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[personal profile] elfs
"I believe that the free market and religious belief are more important in shaping our country than anything the government does."

Medved said that on the radio yesterday, and it stayed in my mind because there's so much inanity and contradiction in it that I can't believe it came out of his mouth.

First off, the market isn't free. Never has been, never will be. Governments, even the simplest of them, must tax to survive, and since the founding of our country tax policy has been used to encourage some activities and discourage others, always within the limits of what the populace would accept. Thus, taxes on vice (drink, gambling, smoking, etc.) have usually been popular, and so have tax credits on virtue (education, home ownership, charity). Unless we want to eliminate all of that, we will never have a "free market."

What we have now is a myth, a myth than the American system rewards labor and ingenuity. In fact, the American market's tax system is tilted only toward having money, and reward having money, and consequently penalizes labor and ingenuity.

But I guarantee you that Medved does not want a free market. Because a truly free market sells people exactly what they want, and what most of them want is vice. Oh, not all the time, surely, but a truly free market would be one where not only can you buy and sell alcohol, drugs, and porn, but in order to be truly free there must be no criminal penalties for doing so: criminal penalties are just as much sand in the free market gears as economic penalties. If one person wants to sell cocaine, and another wants to buy it, and they come to a mutually agreed upon price, then why should the government have any say in this consensual capitalist intercourse?

So, Medved is either a complete moral debauch, or a ferociously self-contradictory fool. I'll vote for the former; the latter is unlikely to be entertaining.

Date: 2012-06-12 01:55 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elfs.livejournal.com
Well, then, let's be honest and tell people the truth: the American dream is a gamble. It's a complete crapshoot whether or not it applies to you. It's like Calvinism, in that respect.

Date: 2012-06-12 02:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hydrolagus.livejournal.com
The thing about intermittent reinforcement is that knowing the truth doesn't necessarily help. People keep gambling because maybe this will be the time. And if you don't have money, ingenuity and labor are the best game available. But telling people the truth would be the ethical thing to do, as would not basing political decisions on the myth.

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Elf Sternberg

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