META: Excess in a Free Market Place

From: Rick Knight (rknight@platinum.com)
Date: Thu Sep 11 1997 - 10:08:34 MDT


     
     EvMick wrote:
          
     Give me an example of (what) the excesses that can and do occur in a
     totally uncontrolled marketplace....give me an example of a totally
     uncontrolled market place...define excess.
          
           Rick Knight responds:
          
     See The Tobacco Industry in the early part of this century in the U.S.
     and elsewhere on the planet in recent times.
     
     EvMick:
     
     I don't know about the early part of this century...but currently the
     tobacco industry is heavily controlled....if you consider taxation and
     controls on advertising. I would argue that it does not meet the
     criteria...also I don't see how it could even be considered...it being
     but one industry in the "market" which is very obviously NOT free..
     
     Rick responds: ...heavily taxed AND subsidized. Sounds like a dog
     and pony show to me.
     
     EvMick:
     
     The ideal of a "Free Market" is that of individuals freely buying and
     selling goods and services..by definition if it is not free it is
     controlled....if it is controlled then it is slavery.
     
     Rick:
     
     Polarized definitions of black vs. White, free vs. Slavery don't seem
     to adequately serve this conversation. "Free market" is, at a quick
     glance, euphemistic at best. We banter around the word "Free" in this
     society like it means something but I suppose I'm also taking a lot
     for granted. Compared to a North Korean in a remote province, I'm
     pretty damn free!
     
     EvMick:
     
     I have no problem with someone killing himself...I don't (nor do I
     want to) own that person...it's his body...his life...his decision.
     
     Rick:
     
     We're going to have a hard time finding common ground because I don't
     share your rather *removed* perspective. I am more and more convinced
     that if someone suffers, I am suffering. It's the old butterfly wings
     chaos notion...
     
     Voltaire:
          
     Whoever has power in his hands wants to be despotic; the craze for
     domination is an incurable disease.
          
     Rick:
          
     I regard the inclination to be a despot decreases in accordance with
     an increase of information and a lack of fear unless you are a
     sociopath. In that case, all bets are off.
     
     EvMick:
     
     I don't agree: Clinton and his cronies are pushing Key Escrow as we
     speak...this INCREASES my fear..Of Government....and yeah...maybe I am
     a sociopath...care to define the term as you understand it? No
     argument that I'm paranoid.
     
     Rick: The "right" brand of paranoid though <G>. To the Industrial
     Age mentality, domination may have been an incurable disease. I think
     obsession for power is directly tied to fear of survival. Eliminate
     fear of survival and you, at least, drastically reduce, a need for
     despotic power.
     
     It's hard to give any viable weight to something that was said at the
     infancy of the Industrial Age (that still echoed Agrarian age
     influence) when we are preparing to eclispse it in this one.
      
     EvMick:
     
     Like "Give me liberty or Give Me Death"...Patrick Henry
     
     "They that give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary
     safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. - Ben Franklin, patriot
     and rebel rouser
     
     When I was a boy I was told that anybody could become President; I'm
     beginning to believe it. - Clarence Darrow
     
     I could no doubt come up with lots and lots of statements made at the
     beginning of the Industrial Revolution...or before...from
     say...Newton, Gallileo..Pasteur. Edison. the list is long.
     
     None of that is relevant? Just because it... "was said at the infancy
     of the Industrial Age (that still echoed Agrarian age influence) when
     we are preparing to eclispse it in this one."
     
     Rick: There's more of the black/white perspective that you tend to
     filter with. I have not thrown out the baby with the bath water.
     Wisdom through the ages *is* relevant. I find Clinton and company the
     last of a dying breed. Government is more than overdue for an
     overhaul. The house of cards will only need a good gust and with all
     the rickety potentials in place (environment, economic, sociological).
      No one wants to give up the scepter. Whether it's a violent coup or
     an enlightened epiphany, government as usual is being undermined by
     the ravenous acquisition of information by the individual. I'm
     thankful that I have access to the amount of information that I do
     because it is an adequate size rock for this David to hurl. There are
     still large portions of the global population who can't or are denied
     access.
     
     EvMick: We don't still have Agrarian Age Influence...? I have a
     quarter million dollars worth of John Deere Tractors on my wagon right
     now...not Agrarian? Toffler (Third Wave) speaks of multiple
     COINCIDENTALLY OCCURING influences. Agrarian, Industrial,
     Information....Ages...all at the same time.
     
     Rick: Information will enable us to create food in land that is
     essentially barren of any minerals...or create food without using land
     for that matter. Your John Deere tractors are marvelous constructions
     of the Industrial Age and they may incorporate Information Age
     technology and they serve a purpose. But information will open up new
     technologies that make a John Deere tractor seem about as practical as
     having an in-dash Victrola.
     
     Eclipsing is a process that occurs over time. Relax, you'll have a
     job for a while <G>.
     
     Rick



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 14:44:52 MST