Roxanne Appleby
Masterpiece
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2005
- Posts
- 11,231
Oh puh-lease, Tony. Be advised that when Pure starts using my name in vain and ascribing various positions and associations to me it's with malice aforethought, and bears little relationship to the truth. I have more than 8,000 posts on this site, many of them political, so it's quite simple to determine for yourself what I do and don't think.If she's opposing such things as anti-discrimination laws and a social safety net for the non-rich, but proposing the the intrusion of the state into our bedrooms and medicine cabinets, then it should be easy to know what category to put her and Ami both.
In a nutshell, I'm a libertarian, and think that the government should stay out of our bedrooms, medicine chests, businesses and other economic and personal affairs. That includes no subsidies or corporate welfare, no anti-discrimination laws, establishing environmental protection though rigorous and efficient protection of property rights ("what's your soot doing on my lawn or in our river?"), and much more along those lines. I'm not an anarchist but a proponent of limited government.
The reason I think this way is because I believe that command-and-control, one-size-fits-none, fatal-conceit, big government solutions to social problems bring about a net reduction in human well-being, prosperity, freedom and choice compared to the situation that would prevail in their absence.
The explanation for why this is true, I believe, is that big-goverment approaches fly in the face of three "existential" realities:
First, scarcity - resources are and always will be limited, meaning there will be trade-offs, and priorities must be established. (The ultimate scarce resource is time - every human only has so much of it.)
Second, human nature is what it is, and self interest broadly defined is an intrinsic part of it, so "solutions" that require the creation of a "new socialist man" (or "moving beyond homo economicus") are doomed to failure.
Third, every human has unique talents, skills, needs, desires, "holes in their head," etc., and so one-size-fits-all solutions are also doomed. Yet government is big and clumsy and not really capable of anything else.
In addition to not sufficiently appreciating the signifigance of these three points, apologists for statism delude themselves and others by always ignoring the costs of big-government approaches when pointing to the putative or intended benefits of such approaches.
I apologize that the last several paragraphs are a bit abstract, but as I say I've spelled this out in much more detail in other places on this website. Bottom line: When Pure starts characterizing Roxanne's views, it's time to stop reading and move on to the next post.