For want of a 95% option, which would probably be about right, I voted 75%. I'm fine with government building roads, providing for the common defense, issuing currency, etc. Article I, Section 8 of our Constitution is actually a pretty good fit for my outlook. The functions I want government to serve boil down to protecting individual rights, enforcing contracts, and implementing a limited number of mechanisms which cannot be achieved by individual action (e.g. issuing patents and copyrights).
That said, my core political belief is "Leave me the hell alone," and most of the rest can be deduced from that. I like personal liberty. I don't like being bothered. I like helping people, and I hate being forced to help people. I'm okay with not being helped, in exchange for being left alone. I'm okay with paying taxes, but I shouldn't have to calculate anything. I'm okay with busybody moralists of all stripes trying to win public opinion, but I'd be very pleased if most of that public opinion never turned into legislation.
Interestingly, I really don't care about self-government or democracy. These can be useful in preventing bad government, but I don't value them in themselves. While I will occasionally speak in support of states' rights, or local government, these are merely a means to an end. Often a smaller government will do a better job, but when the higher level of government acts to secure individual rights against lower governments (e.g. the Emancipation Proclamation), I'm all for it. To me, the best parts of the U.S. Constitution are those which protect us from democratically-created laws. The fact that a majority of people want something doesn't mean a damned thing to me, except insofar as avoiding domestic unrest is concerned. I would be quite fine with living in an unconstitutional monarchy, and never voting again, so long as it offered more personal liberty and a good standard of living.
And that's my idea of freedom.