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by fsckboy
154 days ago
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>This idea of market participants' choices being entirely free rests on the efficient market fallacy in an inefficient market, you can still choose to transact or not, and you will only do so if you feel you will benefit. in an efficient market, the net benefit across society will be higher, but nothing in what I said requires an efficient market. so you are simply wrong. |
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But even in the general case your argument still does not make sense. When we talk of a business providing societal utility, we don't include the business owner themselves in the integral. For example your assertion lets you conclude things like a casino owner who has made a pile of money but impoverished the community has made society better.