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by TheOtherHobbes
3495 days ago
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>First, there can be a commercial consumer group that finds error, the buys nearly wothless claims from lots of consumers and goes after the seller with those. That's actually what government is for. You pay it money, and if you have a good government it includes a branch to make sure consumers aren't ripped off/poisoned/injured/killed/etc. Some governments, like the EU, are actually quite good at this. A commercial consumer group can always be bought out, infiltrated, or threatened with bankruptcy by someone with superior spending power. A government can only be taken over from the inside - often by those who pretend to support libertarian ideals, but in practice simply want to operate at various levels of criminality without challenge or oversight. But a government can never be taken over completely. There are always people who believe that market forces are a naive and unworkable ideology, and are willing to work against their excesses. They have a natural role in government regulation, but no natural role in markets. |
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Im happy that you believe this. I however don't. So where does that leave us?
> You pay it money, and if you have a good government it includes a branch to make sure consumers aren't ripped off/poisoned/injured/killed/etc.
I pay the money because I don't really have the option to only pay for the government I like.
If you feel that way how about a tax on all products that are FDA approved that pay for the FDA. Other products can be sold with a stamp on it, not FDA approved.
> Some governments, like the EU, are actually quite good at this.
I would disagree.
> A government can only be taken over from the inside - often by those who pretend to support libertarian ideals, but in practice simply want to operate at various levels of criminality without challenge or oversight.
> But a government can never be taken over completely. There are always people who believe that market forces are a naive and unworkable ideology, and are willing to work against their excesses. They have a natural role in government regulation, but no natural role in markets.
I don't really understand your point.
Its defiantly not libertarians or people who claim libertarian ideals who create, run and push for more of these regulatory agencies.