By Greg Kennedy
I have recently made a habit of asking this question at opportune moments in classes and public lectures. Hilarious bewilderment usually ensues. Younger people shrug, while older people often get angry because of corrupt senators.
I am increasingly convinced that this has become an esoteric question in our modern society. Political scientists for example, would probably answer with some notion of the social contract – the idea that we accept certain limitations on our freedom (to obey laws, to pay taxes) in return for protection and services that only a centralized sovereign government can provide. When I ask the follow-up question “why do you pay taxes?” people generally respond along these lines, with reference to education and healthcare.
As a historian of the early modern period (we call it the colonial period in Canada), I have the annoying habit of comparing the present with the past. If you ever want to be rid of the notion of human evolution, just become a historian. Here are a couple of examples involving government where the present sounds a lot like the past: Continue reading