Yet look what did actually happen to Ireland - inherantly too weak to fight off outside invasion and influence. Power blocs providing a unified goal will always win against a disorganised decentralized system where everyone is looking out for themselves.
Ireland lasted a good thousand years or so, and they were constantly on the defense against a substantially larger, more powerful neighbour. A united Ireland would not have lasted anywhere near as long under the same circumstances.
Yes, And no. Technology has meant that a thousand years isn't going to work, bigger is exponentially better. Militants, violence, and all that stuff thrives in a modern chaotic environment, and soon people clamor for any government, let alone one that respects their rights. The sole reason rebels nowadays can accomplish anything is because they stick together. On their own, it's easy to divide and conquer through superior fire-power. Think about this,
why was Ireland they on defense from a larger foe? The enemy didn't start out that way. It combined, it saw the purpose and value of large, and it combined.
I didn't say "big governments are bad and small ones are good", I said "governments are bad because they are [coercive, etc]". But a smaller, weaker government is quite a bit easier to ignore, avoid, overthrow, etc.
No, governments are bad because they are composed of people, and people are coercive. Government is not guns, fire, birth control or any thing else. Government is not inherently anything at all. It doesn't exist in a vacuum. It needn't even be, but that wouldn't solve world problems. Governments don't oppress people, people oppress people, they are just tools, and unlike guns, they can do much better things too.