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Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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ETA: Commie. |
Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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The interesting thing to me about one of the responses to you this morning was the suggestion that growth in Chile benefited some more than others -- there were winners, but also many losers (to say nothing of the tortured, etc.). If you're only going to assess the performance of an economy by the net output, you're going to miss a whole bunch of aspects of life that many people care about. In democracies, they get to vote. Although those votes don't matter if we're going to support the violent overthrow of legitimate government to install juntas which will impose free markets. |
Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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I don't understand which point you guys are trying to argue against. Wealthier countrys tend to be stable free market democracies. Ever looked at a scale of affluence, free markets and stable democracies? The richest countrys in the world are almost all democratic and free market (by the way - the way to argue against this point is not to show that one rich country is not democratic - you need to show that the majority of rich countrys are not democratic and not free market). Growing economies tend to lose their dictators. (Again one or two examples does not disprove the point. You need to show that a significant number of countrys with had growing economies over a signficant period of time did not throw off their dictators). Chile, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, Spain, Portugal, Greece, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore etc. Free market economies tend to produce the higher growth rates. IN the past fifty years countries with high growth rates. Germany, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Chile, Hong Kong, Taiwan, . Again, in order to argue against this conclusion is not to show that these economies were not totally free or that there is one counter example. You need to show that generally the majority of fast growing economies were government controlled economies. Highly controlled economies tend to either reduce economic growth or keep a country poor. Examples: Inda, Cuba, Burma, Chile before Pinochet, China before the 1980s, the Entire soviet block, England prior to Margaret Thatcher.............. Which one of these assertions is wrong? |
Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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And didn't we just pick a side? And subjectively, didn't we have to back then? I mean, I know you and Jimmy Carter and them all realized the USSR was benign, but Nixon couldn't see that and he had the keys. |
Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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If you really think Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore are functioning as democracies, then we may be having a problem agreeing upon basic terms. China has rip-roaring growth and is no democracy. As of now, it disproves your argument. Quote:
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Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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Besides, had we supported Allende, then he would have been our guy, right? I'm not impressed by the way you guys are conflated Allende's socialism with global communism. I understand that anything to the left of Ohio starts to look the same, but Allende was no Castro. |
Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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What do you think? |
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