So you are a guy who hates government and doesn't want government ownership or involvement in virtually anything, but at the same time wants the government to own and control everything. ...
You are making a common mistake of equating socialism with communism, which does have a foundation of government owners of the means of production. In socialist Scandinavia, government ownership of factories, shipping lines, lumber compainies etc is rare.
Most "libertarian socialists" and Scandinavians prefer private ownership especially if via stocks that all can participate in their ownership; but they think it is society's duty to provide:
(1) good health care for ALL, not just the well off as in the US;
(2) good educational opportunity for ALL, not just those whose parents can afford a home in a richer neighborhood, which can afford to pay teachers well, buy books for the library, repair broken windows, etc. and not the poor schools in poor neighborhoods as is common in the US.
I. e. a libertarian socialists sees education and medical care as a RIGHT, not a privilege of the wealthy.
My two major operations required seven nights in the hospital for recuperation - Total cost to me was zero. Doctor and many drugs are free as are blood tests, expensive MRI and T99m body scans, etc. (In 7 years I have measured my PSA 50 times as I used my purchased ADT drug intermittenly - resuming use as PSA apporached 0.1ng/ml.) Some buses in Brazil have words I like, painted on their sides, which translate as:
Transport - A citizen's right; The government's duty.
Brazil's main problem is corrupt politicians - a tradition from 300+ years ago: but as in China now, that is changing - politicians are actually going to jail!
I have not owned a car since I sold my cattle farm. It was a three hour drive from Sao Paulo*, and very cheap even for land there as badly run down /neglected. Its >100 hilly acres supported only ten scrawny cows with ribs clearly showing under their skin. They used all the energy the grass gave, just climbing up and down the hills. There was a spring high up on the land, so the first thing I did was plastic hose to several small stone water basins where they could drink without going back down to the small streams in the valleys between the hills. Then I plowed under the weeds, and seeded with good seed (at cost of ~$3000).
Ten years later, when I sold it; the 50 head of fat steers alone more than paid me back for every cent I had spent on buying and improving it.** The land, now in good condition, sold for more than twice what I paid for it, so I had no need of a car in Sao Paulo - with excellent public transport, faster than a private car as either under ground subway or in bus only*** special lanes and free to me as more than 65 years old.
* I would spend a couple of weekends there each month. - There were two small, 2BR houses on the land, one for my honest hard working employee - almost a serf, as he came with the land both for me and several prior "absentee owners."
** The new owner, did not want them. He planned a dairy business on my good pasture.
*** A taxi with passenger can use them too.