Now for the obvious question : well, those who are in power sure are in power but my response is to give some more (and some less) power to the state, namely getting more direct democracy, and more taxes on the extremely wealthy, as well as some rule for the financial system that make accumulation of huge wealth harder.
That wasn't a question.
how do you make education and healthcare
accessible to all without an extensive government?
That depends on what your goals are. I'm not sure why you think government is necessary for these to occur. Let's look at them both:
education
What is necessary to make education available?
You need:
* People to teach
* People to learn
* A place for them to get together
With those three things, education is possible. You'll note that none of those three require any kind of national government. There are plenty of alternatives. Local communities can create local schools taught by volunteers. People can homeschool. People can go to private schools. All of these can coexist, and people can choose for themselves what they'd like to do. Libertarian methods don't make education suddenly go away, they're simply incompatible with the idea of forcefully taking money away from people in in the form of taxes in order to fund education for other people's children and then requiring those children to participate in that education under threat of parental fines and imprisonment. If you don't send your children to school in this country, the government might fine or imprison you, and in some cases take your children away.
Maybe you're comfortable having money forcefully taken from you so that other people can decide how your children will be educated under threat of fines and imprisonment you if you don't like it.
Some of us aren't.
healthcare
they are both accessible to all in Belgium, in reasonable quality
It's interesting that you ask about healthcare, because it provides an airly good example for those of us here in the US. I've never been to Belgium, but according to
various sites, Belgium appears to have a psuedo-nationalized healthcare system.
From above links:
In Belgium, health insurance is mandatory. Basic cover is provided by the national social security system
Contributions are paid by both employers and employees and they amount to 7.35 % of each person’s gross salary. The employee must pay 3.55 % directly from their wages and employers must pay the remaining 3.8 %.
People have to pay a certain amount of their medical bill themselves and they usually pay fees directly to their doctor or the hospital. They must submit their receipts for reimbursement and the money is then paid directly into the claimant’s bank account.
Most Belgians take out supplementary health insurance to cover the portion of their bill, which is not reimbursed.
Now, I suspect that a lot of americans would read this and react unfavorably to it. We don't have a national healthcare system here and having 7% taken from your paycheck for the privilage of paying cash for medical treatment just doesn't sound that great to me. Again, I'm just reading about this, I've never been to Belgium, but for the american audience...ask yourselves if the above sounds like something you'd want to sign up for.
In any case, to answer the question...we don't have national health care here in the US, and obviously people still get medical attention. Just because these functions
can be provided via coercive national programs doesn't mean that those programs are the only way to provide them.
Additionally, I don't see why making health insurance "mandatory" is perceived as a good thing. To me
choice seems like a good thing. There's nothing stopping insurance from existing in a libertarian society. People would still be able to buy it if they wanted it. It simply wouldn't be mandated under penalty of punishment, and nobody would have money forcefully taken from their paychecks.