but corporations are people too D:
Anyways, you all have a point about how the current government works, but here's a problem: humans naturally like to select a leader. It's easy to demonstrate too: in your group of friends, do you have someone who generally makes decisions, tells others what to do? You don't have a problem with it, because you accept him as a follower.
No, the real problem, is that we have too few leaders for the amount of people. with the advent of nigh-instant communication, it would be even easier to make a decentralized government. Instead of a representative or parliamentary democracy, let us have federations, where states or provinces are self-governing entities, with towns and counties governing themselves. By decentralizing, people will have less of a problem, not because they're being ruled by someone else, but because they're familiar with their leader.
The federal government can assign taxes to the states, and the states, in turn, will have to assign taxes to the counties, and the counties will assign taxes to the towns, and the towns will tax the people. By decentralizing, taxes can be placed on a community basis, and they won't be based on brackets or other qualifications.
... and I just realized this has nothing to do with the topic.
Piracy is stealing, as you can't copy down a book, then give it to other people for free. The crux of this is understanding the video game purchase: You are not purchasing the code itself, but a license to use the code. If you used a yogurt culture to make more yogurt and give it to people, the manufacturers won't get angry. But if you got a recipe for the yogurt, and you started making copies of it and handing it out, and THOSE people made copies and handed it out, suddenly the manufacturers are really pissed. It is hard to make analogies, as video games are unique. Pirating songs is not the same thing as pirating video games; if you pirate a video game, there is a whole lot more you can do with that pirated video game than you can do with a pirated song.