Recent Reason TV talk:Philosopher Matt Zwolinski on "Bleeding-Heart Libertarians," The Poor, and Social Justicehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lgESZW3dPcM
10/5/2011 3:09:28 PM
10/5/2011 3:43:30 PM
Basically top heavy government with lots of social and welfare programs is the only way to take care of lazy people.
10/5/2011 3:45:58 PM
10/5/2011 3:59:37 PM
10/5/2011 4:02:15 PM
then it falls over and squishes them.and all the fat cats up top plummet to their deaths.
10/5/2011 4:05:43 PM
10/5/2011 4:15:41 PM
10/5/2011 4:28:08 PM
You said it yourself:1 Reduce government2 have more choice3 profit
10/5/2011 4:56:14 PM
What kind of choice are you referring to exactly?With some things, like what kind of ice cream to buy, I want a lot of choice. Personal preference makes a big difference.With other things, like health insurance, I'd be fine having one choice as long as it worked to allow me to go to the doctor without trying to make a profit by claiming I have a preexisting condition or refusing to cover me on some other ground. That choice is impossible without pretty heavy regulation. We can debate whether having such a choice is possible even if operated by government, and whether that's a good thing, but I'm totally fine with one good theoretical choice over ten bad ones. There, as in any other industry, the companies you're doing business with don't have your best interest in mind unless it benefits their bottom line. Unless the population gets WAY more educated (and they won't), I'm pretty confident smaller government will always hurt the poor and consolidate the benefits.
10/5/2011 5:19:08 PM
10/5/2011 5:35:29 PM
10/5/2011 5:39:45 PM
Welfare should be a SAFETY NET, not a LIFESTYLE. [/thread]
10/5/2011 5:43:40 PM
Insurance isn't really a product though.I agree that competition in most fields is a good thing. But what's stopping monopolies from forming without a body like the FTC?[Edited on October 5, 2011 at 5:49 PM. Reason : ]
10/5/2011 5:48:56 PM
10/5/2011 5:52:34 PM
It's not a product, but it is a service. You pay insurance premiums to offset risk.
10/5/2011 5:53:12 PM
10/5/2011 5:55:40 PM
10/5/2011 5:58:50 PM
10/5/2011 6:15:01 PM
10/5/2011 11:04:10 PM
10/5/2011 11:35:04 PM
10/5/2011 11:47:31 PM
the poor should just get smarter.
10/6/2011 1:01:00 AM
Right, the conversation depends on how specific you get.We are a representitive democracy or a republic depending on who you ask. For the U.S., it's also relatively important to note the power balance between local, state, and national as well as the executive, judicial, and congress. For a bigger picture, we are a Western style democracy. I'm not even entirely sure what that necessarily implies.Economically we are a regulated free market, which is absurdly non-specific. We are also capitalist, but I think saying that we are capitalist is only an tack-on to the free market thing. Exchanges are regulated, although I'm not sure if they can be called semi-governmental. NYMEX, for one was created by businessmen in response to a demand (saying nothing about the current state of affairs). Banking is about as complicated and muddled as possible.
10/6/2011 1:05:04 AM
10/6/2011 10:08:25 AM
Well now. The economic freedom index has been updated and sure enough, the United States has slipped yet again. All the economic freedom gains of the past thirty years have been erased and we now rate quite a bit below Canada in terms of economic freedom. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F4fWQnguR1EOddly enough, we are also showing a similar reversal in immigration patterns, as far more Americans now are moving to Canada.
10/14/2011 12:10:35 PM
I'm for more economic freedom, but regulation is obviously needed.Economic externalities are a real thing. Government should have every ability to interfere, but only in cases where a good case can be made that an activity interferes with someone else's health or freedom.
10/14/2011 1:09:44 PM
10/16/2011 9:31:36 AM
I had actually phrased that better, but the TWW crashed on me and I had to rewrite it. True story.I like the EconFree youtube channel (your video). But it's one of those things I feel like everyone can agree on the problem, but still not get anywhere.It doesn't help that politicians of who promised to reduce the size of government wound up increasing it. I'm just jaded, that's all. I suspect, rational or not, that it's just a guise to let companies pollute and take advantage of people.----I should add some more.The video makes 2 lists of countries, one well off and one poor off. the well off nations have more economic freedom.This is correlation. The fact that they are well off could have lead to economic freedom. In reality, economic freedom is one of hundreds of metrics that all, by themselves, would seem fairly central to the creation of prosperity.The real question that matters is if those well off nations sat down and said "let's become more economically free", and THEN improved their situation. In other words, would this hold up to randomized trials?[Edited on October 16, 2011 at 12:01 PM. Reason : ]
10/16/2011 11:58:19 AM
10/16/2011 12:56:42 PM
10/16/2011 2:16:21 PM
I agree completely. My only disagreement would be that a "good legal system" doesn't require democracy, as they have occasionally been imposed from outside.
10/16/2011 7:46:45 PM
I think a lot of the idea of charter cities (which is actually kind of similar in nature to the economic freedom arguments) is to ask for foreign involvement from legal systems that have a history of working well.Obviously, that has to be consent based in nature, as should everything. But yes, legal codes and many other things can be very effectively brought in from outside. In fact, I think the historical novelty of a lot of what we're talking about is the ability iterate on a global scale.The main point of "democracy" is that at some point there is a closed-loop control of the government. The system needs to be obligated to the people beyond everything else (otherwise our own system admits to be fairly agnostic to the fine detail of the law given the way we pass that responsibility off to representatives). Democracy and the free market do make interesting dance partners.
10/16/2011 9:40:00 PM
10/20/2011 8:57:19 PM
Yes, at gunpoint. a 1040ez is the same thing as a fucking gun. trying to democratically mobilize people to enact legislation that helps the less fortunate and the whole of society is immoral. uh huh, yep.And apparently, there's compassion in knowing that statistically people are economically fucked and not doing a goddamn thing about it in the name of libertywe get it, you know people are screwed, you just don't want to do anything about it.not that i want to get in to this argument, as it'll be just as beneficial as me whistling dixie out of my asshole.[Edited on October 20, 2011 at 10:43 PM. Reason : ]
10/20/2011 10:38:03 PM
holy shit that video was retarded and that graph about "economic freedom" had no axis labels or explanation for the number or how the debt effects "economic freedom", i fucking hate that shit, might as well graph the unicorn population in each country.
10/20/2011 11:05:52 PM
10/20/2011 11:23:43 PM
10/20/2011 11:55:07 PM
10/21/2011 12:06:39 AM
^lol
10/21/2011 12:51:22 AM
And a different set of rich people benefit from anti-libertarian policies and are the same people that bankroll such movements (democrats, republicans, etc). And as the libertarian tradition of America has been abandoned over the past decade, the rich of Washington DC are rich enough to skew the statistics, as Washington is now the highest income metro-area in the nation, surpassing silicon valley. Politics is a battle between the rich and the rich. To portray it as anything else is naive.
10/21/2011 1:02:44 AM
10/21/2011 8:50:42 AM
This is my logic, if a libertarian could point out where I'm wrong please do:1. Participation as a consumer in a market requires some prerequisite education in order to make informed purchases, much like participation in a democracy requires some baseline knowledge of, say, civics. That is, in order to be a rational actor you must be educated properly (Your rationality is a function of the priorities informed by your knowledge)2. Participation as a producer in a market requires some kind of education and skillset, with your competitiveness being a function of the quality of that education.3. In a free market, quality of education would correlate with its cost. Any decent education requires teachers (the more per student the better), textbooks, materials, facilities, computers, all of which cost money. You might not be able to say "More money = better education" infinitely onward, but there is at the basic level a correlation between money invested in educational institutions and the quality of education that comes out.4. Given (3), a person's ability regarding (2) would essentially be a function of their familial wealth. That is, a rich person will receive a better education than a poor person, thus be better capable of making themselves richer. 5. So, by (4) in a society free of a state, or particularly a publically maintained education infrastructure, progeny of richer folks will always have a multitude of competitive advantages over poorer folks. How does this *not* lead to an aristocratic society wherein the rich get richer and the poor get poorer, barring a few exceptional edge cases. In short: your own competitiveness in the market will on average be heavily correlated with the socioeconomic position of your parents. Put another way: The primary means (education) of becoming rich are more readily available to the already-rich, putting them at a competitive advantage with each generation.edit: That being said, there are some libertarians (such as those with a Rawlsian bent) who might take up positions like taxing inheritance at 100% to mitigate as much as possible generational transfers of wealth (wealth that is not earned) or maintain certain public institutions like public education to guarantee roughly competitive outcomes for all children, regardless of parentage.[Edited on October 21, 2011 at 11:46 AM. Reason : .]
10/21/2011 11:36:49 AM
Also lmao will you clowns get out of here with the Economic Freedom Index. Seriously, the Heritage Foundation is a fucking joke and if you don't know this you're beyond help. I mean really, the very "Economic Freedom Index" itself is possibly the most unscientific metric ever devised and that alone should convince you the Heritage foundation is garbage. edit: If I wanted to know more of what the Heritage Foundation said, I'd listen to Hannity and Limbaugh and Beck for more than just the hour or two I hear on my commute.[Edited on October 21, 2011 at 11:44 AM. Reason : .]
10/21/2011 11:42:36 AM
Is there a competing economic freedom index you would prefer we use? I accept such an index is fairly subjective, but upon reading how the index was generated they tried to be as objective as possible, sticking with government statistics for the vast majority of their calculations.
10/21/2011 4:54:40 PM
the ability of libertarians to contort every issue as a failure of government is....fuckin'.....amazing...I don't see how you can promote economic freedom (whatever the fuck that means) and not at least acknowledge the ability of the haves to protect their wealth from the have nots. And to not be able to see what kind of generational inequality this inherently promotes is pretty sad.
10/21/2011 5:19:14 PM
10/21/2011 5:25:34 PM
10/21/2011 10:20:10 PM
ask this guy and his former people about how big government worked out
10/21/2011 10:57:23 PM
10/22/2011 3:09:49 AM