Federally the government should be Lazie fair
However I do think the States are aloud to regulate buissness within their states
Now to the person above you its all well and good in thoes countries then I encourage you to move there yourself. See you have options, there are places attempting to be what you agree with, but please forgive me for not also sharing your ideology. This is the onlly country I believe in, I believe in its principles and the risks associated with it.
Seems kinda mean to force me to conform to your world view if you have supposedlly so many options while I do not.
We tried that. We got the late 1800s. Let's not repeat that mistake again, yeah? I doubt this day and age is going to give us another Teddy Roosevelt to show the parasitic capitalists exactly where they can shove it. It's frankly even worse, now that the unions have practically become a mirror of what they were created to oppose.
I'd also note that forcing
laissez-faire capitalism on people is no different than forcing any other social or economic order on them. The system should be the one which provides the fairest treatment for the whole of the citizenry, not that which egotistical teenagers, old-money economic aristocrats, greedy sociopathic businessmen, and shortsighted anarchists think will benefit them. If you want hands-off government, why don't
you move to a country which embodies it? It's a cliched line, but I hear that Somalia is nice this time of year.
Incidentally, you seem to have some misconceptions regarding the principles underlying the founding of the U.S. The Founding Fathers weren't opposed to taxation, they were opposed to not being provided with the government services (most notably, representation
in said government) which were supposed to accompany the obligation of taxation. Neither the Federalists nor the Democratic-Republicans favored weak government, they merely differed on the level which they believed should hold the greater balance of the nation-state's power.