If you're familiar with Starship Troopers, you must serve time with the military or any government program in order to become a Citizen. If you don't, that's fine, but you can't vote, and you're called a Civilian. Sounds like some elements of fascism. The problem with that is that of the 300 million people in the United States, not everyone will be on the same level of ability. The citizen who is not taxed may have a disability that cannot be cured, and may need government assistance to support any visits to the doctor. By focusing on one particular idealogy of "survival of the fittest", you're putting individual willpower over society's needs. There needs to be a government that assists with keeping everything together.
I am very familiar with Starship Troopers and its system, it is a very authoritarian system. I am of the opinion that if the government is going to provide universal services, it can
demand more than just taxes from its citizens.
Your example places the needs of an individual before society's needs. If the person is disabled such that they cannot contribute to society in anyway, why should the government save them? Because they are a human being?
I am not saying that other societal structures cannot care for those individuals, their family or philanthropic organizations. Both of these likely are better at then any bureaucratic system anyway.
Also, speed limit concerns? Really? If we didn't have a government telling us what the basics are, there would be more murders and accidental deaths in this country than any other industrialized country.
So, individuals are idiots and big government is smart?
It was an example of how the Federal government ties control to funds. Why can Montana's State government not determine what is "safe" on the highways it pays to build? Why are Washington bureaucrats who have never been to Big Sky country smarter about what is "safe" there than the locals?
What I find hypocritical is that these anti-government "hands off my freedoms" types complain about the government watching them, yet when their house burns down or they are mugged, they beg for the firefighters or police officers, both government programs, to assist them.
If the person pays taxes that fund those services it is not hypocritical. One could hire private security and their own private fire fighters, but that is inefficient if I am already paying for the government ones via taxes.
In an anarcho-capitalist society (oh no!), coalitions of insurance companies likely will establish contracts with local security and fire prevention companies to protect their customers property & persons. The companies will even put out the fires of those not covered by insurance in order to prevent the fire from spreading and destroying customer property.
This gets interesting when you begin to look at how
war occurs.
My last point is that times have changed from the beginning of the United States to today's United States. We cannot vehemently follow the Constitution when the planned population at that time was much lower than expected, and society's values and habits shifted. I'm not saying the Constitution is false, but strict following of it jeopardizes the current programs that have been made to support every unique type of person living in America.
You will have to explain your last sentence more. I think the Constitution as written is a very flexible document and if it had been followed would have prevented the expansion of American power abroad and avoided many of the snafu's of the early 20th and 21st century. Population has little to do with State's rights and the checks and balances.
As an example, if the government had actually followed the Constitution, Afghanistan would be a
declared war and Congress would have actually had to put its butt on the line for Iraq. Instead, like the Gulf War & Vietnam, Congress ceded its Constitutional duty to the office of the President.