Tuesday, November 18, 2008

"Conservatives and libertarians sometimes face a disadvantage in policy arguments."

Megan McArdle with an interesting post:

"Conor wrestles with Bastiat Beasts.

Conservatives and libertarians sometimes face a disadvantage in policy

arguments. We're attuned to the indirect effects and unintended
consequences of certain policies, whereas our liberal interlocutors
concern themselves primarily with direct effects. Why is this a
disadvantage? Because the liberal can say, "Look at David from Detroit,
who is going to lose his job, and his home, if GM goes bankrupt."
Whereas the best conservatives and libertarians can do is to say,
"Somewhere in America there is an unknown person who will lose their
job, and their home, if the automakers are bailed out, due to the
inevitable effect of egregious economic inefficiencies that will course
through the financial system."....

The person who is hurt in the
liberal narrative and the one hurt in the conservative narrative are
both real human beings. But the fact that the former is identifiable is
often used by liberals as an emotional bludgeon.

Freddie responds.

I'm still struggling with whether I think the tyranny of the specific hard case makes conservatives systematically worse off in argument; I think it does, but I'm not ready to commit on that yet. Surely on taxes, for example, it works the other way around."

Here's my response:

It's an interesting debate, but I was hoping the debate was between Conor Cruise O'Brien and Freddie Meadowes.

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