|
|
|
|
|
by arcticbull
115 days ago
|
|
Deaths in the Great Leap Forward were heavily concentrated as compared to the Industrial Revolution but the death tolls from IR-related famines weren't really all that far off. Industrialization was messy everywhere. The Irish Potato Famine alone killed 15% of Ireland vs the GLF killing 5% of China. That's not a reason not to plan 5 years in advance... is it? Any more than the Potato Famine is a reason we should't have capitalism. I can't say that I've ever heard the argument that a plan led to a famine therefore we should never make plans, when we have great counterexamples that not planning also led to famine. Feels like learning the wrong lesson here. [edit] I also think it's worth pointing out that America's response to the Dust Bowl was the Farm Bill, which it could be argued is one of the largest-scale examples of central planning in history. It continues to this day, and is part of the reason Americans pay less as a share of their spending on food than any other country on earth. People say everyone remembers the hits, nobody remembers the misses - but that is the opposite of true for government. Everyone remembers the misses, nobody thinks twice about the hits. |
|
Then the disease hit.