BonzaiDuck
Lifer
- Jun 30, 2004
- 16,604
- 2,010
- 126
It was discussed during the Cold War in the economics discipline as "The Mixed Economy." The chicken and egg argument about taxes and government doesn't really apply. In order to generate revenue, you need an effective judicial system, all levels of law enforcement, public goods that only make sense by public provision, regulation of interstate commerce, highways, schools. Without all that, a business would spend so much on self-protection and other costs that -- well -- we'd sink back into the pre-industrial or early-industrial age.
The new but clueless activists haven't worked all this out. They want the remainder of social security recipients to hurry up and die. They want all sorts of nonsense, which in the airing of it, makes them feel like puffed up armchair experts. You will not find among their number any prize-winning macro-economists, great legal minds, or any other experts with expertise that illuminates the nature and survival of the post-industrial state.
These discussions of hyper-generalized labels or "isms" are droll. If you want to discuss political philosophy or economic philosophy, consider the options as toolboxes which don't define all solutions or even all of one solution to any given problem.
there is only the recognition of problems, the consensus on those problems, and a growing agreement as to how they can be solved now -- and in the future.
The new but clueless activists haven't worked all this out. They want the remainder of social security recipients to hurry up and die. They want all sorts of nonsense, which in the airing of it, makes them feel like puffed up armchair experts. You will not find among their number any prize-winning macro-economists, great legal minds, or any other experts with expertise that illuminates the nature and survival of the post-industrial state.
These discussions of hyper-generalized labels or "isms" are droll. If you want to discuss political philosophy or economic philosophy, consider the options as toolboxes which don't define all solutions or even all of one solution to any given problem.
there is only the recognition of problems, the consensus on those problems, and a growing agreement as to how they can be solved now -- and in the future.