You see despicable capitalist hogs - "vulture capitalists" and I see rotten left wing social planning bureaucrats. I'll agree about the badness of your bogeymen if you agree about mine hahaha. Both are stumbling blocks to that "utopia" you mentioned.
Originally Posted by: texaspackerbacker
Problem is, those left wing social planning bureaucrats and those vulture capitalists are incestuous lovers. Rhetoric notwithstanding, it isn't the vulture capitalists who pay for the social planning and regulatory control/punishment that anti-vultures like Dakota wants. The vultures can afford lots of $1000/hour lawyers and invariably manipulate the rules in ways that increase, not decrease, their competitive edge over non-vultures.
That's why, as much as I hate "corporate capitalism" (probably at least as much as Dakota hates it), I remain an anarchist. Because I have zero confidence in the government, in any incarnation, liberal or conservative, Demopublican or Republocrat, to do anything but make that corporate capitalism worse.
Case in point: Eisenhower used the term "military-industrial complex" in the 1950s. Since that time we have had Democrat, Democrat, Republican, Republican, Democrat, Republican, Republican, Democrat, Republican, Democrat. And does anyone truly believe the problems Eisenhower saw have gotten better in any way shape or form? "Big business" power has increased from 1960 to 1970 to 1980 to 1990 to 2000 to 2010, despite hundreds of thousands of pages of government regulation in the name of consumer protection, product safety, fair employment, OSHA, environmental safety, income inequality, AFDC, health care, insurance, banking, blah blah blah blah. So has income inequality. Inner cities have continued to decline. Etc etc etc.
Government doesn't counter the problems of big business power. It exacerbates them and makes them harder to deal with. The real power of the "capitalist class" doesn't come because they have accumulated wealth; the real power comes because it is the nature of states to give power according to relative wealth. That is true of authoritarian states, of monarchical states, and it is true -- in spades -- of the states shaped by "representative" democracy. Because the franchise notwithstanding, it is wealth that shapes access and influence over those who would administer the rest of us.
90% of "Deregulation" as it has been practiced in *ANY* administration since Eisenhower ranted has been little more than rhetorical non-speak, just new varieties of re-regulation that enable some vultures to do their thing better while claiming to do the opposite.
If you want to reduce the power and control of the vultures, really reduce it, the solution isn't de-regulation it is anti-regulation. Anything else just increases the vulture's lifespan and creates full-employment for the vultures' hired guns of lawyers, accountants, lobbyists, bureaucrats, and politicians.
Anarchism doesn't promise fairness and it doesn't promise inequality. It merely limits power of all, and in so constrains the ability of wealth to manipulate the rules of the game for its benefit without actually offering value in return. Madison's Constitution had possibilities for providing similar constraints under republicanism, but with Wickard v Filburn and the decades of Supreme Court decisions emasculating the 9th and 10th amendments and the post WWII rise in government-of-entitlement-and-empowerment, Madison's Constitution is a dead experiment.
Except for the names of the players, and a few technological whizbangs, we've let ourselves be returned to the world of 1763-1789. Madison, Washington and Jefferson,Montesquieu and Tocqueville, Burke and Paine, they offered us a route to replace the worlds of power, of mercantilism and feudalism and empire, with something better, something built on foundations of mutually advantageous exchange and individual self-interest and forbearance.
But we let the pursuers of power con us with their promises of coercion of those who don't want to do everything we want them do for us, con us with their reduction of everything to some "them" who are "making" us do something we don't want to do.
The only question remaining is who gets to be part of the Committee on Public Safety and who ends up having a choice between having one's head smashed in a food riot or carried away in a post-guillotine basket.
And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.
Romans 12:2 (NKJV)