The selective-quote-response-breakdown post is always a sign that an argument has gotten out of hand. Let me preface this by saying I'm willing to concede rhetorical ground here, and that this can be considered settled.
I never said it equated to totalitarianism. Please don't put words in my mouth.
I was specifically referring to this-
You may be anxious to give up any form of personal responsibility or independence, but I'll kindly thank you from assuming that it is a given fact that the government should shove a gun in my face to make me do what you think is right, and worse yet make me pay for the bullet beforehand.
Maybe I'm not getting exactly what you were referring to, but it sounded like the kind of Ted Kaczynskism that equates any notion of the government regulating behavior as being being forced to smile at gunpoint.
I also made several historical allusions to previous 'this power you give me I will lay down' situations, which you seem to be completely ignoring due to an apparent innate trust of elected officials. ... I also disagree with your assessment of both the short term and long term effects of the government getting involved, another area where you seem to be stating 'facts' that come from nowhere but your own worldview.
Allusion is exactly the problem. You didn't point to any specific example. I know there are, but don't pretend that you put effort into your argument that wasn't there. As for my counter example, no there isn't one, because the United States has never nationalized an industry like that. Which is why
I pointed to another country that did do what I described, and in due time, released the power it claimed. You can bet your bottom dollar that a bill authorizing a nationalization would never make it's way out of Congress without an extremely clear annunciation of when that power will be released. Your innate distrust of elected officials doesn't make that any less real.
Actually, in every case I vote for the guy who says that government isn't the answer. ... Wealth transfers from urban to rural environments, tariffs and subsidies all amount to exactly that. Many people pay a little bit to help the few a lot, for no reason than the few will vote for that cause and the many don't find it important enough to vote based soley on.
I'd ask why you bother voting at all then. As mainiac aptly pointed out, the only modern President who reduced the size of the government was Bill Clinton. If there's one lesson to be taken from the political playbooks of the last 40 years, it's that a politician who campaigns saying the government is always the problem and should be shrunk, will upon victory, not shrink anything while dismantling programs to send the same expenditure to the already rich just as you criticize. Somehow, the 'small government' people have managed to hold onto that mantle while doing absolutely nothing to prove their claim to it. I agree with every criticism you have of the voting habits of idiots, but if all it takes to earn your vote is a promise to not make the government more functional, then I think you're being as duped as any others.
I'm also willing to suffer the slings and arrows of normal economic fluctuation rather than pay money to flatten the curves, especially since my understanding of economics is that this behaviour depresses the long term growth.
This is where I'm willing to consider the argument closed, because you've proven me wrong. I assumed going into this that, like every other so-called libertarian I've met online, you were going into a free-market position with the unconscious assumption that supporting a deregulated market would magically immunize you to it's faults. Every free-marketeer I've argued with before was somehow convinced that no matter the results of a market crash, they'd be riding in style just by virtue of being smarter and cooler than everyone else. It's soured my opinion of the title, and I went into this the same way. If you're willing to say "I support a free-market solution in all circumstances, even if the natural crashes associated with it's longterm cycles make me a hobo through no fault of my own", then kudos to you for staking out an honest position.
This then is where we'd have to close this, because as you said we're coming into the argument from two different angles. I certainly can't convince you of the merits of my recovery plan, if you don't thing flattening the growth/crash curve is a proper goal in the first place. Let us have our honest disagreement and be done then, and more power to you.