Sammy: Paragraphs. I'm begging you.
A Free Market, being defined as unrestricted trade without excessive government oversight, has operated more or less intact since the dawn of civilization. The first time our earliest forbears traded barley to a neighboring tribe for the pelts of animals was the dawn of what we now call the Free Market.
Many of the more uninformed ranks of the collectivist/socialist counterculter frequently confuse the effects of industrialization with the effects of a free market. Free trade doesn't create pollution or waste, nor does socialism. They are, quite frankly, competely unrelated.
Under sway of the Soviet Union, eastern europe has become horribly polluted, far more, considering their GDP, than any western nation. Likewise, China is now a tremendous polluter, having a new, booming industrial economy and a large population.
If we do wind up drowning in our own filth (We won't, more on that later...), it will be because people concerned with the effects of industrialization on out environment are too distracted with outmoded economic models and the distribution of wealth to take effective action to control pollution. To be sure, mass industry creates a lot of waste, but only because we BUY the products that create that waste. Cars, cigarettes, styrofoam packaging, crappy plastic trinkets, you name it, we buy it.
You can't put the genie back in the bottle, so an industrialized market is here to stay, but that doesn't mean that the current state of affairs will go on indefinitely. Pollution reduces the amount of arable land, which reduces food availability. The availability of fossil fuels is finite, and as the supply runs out, the food supply generated by any particular area of arable land is also adversely affected. Fertilizers are made of ammonia (made form natural gas) and tractors are run on petroleum. Trucks are used to transport food from where it's grown to where it's sold. So... too much pollution, food prices increase and people starve. Population drops, pollution drops, and balance is restored. In all likelihood, starvation is accompanied by war and war's second cousin, disease, and so we'll probably experience even more dropping population than we need.
So I really don't see how a free-market economy can persist for more than a couple hundred years.
Many of the more uninformed ranks of the collectivist/socialist counterculter frequently confuse the effects of industrialization with the effects of a free market. Free trade doesn't create pollution or waste, nor does socialism. They are, quite frankly, competely unrelated.
Under sway of the Soviet Union, eastern europe has become horribly polluted, far more, considering their GDP, than any western nation. Likewise, China is now a tremendous polluter, having a new, booming industrial economy and a large population.
If we do wind up drowning in our own filth (We won't, more on that later...), it will be because people concerned with the effects of industrialization on out environment are too distracted with outmoded economic models and the distribution of wealth to take effective action to control pollution. To be sure, mass industry creates a lot of waste, but only because we BUY the products that create that waste. Cars, cigarettes, styrofoam packaging, crappy plastic trinkets, you name it, we buy it.
You can't put the genie back in the bottle, so an industrialized market is here to stay, but that doesn't mean that the current state of affairs will go on indefinitely. Pollution reduces the amount of arable land, which reduces food availability. The availability of fossil fuels is finite, and as the supply runs out, the food supply generated by any particular area of arable land is also adversely affected. Fertilizers are made of ammonia (made form natural gas) and tractors are run on petroleum. Trucks are used to transport food from where it's grown to where it's sold. So... too much pollution, food prices increase and people starve. Population drops, pollution drops, and balance is restored. In all likelihood, starvation is accompanied by war and war's second cousin, disease, and so we'll probably experience even more dropping population than we need.
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