How are you going to ask millions and millions of customers whether they would accept the change? You can't. The best you can do is market research and focus groups.
I'm talking about a situation where there is a supplier of materials and whose customer is a manufacturer that uses those materials to make something else. So the millions and millions of customers are irrelevant.
A supplier of materials can't suddenly sell different stuff to manufacturers without negotiating with them. The pencil manufacturer expects the ferrule to be made of a specific material and may need to adjust its machinery if the material is changed. The manufacturer expects a consistent product, so the supplier cannot change the product.
All of the processes are codified. Just look at how big the US Code is.
This does not prove that it is necessary. I also don't think it proves that
all processes are codified, it just proves that a lot of them are.
There are tons of others. All of these laws had a purpose at one point, but no longer; yet, here they sit, still on the books.
If those laws are no longer enforced, it shows that the government has changed and adapted to a different time. Only the rules in law books haven't changed, but that's not all that the government is about.
Earthborn, it is the job of a lawyer to know these things.
I'm talking about government officials, not lawyers. So this is irrelevant.
There needs to be some people who know what all the regulations are, at least in a certain area.
I don't see why someone would need to know all the regulations and since you acknowledge that people only need to know them of 'at least in a certain area' you seem to agree with me. It means that people only need to know about the regulations that are relevant for a specific situation.
Just like a supplier just needs to know the specifications of the product their customers (manufacturers of more finished products) expect of them.
Ridiculous. You mentioned things that they're never been able to do, at least under Communism.
It is irrelevant that they have never been able to do those things. You made the claim that the Chinese get
more and more freedom even though after getting a bit of economic freedom some 20 or so years ago, they didn't get any other freedoms.
That doesn't mean they haven't made strides in other areas.
They have made great strides economically. Not so much in political freedoms. The pencil's claim was people should free to make economic progress. The Chinese seem to how unfree people can still be very productive.