There seem to be multiple fallacies all wrapped up into one class of response there. Just on a cursory glance:
False dichotomy (between “current government” and “no government”, ignoring “better government”),
Composition fallacy (“criticising one aspect of government is criticising every aspect of government”),
Single cause (“the government made these things available, therefore only the government could have made those things available”),
… and probably a few more.
The “Christian bridge” example leads me to think that you are focussing on the “single cause” aspect here.
There seem to be multiple fallacies all wrapped up into one class of response there. Just on a cursory glance:
False dichotomy (between “current government” and “no government”, ignoring “better government”),
Composition fallacy (“criticising one aspect of government is criticising every aspect of government”),
Single cause (“the government made these things available, therefore only the government could have made those things available”),
… and probably a few more.
The “Christian bridge” example leads me to think that you are focussing on the “single cause” aspect here.