PassedOut, on 2011-September-12, 12:53, said:
I don't consider right-wing crazies to be conservative at all: using "conservative" to describe them is Orwellian.
"Reactionary" is probably a better description.
Here is
Jerry Pournelle's take on the political spectrum.
PassedOut, on 2011-September-12, 12:53, said:
I've been in business all of my life, believe in the free market and fiscal responsibility, don't believe in military adventurism, and am an actual conservative. I say that a limited but strong government is exactly what we need: otherwise we could have stayed with the original Articles of Confederation.
Well, maybe. Times do change, and I suspect, as did Smith in
The Probability Broach, that the Articles of Confederation would have had to change with them.
PassedOut, on 2011-September-12, 12:53, said:
I noticed that you did not address the specific examples that Adam gave. For example:
awm, on 2011-September-11, 23:21, said:
It is much cheaper to enforce food sanitation than to deal with mass sickness from poor public health.
Don't you think that is true?
Well, it sure
sounds good, but I'm not sure that a deeper analysis than I can give it wouldn't show that it isn't. For example, see
Bastiat's Parable of the Broken Window.
PassedOut, on 2011-September-12, 12:53, said:
From what I can see, the government provides vital services like this (and others) more effectively than does the free market. It's possible to believe in the free market without maintaining that it is the solution to every problem.
As a conservative businessman, I absolutely support strong consumer protection laws and strong environmental protection laws, strictly enforced. Those laws set the framework for honest competition in the free market. So long as they are equally applied, no ethical business is hurt.
Sticking the word "vital" in there does tend to color the debate a bit, doesn't it?
One of the problems with debates on economics and government is that we have experiences of some things, and no experiences of others. No one alive today has seen a true free market, for example. And some of the backward looks into history claim that "see, this was a free market, and it didn't work," when in fact what they're looking at wasn't a free market at all.
Seems to me the Golden Rule would set the framework for honest competition in the free market quite well, without any government involvement if people would follow it. And as for "no ethical business is hurt", I refer you again to Bastiat's Parable.
PassedOut, on 2011-September-12, 12:53, said:
In my view, the whiners who complain about too much governmental regulation (and I know some) are simply too incompetent to run an honest business. Going back to Adam's example, folks should not have to worry about getting spoiled food, for example, and honest grocers shouldn't have to compete with those who want to make a buck by selling it.
And in the free market, neither the consumers nor the honest grocers would have to worry about that for long, since the incompetent whiner would be out of business pretty quickly. Suppose also that our legal system was better set to hold Mr. Whiner responsible for whatever damage he caused to others. One interesting suggestion I've seen is that if you owe someone something, and cannot pay, you go to work for them or perhaps for someone else with some mutually agreeable contract until the debt is paid. This is an extension of the idea that each individual is personally responsible for his own actions. I suppose it's not perfect (what is?) but it's interesting.