gherkin wrote: ↑Thu Nov 30, 2023 10:05 am
It's not like that at all. The porn industry isn't an abuse of the system. It
is the system at work. Supply and "value" are driven by demand. You say you're trusting in the collective wisdom of those who generate the demand that drives the market. But have a quick look at some of what they demand. Disposable appliances, porn, "convenience" food, plastic everything.
So, again, turning your own argument back on you, you're saying that because the Church drives the supply of available children in order to meet the generated demand of pedophiles that the Church and Catholicism as systems and institutions drives pedophilia.
I'm sorry, but that's just an extraordinarliy weak argument.
It's obviously not fair to blame the Church for presence of children in the Church or for the proclivities of people who want to abuse them.
Just like it's not fair to make the assertion that because "capitalism"-which hasn't ever made any sort of promise to stop people from acting maliciously- has "failed" because it doesn't sufficiently stop people from acting maliciously. Just like it's not fair to blame Catholicism because of the pedophile scandal because it never promised to make people perfect or to stop them from sinning. It can't. Just like it can't stop malicious actors intent on doing evil from gaining positions of high authority. The Episcopacy makes the decision to trust the general good-will of people, to give them the charity of the benefit of the doubt, including people who claim to feel the call for priestly vocation. That allowed malicious individuals to abuse that good will and to infiltrate Holy Orders. So, with that said, according to you I should conclude that this corruption means that I should abandon the Church because it's failed?
No. I don't buy that for a second. And I don't think that you would either.
So "capitalism" doesn't act in the manner that you'd like it to. Ok, so what? It never claimed to be a perfect system, nor did I. So it's probably the best system there is among a whole host of really bad ones. I fine with that.
As Thomas Sowell says, "There are no such things as solutions, only trade-offs."
So when I say that I "prefer the wisdom of the market" it's just to say that I prefer the wisdom and experience of people of good will. That's it. The existence of malicious actors isn't a negation of the rule, it's just the exception to it.
Gherkin wrote:
You need to study up, my friend. As a first place to look into, check out the overlap between the USDA and the few giant firms that run food in the US (and globally). There is a straightforward revolving door between the major corporations like Tyson and the USDA: the people making the regulations are the people running corporate food. And hence, food regulation for the last century has invariably favored the massive producers (and helped them in their near-total monopolies) and damaged the small producer. Or just think about the recent ridiculous covid responses: ask yourself which businesses benefited (cough Amazon) and which suffered. How many small businesses were finally killed off--leaving a market gap for the major corporate entities to take over--precisely because of government interference?
All you're doing is describing Cronyism, not capitalism. This is what happens when you get a marriage between corporations and the government, which is exactly the sort of thing that socialists and fascists want.
We haven't had actual capitalism at the federal level since the turn of the 20th century when the SC decided to screw with the Commerce Clause and essentially make every corporation that does business across state lines or overseas basically extensions if the federal government. The only actual capitalism that happens anymore is within states or locally.
Gherkin wrote:
What do you think I'm strawmanning? I'm not talking about fairy story "capitalism," as found in the textbooks written by libertarians or Ayn Rand. I'm talking about "capitalism" (or, if you like, your "market") as it has ever actually existed. On that point, see my above.
Well, whatever you want to believe that it is, AFAIC it is a strawman. It's a false attribution. Actual capitalism shuns interference either of those individuals running business trying to rig the system by also being in the government or by businesses buying politicians in the government to do the same, or government bureaucrats using the government to assume power over those business to dictate how they are to be ran. Just as there's supposed to be a wall of separation of Church and State(which has never done anything except become a corrupting influence to the Church) there is also supposed to be a wall of separation between business and the state. Or preferably that the state be so sufficiently weak that it both cannot interfere with the market nor become an intriguing target for businesses to corrupt and use to their own advantage, leaving the business at the mercy of the market.
It's really simple, any critique of business and government doing something together, you're not talking about capitalism anymore. You've left that realm and instead are wandering around on some other system's turf.
It's the same sort of thing as lgbtq ideologies trying to call same-sex coupling "marriage." Except that it's not marriage. Marriage has a very specific definition: it's the one-flesh union of a man and woman. Does a gay couple pretending to be married make it a marriage? Does a group of Mormons engaging in bigamy or polygamy make what they're doing a marriage? Does a woman claiming her cat or dog as her husband make it a marriage? The answer to all of those is "No." It's clearly not marriage, it's something else other than marriage.
So what would you call it if someone came here insisting that a those things, and whatever other scenarios besides, were in fact "marriage"?
Same thing here with "capitalism."