3point14
Pi
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2005
- Messages
- 23,091
OK, not quickly enough I get.
If I've read Beerina's post right he's talking not so much about teching it, but allowing the market to guide us as opposed to forcing it. By forcing it I mean diverting funds or subsidizing green measures.
I don't know where I stand on this. Some of the really big projects have to come by way of government involvement. Obviously here in Canada, but also in the US. I think there are effective ways of providing stimulus, but the government seems to get wrong more often than get it right. I think it has to do with urgency resulting in short sightedness. It seems like if the government doesn't do a 5 year multimillion dollar study they're bound to get it wrong.
At the same time I think the last time the government undertook projects like this they did fairly well. I'm not that well versed in US history but what I've seen of the projects they did during the depression most worked out well and dug the country out of a hole like they are currently in. Then again I've heard the opposite.
My limited experience with Beerina is that his(?) fervent belief is that every single problem can be resolved with 'the invisible hand of the market'. I'm always somewhat wary of anyone who proposes the same solution for every problem, it makes them sound like an idealogue.
I believe that the 'market' will always take the cheapest option. I believe that the cheapest option is often the diriest. The only way to make it financialy viable to take the 'clean' option is to legislate to make the dirty way the most expensive.