Here is where I fundamentally differ from anarchists: *my goal is not the downfall or overthrow of the state*. In fact, I am largely indifferent to whether there is a government or not, or which type of government is best. *My goal is subsidiarity*: devolvement of power down to the lowest level of society, that can wield it efficiently and effectively.

This means that I usually agree with anarchists, in practice, since that level is usually the household, (religious) communities, or private business. If we one day manage to successfully devolve all power down to that level, then so be it. *Perhaps human states are simply an outdated model of governance.*

But it also means that I do not think being ruled by Mark Zuckerberg, George Soros, Eddie Wu, or $TRUMP is better than being ruled by the collective decisions of European voters, the people in my community, or by my husband. The one does not automatically follow from the other. Especially, if you are not living in America.

Unlike anarchism, which is a fixed state you can reach and declared victory, even if your celebration takes place on a pile of rubble — subsidiarity is a goal that can never be reached; a continual process. *Power will always push to centralize, as human societies are a natural centrifuge.* We must constantly fight to keep it dispersed.

I have had nearly two dozen years, to come to terms with *the virtue of obedience*, and to understand how to balance submission with my personal faith. In our age, this is arguably the least-popular virtue, after chastity. The obedient are mocked as mindless sheep. But that is the great error of feminism: not every human hierarchy is tyranny. *Not every human authority is illegitimate.* It is merely limited, restrained and qualified: by Natural Law, by the fine print in the Bible, and by the immediate or eventual competition with the return of the King of kings and Lord of lords.

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

Devolvement of power down to the lowest level of society, that can wield it efficiently and effectively.

Who is the judge? Is efficiency and effectiveness subjective?

No, they're natural forces, so the "best" level will tend to be the most stable one and the one that requires the least effort to maintain.

I will co-sign. I don't particularly care what kind of government we have as long as people are generally free to live good lives. In the end I would boil the function of government down to creating a stable environment for families.

If you need more levels because of size then the next level up should be restricted to creating a stable environment for the level below it, but not interfere with levels below that.

It would certainly make things simpler here in MN. Right or wrong, if MN wants to support immigrant families, then they shouldn't have to contend with a federal police force swooping in and taking people off the streets and out of homes.

The federal gov should regulate states, not the people in them.

I don't neven think states should be involved directly with people, that should beling to the smallest local level that can actually get to know them personally.

The problem with Minnesota is the same problem with Germany:

1. a state far from the border being overrun,

2. encourages foreigners to overrun it, against the wishes of the other states,

3. some of the foreigners move to that state, but not most of them,

4. fights with the other states, to keep the foreigners around,

5. demands the other states financially support the migrants,

6. other states get pissed off and stop taking it,

7. gets hit. Cries.

Their behavior puts into question the joint border, but the wealth of the states is largely based upon the freedom of movement between the states. If MN wants an open border, but TX doesn't want that, is there a moral obligation to side with MN?

This is the situation that led to BREXIT, after all. Should TX leave the Union?