"Many commenters have blamed all of this on capitalism. This isn't capitalism. It's a peculiar kind of corporatist socialism, where good risks and the resulting profits remain private, but bad risks and the resulting losses are passed on to taxpayers. There's nothing free-market about it."
It's a good post, but here are my responses:
Don the libertarian Democrat | September 24, 2008, 2:31pm | #
That's why we need a trade-off, like a guaranteed income. Corporatist Socialism is our system. The only way to attack it is to move the social safety net to the truly needy, and then let the economy grow reducing the number of truly needy. However, you're going to have to produce a real and viable social safety net for the truly needy in order for the state to ever meaningfully decrease over time. In the short term, we're stuck.Don the libertarian Democrat | September 24, 2008, 4:42pm | #
My definition of truly needy is not middle class. In other words, people who are destitute. We need to reduce the size of government dealing with the upper and middle class, and confine it to the poor. For a plan put forward by somebody smarter than me, read Charles Murray's "In Our Hands".
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