Steve Ballmer wrote: - You want society to take care of people, yet you are not willing to do this yourself.
Idiotic at best statement. Because only you pay taxes right?
This is the same drivel as above. For some godawful reason the concept of shared burden immediately becomes "I have to pay, someone is getting away with not paying somehow?" it's the logic of greed. The sheer love of humanity that you share with us every time you talk about the infirm really makes your political ideology look like a great choice, keep it up.In other words, you want to force others to do what you are not willing to. This makes it very difficult, if not impossible, for you to claim any moral highground here. There are currently approx 200'000 spinals in America. If we assume that half are quadriplegic, and maybe 1% of the remainder (1'000 individuals) have no family, friends or church (essentially you're assuming that they're antisocial, godless dipshits?), then it would be very easy for to band together with other overly-caring folk such as yourself and create the Care for Antisocial, Godless Spinal Dipshits Foundation, and buy them pasta.
This is exactly why Libertarianism is an evil selfish little ideology, but hey go ahead and take personal swipes at me and the "dipshits" in my metaphors. Let's be honest here, because it's the best you can do.
Ideologically driven 'utopian' societies based either entirely on the individual like you propose, or entirely on the group as funken proposes, completely miss the whole concept of a civilized society as far as I'm concerned. I'll take the cumbersome-bloated-wasteful socialist capitalist democracies we have over either of your solutions, and that's a sad settling for mediocrity I know, but that seems to be where we are as a species as of now. Your choice would mean even more suffering for the infirm, and working class. Funkens choice would likely end up in another chaotic bloodbath.