See, I'm not a libertarian, I'm just summing it up very very broadly above. I'm more on the government as a
necessary evil that should be only as powerful as necessary. They're related, but not the same (at least to me). But I acknowledge the elements of truth of the statement I made, while also thinking it's incomplete and too simple. It's kind of like people's views on communism. Some say it's great in theory, but that corrupt people have made it horrible. Others think that it's flawed
by definition because it ignores the reality of people. Where you sit on that scale is related to above IMO.
A corollary to my statement about a necessary evil should be that no other single entity in the country should be more powerful than the government either, so the rise of corporate powers should be smacked down aggressively. Too big to fail is too big to exist, but also too big to be controlled should also be similarly destroyed. Everything should be decentralized,
including government. That's the flaw inherent in many of the political philosophies of the 17th-19th centuries, they were more concentrated on how to limit the power of individual rich people over government itself (aka: Lords/Nobility), whereas they never saw the corporate hegemony way of getting around such restrictions. They didn't realize how powerful one corporation (and even sometimes one person at the head of such) could get, and how it would
rival a government.
I'm getting way off track, but hey, it's the politics forum.