They utterly overlook the fact that every time their stupid theory has been put into practice, it has failed miserably.
Friedman's ideas turned Chile, India, China, etc into economic powerhouses and raised millions out of poverty. Your grasp of modern history is weak. If there is one tested and true economic system that works for the greatest number of people, its a free enterprise system. There really is no debate.
As in the great depression, monetary policy had a lot to do with the Iceland crash. Their _government_ created a currency bubble through interest rate manipulation. And when the bottom fell out, it fell hard. And when all the money started leaving the country, the banks fell hard.
Its easier to blame these things on "the free market". Joe Six Pack sees the failed bank. He doesn't understand monetary policy. Its easy to tell him "pay no attention to the man behind the curtain" and deceive him.
There is also a lot of confusion in this thread about the role of the free market in the meltdown here in the US. Let me enlighten you.
0 down loans, interest only, arms, etc were not a function of the free market
The Bush administration with willing sycophants all around shared a dream that home ownership would free minorities from housing projects and slums. It is the sort of thing that sounds great on the surface. When people own for things, they are more likely to be responsible was part of the logic.
However, to make this dream a reality, they had to get the GSEs to underwrite loans for people who could make no down payment. Much like a Milton Friedman documentary, this forks into two unintended consequences.
A. nobody actually owns their homes, they are basically just renting them from their banks, they have zero equity, they aren't even real owners as intended.
B.
real estate speculators take advantage of these zero down loans to make fortunes flipping condos/houses in markets like Florida.
The poor get worse off and the wealthier get wealthier. Classic government intervention (like rent controls in the one episode of free to choose). In the end, home ownership was just as low as was before the crisis.
Sadly, government did not learn the lesson. They think the free market failed and must be regulated more. Housing not only must be subsidized with loans guaranteed, but foreclosures must be frozen and prevented. Loans must be modified. The GSEs must be allowed to lose money in perpetuity. That's right, they took the worst of Bush and tripled down on it.
Even Paul Krugman sort of gets it:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/23/opinion/23krugman.html?_r=1
Sort of.
I'm not sure what kind of market you call the one that created the financial crisis, but it isn't a free one.
Milton Friedman said on the topic (ill paraphrase here), "I want a limited government because a big government tends to get taken over by the industrialists". Updating this 30 year old quote for today, we should add "labor bosses" as well.
In a limited government, the big 3 car companies can't lobby congress and impose a 25 percent import tax on south korean made cars, thus screwing the poor people who will still buy them. In a limited government, a window manufacturer can't get government to write regulation making their windows the sole product that meets the regulation. In a limited government, a union couldn't try to get the government to create union shops.
However, in the modern age, all "limited government" means is decreasing federal taxation. The people who use the term don't even understand it as far as I can tell.