It seems almost self-evident that (barring foreign subjugation) a government will care about the wants of (some of) its citizens and nothing else: no other object of concern is plausible.
This is not at all “self-evident”, unless you choose to interpret the sentence completely literally, which would render it nearly meaningless.
For example, the government of North Korea does indeed care about the wants of “some” of its citizens, where the number of such citizens is pretty close to 1.
I think North Korea is no problem for the quoted sentence. I interpret it as saying that the government doesn’t care about the wants of non-citizens, rather than asserting that the government cares about a significant number of citizens.
Nevertheless, even assuming this interpretation it is still not self-evident.
This is not at all “self-evident”, unless you choose to interpret the sentence completely literally, which would render it nearly meaningless.
For example, the government of North Korea does indeed care about the wants of “some” of its citizens, where the number of such citizens is pretty close to 1.
I think North Korea is no problem for the quoted sentence. I interpret it as saying that the government doesn’t care about the wants of non-citizens, rather than asserting that the government cares about a significant number of citizens.
Nevertheless, even assuming this interpretation it is still not self-evident.