"Where you assume I am for big government comes from this: I call for government to enforce the balance between individual liberty and equality of economic opportunity. You claim that government is not necessary in achieving this balance because the free market can provide for this balance. I claim that the free market it not providing for this because it is sabotaged by corrupt government colluding with monopolies / oligolpolies. "
The solution to this is simply battling corruption in government. You've repeatedly argued way, way, way beyond this to things like controlled wages.
"But I have never made any claim on the correct theory to implement in practice to achieve said balance."
You've advocated government wage control, redistribution of wealth, and 99% corporate taxes. I never accused you of being a communist; I merely pointed out that you were describing communist views when you talked about your positions. You have advocated methods. Denial at this point is just silly. You've been very clear, repeatedly, in the past.
No government is ever going to leave you alone on your plot of land. If you use literally no other services or benefit from the controlling government in no other way, they'll still argue defense: If not for them, there'd be no rule of law and marauders might well kill you and take your land and stuff. You'll never get out of property taxes, at least not under any modern huge/corrupt/socialistic government. They use too much money. They can certainly be minimized, or maybe removed (if that were the choice for sources of taxation), but that would require limited government--not the behemoth web of governments up to an international level which you propose.
Regulating "opportunity" certainly wouldn't be easy. And you're talking about the equivalent of local, state, national, and international levels of government, all with the power to create, judge, and enforce their laws. So much bureaucracy requires cash.
^ What The Yell said about doing it on your own with someone else's money. This is why I don't like your communist views: They involve too much control. You can pretend that everyone on an international scale is just going to smile and work together for the greater good, but man isn't built that way. And our societies/cultures know it. You have this unending faith in big government and huge government institutions like they're all going to be smart and efficient (hahahahaha!), and they're all going to work together with an honest desire to be fair, productive, and helpful. It's just laughable on its face.
"If international levels did what they were supposed to, they would act to protect human rights and the rights of communities from corrupt federal and state authorities, and vice versa: federal and state authorities would hold international authorities to account."
Case in point, your unending faith in the incorruptibility of man. You have a presumption that there should be authority all the way up to the international level ensuring all this justice. It never occurs to you that a global government with that level of control is inherently unable to protect individuals' rights. Giving anyone that level of control and expecting incorruptibility is just silly. You can't protect against corruption by creating a global government--that's the most corruptible thing I've ever heard of.
"Why is it you equate ensuring 'justice' with 'protection money'. The state, federal, and international levels of governance are supposed to be goons to whom people pledge protection money to ensure their rights? Change of paradigm required here: those who violate people's rights should get fined, and thereby funds operations of governance."
Again, more faith that such power wouldn't be abused. More presumptions that there's any such thing as "international... governance." You can't just "change" the paradigm when the paradigm is natural order. Human beings look out for themselves and their interests. You keep presuming human beings can be given global power with absolutely no regard for the fact that this drastically increases the potential (which we always manage to realize!) for corruption--it doesn't regulate it.
"We're not talking about anything other than enforcement of laws, laws which ensure individual liberty and equality of opportunity. Those who violate those laws should get fined. Again, if there are no violators, no enforcement is needed; no government is needed, no $ to fund government or enforcement is needed."
No safety net at all? (Yes, ours is ridiculous, covering cell phones, air conditioning, cable tv!) No national defense? No environmental protections? No protections from the fact that using fines as a means to finance government is obviously begging for wide-scale abuse? Maybe more government to regulate government? And more government to regulate the regulators? Sounds sound.
" In the event justice is actually restored to the world, there would be PLENTY of people out there who could be fined more than enough to compensate victims (and government for cost of enforcing the law). "
Presumes facts not in evidence. 1) You can only take what they've got. 2) You can only take it if you catch them and can prove it. 3) You're talking big government; that takes a lot of money to fund.
Presumably you'll dispute that what you're saying necessarily means big government, but:
You're talking about many tiers of government going up to an international level.
You're talking about regulating "opportunity," which would require a hell of a lot of data and government to collect it.
Many decisions would have to be made about what constitutes one's rights vs another's, one group's vs another's, especially in regard to "opportunity," not just liberty. You require levels of courts, levels of enforcement no different than now.
The method you proposed to fund government would beg for abuse, so you'd need regulators. And regulators for the regulators. And probably a whole lot more.
"The question I have is why so much criminality has been condoned (and in some cases even sponsored) by governments for so long?"
Because government is corrupting, and corrupt people know to seek power in government. Start to accept this fact of human nature, and nature, and stop proposing more government to solve everything. It's a corrupting influence which attracts the corrupt. It's not a protection against corruption. That's why America was founded upon limited government principles, so the law would restrict the corrupt asshat politicians and the whole operation would be small and visible enough that the people could keep them in check.
We [clucked] that up many decades ago. But damn did we have a good run. We need to return to those principles of limited government restrained by law, not more corruptible government to protect us from corrupt government.
[I wish I could obey forum rules]