Stef has made very convincing arguments for why political action will fail to get results for us. However, I think i may have found an exception to the rule. After reading "The Fountainhead" (A real must-read book), I realised that instead of voting for politicians who shrink government, there could be a new type of politician - one that we haven't seen before. What if a man like Elsworth Toohey was elected to office? Imagine this: a president gets into power and openly grants massive amounts of power and money to all special interest groups at a rate that keeps them very happy. This president does everything that he needs to stay in power as far as the argument from effect is concerned. In practice, he complies with the ideal statism politician. However, here is the twist - the president intentionally removes the veil of legitimacy of the state. He openly admits that the state is evil (and him with it), and erodes the moral justifications for the state.
This is a man who fully accepts the arguments from freedom, but chooses the opposite because he is a nihilist. This is the old trick of "Dress in your enemy's clothes and say bad things in their name". Ideally, he should act like a magnet for all of the intellectual parasites in society, and only once he has them on his side should he begin this new honesty.
Every week, he delivers a friendly and charming address to the people outlining his most recent statist activities. He will then calmly tell people the economic, moral and practical issues that will result from his statist activities. Finally, he will tie it all together with nihilism to suggest that people deserve these consequences, but in an insultingly light and almost joking kind of way. It will be good if he can illustrate these points by showing lots of hidden camera footage of back-room deals between his politicians and the education union or some corrupt business, and then still ensure that their deal goes through. Then, he can laugh lightly and suggest that it is hopeless to expect to change anything. He will ask, "Why am I telling you this? Well, I believe that society has matured. Ideas like freedom and morality are now thankfully becoming outdated. The new man of society understands that we..." and so on. If there were a pleasant and charismatic socialist president revealing some of the darkest evils of that ideology, and then saying "so what? You don't believe in morality anyway," then that could be completely and perfectly erase the government's moral legitimacy.
So... who's with me? Elsworth Toohey for President?