View Single Post
Old 03-26-2025, 12:37 PM   #23007
kermitology
It's not easy being green!
 
kermitology's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: In the tubes to Vancouver Island
Exp:
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by GGG View Post
He favours market driven solutions to allocate resources to solve problems rather than government funded corps to solve problems. He’s team Carbon tax over set pollution limits for example.

In terms of Communism vs Capitalism he is fairly capitalist.
If the thesis of his book is still something he holds true, then I would call him a pragmatic capitalist.

I'm only through the first chapter (plus introduction and preface) of the book, but he talks a lot about understanding how we define value. The first chapter is a sort of econ 101 summary discussing the different views of Smith, Marx, and David Ricardo, but the tone he takes is one of unbridled capitalism is reckless and selfish and will lead to overproduction, instability in both price and ability to produce efficiently, and are not going to lead to long term success.

He's also socially pretty liberal I would say, but again, pragmatic. Things like LGBTQ2S+, Carbon Tax, DEI, while progressive and things I support are lightning rods for toxic conversation. We need to pull back and find a more passive (subversive?) way to implement these things that don't draw so much wild attention.
__________________
Who is in charge of this product and why haven't they been fired yet?
kermitology is offline   Reply With Quote
The Following User Says Thank You to kermitology For This Useful Post:
GGG