The Vanishing Point

En spændende aften på DR2

Posted in Denmark, Free Trade, Free markets, Racism by Martin Rannje on June 3rd, 2008

I går, mandag, var der ikke mindre end to interessante programmer på DR2. Det første omhandlede positiv særbehandling i USA (”affirmative action”), og var, imod al forventning, forholdsvist kritisk overfor det, i og med at det tog udgangspunkt i en sag som hvide der har følt sig diskrimineret har anlagt imod University of Michigan. Og det var endda fransk! Begge sider af sagen blev hørt, men det var svært ikke at have medfølelse med den kvinde som var blevet afvist udelukkende på grund af hendes hudfarve - medmindre man er hardcore marxist/post-marxist/neo-marxist/post-strukturalist eller evt. studererer “post-colonial studies”. Eller i øvrigt beskæftiger sig med lignende “discipliner”. Og så er jeg ligeglad med om Colin Powell har draget nytte af positiv særbehandling. Programmet viste sig at være så interessant, at jeg gik glip af halvdelen af “Platoon” på 3+, der ellers er en af mine favorit-krigsfilm (men de mange reklame-indslag på 3+ gjorde det alligevel svært at følge med i filmen, eftersom at jeg er tilbøjelig til at zappe væk så snart der er reklamer). Det hed på dansk “Racisme eller Særbehandling” (ved ikke hvad den franske titel var), og kan anbefales. (more…)

Quote of the Day: Free Exchange

Posted in Economics, Free Trade, Free markets, Liberalism, Socialism, Uncategorized by Martin Rannje on April 24th, 2008

Amartya Sen, an economist that can hardly be characterized as a free-market fundamentalist, is at least willing to admit this basic truism:

To be generically against markets would be almost as odd as being generically against all conversations between people (even though some conversations are clearly foul and cause problems for others - or even the conversationalists themselves). The freedom to exchange words, or goods, or gifts does not need defensive justification in terms of their favorable but distant effects; they are part of the way human beings in society live and interact with each other (unless stopped by regulation or fiat). The contribution of the market mechanism to economic growth is, of course, important, but this comes only after the direct significance of the freedom to interchange - words, goods, gifts - has been acknowledged.”

- Development as Freedom, 1998, p. 6.

The analogy of conversations has become no less relevant with the advent of the knowledge-economy where words can be worth much more than physical goods.

Free Trade and Pork Barrel Democrats in the US

Posted in American politics, Democratic Party, Free Trade by Martin Rannje on April 8th, 2008

During the presidential primaries, Obama and Hillary Clinton have been struggling in fierce competition over who can be the most ardent anti-freetrade candidate for the democratic party. As this piece in Reason Magazine notes, it is quite paradoxical that the candidates ostensibly are so busily preoccupied with condemning NAFTA, when it was a democrat (Bill Clinton) who struck the deal. Indeed Bill Clinton comes out as one of the strongest supporters of free trade, if one compares him to other American presidents in the post-Roosevelt era. Yet he presided over a period of booming growth and prosperity in America. (more…)