HisLight said:
I do not need a parent. I am quite capable of managing my own affairs.
But you live in a society. It's not all about
your affairs. It's about our collective affairs. And that's when we need the government - because most of us are too selfish, self-centered, and short-sighted to act collectively without being told how and made to.
HisLight said:
I find that people succeed when they focus on the thing that they do best. Our government should focus on essential functions so that they can perform those functions effectively and efficiently.
That's what the government is trying to do. But again, people are selfish, self-centered, and short-sighted, including the people who run the government, and so the government often fails at it's task. The solution isn't less government, it's getting more intelligent, responsible, socially oriented people into government (and into society as a whole).
HisLight said:
I am not advocating anarchy. I am merely stating that that same ineffective and inefficient process will be applied to arts funding. Graft and greed are part of the process. There is no magical purity that comes with government funding.
This is all true, but it's better than no funding or government oversight at all.
HisLight said:
There will be less money available for arts funding as a good portion of the money will be allocated to administrative costs. The government has administrative costs in allocating and distributing funds. The donee has administrative costs with grant writing, reporting, and frequently financial auditing.
The arts represent such a small social endeavor and such a small amount of funding that there has never been much room for the kind of graft and waste that you're talking about.
HisLight said:
To imagine that government funding will result in something better than what we have now is to ignore the results of the war on drugs or the war on poverty. Perhaps that is why you are in a creative field and I am not.
But we aren't talking about total government funding of the arts (I hope). That I would agree would be an all around bad idea. But being that art is not a commodity in the normal sense, yet is a very necessary social endeavor nevertheless, it does need some financial sponsorship to keep it active and healthy. That financial sponsorship needs to come from a lot of different sources to ensure freedom of expression, without which art becomes just more useless "sponsored" propaganda.
Art is a special case, I think.