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Does anyone here ever think to themselves, or out loud, "Here I am in the 21st Century. Sure, all the old scifi stories told me I'd have a shiny flying car but I'm really more interested in where my 21st Century government is?"
For me that is premised on the view that pretty much all existing governments are based on theory and structures that date at least back to the 18th Century in the West. The East might say they "modernized" a bit with the move from dynasties (China, Korea, Japan) to democratic forms but when I look at the way those governments and polities actually work seems more like a wrapper around the prior dynastic structures.
But I also find it challenging to think just what might be the differentiating change that would distinguish a "21st Century" government from existing ones. The best I've come up with is that I don't see it as some type of privatization divestiture of existing government activities (even though I do think some should be) but more of a shift from government being the acting agent it is now and more like a markets in terms of mediating and coordinating individual and group actions via mechanisms other than voting for representation or direct voting on actions.
In some ways I think one can make that claim but in an important ways, to me, numbers don't really matter. In both you still see the role of government as an actor, doing things, rather than an institutional form that enables people to do things. I think the US Constitution is a good example of that type of thinking. It defines the powers the government is suppose to have, limiting what actions it can and cannot take.
I'm wondering what scope might exist for removing government (and the bureaucracy that performs the work/actions) from our social and p... (read more)