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Culture War Roundup for the week of February 16, 2026

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Citation needed.

My assumption, which anyone is free to disprove, is that the various levels of government, even as inefficient as they are, enjoy significant economies of scale when administering programs like welfare.

Downloading welfare to groups of people that are what, approximately Dunbar's number in size?

America has 343 million people, let's assume a "local community charity that knows everyone and thus knows who is deserving of benefits" serves 10x Dunbar's number so 1,500 people.

We now need approx 228,667 charities. Each one of those needs people to file tax returns, track inventory, collect donations, give out donations, etc. a charity requires administrators (or bureaucrats, if you will). Plus, those administrators need to pay rent, and buy food. So you need to pay them for their human labor time. So you now need a certain % of the charity donations to pay them. You also need to ensure no one who works for the charity is stealing money, so you need compliance and controls and good reporting. Holy shit, you've just invented government again, it turns out coordinating large numbers of humans to accomplish complex things is difficult and expensive.

A very quick research check shows an estimate of 700,000 - 900,000 government employees (all levels) who work in benefits administration, so each charity can employ no more than 3/4 people maximum, which is actually the bare minimum you need to have enough separation of duties for proper compliance around cash handling.

I don't see a world in which downloading all welfare responsibilities to magical "local charities" (which absolutely do not exist) even saves money over the status quo.

As the kids say, yes_chad.webp.

I am wildly not okay with people in the richest country starving to death. Similarly, and inevitably, I am incredibly not okay with $10,000-$100,000s of my tax dollars being wasted on medical care to fix someone's severe malnutrition that a few $1,000 of rice would have fixed a few weeks previously, that's just stupid.

I think the standard libertarian argument is to make adoption easier. If the teacher (or the school?) cares so much, he can adopt the child. Don't force the hospital to pay for it.

Speaking of stupid, I think libertarianism is absolutely fucking retarded. This is not a personal attack, you strike me as an intelligent and thoughtful person, but the libertarian ideology is absolutely retarded. It is a luxury belief that can only exist because of the very large, very productive society that supports the people who mistakenly believe human civilization can work under it's framework.

I read that entire link you sent me, it was a mixture of good ideas and absolutely retarded ideas.

To begin with, the little intro box says

We have now established each man’s property right in his own person and in the virgin land that he finds and transforms by his labor, and we have shown that from these two principles we can deduce the entire structure of property rights in all types of goods. These include the goods which he acquires in exchange or as a result of a voluntary gift or bequest.

Perhaps they manage to draw a path between "virgin land that he finds and transforms by his labor" and modern society, but immediately this is retarded because there is no virgin land to find, period. So we're on a shaky foundation given this is what, 200 years put of date?

Next up:

But the parent should have the legal right not to feed the child, i.e., to allow it to die.

We immediately are treated to libertarianism being retarded. If your "system" legally allows parents to let children starve to death, it's an awful system. And I'm very confident it is a system that will rapidly be outcompeted by systems that do not allow retardation of this level. We are the descendants of "soft" farmers instead of "hard" nomads because the farmers, who weren't Chad horse archers, still outcompeted them.

I would note here there are no libertarian societies, except maybe Somalia (which is a shit hole). Libertarian societies clearly cannot compete with societies that guardrail retarded behavior like "allowing children to starve to death".

Abortion

The libertarians are able to pivot the anti-libertarian position to also then have to be anti-abortion, which is clever. Not trying to get sidetracked, but I think that's easily addressed by picking a dividing line in age in which a fetus picks up personal property rights/potential adulthood.

Considering, then, the creation argument, this immediately rules out any obligation of a mother to keep a child alive who was the result of an act of rape, since this was not a freely undertaken act. It also rules out any such obligation by a stepparent, foster parent, or guardian, who didn’t participate at all in creating the child.

I'm actually not super offended if a mom didn't want to keep her rape baby. I wouldn't want the government to force that on her. I don't really think that any of the above people aside from parents should be obligated to take care of a kid, so libertarians and I agree here.

Furthermore, if creation engenders an obligation to maintain the child, why should it stop when the child becomes an adult?

This is retarded and such a false equivalency, just pick a line in age in which parent doesn't have to maintain the child anymore.

And what of the case, in some future decade, when a scientist becomes able to create human life in the laboratory? The scientist is then the “creator.” Must he also have a legal obligation to keep the child alive?

This is stupid and unhelpful, we're not there yet, we can handle it when we are.

consider the case of poor parents who have a child who gets sick. The sickness is grave enough that the parents in order to obtain the medical care to keep the baby alive, would have to starve themselves. Do the parents have an …obligation to lessen the quality of their own lives even to the point of self-extinction to aid the child?

And if not, we might add, at what point does the parents’ legal obligation properly cease? And by what criterion?

Just pick a line in the sand? That isn't impossible. Obviously in that example they aren't obligated to die to save the kid.

One might want to argue that parents owe only the average minimal care (heat, shelter, nutrition) necessary to keep a child alive. But, if one is going to take the obligation position, it seems illogical — in view of the wide variety of human qualities and characteristics — to tie obligation to the Procrustean bed of the human average

This is retarded. Obviously minimum care is what the parents "owe". If a kid has say diabetes, then insulin is included in "minimum care" , going immediately to "muh procustean, muh not everyone the same" is immediately answered by "the bare minimum to keep that specific human alive" which in 99% cases is a roughly identical level. This is trans-tier "because a fraction of 1% of people don't fall into the gender binary, we must make government IDs and medical records for everyone worse and less helpful".

Finally as Evers points out, suppose that we consider the case of a person who voluntarily rescues a child from a flaming wreck that kills the child’s parents. In a very real sense, the rescuer has brought life to the child; does the rescuer, then, have a binding legal obligation to keep the child alive from then on? Wouldn’t this be a “monstrous involuntary servitude that is being foisted upon a rescuer?”9 And if for the rescuer, why not also for the natural parent?

No because the rescuer didn't conceive life to the child. Because the parent did conceive life to the child. This isn't complicated.

But when are we to say that this parental trustee jurisdiction over children shall come to an end? Surely any particular age (21,18, or whatever) can only be completely arbitrary.

Just pick an age, in 99% of cases this works just fine. This is actually a solved problem.

The absolute right to run away is the child’s ultimate expression of his right of self-ownership, regardless of age.

Based.

Now if a parent may own his child (within the framework of non-aggression and runaway freedom), then he may also transfer that ownership to someone else. He may give the child out for adoption, or he may sell the rights to the child in a voluntary contract.

I'm actually not entirely opposed to this, although at a certain age this will obviously psychologically damage the child, which society will have to pay for with increased criminality, etc. Again, societies with things like marriage, that force adults to shut the fuck up and stay in a family unit (which is demonstrably better for child outcomes) clearly outcompeted societies that didn't, so this would be a regression in civilizational quality.

I do actually agree however that adoption should be much easier, and priority should be made to rescue children from absolutely shit parents (like destitute drug addicts, I'm not opposed to sterilization of awful potential parents) so they can go to better homes.

It then goes to talk about how the current state of parent/child laws in the USA sucks and is the worst of every world

I agree with basically all of it , but I think like with basically other libertarian "solution" , the proposed system is absolutely retarded, incredibly fragile, and would almost immediately disintegrate and be subsumed by neighboring countries with functional civilizations.