Societies Can Turn Around
by
George Crispin
by George Crispin
I
have come across some commonly shared assumptions regarding responsible
societal behavior. Some are sound; some are not so sound (irresponsible
fairy tales). I thought to list a few and critique a few.
The
learned experience of a society changes things much faster than
natural selection.
The
notion that animals have the same rights as humans is nonsense.
Everyone
is owed a fair share. This might work if everyone saw fairness the
same way. The free market, where one is rewarded according to what
one contributes, as judged by one's fellows, does it best. Best
doesn’t mean equal.
It
is a mistake to believe natural resources will ever run out. Doomsayers
always compare current consumption with proven reserves. In any
market a shortage of a good leads to a price rise, which leads to
three things, consumption falling, substitutes being used, and improved
technology (increased reserves). And yes, our earth is finite but
our sun will be a red giant before we use up the natural resources
of the earth, most of which, with the possible exception of fossil
fuels, are recyclable. And if our fuels are not fossil, but were
formed with the earth they will undoubtedly last until our world
approaches the red giant stage.
Man
is blamed for endangering the ecological system and bio-diversity.
It is true that in the short run we have made some messes, but wealthy
societies clean them up. It is hubristic to believe man can upset
ecological stability in the long run; or maintain complete biodiversity
in any run.
It
is unnecessarily cruel the way we raise chickens and fatten hogs
and cattle.
It
is wrong to see global warming as a danger. There is probably nothing
to do except cope with it when and if it arrives. We cannot guess
whether its impact will be good or bad.
Pesticides
are dangerous. This is wrong. Today most are biodegradable, and
we cannot get along without them.
The
earth is becoming crowded with people. This is nonsense. Count the
people you meet driving from Albany to Buffalo NY. Population growth
is a problem. More nonsense. The growth rate is falling today and
world population will stabilize at about 11 billion, better clothed
and fed than ever. Scientists share the blame for us not having
a rational debate about this. Science must be involved but scientists
must recognize that they cannot be ethically neutral, and ought
to be very careful about being trapped in a politically correct
paradigm.
It
is wrong to claim that in a free society many of the most effective
political levers are fiscal. In a free society decisions are made
or discovered in the market. In any case, thanks to the influence
of our intellectuals, the West no longer has a free society. To
think that "scientific" solutions existed for political problems,
was unrealistic, more correctly, hopelessly unrealistic, then it
was further mistaken to believe that a society could be managed
from the top for the benefit of all or even managed from the top
at all. This has been a superstitious era. It has brought us great
material advancement, a murderous century and alienated and disconnected
people.
The
good news is that societies can turn around. Chance, providence,
or individual strong wills may alter their direction. If we recognize
free market competition as the co-operative system that it is, then
cooperate in competing, do not become pushovers, never initiate
aggression, do not expect the worst, but do not be surprised by
it, the success of our societies can be assured. Otherwise . . . .
May
24, 2005
George
Crispin [send him mail]
is a retired businessman who heads a Catholic homeschooling cooperative
in Auburn, Alabama.
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© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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