So your analogy isn't even close.
See here:
[admitted oversimplification]
That was exactly my point.
So your analogy isn't even close.
[admitted oversimplification]
And what, they are going to fix the problems by some counter advertising? What enforcement would they be using against big bucks false advertising, for example?...The Libertarian model doesn't say that there shouldn't be anyone verifying the claims of companies, they just think that it doesn't need to be the government doing it. There are plenty of consumer advocacy groups in this country.
Your point? Did I say I disagreed? No....Monopolies actually are inefficient, should you look at the graphs a monopolistic market....[snip]
This is some bizarre, knee jerk, 'government is evil' statement that doesn't even make sense. Just which monopolies would you be referring to here?...But if you look around today, you see that the only true monopolies in place are those put into place BY THE GOVERNMENT.
Could you cite an historical example, because otherwise I don't have a clue what you are on about here....This is ridiculous. It's not the having of wealth that matters, its how you got it that can lead to violent overthrow. If you're a hereditary monarch who taxes working people to death so you can build palaces for yourself, you're going to cause resentment.
I do not advocate a strong government. I advocate regulation against propaganda and false advertising and against concentration of media ownership so we can maintain informed citizen involvement in government....Partially. I think mostly it has to do with the fact that it leads to dictators in the large scale for a very simple reason. When you concentrate the needs of a large group of people into the hands of the few, when you tell them a small group of people at the national level can take care of providing them with food, electricity, water, transportation, medicine, education and every other individual need, you have centralized power. If you're an individual sitting at the head of this government and you have control over what the people need to survive, that's a level of power that's very hard to walk away from.
And your specific objection to my oversimplification was?See here:
That was exactly my point.
When this "great man" gave governmental advice to Augusto Pinochet, and then tried to lecture the world on freedom you have to question both his morality and his sense of irony.
That's fine. Except you're still left with the attribution of evil motives to Friedman. That "free market theory" does not concern itself directly with the notion of justice or evil does not mean you and I should not. The accusation against him is more than just that his policies will inadvertently lead to harm: the accusation is that he intends harm. Claiming that libertarianism doesn't address the issue of social justice doesn't solve the problem with the accusation against him. How can you not recognize this?
[admitted oversimplification] But put Libertarian views into practice and you actually get greedy people acting to defraud others if there is no regulation to stop them. Because there are enough people with a greedy nature that the Libertarian model fails. For example, the market forces are distorted by advertising. You don't get the best product as long as the people selling the crummy product can get people to buy stuff based on false or misleading advertising. So how does the Libertarian model deal with that? Not well.
You don't get the best product as long as the people selling the crummy product can get people to buy stuff based on false or misleading advertising. So how does the Libertarian model deal with that? Not well.
Shermer argues in his latest book along with a few other Libertarians that monopolies are inefficient and the market forces will take care of them on their own. But what that leaves out of the equation is concentration of wealth. That is not the same as monopolies. The way the 'market forces' correct concentrated wealth is with violent overthrow. That is what has happened time and time again in history.
Concentrated wealth also leads to concentrated political power and that leads to corruption and cronyism. Again, that is what we see in practice. Fascism is not what we see when we plug evolution theory into a computer simulation model.
The chief substantive difference between distributists and left-wing free marketers, it seems to me, involves not so much our sympathies or goals as our understanding of causality. To take much distributist rhetoric at face value, it seems to imply that the present concentration of wealth and capital emerged from laissez-faire and is the natural result of a free market, and that some form of state intervention is necessary to prevent wealth from being concentrated in fewer and fewer hands. The left-wing free marketer, on the other hand, sees the natural tendency of the market as egalitarian and decentralist, and sees the present day system of corporate power and concentrated wealth as the result of massive state intervention on behalf of the wealthy and powerful.The left-wing free marketer says the same thing his radical free market ancestors said:remove all state subsidies to big business, and all special privileges protecting it from competition, and the market will operate as dynamite at the foundations of corporate power; let the dynamite of the market operate, and we will see a decentralized economy of small-scale industry producing for local markets, with widespread cooperative ownership and self-employment.
And what, they are going to fix the problems by some counter advertising? What enforcement would they be using against big bucks false advertising, for example?
Your point? Did I say I disagreed? No.
Where I live, there are plenty of government sanctioned monopolies [Georgia Power being perhaps the best example]. For another example, look at the history of AT&T and the Kingsbury Commitment back in 1913.This is some bizarre, knee jerk, 'government is evil' statement that doesn't even make sense. Just which monopolies would you be referring to here?
See above.Could you cite an historical example, because otherwise I don't have a clue what you are on about here.
Concentration of media ownership, i.e. a media monopoly? So you DO have a problem with monopolies?I do not advocate a strong government. I advocate regulation against propaganda and false advertising and against concentration of media ownership so we can maintain informed citizen involvement in government.
Totalitarianism doesn't follow a communist economic system necessarily either, and right wing dictators don't have to follow capitalism but we sure supported a lot of them in the name of capitalism.But libertarianism is not mutually exclusive with regulation. I do agree, however, that market forces are distorted by advertising.
[l]ibertarianism isn't perfect, but it is not much different regarding misleading advertising than what we currently have. How does the libertarian model deal with it? Word of mouth, a savvy entrepreneur who knows a certain product is crappy and advertises a better one, private certification agencies, contract law, etc.
Does concentration of wealth follow from free-market ideas?
But you are assuming that from free-markets comes concentrated wealth. Here is what a left-libertarian has to say.
Henry Ford believed it was in his best interest to increase the wages of his workers. He was right.Corruption benefits a few, at the expense of the rest of society. For those who benefit it is obviously in their self-interest to maintain or expand such corruption.
Never effective enough to counter the massive capital sunk into advertising and there would never be adequate funding. It is better if we have government oversight of false advertising. This has lapsed significantly under Bush's polices favoring letting the market take care of itself.They could run a consumer advocacy site and it would be consumers' responsibility to research their purchases.
What you are describing as bad monopolies have all been worsened by our current government's policy of deregulating everything and letting market forces act. The outcome has been poor.Then you agree with most of the Libertarians who say government regulation should not be in place against monopolies?
Where I live, there are plenty of government sanctioned monopolies [Georgia Power being perhaps the best example]. For another example, look at the history of AT&T and the Kingsbury Commitment back in 1913.
See above.
Concentration of media ownership, i.e. a media monopoly? So you DO have a problem with monopolies?
Never effective enough to counter the massive capital sunk into advertising and there would never be adequate funding. It is better if we have government oversight of false advertising. This has lapsed significantly under Bush's polices favoring letting the market take care of itself.
What you are describing as bad monopolies have all been worsened by our current government's policy of deregulating everything and letting market forces act. The outcome has been poor.
When utilities were government sponsored monopolies like AT&T, the promise was if we stopped regulating them and let the market forces work instead, things would be fine. My private utilities, cable, phone, and Internet costs have continually gone up, products change on a regular basis specifically to make it difficult for the consumer to compare services and the companies now are in the habit of forcing people to either pay a few extra hundred dollars up front or commit to 2 years of service. It is a mess.
My regulated utilities, power, gas and garbage are run by semi private companies, water and sewer are run by the city, have only risen by as much as the cost for the products, in fact our water, sewer and garbage rates remain incredibly low.
As I said, Bush is far from the deregulation hound you try to make him out to be. Bush engaged in protectionism to protect the steel industry in the US, new oversight committees have been created, and he bailed out Bear Stearns, to name a few things. The current financial crisis is a result of too much liquidity in the market compounded with some poor congressional legislation.Keep in mind here that people seem to want to lump me into some socialist category just because I advocate some government run services and more regulations not less. That doesn't mean I don't think the free market works for most things, because I do. Like I said, I think regulated capitalism works just fine. We had more of that under 8 years of Clinton and we did pretty well in this country. Bush and his 6 years of unrestrained Republican control favoring letting business keep its own house have had terrible results. If you look at their policies, they have refused to enforce regulations as a way of ignoring the balance of powers and they have outsourced tons of government services to the private sector but mostly to cronies. We are certainly not better off.
Inability vs not willing to are too different things. This current administration has gutted regulatory enforcement as a means of getting around the balance of powers.I'm not sure if you've noticed or been reading Randi's Swift, but his loudest complaint in the last few months has been the government's inability to stop false advertising. From Airbourne to Head On to Kinoki Foot Pads to Trudeau's books. And, worse yet, in many other countries, government subsidies are given to Homeopathy and acupuncture.
I'm not for or against the current Federal Reserve actions per se, but to call these sweeping regulations when the changes were needed because of the industry's total meltdown without any regulations and oversight is a bizarre way to describe what is going on.Deregulating everything? Where are you living? We have seen more and more regulation in the last few decades, most recently Bush proposed broad new sweeping powers for the Federal Reserve to regulate the money supply.
What does this have to do with forcing up front payments or 2 year contracts and continual shifting of service "packages" to prevent cost comparisons from actually being done?We're talking about efficiency of resources, not cheapest prices. The increase in prices is more to the result in the increase in fuel costs and overall inflation.
Right, an anecdote which applies equally to every utility customer around.Anecdotal.
I don't have the time to correct you on this nonsense. This administration has gutted regulatory bodies right and left. Look up the problem with Bush failing to appoint people needed to enforce regulations for a place to start. I already described the failure of OSHA to carry through on worker protection from TB that was in the final rule stage when Bush took office. Rummy went to town with private contractors for half of what the Pentagon has previously been in charge of.As I said, Bush is far from the deregulation hound you try to make him out to be. Bush engaged in protectionism to protect the steel industry in the US, new oversight committees have been created, and he bailed out Bear Stearns, to name a few things. The current financial crisis is a result of too much liquidity in the market compounded with some poor congressional legislation.
Inability vs not willing to are too different things. This current administration has gutted regulatory enforcement as a means of getting around the balance of powers.
I'm not for or against the current Federal Reserve actions per se, but to call these sweeping regulations when the changes were needed because of the industry's total meltdown without any regulations and oversight is a bizarre way to describe what is going on.
What does this have to do with forcing up front payments or 2 year contracts and continual shifting of service "packages" to prevent cost comparisons from actually being done?
Right, an anecdote which applies equally to every utility customer around.![]()
I don't have the time to correct you on this nonsense. This administration has gutted regulatory bodies right and left. Look up the problem with Bush failing to appoint people needed to enforce regulations for a place to start. I already described the failure of OSHA to carry through on worker protection from TB that was in the final rule stage when Bush took office. Rummy went to town with private contractors for half of what the Pentagon has previously been in charge of.
... But put Libertarian views into practice and you actually get greedy people acting to defraud others if there is no regulation to stop them. Because there are enough people with a greedy nature that the Libertarian model fails. For example, the market forces are distorted by advertising. You don't get the best product as long as the people selling the crummy product can get people to buy stuff based on false or misleading advertising. So how does the Libertarian model deal with that? Not well.
...
...
If you look at their policies, they have refused to enforce regulations as a way of ignoring the balance of powers and they have outsourced tons of government services to the private sector but mostly to cronies. We are certainly not better off.
Basically I expect the upper classes to use their superior financial means and economic position to advance their position as much as possible within the legal limits, regardless of any detrimental effects on society as a whole. Which is why I support an elaborate regulatory system to prevent such detriments, with measures in place to punish those who cross it. And that's the opposite of the libertarian position.
Free market theory assumes rational self-interest, as far as I know it makes no mention of justice whatsoever. Which is the point, rational self-interest for one person can result in tremendous injustice to others.
To their credit, libertarians do oppose murder and support property rights. I'm not allowed to take your posessions without your permission. That is good, but insufficient.
Suppose I create a pension fund. People put their money in, I invest it and pay myself a handsome wage plus a bonus proportional to the yearly gain. That encourages me to take high risks, increasing my bonus. Unfortunately, because of the high risk the fund went bust during the credit crunch. Fortunately (for me), I still have much of the money I made.
No murder was commited, and the people who put their money in did so voluntarily. Too bad they lost everything, including their pensions. The point is that one has to commit neither murder nor theft to rob old ladies. Without comprehensive regulation it can be done legally in a libertarian society. And without the prospect of punishment it would be in my rational self-interest to do so, regardless of how immoral it is.
But what that leaves out of the equation is concentration of wealth. That is not the same as monopolies. The way the 'market forces' correct concentrated wealth is with violent overthrow. That is what has happened time and time again in history.
Concentrated wealth also leads to concentrated political power and that leads to corruption and cronyism.
They could run a consumer advocacy site and it would be consumers' responsibility to research their purchases.