September 26, 2008
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If libertarians actually ever walked their balk they would turn
their little venal crusade supposedly waged on behalf of "freedom"
and "the individual" at the "private" realm of concentrated power
and wealth which dominates their own lives - as well as the very
economy they want to liberate.
Libertarians deny that the realities of overwhelming bureaucracies
are not distinctly the work of "federal" planning but actually
endemic to liberal capitalism itself, to both the "private" and
"public" realms, where interest group bargaining and the forming of
corporate cartels with high-priced lawyers have always been the
norm. Ever hear of Frederick Winslow Taylor? JP Morgan? Henry Ford?
Enron?
The ugly truth is that the banking and financial sectors, the whole
discipline of economics, are themselves the absolute epitome of
hierarchical command and control, mindless paper trails, and a
bunch of middle-class stiffs in business suits whose job it is to
serve The Man.
gb,
Not to split hairs too much, but I think it would be more correct
to say that capitalism, like socialism, has an observed tendency to
evolve into a managerialism that spans both economy and state (see
Burnham's The Managerial Revolution for details).
Those whom Kevin Carson refers to as "vulgar libertarians" do have
a tendency to conflate laisez-faire with, and mistaken
managerialism for, capitalism.
gb
I was on a school board with a guy who talked like you. He would
say lots of words, very little of which was connected to a cogent
argument.
hey Thomas, thanks for the thoughtful reply! I've recently been considering many self-proclaimed "libertarian" voices but find a disturbing subterfuge on their part on the issue of "managerialism." Is it too much ask for a democratic dimension, i.e., the decentering of power, to libertarianism, even capitalism itself...without becoming anachronistic of course??? thanks for the Carson reference..
Any chance he'll talk about this?
Russia engages in 'gangland' diplomacy as it sends warship to the
Caribbean
Russia flexed its muscles in America's backyard yesterday as it
sent one of its largest warships to join military exercises in the
Caribbean. The nuclear-powered flagship Peter the Great set off for
Venezuela with the submarine destroyer Admiral Chabanenko and two
support vessels in the first Russian naval mission in Latin America
since the end of the Cold War.
"The St Andrew flag, the flag of the Russian Navy, is confidently
returning to the world oceans," Igor Dygalo, a spokesman for the
Russian Navy, said. He declined to comment on Russian newspaper
reports that nuclear submarines were also part of the
expedition.
The voyage to join the Venezuelan Navy for manoeuvres came only
days after Russian strategic nuclear bombers made their first visit
to the country. Hugo Chávez, the President, said then that the
arrival of the strike force was a warning to the US. The vehemently
antiAmerican Venezuelan leader is due to visit Dmitri Medvedev, the
Russian President, in Moscow this week as part of a tour that
includes visits to Cuba and China.
Peter the Great is armed with 20 nuclear cruise missiles and up to
500 surface-to-air missiles, making it one of the most formidable
warships in the world. The Kremlin has courted Venezuela and Cuba
as tensions with the West soared over the proposed US missile
shield in Eastern Europe and the Russian invasion of Georgia last
month. Vladimir Putin, the Prime Minister, said recently that
Russia should "restore its position in Cuba" - the nation where
deployment of Soviet nuclear missiles in 1962 brought Russia and
the United States to the brink of nuclear war.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article4804157.ece
gb,
short answer: Walmart doesn't break down people's doors and take
their weed. Starbuck's doesn't make people buy their coffee.
long answer: Aw man, do I have to? More thoughtful libertarians
don't just agree but actively point out that many businesses and
their representatives have spent many person-decades collaborating
with, bribing, and persuading governments in order to hamper their
competitors, trap their customers, and disadvantage their workers.
Therefore, many people in business, like many in the population at
large, have historically been anti-libertarian. This has had some
very ill effects on society.
the realities of overwhelming bureaucracies are...endemic to
liberal capitalism itself
Overwhelming how? If a business becomes too bureaucratic, it will
tend to decline unless anti-market (and anti-consumer) means (tax
subsidies, protection from imports, etc.) are used to prop it up.
Frankly, I don't worry my pretty little head about how bureacratic
AT&T or Sprint or Verizon are. I just pick the best deal for
me. Now, if one or more are being favored by my government, I
object.
I'm always happy to read up on specific historic examples. It just
seems that every time I look up a supposed sin of capitalism, I
find government grime at the scene of the crime.
Will this video be be available to watch after the fact? Some of us can't watch live.
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