>>Times, demographics, and needs change. Adapt.<<
That's the same explanation progressives give for our "inevitable" move to socialism. It's based upon false premises, but that doesn't stop people from making any number of claims with this explanation. People are perfectly capable of adapting on their own. They've done so for millions of years. They don't suddenly need you and your bright ideas to protect them from themselves. I looked it up. They really don't.
It is true that many things have changed. And there have been abuses left unchecked in the past that I'm not arguing should be left unchecked again. But this is a legitimate basis for new, smarter laws and law enforcement. People aren't inherently more of babies as you argue. They're only that way if that is what you actively make them. I agree that we should have laws and law enforcement that should actually serve us and not serve the interest of established business in stifling innovation by massively increasing start-up costs. I do not agree that, because the world's population has grown, they're inherently babies.
>>People are, at their core, semi-retarded animals with no concept of the greater good.<<
Which is precisely why it is bad to give these semi-retarded animals massive power over one another. Without massive government (increasing the cost of living and lowering the standard of living for everyone as a bonus), no semi-retarded animal can do monumental harm to his fellow man. Thank you for making my point for me. Everyone deserves all the best things they can attain for themselves in this world. (Not at the expense of wronging others. I'm a fan of reasonable laws and law enforcement.) It only hurts everyone to take what they attain for themselves. Well balanced children are taught not to take things that are not theirs. Now if only we could educate some adults and make them more well balanced people, less untaught children.
Edit: In case it's over anyone's head, all of this is exactly why [a small part of, anyway] the U.S. Constitution was written the way it was, with limitations of powers and checks and balances. The Founders of the United States of America didn't limit the power of the government they were creating because they couldn't have abused unlimited power and increased their wealth: They limited its power because they were educated men actually acting in the best interests of their people. They were scared shitless and knew that what they were doing was going to be very important for a lot of people for a long time, if they succeeded. They crafted this document with all of the abuses of their present world and knowledge of history in mind. A knowledge that isn't as spotty and willfully ignorant as the knowledge of many supposedly learned men today.
I think creating the government of a people that rose from a collection of immigrants to the sole superpower on planet Earth was a success. While I'm all about catching abuses that weren't always caught in the past, I think an educated man must be capable of looking at the success of the US Constitution and learning from it. I believe that to attack such a document as unjust because it doesn't give government the power to enforce "social justice" without being able to learn anything from it is rather ignorant. The US constitution doesn't allow the government to claim ownership of everything and everyone, which is what "social justice" requires of a government. I believe this was a good decision. Enjoy being a subject. I enjoy being a citizen.
[I wish I could obey forum rules]