Ayn Rand killed the American dream: Our free-market economy only works for the 1 percent
Posted by ShrugInArgentina 9 years, 10 months ago to Economics
This article starts with a quote from a book titled "Altruism" and in the first paragraph notes that for (George) Soros, "if the doctrine of economic laissez- faire — a term dear to philosopher Ayn Rand — had been submitted to the rigors of scientific and empirical research, it would have been rejected a long time ago."
If the the preset economic system in the USA was "submitted to the rigors of scientific and empirical research" the assertion that it is an example of laissez-Faire capitalism is what would have to be rejected.
If the the preset economic system in the USA was "submitted to the rigors of scientific and empirical research" the assertion that it is an example of laissez-Faire capitalism is what would have to be rejected.
IMO, modern economic theory (and The Founders were profound thinkers and theorists) lagged the American Revolution by about 150 years. Had the Founders had the economic theories of the classical economists, and the Austrians, at least up to and including Mises' "Theory of Money and Credit", available to them, The Constitution would been much stronger on property rights, government interference in any way in the markets, and strict and total non-involvement with money and banking.
I always found it ironic that Adam Smith's "Wealth of Nation" was first published in 1776...
If only they cared about journalistic integrity.
analysis, Herb, is direct, succinct, accurate and
focused. . I love it!!! -- j
.
.
Ricard quotes Soros as saying, "The doctrine of laissez-Faire capitalism holds that the common good is best served by the uninhibited pursuit of self-interest." I'm sure there are some voluntary market economists who take this position, but it is not the one that Rand takes. She makes no claim as to what best serves the "common good." She was not a utilitarian.
has not been tried and then failed; it has not been
tried. We had a partially free economy once, but
it was never fully free. Then, too, the government
is not supposed to take an economic system, give it a name (Laissez-faire, or anything else).,
and then impose it as a political system. Man
is supposed to be free, and have his rights as
an individual recognized; and then laissez-
faire follows. Thus, freedom, and prosperity.
We really didn't have to take anything that crowd says seriously.
'Nuff said.
In the early 1800s exclusive contract to the waterways around new york for steam ships was given to one aristocratic family. Later when Vanderbilt started to run "illegal shipping" into new york and became associated with Gibbons. Vanderbilt suggested he continue his actions until the Livingston file suite against him to stop him. It was also suggested by a late teen Vanderbilt that the exclusive restriction placed by the government was unconstitutional to Gibbons. Gibbons jumped on the idea. The eventual result was Gibbons vrs Ogden in which the supreme court ruled the exclusive contract was unconstitutional.
The actions of Vanderbilt created a friendship between Gibbons and the would be tycoon. Vanderbilt looked at Gibbons much as one would a father. Vanderbilt and his ability are much the reason we had any free markets at all. He beat steamship ventures over and over again that were subsidized by the state of new York. He beat out subsidized railway later in his life and refused to take government monies unless it was in the form of a contract for services rendered to the government.
The fact that law worked based on constitution rather than case law an we had a businessmen with principles who lived by them is why we had a free market for a while. Others would pick up the Vanderbilt way of doing business and it would be keep us free for a while.
New York state attempted to (through is corrupt government leaders) in 1962 to collapse Vanderbilt railways by doing an attack on his stock. They did it by shortselling shares they did not have. Vanderbilt bought up the short sales and every other piece stock on the market, This caused his stock to increase rather than decrease and left the politicians holding an empty bag and owning him the shares they did not have. Today this is illegal to do, then it was a free market and Vanderbilt proved that a person could defend against it.
I am reading "The first Tycoon" right now and its a great book. It has changed by view of early America because the market was not kept free by government but by constitutional law and a man willing to fight for a free market. I recommend the book.
The author would probably prefer to invest in organic farming, give the girl a job, and she'd run away to the city for the $8k.
Very well said.
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