by threadbear » Sun 22 Jun 2008, 14:31:57
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbear', '.')..
I don't disagree with market theory for the production of many services and products. The theory has obvious limits if it's use extends beyond widgets and into energy sectors that require preventative measures. I also agree that govt can screw up and am perfectly happy to call it that--a pure govt. screw up, when it occurs. But the market screws up as often, and many who are in thrall to free market theory, will somehow blame it on "too much regulation" or too much govt, or their fave, too much tax. But never ever is it simply free markets screwing up, so their prescriptions for the markets screwing up is somehow freeing them up even more. It's alot like Communist theory that way.
Of course there are screw ups!
whoever said there weren't?
For example imagine failed technologies like: beta max tape, Smell-O-Vision, and the Hindenburg airship.
Ever seen the movie Catwoman? --> don't bother
What's the joke about opening up a restaurant. There's a 90% chance of failure.
MOST ideas that humanity has ever invented were complete failures and whoever financed the project had to "take a haircut".
Gives you a new perspective on life eh threadbear?
What makes the free market superior is losses are not socialized.
A failed business eats it's own loss. It is my observation that when a liberal complains about the "free market" what they are actually complaining about is NOT the "free market" but in reality a problem that they have helped to create!
For example I blame liberals for the current housing market fiasco.
To understand what happened we have to go back in history. In the early 1900's a home mortgage required a 50% down payment and the loan had to be repaid in 5 years. Why such a strict requirement? Because back then, things operated on the "free market". Put yourself in the bank's shoes threadbear. If you knew the government would NOT bail you out if things went sour, under what conditions would you lend money out? --> Only if you were 100% certain you wouldn't lose money hence the "strict" requirements.
Liberals with their "compassion" but clueless about "economic reality" stepped in and asked the government to back these loans. This resulted in cheap credit. Once the banks knew they could off-load the risk of loan default onto the taxpayers the trap was set for the world's greatest real estate market bull run and also crash.
quote:
"Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard." 
You misunderstand me. Govts can and do act preventatively, to positive effect, in key areas, if there is a consensus and collective will for them to do so.
If govt regulation of the financial sector had been more rigorous, banking collapses would not occur, in a systemic way. AFTER they screw up and begin the process of collapse, of course they should be allowed to complete it! As far as energy goes, you can't possibly disagree that with the opening of the Enron loophole, govt is abrogating it's responsibilities as a preventer of mistakes, encouraging malinvestment, and helping feed a speculative frenzy atop a supply squeeze.
Now if the market theory holds, the ramp up in speculation and potential ensuing downturn back to a more sane 100.00 per barrel, will destroy a lot of pension funds. People who will have their life savings wiped out. Because some kind of homeostasis is achieved, AFTER the fact, does it make market theory superior to more interventionist models that prevent problems BEFORE the devastation unregulated markets wreak in people's lives?