quadraginta
Becoming Beth
Yeah, let's bring back "White's only" lunch counters.
Do you seriously believe that this would happen again on a large scale?
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"It can't happen here."
(Again.)
Yeah, let's bring back "White's only" lunch counters.
Do you seriously believe that this would happen again on a large scale?
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...
I absolutely agree. Government is also required to protect property and enforce contracts, or you don't end up with a market at all. But that's not the level of government we're debating here.
And therein lies my point. Neither discrimination nor slavery are forced on the people by the government. Slavery and discrimination will occur regardless of what the government "dictates". The laws are reflective of collective attitudes and beliefs of the people themselves, or ought to be, constrained by a few principles that are not subject to the whims of the times, or shouldn't be. Overly simplified, it's government of the people, by the people, for the people, and all that.But not on anything like the scale that the South saw. And yes, it still occurs on a small scale... even with government prohibition.
What level of government are we talking about, then?Government is also required to protect property and enforce contracts, or you don't end up with a market at all. But that's not the level of government we're debating here.
And therein lies my point. Neither discrimination nor slavery are forced on the people by the government.
What level of government are we talking about, then?
Slaves in the pre-Civil War south would have told you that their slavery was forced on them by their owners.Slaves in the pre-Civil War south would have told you otherwise: their condition was very much forced upon them by the government.
Laws that came from will of the majority in those areas. Those laws were the method used on the minority, not the cause.And discrimination was forced on people by government in the pre-civil rights era. Have you not seen the examples listed in this very thread of laws requiring racial discrimination?
...you'll have to elaborate. What do you mean by that being the level of government?Well, most directly, the bill mentioned in the original post.
"It can't happen here."

Where is this Libertopia where free markets end discrimination?
Somebody enlighten me, because the only place I see anything approaching a totally free market is Somalia.
Slaves in the pre-Civil War south would have told you that their slavery was forced on them by their owners.
Laws that came from will of the majority in those areas. Those laws were the method used on the minority, not the cause.
I don't know why you are referring to government as if it were something separate from the people.
...you'll have to elaborate. What do you mean by that being the level of government?
Hell, he's referring to the discrimination as if it were something separate from the people, and something that can be only stopped when it's "severely punished" by something as equally separate- the "totally free market." This is all getting a little theological, I think; all three things (free market, government, and discrimination) are of and from the people, and government seems to me just as proper a way to address the problem, on that ground, as a totally free market construct.
And I have to ask- if someone is against the idea of a law (civil rights laws) that disallows discrimination, because it's an improper intrusion of government into a totally free market , shouldn't they be as equally against an equally improper intrusion, at the same level of government, by a law that allows discrimination?
But civil rights are, almost by definition, not a "majority rules" matter. If your free market law even just enables discrimination, by not addressing it, then it's certainly worse than a government law that forbids it even when it can't completely stop it. I agree that neither system can eliminate what is, after all, a personal (and, I hope you agree, wrong) inclination; the point is that government law can stop the personal wrong from becoming an institutional wrong, while the free market law can, by your own admission, as well enable it as stop it.Sure: if the vast majority of people are racist, then neither free markets nor government will stop discrimination, and it will be common. If the vast majority of people are not racist, then discrimination will be rare regardless of how you choose to address it.
As above- if you frame a law such that it even only enables some of those private actors to discriminate against others, then it's an intrusion. If free market principles demand a completely level playing field, then discrimination shouldn't be addressed at all either way by law; all you're really saying is "it's ok for government to have a say in this matter as long as what it says disallows its own principle and allows mine."Well, no. A law that allows discrimination is not an intrusion. It places no obligations on private actors in the market. If you want to intrude upon the market, then you need to either prohibit or require something.
"It can't happen here."
(Again.)
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Enforcement of contracts? By whom? A massive legal system? A massive police presence? Rules about what contracts can say and can't say? Your idea of a "free market" may differ widely from what someone else thinks, and if that happens, who decides what's right?Somalia is not a free market. It is anarchy mixed with local despotism. Property rights are not respected, contracts are not enforced. Without that, you don't have a market. So give it a rest already, that's the most tiresome "refutation" of free markets around.
Enforcement of contracts? By whom?
Rules about what contracts can say and can't say?
Your idea of a "free market" may differ widely from what someone else thinks, and if that happens, who decides what's right?
But civil rights are, almost by definition, not a "majority rules" matter.
If your free market law even just enables discrimination, by not addressing it, then it's certainly worse than a government law that forbids it even when it can't completely stop it.
As above- if you frame a law such that it even only enables some of those private actors to discriminate against others, then it's an intrusion.
If free market principles demand a completely level playing field
And the whole argument that "some actors in the free market will punish others in the market for acting wrongly" places the burden in the wrong place, in my view; it places the burden for correcting the wrong on those who suffer by it (or even just suffer it to continue when not directly affected) rather than on those who commit it. I'm not one to believe in the idea of a totally objective (as in "god-given") morality; but this takes the subjectivity of morals to a wholly different (and somewhat self-serving) level.
My wife is eyeballing this laptop I'm typing on (well, it is hers), and since mine has a virus, I doubt I'll get back here before tomorrow morning. I do want to say, though, before I go, that I appreciate the reasonable level you've brought to this conversation; I hope I've upheld the same level. It just seems appropriate to me to point out a reasonable airing of views in a time when that's so hard to come by.
In practice the majority must believe that protecting minority rights is important or it simply does not happen, regardless of what's on the books.
I don't see how you can possibly argue that if just left to their own devices the southern US would have ended discrimination against blacks any sooner than being forced to by the government.
I never argued that it would have. In fact, I've been rather explicit about the point that southern government discrimination was ended only because of federal government intervention, and this was wholly justified. My position has always been more nuanced than your response indicates, and I can't really engage with you if you only attack what amounts to a straw man.
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I suppose this is a semantic issue, but I don't consider allowing slavery (which obviously infringes upon the rights of the slave) to be compatible with free markets. If the slave is not free to sell his own labor as he wishes (and he's not, or else he wouldn't be a slave), then he is excluded from the market.
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Were I hearing voices in my head I should seek medical advice, but maybe that's just me.I think it's the usual progressives' desire to have more govt control of citizens.