Thanks Greenman.
In response to your not knowing a single conservative that wants an uncontrolled market,because they quickly become a cesspool. I think many think they want it and base decisions on that idea.
You might be right that if they realy understood they'd change their position, but it seems to me many of them are of the option that they are for it and have knee-jerk responses to any government policy of 'that's bad because it's not free market' and don't consider the issue itself. That's what makes it a 'blind ideology'. They don't understand what you said that their 'free market' isn't the case and if it were it'd be a cesspool. They just think 'free market is reat, so say no to that government proposal'.
They are in an environment that's well protected from the real effects of free market, and ignorance is bliss. They don't have to deal with a cesspool, they can just attack particular good programs.
(At this point, I just lost most of one of my favorite posts in a long time. I'd meant to just save it instead of posting it and because of this limited browser, I had to cut and paste pieces and trash the other parts to make room in the process, and then I hit the wrong button losing the whole post, except the fragments left in the window here. I'm pretty disgusted and I guess I'll post the fragments and a bit I remember.)
Indeed, Alan Greenspan and others, despite this view, had the simplistic notion that 'the market is always knows best', and strongly opposed government reglation as an ideology, with a major effect on our country. Greenspan finally said his ideology was wrong, that the market cannot control its own harmful excesses. Oops.
I remember one point being to say if I suggest a credt card interest rate cap, discuss the pros and cons of that, don't just say 'that's not free market' and ignore the issue.
(Sorry, but several paragraphs of supporting structure and points are just lost here. I finally went on to mention my opinion of the 'invisible hand' at the end of the post.)
There are market efficiencies. If a community having 25% farmers, 10% millers and 5% food salesman is an especially efficient ratio of labor, then people doing what's best for them tends to lead to that ratio without uneeding a central government determine it's a good ratio and assign people to those roles - and indeed Smith IMO would argue the 'invisible hand' is more likely to get the ratio right than planners.
If you get too many farmers, the oversupply of product decreases prices making it less attractive to farm, making farmers look at milling. Too few farmers, it looks like good money.
My opinion is that there is some truth to that but it's limited. See the quotes from Stiglitz and Chomsky for examples.There are many 'corrupting influences' to the 'invisible hand'.
Smith himself understood many dangers of a blind 'free market' but many of his claimed followers ignored that.
I'd rather not see 'free market' mentioned in a topic, it's just a false distraction, like calling everything you don't like 'communist'. "Free Market" that extreme is a bad, simplistic ideology.