His stance on the civil rights act was pretty laughable. If the free market would end segregation on its own, we wouldn't have had segregation issues to begin with.
(to the OP: Yeah. Pretty much.)
To the quoted part: I think a purely theoretical argument could be made that the market would eventually (there's the key word) end segregation, just as economics would have eventually (see a theme?) ended slavery. But the problem is how long can a people wait for that kind of a solution when you are talking about essential liberties. And most people rightly would not be willing to wait to see if it all worked out. Theory is nice and all, but it is *only* theory.
(to the OP: Yeah. Pretty much.)
To the quoted part: I think a purely theoretical argument could be made that the market would eventually (there's the key word) end segregation, just as economics would have eventually (see a theme?) ended slavery. But the problem is how long can a people wait for that kind of a solution when you are talking about essential liberties. And most people rightly would not be willing to wait to see if it all worked out. Theory is nice and all, but it is *only* theory.
That, and segregation was a political problem, not an economic one. Saying the free market would fix it is a nonsense claim. It is like saying communism would cure a cold.
Pure libertarianism is great in theory. Pure communism is great in theory. Pure capitalism is also great in theory.(to the OP: Yeah. Pretty much.)
To the quoted part: I think a purely theoretical argument could be made that the market would eventually (there's the key word) end segregation, just as economics would have eventually (see a theme?) ended slavery. But the problem is how long can a people wait for that kind of a solution when you are talking about essential liberties. And most people rightly would not be willing to wait to see if it all worked out. Theory is nice and all, but it is *only* theory.
This is the same thing that happened when I brought up the Libertarian Party platform in another forum long long ago. When you ask hard core Libertarians to carry their thoughts through to the logical outcome, they fumble the ball.I think it's his strict adherence to libertarian philosophy. He seems to refuse to recognize that the government can step in and regulate/legislate to make things better than the free market can do in some instances.
His stance on the civil rights act was pretty laughable. If the free market would end segregation on its own, we wouldn't have had segregation issues to begin with.