a system in which man is free to act in good conscience or regulate to insure he does. Do we have confidence that man will move up requiring less regulations or down, in which our fear of the corruption of others drives us to want to regulate more. If we move up, what is to stop the corruption of others, and if we move down what is to stop the corruption of others from corrupting the regulations and the enforcement of the law.
And since we are all 'good people with the best of intentions' do we hate the corruption of others or do we hate the corruption of other's institutions. Do we hate man or do we hate government.
All of this, however, is a projection of our self hate. The more you realize the depth to which you have been made to feel worthless as a child, the more you will see that it is your buried feelings that bring you fear, that your fear of the world, of others, of corruption, of force, etc, are all fears that have already happened. You have all been through worse that a concentration camp run by tremendous dictators and your fear of government, well founded as it is, is a psychotic reaction to that where it is generated by that fear. The problem of course is that we create what we fear and fearing control we seek to control others, but of course with the thought that our control is good.
Anyway, I think the notion of government is a pragmatic thing, a way to introduce a third party into dispute, a party, because of independence, can possibly have some unbiased perspective. We fumble along, it seems to me, trying to balance the forces in our nature that pull us up and down and need the judgment of our neighbors to help us along in those areas were our personal egos are involved.
The individual should be free to act to the fullness of consciousness and the group will inevitably make demands as a matter of exchange for protections and shelter. The conscious individual is never restricted because he always acts for the group.
To be free, then, is not dependent of the forms you live under, but the evolution of your mind.