Americans Like the Idea of Government Much Better Than the Reality, To Judge By Polls

If you ask them what they think in the abstract, Americans remain very much divided over the role they think government should play. A Gallup poll published today shows a three-way dead heat among fanciers of active government, aficionados of a small state, and people who answered, "wha?" But, if you throw in the very real-world matter of what government costs people and how it affects their lives, opinions shift. Then, Americans overwhelmingly discover a fondness for putting the state on a tight leash. As it so happens, that squares with Reason's own polling results.
In Gallup's survey, 1,510 adults were asked, "Where would you rate yourself on a scale of 1 to 5, where 1 means you think the government should do only those things necessary to provide the most basic government functions, and 5 means you think the government should take active steps in every area it can to try and improve the lives of citizens?" Thirty-two percent picked 1 or 2, 34 percent picked 4 or 5, and a solid 33 percent stuck their fingers in their ears, wiggled them around, and picked 3.
Deadlock—and those rough divisions have prevailed for several years now! Time to start divvying up territory!
But that's an abstract question. As Gallup's Jeffrey M. Jones points out, "Some segment of Americans may favor an active federal government, but believe the current government goes further than they would ideally like."
And, in fact, that's exactly what Gallup has found over the past 20 years. Many Americans may favor the idea of an activist government, but at least a plurality of respondents consistently thinks that the government is actually doing to much.

In fact, in the current Gallup survey, 53 percent of respondents favor the government doing less in order to reduce taxes. An identical 53 percent says the government is doing "too many things that should be left to individuals and businesses."
Interestingly, that number is rather close to the results of a recent Reason-Rupe survey of 1,013 Americans. Of the respondents, 56 percent say that Congress passes too many laws. An even larger 76 percent say the federal government spends too much money. Fifty-five percent were so adamant on that point they preferred to see the federal government default on its debt than raise the debt ceiling.
Given respondents' opposition to Obamacare, war with Syria, and NSA surveillance, it's obvious there's a long list of activities on which they believe the government is expending too much money and legislative time.
Government may be one of those things that seems OK as an idea, from a distance. A far distance. But it's always wildly disappointing in real life.
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In fact, in the current Gallup survey, 53 percent of respondents favor the government doing less in order to reduce taxes.
Fifty-three percent, eh?
Boy, he was a genius, wasn't he? Why didn't I vote for him again?
You were jealous of the hair.
Wanna bet? $10,000?
You know, I saw him drinking a pi?a colada at Trader Vic's in Sarasota.
Non-Alcoholic, of course.
Wasn't close enough to tell, but his hair was perfect.
I'd say this is a better reflection on reality; that is when push comes to shove, the current general displeasure not withstanding.
"Cut government! Just not anything that affects me or my family or my friends."
Put govt on a leash? How about using a choke collar?
Or a noose?
Inb4
SOMALIA!
What you are seeing is the half of America that likes having social security, medicare, a living wage, a nation, and American jobs, but doesn't like gun control, affirmative action, and bombing the middle east.
On the scale of 1-5, I pick ZERO.
I pick negative 5.
The idea of government is that it will protect our lives, liberty and property, and maybe promote the general welfare on top of that, strictly following the rules in the constitution and only adding functions when a supermajority of the citizenry wants the government to do more and amends the constitution in order to facilitate that in some specific area of perceived need, all at a cost in taxes that is reasonable and fair, without burdening future generations with crushing debt.
The reality of government is that it takes our money, restricts our liberty, ignores its own rules, grants immunity from liability to its own officers, spends without restraint, debases the currency and leaves the bills for our children and grandchildren to deal with.
So yeah, the reality sucks.
Thus far, that's also the reality of anarchy.
Unlike anarchy, some governed countries have managed for a time to attain some level of protection from outside threats without being a larger threat to their population.
Anarchy has officers?
Yes, and they let you gambol about field and forest.
/whiteindian