by Duende » Thu 14 Feb 2008, 12:34:16
LoneSnark wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ho here believes they are worthy to dictate what others spend their money on? Are we to conclude your preferences are the only valid preferences in society?
LoneSnark, I hate to admit it, but I love reading your posts. They get me all worked up. This one's a good example. Assertions like this strike me as superficial and shortsighted. At first I thought you were just plain old wrongheaded - or provacative - but now I realize we're just talking past each other. You really believe that everything can (should?) be filtered through a critical, economic perspective. I admittedly know very little economics, but am working hard to catch up in the hope that I can better articulate my concerns about the purely economic perspective you seem to champion. [/aside]
Regarding the OP on good vs. bad wealth creation:
When the
use of a product or service affects the health, safety, or welfare of the general population (and of the environment, if that counts), then its use should be regulated at the very least, and perhaps outlawed if its effect is finally deemed immoral. In other words, things should not be allowed just because they create wealth.
Two examples come to find:
The institution of slavery created wealth for landowners in Colonial America, but would you call that "good" wealth creation? Second, cigarette smoking is permissable from an individual perspective. You can kill yourself if you want to. But, to the extent that you kill me - in the form of secondhand smoke - it should be regulated. In short, if the external costs cannot be internalized, then that activity should be looked at a little more closely.