| | Jordan:
If a government is strictly limited to creating and upholding laws that focus on protecting the individual rights of its citizens, then I would argue that, in principle, there should be only one valid set of objectively derived laws that should apply equally to all people and that the concept of multiple legal jurisdictions is philosophically untenable. This of course, presupposes that there is the recognition of a fundamental principle from which individual rights spring, and each concrete law can be traced back to and validated from that principle. Thus, in my view, if the US federal government was constrained to doing its proper job, then there would actually be no role for state governments at all.
The problem arises when governments step beyond their proper jurisdictions and begin creating laws that improperly control the behavior or otherwise abridge the freedom of individuals. Laws that fall into this realm tend not to be objectively validated against any specific principle, but become arbitrary. Note that I am not saying they are necessarily irrational, but just arbitrary. One subset of these types of laws fall under the heading of "rules and regulations". For example, once the government improperly subsumes the function of building roads, it then has the obligation to make the roads safe by imposing speed limits. The actual speed selected is somewhat arbitrary (e.g., 55, 60, 65, 70 MPH) but some speed needs to be selected to make the limit comprehensible and enforceable. I suggest that people can properly argue about "laws" that fall into this category, since there are many different factors that can be considered when establishing the actual legal limit. And disagreements over these sorts of things lead people to want to set up different jurisdictions so that they can establish different rules and regulations. This problem vanishes when the government is precluded from these areas altogether. Then individuals (or companies of individuals) take on the responsibility of building the roads, etc. and each acts as their own "jurisdiction" over their own property, establishing the "rules and regulations" that they see fit within their domain. Ultimately, the market for their goods and services will influence what sorts of restrictions people find acceptable.
Tying into another point I (and Bill Dwyer) made in another thread, the point I am making above regarding the proper function of government is the distinction between "protecting" our rights and "governing" our lives. All of the areas I deem to be inappropriate government activity have to do with "governing" us. This is why I still believe that it would be a very useful distinction to stop calling what Objectivist's desire a "government". We don't want some refinement of what we have today. We don't even want what we had at the signing of the US Constitution - as this was already flawed with government involvement in the postal system, road building, education, interstate commerce, and so on. We need a new name that symbolizes the true nature of what we seek - a structure confined to the protection of individual rights - nothing more or less.
Getting back to the first point, of course the reality is that even if you did articulate the fundamental first principle of individual rights and construct a consistent framework of law upon it, that doesn't mean that everyone is going to accept it. Most people are not fully rational and bring all sorts of baggage to the table that muddy the water when discussing rights, so regardless of how philosophically appropriate a single-jurisdiction government would be, I cannot see it being accepted or implemented in the foreseeable future.
Regards, -- Jeff
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