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Date: | Tue Jun 12 16:31:17 2007 |
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Samuel Bostaph wrote:
> Let's face it; Friedman has always been a soft-core socialist, as Walter
> Block pointed out to all of us at the HOES
> meetings in Vancouver a few years
> ago.
One can certainly make that case, although it
seems to me that this means that "socialism" will
now cover a much wider spectrum than one might
have expected. Does this not lead to an
interesting quandary, since Friedman's ideas are
certainly embodied in many actual aspects of the
economy and many actual policies of the gov't? If
Friedman and his policies are socialist, and the
gov't and the economy are following those
policies, and the economy "works" (define that as
you will), therefore socialism works. Socialism
is thereby rescued from "the dust-bin of history"
and made an essential element of functional
economies. The pragmatic argument against
socialism ("it just doesn't work") therefore
disappears; instead, socialism becomes part of
parcel of economies judged to be "successful."
I don't know if I want to go there.
John C. Medaille
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