Earthborn said:This is not necessarily true.This too is not necessarily true. For some people it is not reasonable to expect them to ever become a responsible person because their mental disability is too severe.
You never know; there could be a medical breakthrough, or a spontaneous remission. We give them the benefit of the doubt because they're human and we know that humans are capable of responsibility. Show me an animal that's capable of personal responsibility and then we'll talk.
So I don't think the Chinese fossil trade is a very good example of Libertarian policy.
When did I say it was a Libertarian policy? Now you're putting words into my mouth! I said that the people who find fossils on their property have a financial incentive to turn them over to the scientists; it DOESN'T FARKING MATTER how they are or aren't allowed to go outside the country!!!
The problem is, doing it right does not yield higher prices. Quickly getting the biggest dinosaurs out of the ground and making a spectacular piece of it, if necessary forging most of it, does get the highest price.
Not at all. In the fossil in the Horizon episode, the hoaxers actually cut themselves out of tens of millions of dollars by hoaxing it, and even more by not properly documenting it.
Are you saying that markets can lead to imbalances.
Goods- or service-oriented markets seek out balances. But this would be permission-based, which is a whole different animal.
Which is an interesting idea, especially since you believe the military is a legimate government function, and I'm pretty sure it is the military that causes quite a lot of pollution.
But has no incentive to reduce it.
With all those diesel and airplane fuel powered craft they have...Interesting idea! Just let the politically connected companies buy the vast pieces of wilderness to pollute all they want.
Which would give them an incentive to pollute it as little as possible for fear of driving down the property value.
Obviously the semi-government organization watching over the emission rights system and that is designed to be not direct under political control. A sort of Environmental (European) Central Bank. Or something.
Well, given what the Federal Reserve has done with our money, that makes me very scared about a similar system handing out pollution credits. Pollution inflation doesn't seem like a very good thing for the environment any more than monetary inflation is good for the economy...