PLAYER57832 wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:
Also, why do people assume that only government should provide X-amount of these particular services to various groups?
And if they assume that, then how much should X be? And, how do they know?
This is the only answerable question. I have said all along that government's function is both to provide "fences" so that individuals and other entities don't trod on the basic rights of others. Beyond that, and as a part of that, government needs to undertake things that are not inherently profitable for business or where there is an overriding moral imperative against taking profit.
Is monetary profit the only means for people to create organizations to produce goods and services? Obviously not.
So why do people insist that the government must provide such goods and services?
PLAYER57832 wrote:Much of biological and environmental research and work falls into the first bracket. Medicine falls into both.. it is both difficult to be inherently profitable and there is a moral imperative to ensure that profit doesn't limit its availability to some extent. The debate lies in how much and where profit can exist, but that is another topic, mostly already being addressed in the latest incarnation (whatever it is named now) of Phattscotty's healthcare thread.
Would there be no medicine nor any biological and environmental research without government-provided funding?
(Response: Well, there wouldn't be enough).
If we maintain that only government should provide X-amount of these particular services to various groups, then how much should X be?
And, how do we know?