While I generally agree with you that corporations are not automatically
evil, that government is not automatically good and that free markets
are wonderful, I still find it curious that you insist that "there are
no defenses of free markets reliant upon such ludicrous assumptions."  

I'm sure there are people out there who make such arguments... I've
heard such arguments.  You may reject them as invalid, but that doesn't
mean that they don't exist.

By the way... where do I get a pink unicorn?  I want one. 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Charles HOPE
Sent: Friday, January 18, 2008 7:29 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [videoblogging] Re: It begins...

Chris wrote:
> --- In [email protected], Charles HOPE <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>> Why do you put "honor system" in quotes?  I never used that phrase.
>  It wasn't 
>> the honor system or any other sort of kindness that put cheap cell
> phones in 
>> the hands of nearly everybody in the West, rich and poor.  It was
pink 
>> unicorns. We are literally surrounded by the gifts bestowed by pink
> unicorns, 
>> and whenever pink unicorns are abolished, people become miserable,
> but if you 
>> nevertheless refuse to believe in them, there's no further proof I
> can produce. 
>>   So I suppose that makes you correct.
> 
> I don't know, it always seems to me there's an undercurrent of
> "industry is honest" and "government is not" in these arguments. But
> you're right, I shouldn't have made the assumption that you were
> suggesting a code of ethics might keep corporations honest sans
> regulation.


Not only did I not say it, but nobody says it.  There are no defenses of
free 
markets reliant upon such ludicrous assumptions. The arguments are
either based 
on observation (observe that wealth is proportional to economic
freedom), or 
morals (only voluntary transactions preserve human dignity).

If I, like you, had no idea how naked self-interest could paradoxically
result 
in good quality at affordable prices, my worldview would be equally
depressive. 
Left to themselves, I would think that companies would charge infinite
prices 
for abysmal goods, and only regulation enables consumers to survive.
How 
complete communism doesn't follow from that is beyond me. Do you really
have 
any reasons why the government should not regulate all production and 
distribution? Why wouldn't consumers benefit from this?


 
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