Quote:
Originally Posted by austxjr
Until they can acknowledge and digest things like lack of regulation in the financial sector being a bad thing (or global warming or universal health care or drug policy, abortion, money in politics, gun control, etc...) and formulate an approach to regulating Wall St. and the too big to fail banks and insurance companies in line with their ideology, then they will appear totally out of touch with much of the electorate.
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I generally agree. Any society needs a degree of regulation, investment in education, gov funded research institutes etc etc etc.
But I would go further. Total freedom fails spectacularly in private industry. These idiots think everybody lives on a remote farm with a pig and a goat and never get sick or need medicine or have children who need education.
Take the BP Macondo disaster. Some say that further regulation is the recipe for improved safety. But it goes much further than that. It involves everything from improved education of engineers, a changed attitude to authority, an increased ability to work as a team and welcome constructive criticism, an ability to say 'stop' to bullies, whether a company executive or a forceful drilling manager,
A bigger textbook of procedures is only part of the solution.
So the problems with 'freedom' as executed in a large corporation or group of co venturers, and the disasters which result, are a microcosm of the anarchy which would result from an un-managed freedom throughout a modern society.
Who on earth thinks that you can be a libertarian working professionally in a large private corporation?