It’s been said that good ideas don’t require force – while bad
ones rarely get traction without it. True enough. But how about a qualifier?
Whose ideas?
Yours? Mine?
There is a kind of tacitly agreed upon – or at least, rarely
questioned – notion that we all agree on what constitutes a “good” idea. It’s
the keystone of coercive collectivism, without which that ideology loses moral
legitimacy.
But in fact, we don’t agree about what a “good” idea is. Millions
of individuals tend to have millions of individually variable ideas about that.
So the question becomes: Whose ideas will
prevail?
If there is a free market – in ideas as well as economics – this
will sort itself out naturally and non-violently, via the signals of supply and
demand. Actually, those two should be reversed. It is demand which
determines supply (as well as price).
A question:
Is there market demand for six air bags (and back-up cameras and
tire pressure inflation sensors and anti-whiplash head restraints, etc.) in
every new car?
Wouldn’t it be nice to find out?
Unfortunately there’s no way to know, because the
market – millions of individual people’s freely expressed determinations about
what’s “good” – hasn’t been allowed to operate. Instead, a handful of people’s
idea that air bags (and the rest of it) are “good” has been imposed on everyone
else, on the false presumption that everyone agrees it is good to have six air
bags – and many other such things – installed in every new car. This is taken
as a kind of collectively agreed upon noggin nodding. That illusion must be
maintained, in order for the coercion and collectivism behind it to have any
semblance of moral legitimacy.
And yet, it is obviously not legitimate because some
noggins aren’t nodding – including mine.
Because more air bags is
never enough air bags…
And even if it is just mine.
Morality isn’t democratically determined.
Why should my ideas – or yours – about the “good” of air bags or
any other such thing be forced to take a back seat to anyone else’s opposite
idea?
That is the moral question at issue. And it goes much deeper
than air bags.
It’s interesting to speculate what might be available, car-wise,
if individual demand – as opposed to coercive collectivized mandate – were
allowed to determine supply.
Actually, we can get a pretty good idea about what would be
available, car-wise, if we were free to choose – and if the car industry were
free to meet that demand – by looking at other goods which are built
to suit individual demand as opposed to coercive collective mandate.
Personal computers, for example.
You can buy a high-end Macbook, if that is your preference. It
will be feather light, have amazing features, a high-resolution Retina display
and a handsome aluminum case. It will also cost you $1,200 to start.
Or, you could buy a $300 no-name PC.
It won’t have all the features of the Macbook. But it may be
sufficient for your needs. Cool – right? The government – i.e., a handful of
people who’ve somehow acquired the power to make and enforce such decisions –
doesn’t (yet) mandate that you buy a high-resolution Retina display and so on.
You are free – for now – to buy the computer which meets your ideas
about “good” . . . and “good enough.”
…it gets the job done.
Imagine that same dynamic allowed to play out with regard to
cars. It’s not even necessary to imagine.
We can know.
The government only got into the car design business in a
serious way in the mid-‘70s. Before then, we we were largely free to buy what
we wanted – not what coercive collectivism imposed on us. There was a market
for bare-bones simplicity, high-end luxury and almost every conceivable thing
in between. Not coincidentally, the golden age of car design is generally
considered to be the pre-government design era. Batfinned Cadillacs – and
air-cooled Corvairs.
Sometimes, mistakes were made – the Edsel, famously – but
nothing was forced on people. The Edsel sucked, but it
wasn’t subsidized. Ford ate the loss – not the taxpayer. Ideas came
– and stayed or went – on the merits. If people wanted it, they bought it. If
not, they didn’t. In the case of the latter, the car industry stopped making
it.Seems reasonable.
Then along came unreasonable. Or rather, immoral.
Some people – a gaggle of pushy know-it-alls – decided their
notions of what is “good” must be applied generally – even if the market
rampantly disagreed with their notion. Air bags are the best example of this
cross-wiring of the natural order of things.
Or what ought to be the natural order of things.
They were invented – then offered. So far, so good. The market –
the free choice of millions of individuals – said nyet. And that’s
where it should have ended. The bags cost too much vs. the putative value. Mark
that. Value – the “good” – is a subjective estimation
calculated in the mind of every human individual. I can have the air bags – and
maybe they’ll be nice to have if I crash into a tree. Or I
could buy leather seats, which I’ll enjoy much more.
I’ll take the seats, please!
How is this meaningfully – and morally – different than a person
electing to buy the $300 tablet instead of the $,1200 Mac? Why is it ok to
force people to – in effect – buy the $1,200 Mac?
Because “safety” is a consideration? Only of degree, not kind. A
high-end Retina display is without question easier on the eyes – and so, safer
– than a basic display. Besides, why is this weighing of the pros and cons
of your safety or your health the business –
morally speaking – of anyone other than yourself?
How did it happen that other people’s ideas of what’s “good” are
binding on us?
It’s the craziest – and the most dangerous – thing imaginable.
Coercive collectivism – the ideology responsible for literally
hundreds of millions of murdered victims – depends on maintaining the
illusion that everyone is in agreement. That we are all one big “team.”
And of course, every team has leaders.
. . .
Got a question about cars – or anything else? Click on the “ask
Eric” link and send ’em in!
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