Kshartle wrote:
Bean wrote:
The fact the folks on this board miss the forest for the trees on this baffles me. I think a line in the MR thread says it best: it works, until it doesn't. Translation: fantasy land.
When you stand one inch from a tree you miss the forest around you.
Gumby and I both realize that if a government allocates real resources (or interferes in the real economy) in certain ways that it could collapse the whole damn thing. This isn't MR's fault. Governments have been doing this for centuries. Usually collapses of currencies are due to certain specific choices and stimuli that have little to do with printing money within a fiat currency regime like ours. These are either having foreign-denominated (usually war) debts, having lost a war in general (huge destruction of production), vast widespread corruption (taking farmland from white farmers and giving them to blacks), or other very NON monetary events.
A currency, even gold, is only as valuable as the real goods and services you can obtain with it. You lose a massive war or confisate real productive resources for random reasons and in massive quantities, and you're going to have problems, and maybe witness the ushering in of a new government. Both Gumby and I suggest carrying some physical gold for this very reason.
So we see the forest, but we see a lush, green, moist forest and you think the torch we're carrying is going to burn the whole damn thing down.
If ours is on the cusp of destruction because of "too much government intervention," then we also have to worry much more about the other massive economies in our world, most of each with their own fiat currency, sprawling metropolis "centrally planned cities" with massive private sector GDP, centrally-planned education/healthcare systems, welfare states, etc.
Saying that we don't have perspective because it may eventually collapse is pretty rich, because most "free societies" (or all of them, depending on what your definition of "free society" is), have either been abandoned for "statism" or conquered, yet we're being asked to adopt this model as ours because "MR is a fantasy land."
Look around you, folks. What is the "fantasy land?" A free society, with no government, that is amazingly productive, peaceful, and clean, or a productive, robust mixed economy with a fiat currency, some state institutions we may or may not like, a military, and sprawling beacons of social engineering called "cities."
Which one is the "fantasy land?"
Who's really not seeing "the forest through the trees?"
This seems like a case of the pot calling the stainless steel kettle black.
"Men did not make the earth. It is the value of the improvements only, and not the earth itself, that is individual property. Every proprietor owes to the community a ground rent for the land which he holds."
- Thomas Paine