But also relevant is this: infrastructure needs are growing, not declining. You may if you wish argue that 3D printing, mesh networks and personal nuclear reactors (or solar cell arrays) plus cheap water filtration are gonna change that real soon, making taxes obsolete; but so far the historical trend is strongly demonstrating ever-greater needs for public infrastructure. The fact that a few companies actually have private and rather monopolistic control over many of the most modern components of that vital public infrastructure is an argument for close regulation of them by government of one kind or another, surely.
Pure Libertarianism works best if you can make everything you need from wood, using sharpened stones. By the time a society can create Bronze, it's not viable.
Besides the net neutrality reality, I reflected on a random scattering of realities:
Apple gets to decide how much tax they pay and to whom they pay it.
Facebook can control who gets elected, how happy your kids are, and how many friends wish you happy birthday. It'll take credit for some of this work depending on which way the wind is blowing.
Twitter decides who Trump decides to punch or blow up.
Google unleashes new species of mosquitoes.
Auto manufacturers tend to lobby CARB more than the other way around with regards to auto emissions.
Meanwhile the U.S. government is spending $67,000,000,000 building a wall that I wouldn't call public infrastructure.
How long will it be until a Stripe-like service gives you citizenship or removes your citizenship from a government? Machine learning-based immigration, the President will personally build the model :(
I found https://shift.newco.co/your-financial-shock-wealth-4845e6dc1... a very interesting analysis of how the masses subtly and most effectively become enslaved without raising much protest.
Unfortunately, those who fail to learn from history repeat its past errors. One example comes to mind: The Roman Empire with its edict of "Bread and Circuses" -- well that too fell ... hard.