...I am unaware how these things are indeed beyond the purview of government, since government in fact does them, and since the documents that create the government allow for the government to shift and change....
It is very cut and dry: The US Constitution delineates the powers & responsibilities of the federal government AND the means by which we change said powers & responsibilities (the amendment process). Anything done (by law or tradition) outside of that is outside of their mission and subject to be struck down once it is heard by the Supreme Court.
That they engage in activities that are outside their perview (and thus illegal) doesn't magically make it legal or right. This sort of flagrant disregard for process & law from lawmakers is appalling.
In my opinion, gasoline, cigarettes and people who make fortunes selling Fig Newtons and other things should be taxed to all hell, because these things are harmful for the world and impact others. Even if I don't buy gasoline or cigarettes these things effect me, so I should receive some kind of benefits in the forms of parks, or street sweeping, or public care for my parents so they don't have to live in my house and annoy me.
Good point. However, this has nothing to do with food stamps. This has to do with government taxing businesses who provide goods that possess a negative impact, then using that money to positively impact the entire community. Food stamps are presumably used to the benefit of select members of society.
There is a separation between
levels of government. State government provide for "free and appropriate education", so it is properly their place to provide schools. There is no such mandate in the US Constitution (federal level government), so they should not be involved in any way. Not by collecting & distributing taxes, not by setting policies, etc.
The subject/example at hand is food stamps. This is not a power or responsibility delegated to the federal government. As such it should be left to some combination of the following: communities, private organizations, local governments, & state governments.
To my knowledge, ALL state governments have a legal obligation to work with a balanced budget (even those who find themselves in the red). Federal gov has no such requirement, and thus engages in all manner of higher dangerous deficit spending and is notoriously irresponsible, fiscally speaking. Note my former example of 90% of public assistance monies being soaked up by administration.
Communities, private orgs/charities, and state & local govs are FAR better suited than federal gov to work assistance programs efficiently.
without any form of government
Who said anything about no government? Not me!
I said food stamps & similar assistance programs were not within the perview of the federal government. That is not an opinion, that is a fact. I said the federal government is incredibly wasteful. That too is a fact. But my proposed solution is not to abolish all government. I never said anything at all like that.
Without a large national tax base, Libya could drop napalm on my farm due to a bad bid for GE and who is going to pay for the damage? the league of extremely wealthy untaxed citizens? The world is just too complicated for such 'fairness'.
Not so. First, it IS a delineated responsibility of the federal government to provide for the national defense.
Second, if Libya dropped napalm on your farm, the US military is going to bomb Libya, but not pay for your farm.