Re: The Education Function

From: Joe E. Dees (jdees0@students.uwf.edu)
Date: Thu Dec 17 1998 - 23:49:08 MST


From: "John Clark" <jonkc@worldnet.att.net>
To: <extropians@extropy.com>
Subject: Re: The Education Function
Date sent: Fri, 18 Dec 1998 01:17:17 -0500
Send reply to: extropians@extropy.com

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> Joe E. Dees <jdees0@students.uwf.edu>
>
>
> >I'm arguing for a free market economy with regulations whose sole
> >purposes are to protect civil rights of employees and clients from
> >executive bigotry, the planet from fiscally tempting but
> >environmentally irresponsible pollution, and consumers from
> >monopoly-facilitated price-gouging
>
> You're arguing that it would be terrific to have regulators so incredibly
> intelligent that they always knew what the correct thing to do is, and even more
> incredibly always had the integrity and moral courage to actually do it.
> Well yes it would be terrific, so would a perpetual motion machine.
>

Well, writing the regulations properly (with knowledgeable input, say,
from raw materials providers, product processors, waste disposal
experts, environmentalists and independent scientists for ecoregs,
from human resource managers and civil rights theorists for
civrightsregs, and from ceo's, labor and economists for
antitrustregs) and having oversight for the regulators as well as the
regulated would be good places to start. It would also be useful to
have a period where all proposed regs are posted on the internet
and all cybercitizens are mailed abstracts and the URL of the full text
and given a reply addy so that they may be publicly honed, tweaked
and critiqued before enaction, or rejection whole cloth, by popular
vote. Joe
> John K Clark jonkc@att.net
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